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By Joe Sixpack
Posted on January 11, 2008 on Joe
Sixpack
IF
YOU'VE bought a case in the new year, you've probably
noticed the price has been jacked up by four or five
bucks, maybe even more.
It's not like we weren't warned. Craft brewers have
been griping about the rising prices of ingredients
for months. Last fall, Dan Weirback, president of Weyerbacher
Brewing in Easton, e-mailed a missive to his customers,
pleading for understanding. "We need you now more than
ever if we are to continue making great beer," he wrote.
(You can read the entire letter here.)
I spoke with Weirback this
week as he visited bars and distributors that had just
received the latest price sheet, with increases of $30
per keg or more. Here's a condensed transcript of our
conversation.
Joe Sixpack: Why did
you write your plea for understanding?
Dan Weirback: When the price
of gas goes up, the first thing you hear is that the
gas stations are gouging. I was worried that people
would call us a bunch of crooks - "You're trying to
rip us off." The concern at first was great because
of the increases.
J6: What kind of reaction
did you get?
DW: I received nearly 100 e-mails
at the Web site, all in support except for one. And
when I wrote him back in detail, he was won over, too.
As we talked and listened, the feedback was positive.
Our customers understand that this is a cottage industry.
They're getting fresh beer from local merchants.
J6: You say the biggest
reason for the increases is the cost of ingredients.
What kind of increases are you experiencing?
DW: We're seeing $17 to $22
more per pound for hops, which is nearly a 400 percent
increase. We use 12 different varieties, and they're
all going up. Malt is up by 56 percent.
J6:
Let's get a little more specific here. What are your
hops costs on Hops Infusion?
DW: Normally I don't like to
talk about the amount of ingredients we put into our
beers - that's proprietary. But we use about 60 pounds
of hops for a 20-barrel batch, which makes about 250
cases. Before, that 60 pounds cost us $300. It's now
$1,200. So the impact on Hops Infusion is $3.75 a case,
just for the hops. And Double Simcoe is a lot worse.
J6: How much more will
Hops Infusion cost at retail?
DW: Figure on about $7 or $8
more.
J6: How about Double
Simcoe IPA?
DW: On the retail end, it's
going up by $15 to $18 per case.
J6: What about hops
supply?
DW: There's a shortage of hops
because world demand is up. That's partly due to all
these super-hoppy beers. But there's more to it than
that. In the '90s, there was a glut of hops and acreage
began to dwindle. Now there's a bigger demand from China
and Russia.
Plus, word on the street is
that the big three brewers have been gobbling up all
the hops they can get just to make sure they can supply
their own market share. You almost have a free-for-all,
and the people who are having the worst time are the
really small packaging breweries and brewpubs. Any excess
hops are going to be difficult to find.
I don't know what's going to
happen, but you wonder how far prices are going to go
up. I don't know of a single hops supplier who's accepting
new customers.
J6: Do you have enough
hops for all your beer styles?
DW: I know I'll have enough
of all the hops for the rest of the year because we
can substitute the hops on some of the varieties, so
it's not such a big deal. Our Blithering Idiot barleywine,
for example, we had to substitute one of the bittering
hops. But that's a beer style where you won't notice
the change. The Double Simcoe, on the other hand, has
to be made with Simcoe hops, and there are only a few
people who grow it.
J6: Will you have enough
hops to brew Double Simcoe?
DW: It depends on how much
of it we sell.
J6: It doesn't sound
like you're too worried about losing customers. I thought
most beer drinkers based their purchases on price.
A: That's left over from the
era of industrial beer, when you had store managers
thinking that way and consumers that way. That's a paradigm
that doesn't exist anymore. . . . It isn't all about
price any more. Many people are more concerned about
quality, and frankly, they think about the price per
bottle, not price per case. You can look at Blithering
Idiot, which costs $50 a case, or just $2 a bottle.
Compare that to the price of Bud, Miller, Coors at a
bar, and it's much less expensive.
"Joe Sixpack" by Don Russell appears weekly
in Big Fat Friday. For more on the beer scene in Philly
and beyond, visit www.joesixpack.net.
Send e-mail to joesixpack@phillynews.com.
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