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To our friends near and far,

As you may know, numerous wildfires have left California in a state of emergency. Of the many fires that tore across the landscape, the Camp Fire has become one of the most destructive fires in California’s history. The fire broke out near the town of Paradise, California and destroyed nearly 10,000 homes, killing many residents and displacing thousands more.
 
This has affected our friends at Sierra Nevada Brewing Co. profoundly. While their production facility in Chico was spared, much of their workforce has been left to deal with the aftermath.
 
Because of this, Great Lakes Brewing Co. is proud to answer Sierra Nevada’s call to participate in a nation-wide fundraising effort to support the impacted communities.  On Wednesday, November 28, Brewpub Brewer Steve Forman spent his day in Brewhouse No. 1 brewing Resilience IPA, Sierra Nevada’s brew benefiting those affected by the Camp Fire. Once Resilience IPA is ready to be tapped at the brewpub, 100% of the sales will be donated to the Sierra Nevada Camp Fire Relief Fund to support those impacted by the Camp Fire.
 
We’re honored to be Brewing Good a short 2,396 miles away. Learn more about Resilience IPA here and follow us on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram for the latest updates.

 

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As we wrap up our year-long celebration of 30 years of independent–and now employee-owned–brewing, the GLBC Family is proud to share that co-founders Dan and Pat Conway have been inducted into the Cleveland Business Hall of Fame. First formed in 1996, the Cleveland Business Hall of Fame honors and celebrates business and civic leaders helping make Cleveland a great place to work, live, and succeed.

Great Lakes Brewing Company, Ohio’s first and largest craft brewery, was founded by brothers Daniel and Patrick Conway.

Patrick Conway’s long love affair with beer began during his tenure as a graduate student at the University of Chicago, when he got a job as a bartender to pay his bills. His palate became even further enlightened while traveling through Europe post-graduation, taking an intrepid tour of the continent’s small breweries and immersing himself in new styles. Upon returning to the United States to teach in Chicago, he was delighted to find that Americans were finally starting to gravitate towards some of these European beer styles that he so admired.

Inspired by the then fledgling movement towards craft beer in America, Patrick Conway returned to his hometown of Cleveland, Ohio to pursue his dream of opening Ohio’s first craft brewery. Daniel, a John Carroll University graduate with a background in banking, joined Patrick in developing their business plan. With limited brewing experience and the odds stacked against them, the two brothers chose to settle in Ohio City, where their fledgling operation would grow into becoming one of the premiere craft breweries in the United States.

Since 1988, the Conway’s Great Lakes Brewing Company has been a pioneer in sustainability. Conserving resources, investing in urban farming and local food, repurposing byproducts, and water stewardship are all initiatives championed by the Conway brothers. 

Daniel and Patrick Conway’s passion for beer is evident in Great Lakes Brewing Company’s meticulously crafted family of award-winning lagers and ales. In celebration of 30 years of independent craft brewing, the brothers announced the creation of an Employee Stock Ownership Plan as a thank you to their beloved family of employees.

Read more about the induction of Dan and Pat Conway here.

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Great Lakes Brewing Company is proud to once again be recognized by ERC as one of Northeast Ohio’s 99 best places to work! NorthCoast 99 recognizes great places to work for top performing people that drive results, provide competitive advantages, and allow businesses to innovate and grow. Applicants are evaluated based on policies and practices related to the attraction and retention of top performers, as well as data collected from employee surveys. This is the fourth year GLBC has been honored.

As we celebrate our 30th year of independent craft brewing, we are honored to receive this distinction, and thankful for our family of dedicated employee co-owners who share our integrity and vision, and make it fun to come to work every day! If you are interested in becoming a part of our outstanding team, visit our Employment Page to browse our current openings. Not seeing any positions that match your skill set but are interested in being notified of future openings? Our Application for Future Positions can be found here.

Click here to view the full list of NorthCoast 99 winners.

30th Anniversary Oyster Stout bottle

You didn’t think we’d celebrate our 30th anniversary without a special release, did you? In honor of three decades of independent craft brewing, Great Lakes Brewing Co. is proud to share our 30th Anniversary Imperial Oyster Stout.

To celebrate our pearl anniversary we added fresh shucked oysters and cacao nibs to this special Imperial Stout, symbolizing the hard work and sweet memories we’ve shared over 30 years of independent, family-owned (and now employee-owned) craft brewing. 

To mark this storied occasion, the 30th Anniversary Imperial Oyster Stout will be presented in an elegant black matte 22 oz. bottle. Screenprinted on the surface in glossy black ink is a discoverable bathymetric map of Lake Erie (though we can’t promise you’ll find any oysters there).

The 30th Anniversary Imperial Oyster Stout will be available throughout the GLBC distribution footprint. Savor the rich, chocolaty flavors and subtle saltiness as you help us toast to the next 30 years. Learn more about this special release below…

THE BEER
Flavor: Luxuriously smooth with deep-diving roasted malt and cocoa flavors, and a delicately briny finish.
ABV: 11%
IBU: 37
Malts: Harrington 2-Row, Roasted Barley, Oats, Chocolate, Cara 45, Special Roast
Hops: Simcoe, Mt. Hood
Specials: Fresh Oysters, Cacao Nibs, Salt
Pairs with: Oysters, aged cheeses, and chocolate cake

THE RELEASE
Date: Thursday, August 16, 2018
Time: Gift Shop opens at 10:00 AM. Brewpub opens at 11:30 AM. 
Bottle cost: $9.99
Brewpub: On tap beginning Thursday, August 16, 2018 at 11:30AM

EVERYWHERE ELSE
30th Anniversary Imperial Oyster Stout will be available in bottles and on draft throughout the GLBC distribution footprint beginning Monday, August 20. Keep an eye out for special events and tappings on our Events page.

Follow us on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram for more updates on our 30th anniversary. Want to celebrate our anniversary by making our breweries all yours? Click here to learn how you can win a VIP trip to Cleveland.

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Great Lakes Brewing Company Extends Distribution in Indiana
August 20 launch with Cavalier Distributing will serve the state

July 31, 2018 – Cleveland, OH – Great Lakes Brewing Co. (GLBC), now celebrating 30 years of independent craft brewing, announces plans to distribute their award-winning ales and lagers throughout Indiana.

On August 20, Ohio’s original craft brewery will be available throughout the state of Indiana, through a partnership with Cavalier Distributing. GLBC has served the South Bend area for over a decade. According to GLBC Regional Sales Manager Kevin Hack, deepening distribution throughout Indiana aligns with the brewery’s growth plans.

“After 10 years of only distributing to the South Bend Area, we are excited to finally bring our beers statewide in Indiana. This fits our growth strategy of deepening our market presence within The Great Lakes region,” said Hack.

Customers can expect to find GLBC’s year-round family of beers in package and draft: Dortmunder Gold Lager, Eliot Ness Amber Lager, Turntable Pils, Holy Moses White Ale, Burning River Pale Ale, Commodore Perry IPA, and Edmund Fitzgerald Porter. GLBC’s seasonal portfolio will also debut in Indiana, including the award winning Oktoberfest and fan favorite Nosferatu Imperial Red Ale.

The new market rollout will involve customer appreciation events, meet-and-greets, special tastings, and giveaways throughout the region. Customers can follow @GLBCIndiana on Twitter and visit greatlakesbrewing.com/events for launch event announcements and regular updates.

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Great Lakes Brewing Company Extends Distribution in New York State
August 29 launch will serve Albany and the Capital Region

July 27, 2018 – Cleveland, OH – Great Lakes Brewing Co. (GLBC), now celebrating 30 years of independent craft brewing, announces plans to distribute their award-winning ales and lagers in Albany and throughout New York State’s Capital Region. 

On August 29, Ohio’s original craft brewery will enter Albany with Saratoga Eagle Sales & Service. GLBC currently serves Upstate New York, including Syracuse and Ithaca. According to GLBC Regional Sales Manager Matt Roth, deepening distribution in New York State aligns with the brewery’s growth plans. 

“After seven years distributing only as far west as Syracuse in New York, we are excited to finally bring our beer to the Eastern side of the state. This fits our growth strategy of deepening our market presence within our relatively small distribution footprint. During my visits to the region wearing Great Lakes gear, so many people have asked where they can find our beer. It makes me happy when people recognize our brand, and I’m excited that our fans in the Capital Region can now drink our beer,” said Roth.

Customers can expect to find GLBC’s year-round family of beers in package and draft: Dortmunder Gold Lager, Eliot Ness Amber Lager, Turntable Pils, Holy Moses White Ale, Burning River Pale Ale, Commodore Perry IPA, and Edmund Fitzgerald Porter. GLBC’s seasonal portfolio will also debut in the Capital Region, including award-winning fan favorite Christmas Ale, which Roth says will launch with a large “First Pour” event. 

The new market rollout will involve customer appreciation events, meet-and-greets, special tastings, and giveaways throughout the region. Customers can follow @GLBCinNY on Twitter and visit greatlakesbrewing.com/events for launch event announcements and regular updates.

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An underground river of beer? In Cleveland? The idea might raise some eyebrows and elicit a few guffaws, but this is no Willy Wonka fantasy. Beneath the hustle and bustle of West 26th Street, a stream of brewery-fresh beer flows to where it rightfully belongs: a pint glass. Thanks to two subterranean pipes connecting our brewery to our brewpub, craft beer fans are able to enjoy beer pumped directly from our brite tanks, the large vessels where finished beer rests before it’s packaged. It’s a setup that few (if any) other breweries in the U.S. have, and it’s why our beer tastes even fresher at the brewpub.

But how did this glorious tributary come to be? GLBC co-founder Dan Conway, Brewmaster Mark Hunger, and Plant Manager Mike Heidinger explain how we created our very own underground river of beer.

A river runs through it

To understand how the pipes got there in the first place, we need to look back at the brewing history of our campus. Our very first brewing system, Brewhouse No. 1, was installed (and still operates) in our brewpub on Market Avenue in 1988. Word of our little brewery quickly spread, and by 1992 we made our first expansion into the neighboring Fries & Schuele building, located just around the corner from the brewpub on West 26th Street. In the midst of a craft beer boom in the late-1990’s, we undertook our biggest expansion to date and began transitioning our production facility across the street into what is now our main production brewery, the former storage and stable facilities of the Leonard Schlather Brewing Company. 

Between renovations and installation, getting the larger Schlather facility fully operational would take time, but beer still needed to be brewed. Without completely halting operation, how could the brewers maximize their brewing in the Fries & Schuele building while still using the extra space afforded to them in the new space? The answer: a series of underground pipes connecting the two buildings. 

“At the time, it was a matter of production and space. One of the first things we did when we expanded into the Schlather building was adding fermenters, so the idea was we’d brew in the Fries & Schuele building and pump the beer across the street so that it could ferment,” says Hunger. 

“The city was supportive of our expansion,” says Conway. “There were a number of construction and renovation projects happening to get the building up and running, so when we asked if we could dig up the road to lay down pipes, the city didn’t really mind.” 

One street closure and a few days later, the underground beer pipes were laid down and connected, and freshly brewed wort was being pumped into the new brewery to ferment. But this setup was only temporary. By 2000, the entire operation had transitioned into the Schlather building where all of the brewing (and fermenting) was being done under one roof. So what became of the pipes? The brewers didn’t want to see a good thing to go waste.

“We essentially just reversed the flow,” says Hunger. With fresh beer sitting in brite tanks waiting to be enjoyed, the idea of Burning River flowing (literally) beneath West 26th street was an idea that was as awesome as it was practical.

But why?

For one thing, it’s efficient. Most of our higher volume releases (think year-round and seasonal beers) are all typically pumped over direct from the brewery. “The general rule of thumb is, if it’s a beer you can buy in a bottle, we’re probably pumping it over,” says Heidinger. It takes only about 15-20 minutes to pump over enough of one style for the brewpub, whereas kegging that same amount could take as long as 2 hours. “Last year we pumped in around 148,800 pints worth of fresh beer directly to the brewpub,” says Heidinger. “If we were to keg all of that, we’d be looking at around 1,200 kegs that would need to be filled in the brewery and then hauled over to the brewpub annually. Aside from how labor intensive that is, we don’t even have a cooler big enough to store that amount of extra kegs.” 

But why not just brew the beer in the original system still operating in the brewpub? “If we were to even come close to brewing as much beer as we’d need for the brewpub, we’d be brewing in Brewhouse No. 1 night and day just to keep up with demand,” says Hunger. “If we did that, we wouldn’t have the flexibility to use that system to brew our small-batch pub exclusives.”

But perhaps most importantly of all…

It just tastes better this way. Fresh is best when it comes to beer, and the less packaging that’s done to a beer means it will remain at its highest quality longer. “The less beer is exposed to oxygen, the better,” explains Hunger. “We don’t even use a pumping system to get the beer over. The natural pressure from the tanks alone is enough, so the entire process is relatively easy on the beer.” And with crisp, bright, and refreshing flavors, our river of beer is easy on the taste buds, too.

Join us as we celebrate 30 years of award-winning craft brewing and taste the freshness for yourself by visiting our brewpub. Care to learn more? Sign up for a tour for a closer look at our brewery, our history, and our beer.

Words by Adam Ritterspach

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We are thrilled to announce that the Great Lakes Brewing Company Family of Employees is a Gold Level Sponsor of Pride in the CLE in 2018, thanks to a grassroots effort led by GLBC employee and LGBT Community Center of Greater Cleveland volunteer, Chris McNulty. Chris collected signatures of nearly 100 GLBC employees who all chose to commit their GLBC sponsored charitable dollars to Pride in the CLE. Cultivating communities is part of our GLBC DNA, and we are especially proud of how our family of employees came together to support Pride in the CLE. Great Lakes Brewing Company and our Family of Employees salute Pride in the CLE and send cheers to our LGBTQ friends and family.

See You At Pride!
Great Lakes Brewing Co. beer will be served on tap during the Pride parade and festival at the Great Lakes Brewing Co. Beer Garden on Public Square, Saturday, June 2. Once you’ve picked up a fresh brew, stop by our booth to chat with our GLBC ambassadors and take home some swag. You’ll also find members of our GLBC family marching in the Pride parade. Ask for GLBC beer at Pride in the CLE’s satellite events throughout the city all weekend long!
 

Ride the Fatty Wagon to Pride:
Make our brewpub your Pride in the CLE pre-game and after party destination, and ride our sustainable Fatty Wagon shuttle to and from Public Square. Our shuttle will run from 11AM to 3PM on Saturday, June 2. Just make a purchase in our brewpub or gift shop and ask your server to add a Fatty Wagon shuttle ticket to your bill (tickets are just $1 with purchase).


For more information on Pride in the CLE, click here.

 

Great Lakes Brewing Company
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