The worst thing is that you'll report that income as self employed and most of it vanishes.
TerapinChef said:Here's a bit of a twist for you...I'm an avid homebrewer and happen to work in a restaurant. We are actually located in an old mansion, and I've often thought about how nice it would be to use one of the old rooms in the basement as a lagering cellar. What would be the difficulty in the restaurant obtaining a brewpub permit, having our existing equipment inspected, and using the facilities to brew on a small scale level? At our busiest times, it would be a max of 10G/week of any brew, and if more than one were kept on tap, it really wouldn't require that much of my time to brew it for them...the only investment for them (that I can think of from reading this thread) would be the brewpub licence, a few cornies, and my time/ingredients. Anyone with any knowledge of the brewpub game feel free to chime in here....
Actually Panzer it's been done. I remember a story recently I saw about a guy who was running a sub-micro-brewery out of some space in the back of a coffee shop. I think in the story the brewer owned the coffee shop, but never the less it shows that it's possible if you can convince the bar/restaurant owner to give it a go. Of course you'd have to fill out all the TTB stuff, and get it approved, and probably fork over the licencing cost or work it out in a detailed contract with the business owner. You'd also have to brew on premises amongst other complications. I've been thinking about chatting up the bar owners that I'm acquainted with and seeing about getting some business going.
Being under-employed, I've just been toying around with crazy thoughts lately. Here's one.
For Illinois you would need:
Equipment to brew 30 gallon batches
A couple of kegs.
A kegerator
A working vehicle
Go to a restaurant who is already serving alcohol, Bring many homebrews. Get in touch with the owner. They already pay $500 a year for their liquor license. Tell them that if they pay the additional $550 to get a brewpub license, you will bring over and install a working kegerator.
Once a week, or once a month, depending on how often you are needed, you brew at home, then deliver the cooled wort to their premises where you pitch the yeast and stick it in a closet.
You make one, maybe two "house" beers that are unique just to the restaurant. They can sell 6 packs for another revenue stream.
It costs them a mere $500 a year to serve a unique product that nobody else has. You pitch it to them by saying, "I can create a beer that perfectly accompanies the majority of your dishes... your restaurant's style. I can match it to your clientele, to your regional specialties.
You get paid one dollar per pint... the cost of pretty much any other "import" beer. With 31 gallon batches (1 barrel), that's $310 per night of brewing, plus a quick trip to rack the beer and again to keg it, minus the ingredient cost.
You're talking about my write up and pictures about Sue's in Michigan aren't you?
https://www.homebrewtalk.com/f5/smallest-brewpub-202767/
Actually a friend of a friend who happened to own and manage a bar and grill tried one of my beers (the hoppy hefe) and said if we (my friends and I) could get two or three batches of beer that was consistently that good she would like to serve it in her restaurant. And she suggested doing what you listed here (In california the laws are different but she said it was doable).