Hey, everyone - the day is here...alha started brewing. It's official that homebrewing is no longer cool. Time to melt down your kettles and give your burners to your cousin Enis to use for his annual frozen turkey fry.
I've seen kits sold at Bass Pro Shop, which makes no sense at all.
We've had three breweries close in St. Louis (they all moved to LA j/k) while more keep opening. For the most part, there wasn't any great sense of loss at the three.
However, there is no reason that the microbrewery cannot reach or even exceed a 25% market share. One of the major factors that I believe to be holding back a higher growth rate is the grossly close-minded population that grew up drinking the thin, light macrobrews of the past. My dad, for example won't drink anything other than Bud or Bud Light. However, the more accepted craft beer is, the more the younger generations will be exposed to it. They, in turn, will develop a taste for it rather than the just the light beers of the macros. This then can perpetuate further.
With that said, I see no bubble in any near future. If anything, an increase. However, the market may get more and more difficult to enter if the rate of new brewery market entrance exceeds the rate of market share growth. IE. supply and demand principles.
Yeah, I'm no market expert, but I don't feel a bubble coming either. One thing with craft beer is that there is a greater tendency for people to build up mixer packs rather than buying large quantities of the same thing over and over again. This means that the "pie" is broken up into many more (albeit smaller) pieces, which allows more brands.
Definately a possibility, but the fact that it was at _Target_ of all places, lead me to that conclusion. I mean, where next, Macy's? Bed, Bath & Beyond? The mind boggles...My brother got one of those barrel style homebrew kits many years ago... they've been around a long time, I think you're just noticing this stuff more now that you're into it![]()
I mean, where next, Macy's? Bed, Bath & Beyond? The mind boggles...
Definately a possibility, but the fact that it was at _Target_ of all places, lead me to that conclusion. I mean, where next, Macy's? Bed, Bath & Beyond? The mind boggles...
Definately a possibility, but the fact that it was at _Target_ of all places, lead me to that conclusion. I mean, where next, Macy's? Bed, Bath & Beyond? The mind boggles...
Hell, they have been selling beer kits at chapters (book store chain) for a couple years now.
https://www.chapters.indigo.ca/en-ca/home/brand/brooklyn-brew-shop
Kohls carries lots of beer goodies these days. Unfortunately, most of the stuff they sell is made in China crap. I don't think I saw a Mr. Beer, but I wouldn't be surprised to see them there, next Christmas.
I saw Mr beer there this yea .
No offense taken, and apparently I don't get out enough. Man, I thought I was being facetious, turns out I didn't think far enough outside of the box. Mayne Ikea? Toys/Babies R Us? My local firearms dealer? lol I considered brewing to be somewhat a specialty endeavor, but I guess to me that sort of reinforces my thought, of jumping the shark. Maybe I am an elitist, but having it sold everywhere makes me feel that it's less 'special' or serious, or something. I know what I'm thinking, but can't seem to express it properly. Just my feeling, but that doesn't mean it's correct of course.Not being said with any rude tone, but my mind boggles at how "unaware" you are.
Bed, Bath, and Beyond has been carrying Mr Beer for a while. They also sell Brooklyn Brewshop extract kits.
And,
http://www1.macys.com/shop/product/platinum-collection-beer-brewing-kit?ID=1721849
I got several pages in and finally had to jump to here. My crystal "malt" ball says that the industry will evolve into brew pubs or rather brew restaurants and there will be even brew restaurant chains. And possibly all the Applebees, Olive gardens, and Golden Corals will have nano breweries in each location. That means they will be hiring all us home brewers to run them.![]()
we have a local chain brew restaurant around here, called Sweetwater Tavern. yes, they have troubles with the name, so at GABF or other pro competitions, they're entered as Great American Restaurants. decent beer, they only sell on premise and don't distribute
and the nearest brewery to my house, Beltway Brewing, is a contract brewery. They're making the core beers for several smaller local breweries, so the smaller breweries can concentrate on seasonal and one-offs. plus they're making the house beer for Buffalo Wing Factory (a local chain)
The only thing is that even these neighborhood breweries need to be big enough to sustain themselves. Restaurants can get away with relatively low material costs and capital investments. Brewing has very high capital and material costs. To profit off of brewing, a small brewery may need to be 4-5 BBL brewing 3 days a week. That is a minimum of 400 pints a day sold, which doesn't seem entirely unreasonable, but requires more customers to come by regularly than a restaurant would.
I can help with one new point. At least here in SoCal, Walmart carrying Mr. Beer and Target carrying Brooklyn kits was new for 4th quarter. (Disclosure, my wife and I are retail services reps for toy maker Mattel and it was something we saw on the floors and back rooms.)
Edit to clarify, they weren't there last year in our area.
I think the same applies to craft beer. The craft beer rise is going to be the new future- it mirrors those same trends in food of wanting small, local, recognizable, and less corporate. Things like the IPA trend, or the Bourbon Barrel trend, or the sour trend, those aren't going to last as long.
Bed, Bath, and Beyond has been carrying Mr Beer for a while. They also sell Brooklyn Brewshop extract kits.