JulianB1
Well-Known Member

Dat glass!
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Dat glass!
The event page says "The last of our quarterly release events". Does that mean the last one this year, or the last one EVER??![]()
Yeah, I think the real explanation is that they do it because they can and that's what the market will bear. There probably is some truth to operational costs being higher in California but I have no idea what Cascade's problem is.
I'm no brewer but I have a hunch that the sours Cascade is making take longer than the Bu. Time = money is at least a partial explanation. Now I acknowledge that time does not necessarily equal quality or taste but I feel like in some cases we're comparing very different things just because they're all "sour / wild beers". The new corvette has as good as / better performance than many a porsche ... but just saying "they're all sports cars" and asking "why can one person get away with charching XXX" isn't really legit. A Porsche is still a Porsche. (Please don't see this as "demeaning" De Garde as being a Corvette ... it's just an analogy!) There are really two layers: the cost of producing and the value of the outcome. De Garde just seems to hit aces on both - low cost of production and high value outcome. Maybe, say, Cascade has high cost of production and high value outcome and we're mad that they aren't as cheap as De Garde. Seems, possibly, off to me.
Before people attack me for defending XYZ brewery, let me say I'm really just expressing a hunch that some beers may be more expensive to produce. Look at Maple Samson from the upcoming release - $18. That's not crazy, but it's a far cry from $7 Hose, right? And for obvious reasons. One thing I've always found sort of brilliant about De Garde is that they've found a way to do what a lot of non-sour/wild breweries do but exclusively with wild beers: make a "mass produced" product that can fund more costly / experimental stuff. Look at many businesses doing interesting stuff and you'll note they have something - an IPA, a sedan (toyota), an advertising product (google), etc - that gives them the freedom to experiment. Without looking at finances I'd guess that the Bu are produced relatively quickly (like an IPA ... though, yeah, longer than that) and provide cash flow allowing De Garde to start doing the stuff that takes longer (e.g. Belle Ensemble and Corbeau Noir from the upcoming Keeper's releases).
In short, we shouldn't totally hang other breweries that can't match $7 bottles of gose without digging a bit deeper.
I'm no brewer but I have a hunch that the sours Cascade is making take longer than the Bu. Time = money is at least a partial explanation. Now I acknowledge that time does not necessarily equal quality or taste but I feel like in some cases we're comparing very different things just because they're all "sour / wild beers". The new corvette has as good as / better performance than many a porsche ... but just saying "they're all sports cars" and asking "why can one person get away with charching XXX" isn't really legit. A Porsche is still a Porsche. (Please don't see this as "demeaning" De Garde as being a Corvette ... it's just an analogy!) There are really two layers: the cost of producing and the value of the outcome. De Garde just seems to hit aces on both - low cost of production and high value outcome. Maybe, say, Cascade has high cost of production and high value outcome and we're mad that they aren't as cheap as De Garde. Seems, possibly, off to me.
Before people attack me for defending XYZ brewery, let me say I'm really just expressing a hunch that some beers may be more expensive to produce. Look at Maple Samson from the upcoming release - $18. That's not crazy, but it's a far cry from $7 Hose, right? And for obvious reasons. One thing I've always found sort of brilliant about De Garde is that they've found a way to do what a lot of non-sour/wild breweries do but exclusively with wild beers: make a "mass produced" product that can fund more costly / experimental stuff. Look at many businesses doing interesting stuff and you'll note they have something - an IPA, a sedan (toyota), an advertising product (google), etc - that gives them the freedom to experiment. Without looking at finances I'd guess that the Bu are produced relatively quickly (like an IPA ... though, yeah, longer than that) and provide cash flow allowing De Garde to start doing the stuff that takes longer (e.g. Belle Ensemble and Corbeau Noir from the upcoming Keeper's releases).
In short, we shouldn't totally hang other breweries that can't match $7 bottles of gose without digging a bit deeper.
BUT, we will have our first round of Bu and Petit Desay on the market by the end of this month. $4/22oz is our retail target.
I had said as much earlier - but then deleted my post when I saw that Cascade charges $20 for their gose. Same style, likely same time to produce, $13 more.
I might be scarred for life
degardebrewing, you need to do a batch of Hose in tequila barrels. Jose?
And charge only Tree Fiddy for it.That'd be an expensive batch.
IN.
don't forget the wormThat'd be an expensive batch.
IN.
Ppppppp