Demon
Well-Known Member
500lbs of grain and 150gal of water won't change temp much, but we do have a grant on a burner to raise temps if necessary.
You sir are the epitome of unselfishness, true grit, ingenuity and old fashioned determination to succeed!
Thank you for your generosity of sharing information and answering every question put forth! I so wish I could try your beer!
I have my own question: Did you seek out distributors or did they come to you? What does the deal look like for the distributors and you? Do they take a percentage? Do they pick up your beer and bring back the empties (kegs)? Does the distributor handle all of the salesmanship work introducing your products to the new bars?
ps. LOVE that keg washer!
Congrats on the success! Always good to see somebody take the leap and succeed and then share their success stories.
Question for you about your glycol chiller on your previous setup. Did you have a pump per fermenter, or did you run multiple fermenters off one pump? How did you control temperature to each fermenter?
Have you run into any problems with the pumps? It says they are for pumping water only, not chemicals, and with a maximum liquid temperature of 120°F.
You make a ton more money selling by the glass. We still may do a taproom eventually. Right now our priorities are adding more fermenters to increase capacity and we'll start canning next month, finally.
As everyone has said before thanks for sharing all of this information. There is so much out there that it's easy to get sucked into the I need a million dollars to open a brewery. I'm a big fan of starting small and letting organic growth grow your business. I do have two questions
1. Did you guys just do an LLC or did you do a S Corp?
2. Did you guys have your physical location before you got TTB approved?
Glad to hear it will be canned soon, some damn good beers! I loved McLaughlins RedEye at the Summer Solstice beer fest! Keep em coming!