Alberta beer week kicks off with a taste of Unity - Action News
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Alberta beer week kicks off with a taste of Unity

50 Alberta craft brewers have teamed up to create a new brew to celebrate Alberta Beer Week and to raise a little money for the province's micro brewers.

Craft brewers team up to spread the word about the rise of the local brew

Fifty Alberta craft brew makers combined to create Unity Brew. (Haydon Dewes)

Beer columnist Haydon Dewesvisited the Calgary Eyeopeneron Friday to talk about Alberta Beer Week (Oct. 19-27) with host David Gray. This interview has been edited for clarity and length.

Q: What's the story behind Unity Brew?

A:This is when all of the brewers in the province get together for oneday and brew a beer together. It basically consists of oneperson doing all the work and the other 49 standing around telling them what to do.

Q: What's it taste like?

A: For this one, there was a bit of back and forth on email, trying to decide on the recipe.

They opted for something called the Alberta Maltster's Red Ale. What they've done is taken malt from five Alberta maltsters. If folks out there don't know, Albertamakes half of Canada's barley. We are a massive barley producer and there's a ton of small, little craft maltsters as well just little small shopsthat take barley from the farm, malt it and then use it for beer.

Q: I just spoke to a farmerwho said they're having a terrible year for growing barley. Will this be a problem for craft brewers?

A:I really hope not. Eighty per centof barely is made for cattle feed; the rest is beer. The ones that use it for beer, it's quite specialized. So I've got fingers crossed. After all: no malt, no beer.

Q: What's it taste like?

A:It's a pretty rare style, actually. You don't see many red ales around. It usually goes from light ones straight to dark. This is sort of that middle of the road beer. It shows off the malt.

It's smooth. It's got some caramel and chocolate, a little bit of roastiness in there. It's anice sipping one, whereas hoppy beer tends to lose its flavour straight away. This one is going to keep getting alittle bit better over the next couple of weeks.

Alberta craft brewers gather at the Blindman brewery in Lacombe, Alta., to create Unity Brew, a collective effort. (Haydon Dewes)

Q: Where is it sold?

A:It's only sold at Albertabreweries or tap rooms. All the money goes back to the Alberta Small Brewers Association, which is the support group for small brewers in the province.

Q: Why is there much unity? Everywhere you turn, there's another craft brewer. Isn't it time for some cutthroat competition?

A:The craft brewing industry is still so small compared to the macro brewing industry thatit's still a situation where we believe that a rising tidelifts all boats.

We're working together to basically get some of that bigger market share. We will until we reach that point where craft beer becomes a much bigger chunk of the market it's still tiny so most of the beer being sold out there is still made by massive international conglomerations.

People are still working together. They're a good bunch of people.

They like their craft. That's why the craft is in there. It's all about your interesting, uniquely crafted product, made straight from the land here in Alberta. It's great. When you get 50 different companies together to make one product andsell it for the common good of the industry, it's pretty rare for that (to happen).

CBC Beer columnist Haydon Dewes holds a can of Unity Brew, which was created by a coalition of 50 Alberta craft brewers. (Haydon Dewes)

Q: How big is Alberta Beer Week?

A:Its getting bigger and bigger. I was on the show one year ago, talking about this, and at that point, there were 67 breweries. There are now 90 breweriesin Alberta. By Christmas, we should be up to 100. There are a bunch morejust waiting to open their doors as well.

If you go onto Alberta.beer that's the website for for the Alberta Small Brewers Association there's listing of all of the events happening this week.It ranges from free samples to tours to new beers to beer and food pairing. And then there's one great event, next Wednesday night, at Last Best Brewing Companydowntown. It's the IPA Tap Takeover. So they've got 36 breweries from across Albertawho all submit an IPA and you can get a sample of each one at Last Best.

So if you're doing really well that night, you can try 36 different IPAs made by Alberta brewers in one spot.

Q: Can we look forward to someone creating a cannabis-infused beer?

A:I don't think we will get it.

My understanding is its illegal to blend cannabis and beer together. But hops is in the same family as cannabis, so you're going toget a lot of beer that tastes like hops thenew beer that Banded Peak just put out, their double IPA, has got a very cannabis sort of aroma in play. There's no cannabis (in it), but it sure does smell like it.

With files from theCalgary Eyeopener.