EBOOK

Northwest Know-How: Beer

Jacob Uitti
(0)
Pages
56
Year
2025
Language
English

About

JAKE UITTI's work has appeared in the Washington Post, Interview, American Songwriter, PopMatters, the Seattle Times, and many other publications. He is the creator of the TV show Video Bebop and author of UniqueEats and Eateries of Seattle and 100 Things to Do in Seattle Before You Die from Reedy Press. 

JAKE STOUMBOS is an illustrator, animator, and graphic designer based out of Seattle, WA. His work is continually inspired by conversation and collaboration with a vibrant community of artists and mentors. To see more of Jake's work, visit his Instagram @stoombz, or find him online at jakestoumbos.com. Beer is one of the oldest and most popular beverages in

the world. In its purest form, the recipe is simple: boil

grains in hot water and then add yeast to the liquid to start

fermentation. Yet, with the addition of hops for flavoring,

the results are seemingly endless. There are many beer

styles-such as pale ales, pilsners, hefeweizens, and

porters-and each contain a multitude of varieties made

from specific combinations of these few ingredients.

More than any other, the word craft signifies Pacific

Northwest beer. The term points to both the many

microbreweries between Oregon and Washington, as well

as the many varieties of beer each brewery conceives of

and produces. But while beer brewing is a major part of

the food and drink culture in the Northwest, there isn't a

specific process prominent in any given locale. This isn't

like Southern barbecue, which has a distinct St. Louis style,

Kansas City style, Memphis style, and the like. Rather,

throughout the Northwest, variety is key.

In some parts of the world, specific recipes are tied to

certain regions. Pilsners, for example, were invented in

the Czech Republic. Lagers are from Germany and monks

in Belgium first made Trappist ales. But throughout the

Northwest, experimentation and selection remain the

preeminent focus. "The Northwest is all about choice," says

Larry Rock, the first brewer at the historic Maritime Pacific

Brewing Company and veteran beer industry man. "You

can't pin the area down to just one style."

But craft beer abundance hasn't always been the reality

for the region. Prior to the 1980s, beer drinkers imbibing at

their favorite taverns or local pubs consumed either cheap

domestic stuff or the often-skunky European imports

shipped across oceans. But that changed in 1981 when

Redhook Brewery planted its flag in the Emerald City. At

that time craft beer brewing was brand-new. Only two years

prior, pioneer Sierra Nevada Brewing Company started

releasing its pale ales in Northern California. But word

traveled fast and the trend soon hit the woodsy Northwest.

Redhook's Extra Special Bitter became an early favorite

in the region in the mid-80s. Seeing Redhook's quick

success, other breweries started to pop up in the Northwest,

including Seattle's Hart Brewing (now Pyramid Brewing

Company) and Portland's Widmer Brothers Brewing in

1984, Deschutes Brewery in 1988, Pike Brewing Company

in 1989, Mac & Jack's Brewery in 1993, and Elysian Brewing

Company in 1995. Over the decades, the beer culture has

grown in the region from one or two pioneers to include

hundreds of breweries trying to home in on the moment's

premier recipe.

Today craft beer connoisseurs in the region can buy

cans in barbershops while they wait for a trim or fill glass

growlers with a variety of specialty ales to go at their

corner drug store. To wit, almost every restaurant has

craft beer in bottles or on tap, and the same goes for sports

stadiums, theaters, and concert venues, which used to be

the uncontested domain of mega-brew monoliths. To fill

this large demand, breweries produce batch after batch for

curious customers, creating oddities such as peanut butter

stouts and jalapeño hefeweizens to go with their beloved

IPAs and lagers.

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