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I don't have an issue with a brewery pricing their beer according to what the market will bear. They certainly should do that. I suppose I'm really just lamenting what the market will bear. ¯\_(ツ)_/¯

And the fact that the market still bears bombers of hops (and their prices) is embarrassing to mankind.
 
I want to know who this "pro" is giving us all these "tips".
I'm not a pro but i'll give you just the tip.
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I curate beer lists for a living. Typically i work with 60-tap systems, and ~120-bottle lists. The key for draft is style variation and staying away from too many hop-forward beers that rely on freshness. Only keep as many on as you can kick in a couple weeks; whatever the market will allow. The bar in Wisconsin has ~6 IPAs at any given time. The bar in California has ~15. With package beers, strive for things that don't need to move quickly; saisons, imperial stouts, barleywines, AWAs, etc.

As what's-his-face just said, freshness is key. If the bar is doing 40k/week, there's generally no problem. If the bar is doing 15k/week, it's a lot more tricky.
 
This kills me. I go into a World of Beer and there's 500 bottles that are all old as ****.

And i get it, it's the WORLD of beer, but do you really need 4 ****** lagers from the ******* Congo? It's asinine.

The people who put together the bottle list of the brewery that I mentioned probably did something like this:

Dude #1: We have 12 coolers to fill with beer.

Dude #2: What do you think we should do?

Dude #1: Get the entire year-round portfolio of every brewery that has general distribution in Pittsburgh.

Dude #2: Great idea!
 
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