Category: breweries

Building the Brewery: Surly Brewing Co.

And Now for Something Completely Different
In terms of craft beer in Minnesota, Surly & MNBeer sort of “grew up” together, launching around the same time and watching the beer scene grow steadily. I’m sure some of you remember tasting their beers for the first time at Winterfest in 2006 (bonus: remember Omar with long hair?). Instead of detailing their very interesting past (which is much better heard at the brewery while enjoying a Furious anyways), I will be sharing the insights of Surly’s president, Omar Ansari, about the plans for Surly’s new destination brewery. I should say here that I first talked to Omar about his ideas for the new brewery while at an event to celebrate Surly selecting HGA Architects (my employer) to design it. While I may be biased about their choice of architect, this feature isn’t going to be about the design, but about the concept, and of course, the beer.

A New Brewery the Surly Way
In May of 2011 the “Surly bill” was signed into law, allowing breweries producing under 250,000 barrels a year to sell their own beers on site. This law change cleared the way for Surly to begin planning their $20 million destination brewery, which will include a brewhaus, beer hall, restaurant, event center and an outdoor beer garden. The planning is still in the very early stages. Omar compared it to actually starting the brewery, “It’s a slow process. This in many ways is much harder than building the brewery the first time around. The only people I had to convince then were my family and Todd, and then get the building ready. Now there are so many moving pieces. We have to work with the city, the county, architects, lawyers, bankers, land sellers and neighborhood groups. It’s a much bigger undertaking. From idea to brewery the first time around it took 2 years. We started thinking about this in 2010 and we’re shooting for opening the new location in 2014.”

The big missing piece is the site location. So much of what the new brewery will be like is dependent on what site they have to work with. Though a Prospect Park location has received some serious attention as of late,  nothing has been finalized on this front yet. Omar simply joked, “People always have lots of thoughts on where the brewery should be. Usually it’s within stumbling distance of their house.” While it can’t be in everyone’s neighborhood, it’s important to be located in a place that is densely populated and has easy access via public transit and on bike. Offers from many suburbs are attractive, but just don’t fit with what they’re trying to achieve.

He and Todd have always felt that this project would be urban. He talked about breweries around the country that have gone into depressed industrial areas and helped to revitalize their neighborhoods. They’re having trouble finding a spot like that here. He explained the difficulty they’re facing, “We need a certain size site and there just aren’t that many spots available in Minneapolis, which is a good thing. The Twin Cities doesn’t have these old vacant areas. Things are so developed.”

Although the exact location isn’t yet determined (which means we can all keep dreaming about it being in our neighborhoods for the time being), Omar shared some of the details about the new brewery that I’m sure MNBeer readers will find equally important. By this, I mean he told me about the plans for the beer.

Doing What’s Best for the Beer

The new location will open with Surly’s current line up, but he hopes to have 15 to 20 of their beers on tap in time. As production moves to the new facility, the Brooklyn Center location will be devoted to what he calls “wild” beers (he mentioned a barrel aged Darkness and it set my heart aflutter). It’s no secret that Surly can’t make enough beer right now. He explained, “The constant struggle is that everyone wants more Furious, but they also want more of the anniversary and specialty beers.”

It’s been inferred before that Omar has prevented Todd from being as creative as he could be. The reality is that in their Brooklyn Center location, there just isn’t enough space to do all of the barrel aging and other creative brewing that they’d like to do. This will change when the new facility gets up and running. Having a 25,000 square foot facility for barrel aging and sour beers is a luxury that not many other breweries have. This is another indication that the Surly way of doing things isn’t going to fall by the wayside with their new increased production capabilities.

In the past, Surly has tried to go into other markets and had to pull out because they were having a hard time meeting demand. With an increase in brewing capacity of 100,000 barrels a year they could try to reestablish themselves in those abandoned markets, but that isn’t necessarily what is best for the beer. He emphasized the importance of meeting local demand, “We’re brewing all the beer we can brew. We’re going to have to make enough to meet Minnesota demand first and it’s hard to know what exactly that is at this point. So if this doesn’t get us back into those markets, I guess we never will. There’s only so much you can do to grow.”

First public tour. Not the short goatee!

One of Omar’s chief concerns about the increase in production was whether they’d be able to get enough raw materials. He assured me that they were able to secure contracts for their ingredients, “Getting those particular hops contracted was important. And if we didn’t, we’re building this big facility and what would we brew? We were able to lock that down, so we’ll be able to grow with the brands that folks know and love and maybe even make some of the smaller ones bigger.”

Speaking of ingredients, Surly’s fresh-hop beer, Wet, recently hit the market. This is Omar’s favorite Surly beer and he explained why, “it’s a delicious beer and a lot of work goes into it. We had two tanks fabricated just to make it. It’s an unbelievably laborious process. We don’t sprinkle a little bit of hops on it; all the hops are wet hops. It doesn’t necessarily make a lot of sense in many fashions, but it embodies the way we do things.” Whenever Omar and Todd are confronted with a decision, they always bring it back to what is going to make the best beer.

Going from the new kids in the Minnesota beer scene to veteran brewers making some of the best loved local beers in just six short years shows that doing what’s best for the beer is much appreciated by consumers. Omar is a little bit in awe of the success they’ve experienced, “What’s happened to us is nothing that me or Todd or anyone else would have ever thought would happen. We always thought we would brew beers that literally didn’t belong in every bar and liquor store.” Fortunately for and thanks to Minnesota beer drinkers, that is not the case.

Lift Bridge Harvestör Cask Tapping at Ngon Bistro Today

St. Paul’s first cask of Lift Bridge Harvestör Fresh Hop Ale gets tapped at Ngon Vietnamese Bistro right after work: 5pm-7pm.

Hai has some great patio menu items including:

  • Anise braised Thousand Hills short ribs on baguette with arugula and pickled sprouts and scallons
  • Curry tempura Lake Superior Herring with sweet potatoes fries and spicy aioli
  • Grilled five spice sausage made with Fischer Farms pork
  • Spring Rolls made with organic greens, mint, vermicelli noodles, shrimp & BBQ pork

Enjoy some Harvestör and celebrate the last few patio days of the year!

Harvestör Details

Beer style: Fresh Hop Ale
ABV: 6.5%
IBU: 60
SRM: 13

Description: Constant addition of fresh, organic Cascade hops from Hippity Hops Farms in Forest Lake, MN. Aromatic and caramel malts compliment the hop character for an incredibly balanced beer that celebrates the hop harvest without killing your tongue.

Surly Tap Takeover Tonight at Muddy Waters

From 2pm – close today Muddy Waters is getting all Surly on your proverbial ass. Muddy’s will feature 17 Surly beers, apparently “the most Surly beers on tap, at once, at one establishment, EVER!”

Beer List:
Furious, Cynic, Bender, Coffee Bender, Five, SŸX, Hell, Fiery Hell, Bitter Brewer, Cacao Bender, Darkness, SurlyFest, Wet, Bandwagon, Schadenfreude, Smoke and Mild.

Tap prices will range between $5.50 – $7 and Muddy Waters will also offer a special Hell beer cheese dog for $5.

Surly Brewing Co. in Prospect Park?

Could we see a witch’s tower in the background or foreground of this drawing someday?

Earlier today, the Star Tribune reported that Surly is working with the city of Minneapolis to apply for envorinmental remediation grants to clean up a site of a former food processing plant in Prospect Park near University Avenue, SE.

A city list of companies seeking grants pegs the Surly proposal at $2.5 million for cleanup costs. The document says plans call for a 50,000-square-foot structure housing a brewery and beer hall, as well as adjacent recreation space and festival gardens “to the extent feasible.” Site design also includes 40,000 square feet “mostly for expanded brewery operations.” Total projected cost is $23.5 mllion.

A statement from Surly Brewing Company this afternoon confirms that the Malcolm Midway site has indeed risen to the top of their list, but it is certainly not a done deal at this point. The brewery says it will continue to vet the short list of location options for its destination brewery. To sum things up, “…this is a 100-year decision so we are being mindful, patient, and thorough with our search.” (Read the statement in its entirety below.)

Back in June, thanks to a report from Beerpulse, a crafty MNBeer commenter, TripleT, first dug up the real estate listing for a space that fit the bill for the 8.5 acre plot in Minneapolis described in the Beerpulse story. (Here’s our story.)

Short of having the brewery in your own backyard, what are your thoughts on the location, dear readers? Its proximity to highway 280/94 and light rail, as well as Minneapolis, St. Paul, the U of M and to a lesser extent Midway Stadium and the State Fairgrounds are certainly nice. Perhaps that area of the Twin Cities will become hope to our next “brewery boom”? St. Paul Planning Commission notes mention that another brewery project, Bang Brewing, is looking at a spot on the other side of highway 280 on Capp Road. Hmmm…

Surly Brewing Company continues to vet the short list of location options for its $20 million Destination Brewery. As the due diligence moves forward, the “Malcolm Midway Site” (a demolished food processing plant West of Highway 280 and a short distance from University Ave) has risen to the top of the list, though it’s not a done deal and much needs to happen for it to become a reality. The “Malcolm Midway Site” has strong attributes: it straddles Minneapolis and St.

Paul, it’s steps away from bike trails and public transportation, including a new light rail transit station, it’s zoned and sized well for our project and it complements the Neighborhood’s Master Plan for redevelopment of the area. There are cons too, one of which is preparing the site for development after its variety of industrial uses over more than a century.

The “Malcolm Midway Site” has many proponents for Surly’s plans. The City of Minneapolis and Hennepin County have been incredibly supportive as we’ve done our environmental investigation to test viability. That said, there is substantial work to be done at the site even before we’d put the first shovel in the ground to build the new brewery. The land preparation and legwork that goes into making a former industrial site ready for new development isn’t uncommon for an urban project. In fact, it’s expected. The various stakeholders are excited about the prospective site for Surly’s Destination Brewery because it will result in jobs, it will help refresh the area, and it will be a community gathering point for generations to come. Those are some of the reasons government leaders have been so supportive and active in helping to make the “Malcolm Midway Site” a strong contender for Surly.

To balance the mutual benefits of the proposed development against the substantial costs to rectify soil and environmental challenges, Surly has begun the application process for grant funding to cover some of the cost for the site’s preparation and cleanup. It’s standard operating procedure for the development of an urban site, and is part of the reason why the Twin Cities is always regenerating and redeveloping areas of the community to make them more productive and better overall destinations. We are hopeful that our project fits within the parameters of the grant qualifications for these competitive grant sources including Hennepin County, the Metropolitan Council and the State of Minnesota. The competitive grant application process has begun, applicants and projects will be assessed over the coming months and awards are announced next January.

While the “Malcolm Midway Site” is an attractive option for this project, it’s not the only option and we continue our due diligence investigation on other site options in Minneapolis and beyond. As we’ve said before, this is a 100-year decision so we are being mindful, patient, and thorough with our search. We are looking forward to getting more Surly soon!

Mankato Brewery Center Street Series

Mankato Brewery has announced their next beer, Center Street Series #1, a draft-only limited-release American Amber Ale, said to be “crafted with tradition in mind, but always with a little MB twist.”

If you’d like to try this beer, head to Pub 500 in Mankato at 5:00 today for the release party!

Beer Details:

Style: American Amber Ale
OG: 13P
IBU: 26
ABV: 5.8%
COLOR: Amber