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Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

Memphis Made Brewing Co. to Distribute in Mississippi Beginning this Week

Photo by Brandon Dill, courtesy of Memphis Made Brewing Co.

In a press release today, Memphis Made Brewing Co. announced it will begin distribution of its craft beers outside of Shelby County for the first time since the company’s inception.

The brewery — whose signature beers include Fireside, Cat Nap, and Junt — signed a distribution agreement with Clark Beverage Group, Inc. Expect to see selections from Memphis Made arrive in stores throughout North Mississippi beginning this week.

Drew Barton and Andy Ashby founded Memphis Made Brewing Co. in October 2013, and until now, have only sold their products within Shelby County.

“We’ve been looking at North Mississippi for some time now,” Ashby said in the press release. “People have been asking for Memphis Made beer outside of Shelby County, and we’re happy to finally be able to answer the call. Clark has a great reputation in Mississippi and was the best choice for this expansion.” Photo by Becky Clark

Drew Barton (left) and Andy Ashby

According to the release, Clark will distribute Memphis Made beers into Desoto, Tunica, Tate, Marshall, Panola, Lafayette, Yalobusha, Quitman, Tallahatchie, Bolivar, Coahoma, Sunflower, Washington, Benton, Tippah, Union, Alcorn, Tishomingo, Prentiss, Itawamba, Lee, Pontotoc, Chickasaw, Choctaw, Calhoun, Webster, Oktibbeha, Monroe, Lowndes, and Clay Counties.

“We are very excited to partner with Memphis Made Brewing Company for our entire North Mississippi beer footprint,” Jeff Brasher, vice president of Clark’s Alcohol Beverage Division, said. “We have had numerous requests for Memphis Made in both on-premise and off-premise accounts for many years now, and we are very proud they selected our team to represent them in North Mississippi.”

Memphis Made Brewing Co. is located at 768 S. Cooper St. Its taproom is typically open Thursdays-Sundays but is currently open 4-7 p.m. every day for to-go beer sales. Planning for a second location at 435 Madison is in the works.

Categories
Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

Emergency Rule Allows Restaurants to Sell Beer for Takeout, Delivery

Justin Fox Burks

A temporary rule will allow restaurants and bars to sell beer for takeout and delivery thanks to quick moves by Memphis Mayor Jim Strickland and the Memphis Alcohol Commission (MAC).

The news comes from the Twitter account of Steven Reid, a political consultant and commissioner with the MAC. His tweets about it began Friday. Here’s the thread as the rule move from idea to reality.

Emergency Rule Allows Restaurants to Sell Beer for Takeout, Delivery

Emergency Rule Allows Restaurants to Sell Beer for Takeout, Delivery (2)

Emergency Rule Allows Restaurants to Sell Beer for Takeout, Delivery (3)

Another source sent the text of the MAC’s ruling, approved Saturday morning.

“Due to the declaration of a civil emergency by Mayor Strickland for the City of Memphis, I move that the Alcohol Commission grant permission for all businesses presently holding a lawful ‘on premises’ beer permit issued by the Memphis Permits Office to sell sealed containers of beer to-go, including curb side, drive-through and/or delivery.

“All permittees, their employees-including delivery employees, subject to this motion must continue to follow all applicable federal, state and City laws and ordinances. This motion takes effect immediately upon passage and will remain in effect only for the time until the Mayor of Memphis announces the declaration of Civil Emergency has ended.”

It wasn’t immediately clear what a “sealed container” was exactly. Certainly it’ll include crowlers and growlers but, maybe, bottles and cans, too.

We’ll update this post as we get more information. In the meantime, let’s get a pint (or many) delivered and raise them to some good news for Memphis restaurants. 

Categories
News News Blog

New Bill Would Allow Alcohol Sales at Memphis Zoo

Alcohol can now only be served at the Memphis Zoo during special events like Zoo Brew.

State Senator Brian Kelsey wants you to Zoo Brew all year long.

The Germantown Republican filed a bill Wednesday that would allow “alcohol and beer” to be sold at the Memphis Zoo during regular operating hours. The sale of alcohol at the zoo is now only allowed for fundraising purposes and special events for which zoo officials have to get a permit.

Brian Kelsey

“Revenue from alcohol sales will allow it to upgrade even more of its world-class exhibits,” Kelsey said in a statement. “I’m happy to work with the zoo and with my colleagues from Shelby County to help this treasure of our community.”

A news release from Kelsey’s office said similar legislation was approved by the Tennessee General Assembly last year that allowed the sale of alcoholic beverages at Zoo Knoxville.

“Memphis Zoo sees this as a potential opportunity to raise incremental revenue and provide the option to guests that would like to purchase alcohol during their visit,” said Jim Dean president and CEO of Memphis Zoo.

Memphis Democrat Karen Camper will sponsor the bill in the House. State lawmakers will convene for the 2020 legislative session on Tuesday, January 14th.

Categories
News News Blog

Board Game Bar Could Open in Early 2020

Board to Beers

A Memphis board game enthusiast is looking to open Memphis’ first board-game bar in early 2020.

Taylor Herndon launched a campaign on Kickstarter in hopes of raising $10,000 to open the bar, dubbed Board to Beers.

“This will be a place to build a new community,” the campaign page reads. “A place to set aside the digital world and get the much needed face-to-face interactions that we miss out on in our daily lives. It’s time to let adulting take the backseat for a bit.”

The bar will serve wine, cider, and local beers, as well as food from local food trucks.

So far, Herndon has more than 400 board games ready to stock the bar’s game library and hopes to add more before opening. For a $5 fee, bar-goers will have access to as many games as they like during each visit. “Game masters” will be on site to give gamers instructions and address any questions or concerns.

The bar will host board game tournaments, as well as pop-up shops, D&D, Magic, cosplay, karaoke, and college nights throughout the year.

Board and Beers will offer memberships that allow free game play and discounts on drinks, rentals, and events.

Board to Beers

Gamers at a recent Board to Beers promo night


The bar is hosting a pop-up game night this Friday, December 13th, 6-10 p.m., at the Memphis Botanic Garden, where more than 150 games will be on hand.

It’s $5 dollars to enter. Fare from 9DOUGH1 and local beer will also be for sale. All proceeds will go toward Board to Beer’s future brick and mortar.

Herndon said the bar will be located on Poplar near Chickasaw Crossing. 

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We Recommend We Recommend

Meddlesome Brewing Releases Specialty Beers this Month

Meddlesome Brewing Company has collaborated with Old Dominick Distillery to make something special: bourbon barrel-aged beers.

“Alex Castle, head distiller of Old Dominick, is a friend of ours, and it just made sense,” says Richie EsQuivel, co-owner of Meddlesome. “It’s like, ‘You’ve got bourbon barrels. Let’s put beer in those.'”

EsQuivel and his team decided to try aging five different beers in the used bourbon barrels for nine months to a year.

Josh Richardson

ain’t doodly squat!

“When it gets cold or when it gets hot, the wood expands and contracts,” says EsQuivel. “And when it has liquid in it, it draws the liquid in and then pushes the liquid back out. So, by aging a beer in the wood, a whole bunch of processes go down. Not only are you getting flavors from the wood character of the oak barrel, you’re also getting flavors from the bourbon that was in it before.”

Thus, five unique, locally made bourbon barrel-aged beers were born: Heavy Meddle (wee heavy [Scottish ale]), Full of Sin (imperial stout), Red Hot Mess (imperial red ale), All the Cookies (imperial oatmeal raisin cookie ale), and Devil’s Water (dark strong).

Each Saturday in November, they’re releasing them one at a time as the brewery’s first series of packaged (and giftable) beers.

This week, they’re releasing Red Hot Mess, inspired by Old Dominick’s Memphis Toddy, made with cinnamon sticks and Red Hots candies. And at 10 percent ABV, each two-pack of beer is perfect for sharing.

“You can drink one by yourself, but you might be a red hot mess when you’re done,” EsQuivel jokes.

Month of Madness, Meddlesome Brewing Company, 7750 B Trinity, Suite 114, Cordova, Saturday, November 16th, noon until sold out, $15/bottle, limit of two bottles per customer, cannot be consumed on premises.

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We Recommend We Recommend

Beer for the Wiesn at Crosstoberfest Saturday

Can’t make it to Munich for Oktoberfest but still want to celebrate? Don’t fret. You’ll be able to sample German-style beers at Crosstown Brewing Co.’s second annual Crosstoberfest.

“It’s probably the best opportunity to get the full-on German Oktoberfest experience, but in Memphis,” says Clark Ortkiese, owner of Crosstown Brewing.

While this one-day celebration isn’t as long as Germany’s official multiple-day beer-drinking holiday, guests will feel like they’re in Germany, with authentic decor, stein-hoisting competition, bratwurst-eating competition, live German music, and more. All of this with their seasonal Crosstoberfest festbier or the summer seasonal German pilsner, Terraplane, in hand makes for a prime in-town Oktoberfest getaway.

Crosstown Brewing Co.

Raise a stein at Crosstoberfest.

A craft beer tent will offer free samples of Crosstown Brewing’s German beers and other brews, and beer representatives will be available to answer questions.

“Bell’s Brewery [from Michigan] will also be there offering some of their wares, like a brown ale and their Oktoberfest beer,” says Ortkiese.

To soak up all of the tasty brews in your system, an array of food trucks and booths, such as Flying Saucer and New Wing Order, will be on-site.

“And one of our neighbors, Next Door American Eatery, will be here,” says Ortkiese. “They’re good friends of ours, and we love hanging out with them.”

Crosstoberfest is open to the whole family, with live performances by Mighty Souls Polka Band (with Sean Murphy of the Mighty Souls Brass Band) and DJ Oompahstar, shopping, and a multitude of children’s activities, like face painting, pumpkin decorating, and an Art-Toberfest crafts area for coloring and painting.

The best part?

“This event is free to attend,” says Ortkiese. “That’s been a big part of the things that happen at Crosstown Concourse that we love.”

Crosstoberfest, Crosstown Brewing Co., Saturday, October 12th, 11 a.m.- 7 p.m., free.

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We Recommend We Recommend

Beer Logic Seminar Benefits JDRF

Joseph Tillman, a bike rider for JDRF Ride to Cure’s West Tennessee Chapter and for Logistics Leaders, is participating in a JDRF ride throughout Death Valley this year. And to help raise funds for the organization, Tillman has partnered with beer history connoisseur Chad Philbeam to host a Beer Logic seminar, with the subject “Everything you ever needed to know, you learned from beer.”

“I was talking to a friend about doing a wine tasting, but we couldn’t figure anything out. I got to talking with Chad Philbeam, and I was like, you know what? Beer’s better,” says Tillman. “Chad’s a beer fanatic who relates everything back to beer and how something like beer has impacted your life.”

(center) Joseph Tillman

Tillman first heard about JDRF when his friend and colleague, Adrian Gonzalez, told him that his daughter, who was struggling with Type 1 Diabetes, had trouble finding spots on her fingers to prick for blood tests. “It was really heart-wrenching for him,” says Tillman. “That’s when he started a ride team for Ride to Cure called Logistics Leaders.” Fueled by that and seeing other loved ones, like his grandmother and neighbor, struggling with the disease, Tillman decided to join the cause.

Anyone interested in helping the cause and attending Beer Logic will receive three beer pints with admission. Attendees can also purchase raffle tickets to earn prizes like a two-night stay at The Park Vista in Gatlinburg, Tennessee. Ultimately, Tillman says, “Come out to laugh, learn, drink beer, and help fight Type 1 Diabetes.”

Beer Logic Benefiting JDRF, Memphis Made Brewing Co., Saturday, August 3rd, Two show times at 2 p.m. and 5 p.m., $45 in advance ($80 for couples) or $50 day of show ($90 for couples).

Categories
Food & Wine Food & Drink

Whiskey Barrel Beers

On a ramble through Kentucky’s Bourbon Fest a few years ago, I happened across a most Kentuckian innovation: ale aged in bourbon barrels. These days, it isn’t as random — or Kentucky — as it seems. Goose Island Brewing has been monkeying around with a Bourbon County Stout since the 1990s. So, bourbon-barrel beer? It’s worth a try.

Likely as a result of the bourbon boom in the last decade, brewers have been trying the same technique with lighter styles. With the surge of popularity for bourbon, a “two great tastes that taste great together” experiment seems to be happening, making bourbon-barrel beer the boozy version of a peanut butter cup. The bourbon boom has also done something else — made used whiskey barrels a lot cheaper.

This is because bourbon distillers, by law, can use those charred white-oak barrels for mellowing moonshine into the nectar of the Gods only one time. Making beer, on the other hand, is a short-term process; no one wants a beer that’s a couple of years old. Whiskey needs several years in barrels to take away the harshness of the freshly made stuff. The barrels expand and contract with seasonal temperature fluctuations, so that the whiskey soaks into and out of the charred wood — which makes Kentucky, with its hot summers and cold winters, the perfect place to make the stuff. Wood is porous, so there is evaporation — called the “angels’ share” — of up to 1 percent of the volume per year. The angels’ share doesn’t all go into the air, however; a fair bit stays in the wooden staves.

The barrels are perfectly good, but can’t be reused if the product is going to legally be classed as bourbon. Traditionally, these gently used barrels were sold to Scotch distillers to help recoup costs. That still happens, but bourbon production is now so high that there are more barrels than the Scots need, so they are being used to age sherry, brandy, tequila, and, yes, beer.

Storing beer in whiskey barrels draws that angels’ share out and into the beer. Traditional stainless steel vats provide more precision in the beer-brewing process. No two used barrels are exactly alike, so what you get when you pull the bung and pour out the beer is always going to be a bit of a mystery. Which is a great story of craft, but how does it taste?

Brewery Ommegang out of New York has a smoked vanilla porter made with light, smoked malt as well as chocolate malt. The porter is aged in bourbon barrels for six months with whole vanilla beans. It sounds expensive, and it is expensive. It is also very deep and — words fail me — luscious. But with an ABV of 8.9 percent, no one is going to be funneling this stuff. It pours and looks like a Guinness, but although rich, sits a lot lighter. The weather and the seasons being what they are in Memphis, I was looking for a lighter version. Which led me to Boulevard Brewing Company’s Rye on Rye out of Kansas City. While I’m not a huge fan of rye ales, this one doubled down, aged in whiskey barrels from Templton Rye — which I really do like. Over all, it hit the spot. It was light enough, but had that lovely rye spice imparted by those wonderful whiskey-logged barrel staves. Spicy yes, with vanilla and hops, and a nice clean finish that doesn’t leave you looking for a toothbrush.

The great thing is that these two beers taste nothing alike. Barrel-aged beers are all different. To Memphis’ craft brewers, I say this: In a few years, Old Dominick is probably going to have a lot of whiskey barrels it can no longer use. Now you know what to do with them.

Categories
Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

2019 Beer Bracket Coming at Ya!

Folks, let’s all raise a beer! The 2019 Beer Bracket Challenge is returning February 11th. Duking it out for the title of Best Beer of Memphis 2019 will be Crosstown, Meddlesome (last year’s champ!), Wiseacre, Memphis Made, High Cotton, and Ghost River.

The bracket has been shaken up a little this year, with new categories.

Toby Sells, who is in charge of the editorial side of this gig, explains, “Instead of limiting selections to just dark, light, IPA, and seasonal, we want to let our breweries choose which four beers they want to compete. It’ll be a sort of Royal Rumble, winner-take-all kind of thing.”

Sells says, “This year, we’re giving each brewery on opportunity to change one match-up they don’t like. Is your beer up against 201 Hoplar (last year’s winner)? Breweries can swap with another beer in another match up. But they can only do that one time.”

Voting begins Wednesday, February 13th with the first round. Rounds last two days, with the last and fifth round running through February 22nd. Basically, it’s Beer: Thirty all the time!

Beers face off NCAA-style. The beer with the most votes moves on. The final two beers left go head-to-head. The winner will be announced on Thursday, February 28th via Facebook Live.

And if that’s not interactive enough for you, you can get in on the action by taking a picture with one of the competing beers to be entered for a prize. And, all those who vote are entered to win a prize.

But wait that’s not all! All Memphis beer fans are invited to Aldo’s Downtown to watch the seeding on Monday, February 11th, at 4:30 p.m. p.m. And then back again at Aldo’s for the awarding of the VanWyngarden Cup to the winning brewery on February 28th, 3 p.m. Be there!

“We started the Beer Bracket Challenge to promote (and have fun with) Memphis beers and those who make it,” says Sells. “Brewers are fun and hard-working folks and they’re making some of the best damn beers in the U.S.of A. right here in Memphis, Tennessee.”

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Rassle Me Sports

Meddlesome Brewing releases Jerry ‘The King’ Lager

Watch out Budweiser, the “King of Wrestling” is coming for your throne as the “King of Beers.” This week, Memphis-based Meddlesome Brewing Company is rolling out its newest offering: Jerry “The King” Lager.

“A while back I was contacted by someone from the brewery who explained to me they make beers with names that are familiar with Memphis,” Jerry Lawler said. “One was 201 Hoplar and they had the idea to do a Jerry ‘The King’ Lager. I thought it sounded fun, so I gave them the go ahead to use my name.”

Lawler, who prides himself on never having a sip of alcohol in his entire life, now has a beer named in his honor to go along with his bar located on the drunkest street in town. When asked if he would end his 68 years of sobriety to taste the beer named in his honor, the King said “I’ve never tasted beer, wine, or whiskey in my life and I’m not going to start just because one’s named after me.”

(I did get a chance to sample Jerry “The King” Lager last Saturday live on the radio. Listen here for my taste test.)

Available for a limited time, Jerry “The King” Lager will make its debut at Jerry Lawler’s Hall of Fame Bar & Grille during a Monday Night Raw watch party featuring a meet and greet with WWE Hall of Famer Mick Foley.

Starting Wednesday, the lager will be on tap at the brewery’s taproom, which is conveniently located for wrestling fans wanting to spend a day in Cordova. According to Google Maps, Meddlesome Brewing is just a two-minute drive to the King’s other restaurant- Jerry Lawler Memphis BBQ Company. You can’t buy Meddlesome beers in stores yet; however the taproom will offer the beer “to go” in 32-ounce cans and 64-ounce growlers.

Meddlesome is not the first Memphis-area brewery to embrace the Bluff City’s relationship with pro wrestling. Memphis Made Brewing’s taproom has a Royal Rumble pinball machine and often serves as the host venue for my regular Rasslin’ Trivia Nights. Wiseacre Brewing has made some short-lived wrestling-themed adult beverages (a taproom-only release of Sandy Ravage’s The Cream and an experimental keg of Cocoa B. Ware Brown Ale), and they spotlighted Memphis wrestling as the theme of their annual mural outside their brewery in 2015.



For those local brewmasters looking for a Memphis rasslin’ inspired name for your next beer, I present to you this list (insert Chris Jericho joke here) free of charge:

  • “SuperStout” Dundee
  • Double J Double IPA
  • Dave Brown Ale
  • Mr. Coffee Stout
  • USWAle
  • Banana Nose Wheat Ale
  • “Stout of the South” Jimmy Malt
  • Plowboy Porter
  • Jackie FarGolden Ale
  • Mid-South ColiSasion

Listen to Kevin Cerrito talk about pro wrestling on the radio every Saturday from 11-noon CT on Sports 56/87.7 FM in Memphis. Subscribe to Cerrito Live on Apple Podcasts, Google Play, tunein, PlayerFM or Sticher. Follow him on Twitter @cerrito.