HOMEBREW CLUB PROFILE
Made From Scratch



BY JEFF ALWORTH


contents

PUB CRAWLS

BREWPUBS

BRITISH, IRISH

CHI-CHI

COCKTAILS

THE SCIENCE OF DRINKING

FUN AND GAMES

GAY BARS

KARAOKE

OLD MEN

OUTDOORS

SPORTS BARS

THE YOUNG AND THE RESTLESS

WINE

WINE WORDS
 


If you have any contact with Portland's brewing world, you've probably heard of the Oregon Brew Crew. Called, modestly, a homebrewing club, they do a lot more than brew up five-gallon batches of beer in the basement. You may have seen them around town, with brew kettles boiling, as they demonstrate the process at beer festivals or on May 5, National Homebrewing Day.

Behind the scenes, the club's more than 120 members take on the Herculean task of organizing hundreds of volunteers for the Oregon Brewers Festival and Spring Beer Fest. They help organize and judge at local homebrewing competitions, including the Rose Festival Homebrew Contest held at Nor'Wester Brewing. And, if you've ever ordered a pint of Collaborator--a beer produced jointly by the Brew Crew and Widmer Brothers Brewing that's available at area bars, including The Rose and Raindrop, Dublin Pub, and Widmer Gasthaus--you've even tasted their beer.

Things weren't always so active for the club. In 1980, members started meeting at the Cartwright Brewery, the first (and now-defunct) Oregon micro formerly located at Southeast Sixth Avenue and Main Street, to discuss beer and brewing. At the time, it may have seemed an obscure pastime; the chief beer debate raging across America was between "tastes great" and "less filling." No one had ever heard of the weird beers the Brew Crew was interested in--except maybe the guys at Cartwright, and they brewed pretty bad beer.

Membership at meetings hovered in the single digits. There just wasn't much interest in good beer. Of course, it didn't take long for that attitude to change. The rise of microbrewing was just around the corner, due in part to groups like the Brew Crew. Especially in Oregon, brewing found especially fertile ground, and many people who started out as hobbyists ended as professionals. Over the course of nearly two decades, the Brew Crew's membership, which tends toward men, featured some well-known names: Rob and Kurt Widmer, Fred Eckhardt, Alan Sprints and Doug Henderson.

When I met with members of the venerable club at The Rose and Raindrop to discuss their activities, I asked, now that good beer was as common as rain, how had their focus shifted? As I listened to them describe all the irons they had in the fire, I began to wonder--when do these guys have time to brew? Don Rutledge, the current president, admitted that the time he could devote to actually making beer had dropped off sharply. He seemed to speak for many when he said, "Homebrewing is still a huge part of my life--just not the brewing part of it." In fact, Bob Brewer (yes, that's his real name) added, that probably wasn't uncommon. Due to busy lives and other activities in which the Brew Crew are involved, the time-consuming brewing process sometimes gets squeezed out. "Probably one-third of our [members] don't even brew."

If this sounds like a paradox (and it did to me) things became clearer as members began to discuss the connoisseurship element of homebrewing. Scott Sanders, who created the recipe for the Collaborator Brown Ale we were drinking, offered some explanation: "Everybody thinks of the Brew Crew as just a homebrew club, but actually beer appreciation is a major focus." When a casual beer drinker tastes a beer, he notices the flavors--bitter or sweet, spicy, citrusy, malty, and so on. For a homebrewer, the experience is quite different. True, beer can be cataloged by flavor, but it will also be phenolic or contain diacetyl or fusel alcohol. It points to the relationship homebrewers have to beer. Though what finally matters is the flavor of the beer, the trained palate of a brewer can detect subtle flavors that indicate, say, high fermentation temperatures. Having experience at making their own beer, homebrewers sniff and sip at their beers like forensic scientists, looking for the fingerprints of the brewing process.

Although they might not be able to share this level of experience with everyone else, the Brew Crew would love to expose people to as much of beer's versatility as possible. An excellent example is the Collaborator project, which had its genesis in a discussion about rare beer styles between the Brew Crew and the Widmers. For homebrewers, no beer style is obscure; far from it, they tend to gravitate toward making beer they can't find commercially. Members of the Brew Crew lamented, though, that certain styles weren't available to everyone else--and because of their limited market potential likely never would be.

Working through some "what ifs," they explored the idea of collaborating to produce these kinds of beers for local distribution (hence the Oregon in the club's name). The plan that developed drew on the strengths of each group: The homebrewers created recipes for the beers, and the Widmers brewed them and arranged for distribution to local pubs. For the Brew Crew, this posed two exciting possibilities. First, it gave homebrewers the chance to have their beers reach a larger audience (as far as anyone in the club knows, this is the only such arrangement in the country). But even more important, it was an opportunity for members to work directly toward exposing the public to a broader range of beer styles than is commercially available. Being involved in the process meant they could create beers as authentic to historical or regional styles as possible.

They began with a style called milk stout, a light-bodied, sweet stout made creamy by the use of lactose. No American versions exist for this beer, and even in England, where it was invented, it's now rare. Since then, they've released a Belgian-style dubbel and Sanders' brown. Two more are planned; a Belgian wit (white)--a light summer ale made with coriander and curaçao orange peels--will be released in the summer, and an old ale, currently in production, will be aged and released this winter. Like any club, the Brew Crew are activists for their pastime--they love newcomers to try their hand at brewing up a batch of beer. But then again, they'd be just as happy if more people sniffed and sipped and admired the next pint of beer they ordered--especially if it's Collaborator.

To find out more about the Brew Crew and how to become a member, check out the club's Web site at www.oregonbrew.com or call its hotline at 288-2739.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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