National Beer Day is coming: Raise a pint at one of these local breweries

You have President Franklin Delano Roosevelt to thank if you plan to celebrate National Beer Day on Friday. Because on that day in 1933, FDR took the first step toward ending Prohibition by signing a law that allowed people to brew and sell beer in the United States. Fast forward to 2017 and there are no shortage of breweries, especially in South Florida.

Honor Roosevelt’s legacy or just enjoy raising a pint of craft beer on Friday at these places across the region:

Miami-Dade

Seems like every few months there’s a new brewery popping up around Miami which means there’s an extensive list of beer sampling to be done in the Magic City on April 7.

Little Havana

David Rodriguez was at the vanguard of craft beer in South Florida, helping Matt Kuscher of Lokal in Coconut Grove and Kush in Wynwood become two of the best craft beer bars in South Florida. He, Kuscher and his wife Cici founded the Brew Bus craft beer tour. Their new craft beer bar may raise the bar in Miami. 1547 SW Eighth St., Miami

Doral

The Tank brews three core beers: El Farito IPA, Freedom Tower Amber Ale and La Finca Miami, a wheat saison Byronic brown ale. Their long-awaited taproom opens later this month and they will post the exact date on their website so check it frequently. In the meantime, you can sample their beers at several locations, including Lincoln’s Beard Brewing, just off the Palmetto Expressway and Bird Road. 5100 NW 72 Ave., Miami

Just a few minutes away at M.I.A. Beer Company, tap manager Claudio Menicocci gives the full rundown of the specials on Friday. “We will be selling our 305 Golden Ale for $3.05 all day and we will have a couple of special growler options too. Another of our highlights will be our Aviation Cocktail, a beer-based cocktail that comes in at 16 percent alcohol by volume and has maraschino cherries, violet flowers and lime juice,” he said. 10400 NW 33 St., Miami

Biscayne Bay Brewing Company will have several special features on Friday. They’re going to tap two of their limited release beers, El Roble, an 8.5 percent ABV Scotch ale aged in Woodford Reserve barrels and El Watusi, a 10.1 percent imperial stout, said Owner John Mallea. “We will also have a promotion on Friday for half off all growler fills during happy hour from 3-7 p.m.,” he said.

8000 NW 25 St., Doral

Wynwood

At J. Wakefield Brewing they’re all set for National Beer Day because every Friday they host a Growler Happy Hour with 25 percent off all fills using their 32-ounce growler from noon to 4 p.m. Their regular happy hour starts at 5 p.m. with $1 off all drafts until 7 p.m. They’re known for brewing Hops 4 Teacher IPA, a deep orange India pale ale, and The Stush, a lemony, tart pale golden Berliner Weisse. 120 NW 24 St., Miami

The neighboring Wynwood Brewing Co. already offers happy hour from 4-7 p.m. with $2 off their core beers La Rubia, their American blonde ale, and Pop’s Porter, their robust porter known for its roasted aroma with hints of chocolate and coffee. The seasonals, including barrel-aged beers are $1 off. 565 NW 24 St., Miami

If you’ve already got a growler, bring it in for half off at Concrete Beach Brewery, including their best seller, Stiltsville pilsner. They’ve also got a pair of new beers: a wheat IPA, Tangerica, which is brewed with tangerine peels, and their Imperial Chocolate and Chili Stout, which is made with guajillo peppers and cacao. 325 NW 24 St., Miami

South Miami

Make sure you get to Lincoln’s Beard Brewery Company well before 8 p.m. or you might miss the first release of their single keg of Big Whiskey, their barrel-aged brown that they’ll start pouring at 8 p.m. That’s right before The Bangers, a grunge cover band, hits the stage that night. 7360 SW 41 St., South Miami

Miami Beach

Around longer than all of these in the 305 is the landmark Abbey Brewing Co., where craft beer lovers have been going for years. Brace yourself for an onslaught of specials this day. The list is long and includes a trio of their Trappist beers: Immaculate IPA, their Octoberfest (an imperial stout) and a Swartzweizen dark wheat beer. Florida beers abound, too, and owner Raymond Rigazio is excited about “a special keg of Gravity Brew Labs Biscayne Gold, a Northeastern style IPA packed with tropical fruit and pine aromas and flavors known as the ‘juice bomb’,” he said. 1115 16 St., Miami Beach

Source:  miami.com

Ten New Miami Breweries to Look Out for in 2017

7. The Tank Brewing Company
Owner/founder Carlos Padron and brewers Matthew Weintraub and Moh Saade will open the Tank Brewing Company, which will be home to one of South Florida’s largest tasting rooms. The sprawling, 25,000-square-foot facility will dedicate 4,000 square feet to their new taproom, which can hold nearly 600 guests. Sixteen taps will pour at Tank, which will offer of a mix of guest beers, specialty releases, and a series of core beers: Freedom Tower, an American amber ale; La Finca Miami, a Belgian-style wheat saison; and El Farito IPA. “As a tribute to the city we love and where our team was born and raised,” Carlos Padron says, “a number of our core beers have been named after landmarks in Miami that we feel are an inspiration for us to create something great, artisanal, and handmade.” The Twisted Fork Kitchen will make the Tank one of the few breweries in Florida to have a dedicated kitchen offering a rotating menu of plates meant to be paired with each beer. The brewery will also be home to a cigar store and lounge – an homage to Padron’s close ties to the Plasencia family, of the Plasencia Cigar Company, whom he considers an inspiration.

The Tank uses a 15-barrel system to brew its beer, and plans are in the works to bottle in the next several months. The brewery specializes in a variety of styles, notably Belgian farmhouse and abbey-style ales and recipes historically brewed in Western European monasteries such as dubbels, tripels, and quadrupels.

Source: Miami New Times

WHAT’S BREWING? SOMI’S CRAFT BEER SCENE

The last few decades have been an exciting time for taste buds in America. Sophistication in food and beverage has led to sophistication in tastes, fueling a cycle that has made available ingredients, dishes and drinks that were unheard of just a decade or two ago.

It is no longer odd to see people taking pictures of their food and drink at restaurants and sending those images out to fellow ‘foodies’ (and drinkies?) on social media who also share their excitement for the latest and greatest in flavor and craft. When it comes to drinks, wine definitely paved the way. Starting in the late ‘90s the level of variety, information and the subsequent rise in consumer knowledge of wine skyrocketed, so that today even the casual drinker can confidently state their preference between cab and pinot, or their distaste for oaky chardonnay. Beer is in the throes of a similar burgeoning in specialization and an explosion in variety. In the US, this change started at the grassroots, often led by home brewers turning into craft brewers and working to elevate American beer’s profile among the world’s great libations. The initial stirrings of the craft brewing revival are generally dated back to 1965, when Fritz Maytag purchased the Anchor Brewing Company in San Francisco, and worked to reintroduce styles of beer that had faded over the decades of homogenization and standardization by large brewing conglomerates. At the time, beer in the US was well on its way to becoming the light, limp, lager archetype mostly associated with thirst-quenching and regrettable decisions. Besides Maytag, a few pioneering brewers, writers and scientists started to lay down the groundwork for the coming generation of craft brewers by sticking to their principles and producing beers of character and purity that often emulated the characteristics of old-world styles but with new-world twists. Among his other accolades, Maytag is credited with brewing the first American IPA, a beer style that is now ubiquitous and easily identified.

The rise of craft beer took time, however. In 1986, craft beer represented 0.1% of market share, compared to 95.2% of the share held by just 33 ‘macro’ brewers. Fast-forward 30 years; in 2015 craft beer accounted for 12.2% of the domestic beer market and continues to grow. The last few years in particular have witnessed vertiginous growth, with market share more than doubling since 2011. It’s worth pausing here to define the term ‘craft beer’, because unpacking its meaning goes a long way toward explaining why those who make and drink these beers are so buoyed by pride and passion. The Brewers Association, a trade group focusing on promoting craft breweries and home brewers, with a membership of 3,600 breweries and over 45,000 home brewers, gives this succinct definition: “An American craft brewer is small, independent and traditional.” With a definition like this, it’s no surprise interest in craft beers is on the rise. We can extrapolate from that line that these products are for the most part authentic and crafted by people who pour their heart and soul into what they do, following traditions from generations ago while always looking for ways to improve on them and create something new.

This definition fits neatly into the ethos of the recent culinary renaissance in the U.S. for good reason – when these elements come together, the consumer can expect to be impressed and elevated by tastes and ideas they’ve never encountered before, with plenty of local choices available. While wine-making is hamstrung by the limitations of place and grape variety, beer offers the talented brewer a much broader palette, with changes in grain, hops and a variety of other flavors and additions leading to almost endless permutations of flavor and the opportunity to create highly idiosyncratic brews. This explosion in creativity has boasted exponential growth in our area as well. Florida’s beer scene has undergone intense expansion in the last few years, with around 45 breweries in the state in 2011 roaring into 151 by the end of 2015, and clearly continuing to grow. Production in 2014 (latest figure available) saw Florida produce 1.2 million gallons of craft beer, ranking it 5th in the country for output. The interest in and availability of great brewery products is pervasive, with local bars, restaurants and retailers capitalizing on local craft producers, and our SOMI neighborhood is no exception. Many talented and passionate people are making the best craft beers readily available in our area, and we will take a trip around town to explore those offerings later in this article. For now, however, we’re going to touch base with two locals who are deeply involved in the craft brewing scene in different ways. One, the operator of a landmark brew pub in our area and the other, a home brewer who channels the curiosity and enjoyment that have fueled the growth of craft brewing.

Joe Gallagher, Senior Commercial Broker with NAI Miami, and current Chair of Chamber South, is an avid home brewer. He caught the brewing bug in earnest about five years ago after taking a couple of weekend classes at the now defunct Brew Box, which offered training in production techniques for aspiring brewers. His initial interest in home brewing also included a more personal motivation: to spend more time with two good friends by getting together to make beer. His friends never became as involved in beer-making as he did, although they still get together occasionally at Joe’s house, where the equipment is housed. While his friends saw it as a more casual activity, Joe dove deep, reading and listening to as much as he could on the subject. Besides the intense interest in the brewing process itself, it’s clear that he is drawn by all aspects of the craft brewing industry including the commercial and particularly the social – the camaraderie and sense of community of knowing who the people are that make the product you enjoy and the exact place where the craft takes place. At home, each batch of beer takes him about six weeks on average to make. In very loose terms, the fermentation takes two weeks, then two additional weeks for clarification and settling, with an additional two weeks of bottle-conditioning, where the CO2 develops and the final beer takes shape in the bottle. It’s a work of dedication and precision, and the results aren’t always as expected. Asked about the interests that drew him to home brewing as a craft, Joe says “I always liked beer, and I liked cooking, and this seemed like a natural blending of the two. And it was fascinating because it wasn’t just like cooking: it was more chemistry, it was timing, it was balance of ingredients. It was much more of an intricate process than I was initially aware of.” When it comes to serious hobbies, the better one gets at it, the more complex the process becomes and the higher the expectations, especially when dealing with sometimes rebellious microorganisms. Asked when he started to feel he had a handle on the process, he answers with a chuckle “I still don’t think I have a handle on it.” The conversation turns to the variety and complexity of the processes and ingredients, which is truly staggering. The Brewer’s Association style guidelines include over 150 styles, with around 30 styles of ales and lagers originating in North America alone.

The style is a guideline, so when adding to this the brewer’s craft – the stamp his or her own tastes and decisions make on their unique formulation – the endeavor of knowing about, let alone trying, all these styles can easily become a life-long pursuit. He struggles to pin down his preferred styles, but after some thought he mentions pale ales, ESBs and sours as some of his favorites, always dependent on the occasion, time of year, venue and what producers are available. He adds, “I don’t believe there’s such thing as bad beer, aside from beer that has been incorrectly produced, or is tainted. A lot of people claim certain breweries don’t make good beer, but I believe every beer appeals to somebody and you have to be respectful of that. As a beer community we are very accepting, but once it becomes more of an elitist thing then you start to lose a lot of the sense of camaraderie that we have as beer people.”

The conversation is wide-ranging and turns to his favorite local spots. He mentions Sports Grill and Buffalo Wild Wings as having some of the better selections of craft beers in the area, offering carefully curated choices. He also speaks candidly about his neighborhood microbrewery, Lincoln’s Beard Brewery on Bird Road, which is one of the only breweries in South Dade County. All that he loves about craft brewing is in some way represented by this small neighborhood brewery. He feels their setup is “the perfect scenario” for a neighborhood brewery, in no small measure because they’re close to his home, and the proprietors are former home brewers who got started with investments from their friends. He loves the community feel of the brewery and the proximity of the brewers to the consumers. He has on occasion taken his own home brews in to have them take a look, particularly when he wasn’t sure of a defect in the end result. “They’re really encouraging.” Growth, when it comes to craft industries, is the sought after life-blood but can in some ways completely change the game if it goes on unchecked. Authenticity can get lost when places that start out local and small become bigger and more impersonal, or when they’re absorbed by the large beer conglomerates that they initially sprung up in defiance of. Many craft breweries have been snapped up by large corporations in the past couple of years, and while this is arguably good for some consumers who wouldn’t have found those producers had they stayed small, for the purists and those who love the personal aspect of true craft product it can seem like nothing short of betrayal. This dynamic in some ways hampers the close connection between brewer and consumer, but in the grand scheme of things is a net positive for the craft beer movement. When asked about his views on the growth trend for the industry, his sense is that Miami may not have the demand to add more than about a dozen more breweries, but that as those currently operating become more popular, customers will gravitate to the ones that most suit their tastes and become regular patrons. This, in turn, will push those breweries to expand their operations and seek to add capacity to satisfy demand. Ultimately, he sees the quality of the beer as the main deciding factor in a brewery’s success. As a realtor, Joe has been involved with finding space for a brewery and even working with the city to change zoning restrictions on where breweries may be located within neighborhoods in order to make it happen. “I love breweries, I love that people are doing cool things with beer-making, so to be part of that is just very exciting.” And then I pose the question: do you see yourself setting up shop? Without skipping a beat he responds with a smile, “No! I’m good at what I do, I’m good at real estate. Brewing for me is a hobby, and once it becomes a job it would not be the same.” He recommends that those interested in getting started with home brewing check out MASH, the Miami Area Society of Homebrewers. While he recommends books and podcasts as well, he feels that getting started with a group of like-minded and experienced fellow brewers goes a long way towards home-brewing success.

Titanic Brewing Co. was the first brewpub in the area, and Kevin Rusk, the founder and proprietor, had to go so far as to have the city’s laws changed in order to open its doors. Kevin got his start in the hospitality industry as a thirteen-year-old dishwasher in Maryland, and has worked in restaurants ever since. He came to Miami as a scholarship student in FIU’s Hotel and Restaurant Management program. Around the time he graduated, at the age of twenty-one, he joined a college friend in buying the iconic, and now sadly gone Tobacco Road bar. In 1995 he took a break from day-to-day operations at Tobacco Road and decided to start something on his own and in the intervening year put together the business plan for what would become Titanic Brewing Co. Asked why he decided to open a brewpub, he explains he had had the idea for some time, “Me and my partners at Tobacco Road wanted to start Florida’s first brewpub in the late ‘80s. We were negotiating with the City of Miami for this historic firehouse that they had opened for development bids, they wanted a restaurant there. We wanted to do a brewpub. Brewpubs were unheard of at the time. They weren’t even allowed in the state, so we hired a lobbyist to have the law changed. We didn’t get the site in the end.” He adds, “Then we tried to buy the building north of us and had plans to add a brewery to Tobacco Road, and that didn’t go through either. But it was a dream I always had.” He would see his idea come to life in 1999, when Titanic first opened its doors. Dining at Titanic or sitting at the bar, the large tanks that brewmaster Steve Copland employs in creating the brewery’s signature beers are visible, but it may be unclear to the casual observer just how active a brewery Titanic really is. The brewing process is repeated three times a week, and Kevin says his output is comparable to that of other standalone breweries in the area. Asked why his beer is only sold at the restaurant, he explains, “When I sized this brewery, brewpubs weren’t allowed to sell growlers or distribute their beer. Now we chose to not even sell growlers since we’re almost at capacity.” Taking a careful look around Titanic, it’s easy to see the brewing process come to life from start to finish. It begins in the dining room adjacent to the bar, where the grain room and brewing tanks are located. Beer is made of basically four ingredients: malted grain (most commonly barley); hops for bitterness, aroma and keeping qualities; yeast to convert sugars into alcohol; and water. The small grain room to the left of the imposing copper-colored tanks houses the bags of malted grain along with the hops and other ingredients. The cracked malted grains, also known as grist, are transferred to the brewing room through a hopper, and are then mixed with water and heated, producing was is called the mash. This process makes fermentable sugars available, and once completed, results in a thick, sweet liquid known as wort. The wort is then moved to a separate vessel, where it boils as the hops are added. Once this mixture cools, it is piped over to the large, silver fermentation tanks behind the bar (when at the restaurant, turn your gaze upward, and you can clearly follow the pipes leading out of the brewing room as they make their way along the ceiling). The fermentation and clarification process takes place in those, and once ready, the finished beer is piped over to the giant kegs at the other end of the bar ready to be poured.

Titanic produces six signature beers, with the Triple Screw being their most popular and what Kevin calls a “stepping stone” beer for those not yet initiated into the world of heavier, more full-flavored brews. “Our main beer is a kolsch-style beer, which is a German ale style originating in the area of Cologne. We chose that because it’s very lager-like. I gotta tell you, when we opened nobody knew what an IPA was; it was a totally different world twenty years ago.” He’s seen those trends change, and while the Triple Screw still is his best seller, he’s seen it go from representing 45% of beer sales, down to 27%. People don’t need as much of a stepping stone now that a variety of beer styles, particularly IPAs, have become part of the vernacular. All of the beers produced at Titanic retain a strong European influence and show restraint and balance. The other varieties regularly produced and always available on tap are Captain Smith’s Rye Ale which is a German-style amber ale; White Star IPA, which is an ‘American interpretation of a classic English Ale’; Brittanic Best Bitter, a traditional style ESB; Boiler Room Nut Brown Ale, a traditional-style English brown ale; and the Shipbuilders Oatmeal Stout, a very rich, dark brew. Besides the house favorites, Titanic also hosts seasonal beer-selections, sometimes their own or those of other breweries. They also run a very successful Mug Club, which still boasts many of its original members. For an annual fee, members get engraved oversized mugs that are housed at the restaurant, and are also treated to a free members-only meal and all-day happy hour on Wednesdays. The program is so popular that their waiting list consists of about 400 thirsty aspirants vying for just a couple of spots each year. When asked about his views on the craft beer industry, Kevin is bullish although he feels that while some of the smaller breweries channel genuine passion, their financial fundamentals may sometimes be a bit shaky. Asked about his favorite local brewery, he mentions The Tank Brewery, one of the favorite up-and-coming breweries also mentioned by Joe Gallagher, as offering some of the best-crafted beers in the market, while also having solid long-term staying power. He names their Belgian-style Saisson, named ‘La Finca Miami’ as his current favorite. When enjoying a craft brew at Titanic, make sure to ask the staff about the process of production which is available for all to see and definitely enriches the experience. As you sip your brew, you’ll have a sense of the work and creativity that go into the glass, and you’ll get a glimpse of why ‘beer people’ are so ardently loyal to their drink of choice.

Source: somimag.com

Wynwood West: Craft breweries populating Doral, Kendall

An orange Abraham Lincoln riding an old-timey bicycle peeks over rush-hour traffic on Bird Road and catches your eye from the east side of the Palmetto Expressway with one bold, mouthwatering word against the jet-black building: “Brewery.”

Down there, at the entrace to the Bird Road Arts District on Southwest 41st Street, the equal-part owners of Lincoln’s Beard Brewery sweat through their T-shirts amid wet paint and polyurethane vapors wafting through the open doors as they put the finishing touches on their shared dream.

“Miami’s neighborhood brew pub: That’s what we want to be,” said head brewer John Falco, one of six owners — most of them ex-military at Doral’s U.S. Southern Command — who are betting on beer. “This is my dream.”

Like Lincoln’s Beard, whose orange-and-yellow logo is newly visible above western Miami-Dade, lovers of craft beer — the buzzword for artisanal beer brewed locally in small batches — are moving west to chase that dream.

Three new breweries will come online west of Miami International Airport this year to brew beer in the communities where more Miamians are moving. They will join two in Doral, the third-fastest growing U.S. city: firmly established MIA Beer Company and Biscayne Bay Brewing, whose long-awaited tasting room where beers can be sampled as you would in a bar is set to open in east Doral in early May.

 “The market is ready, and it’s growing,” said Jose Mallea, founder of Biscayne Bay, which has been brewing and distributing beer in Miami-Dade and Broward counties since setting up in Doral in September 2014.

Until now, Wynwood, where there are three breweries within a mile of one another, has been the place to be for beer. But as real-estate prices soar to more than $50 and $60 a square foot in that area, those interested in brewing in large, industrial spaces are looking to Doral, western Miami and Kendall, where rents can be as low as $8 to $12 a square foot.

Even Wynwood’s best-known breweries are looking to set up full-scale breweries outside of their neighborhood as they are squeezed by rents and space constraints.

J. Wakefield Brewing is looking to build a brewery for production only that would make it the largest south of Tampa’s Cigar City Brewing and twice as big as Oakland Park’s Funky Buddha Brewery — capable of brewing a massive 45,000-50,000 barrels of beer a year, founder Johnathan Wakefield said.

And Wynwood’s eponymous brewery, Wynwood Brewing, is looking to be brewing in a large-scale brewery by the end of next year. Their breweries in Wynwood will be more like storefronts where they can experiment with smaller batches of beer.

From Wynwood to the west, the golden beer rush is clearly well under way.

Each brewery has its own style and character, most with a tasting room that acts as a lounge. Food is often available through food trucks or, increasingly, in-house kitchens.

Dropped right between Miami Springs and Doral, The Tank Brewery’s beers will be available in local restaurants and bars in less than two weeks, said founder Carlos Padron, 50, whose day job of handling operations for the Plasencia Group’s cigar import and sales dovetails perfectly with his new endeavor.

The Tank’s tasting room, which is still a study in concrete dust and outlines of future bars on Milam Dairy Road just south of Southwest 58th Street, will have a cigar bar inside when it opens this summer.

Wedged between warehouses, The Tank and other breweries work to make their tasting rooms destinations.

Padron stole away head brewer Matthew Weintraub, 27, from Florida International University, where he was an adjunct professor in the hospitality school, teaching beer-making at the school’s state-of-the-art brew lab. Soon, they’ll be able to make more than 9,300 gallons of beer a month at the Tank.

“I just want people to enjoy the beer,” said Weintraub, whose first offering will be a saison, a so-called farmhouse style with a floral aroma and crisp finish like brut champagne.

Whereas some might see competition, local brewery owners have seen that more craft breweries helps educate non-beer drinkers and those who only know the mass-market, pale, yellow beers such as Budweiser, Heineken and Miller.

“I welcome it with open arms,” said MIA Beer founder Eddie Leon, whose taproom fills up nightly for happy hour with locals. “No two breweries are going to make the same beer, and each taproom provides a different experience. We all do something unique.”

Across from the Tamiami Airport in Kendall, Alberto Cespedes teamed up with two longtime friends, including Jaime Medina, an assistant brewer at Miami’s long-running Titanic Brewery in Coral Gables, to build Spanish Marie Brewing. The company expects to begin distributing its beers in July.

Spanish Marie, whose tasting room is expected to open in the fall, will have the feel of a hidden speakeasy, Cespedes said. He said he hopes it will become a local watering hole for Kendall residents who don’t want to travel to Wynwood or even Doral for quality, locally made beer.

“We want to cater to people who don’t want to drive an hour when they want to get a beer,” he said.

Lincoln’s Beard will brew only for its patrons in-house at its brewery under the bright orange sign visible from Bird Road. Proprietors envision a relaxed bar environment, with live music in the beer garden out back where locals can duck out of rush hour into happy hour. Kendall’s Tacos & Tattoos Mexican restaurant will have a permanent outpost at the brewery.

Florida craft breweries produce more than 35 million gallons of beer a year, according to the Brewers Association — enough to fill Lolita’s tank at the Seaquarium 70 times.

And now, craft-beer drinkers will have more options available in their own Miami neighborhoods.

“We want to integrate fully into the community,” Falco said.

Source: miamiherald.com

The Tank Brewing Brings Cigars and Craft Beer to Miami-Dade County

New Times last spoke with Tank brewmaster Matt Weintraub when he debuted Tank at this past February’s South Beach Wine & Food Festival. Now the brewery has a place to call home. The facility is located slightly northwest of Miami International Airport, at 5100 NW 72nd Ave., in a slice of unincorporated Miami-Dade County that sits between Doral and Virginia Gardens.

The brewery is almost ready. In an interview with Miami’s Craft Commander last week, Weintraub said he hopes to have Tank open either by the end of this year or the beginning of 2016.

The relationship with cigars comes by way of Tank Brewing owner Carlos Padron, whose brewery also shares a space with his other business, Family Tobacco Traders. Before getting into craft beer, Padron was in the business of importing cigars from Central America.

At Tank, combining the two will come in the form of a cigar shop/lounge where guests can smoke a stogy while enjoying a small-batch beer made only several feet away. Minus the taproom and the cigar lounge, the brewhouse is roughly 10,000 square feet and includes extra space for a possible expansion.

Beer and cigars — it seems very Miami, but are they a perfect pair? It all depends upon the beer. Tank is going with flagship La Finca Miami saison. As Tank’s assistant brewer, Moh Saade, describes it, it’s a classic, single-strain saison made with a blend of grains and dry-hopped with German and American hops.

Marrying the sophistication of fine cigars with the craftiness of small-batch brews is part of keep craft beer evolving. “For craft beer to survive, it has to take a face, just like wine, in people’s minds,” Saade told Craft Commander. “Craft beer is not less than wine. It’s not a fad. It’s part of life.”

If you missed trying Tank’s beers at this year’s Grovetoberfest, they are still available on a limited basis. Tank is partnering with Seven Dials October 27 for a four-course beer dinner featuring its line of Belgian monastic-inspired beers. Tickets cost $75 per person. Reservations can be made by calling 786-542-1603 or emailing [email protected].

Source: miaminewtimes.com

Miami’s the Tank Brewing Company to Debut at SoBeWFF

Florida International University‘s brewing club, B.R.E.W. FIU, has become known for not only fostering Miami’s beer industry but also turning out some professional brewers.

Club cofounder Matthew Weintraub is now the brewmaster for the Tank Brewing Company, which will pour its first brews during Thrillist’s Barbecue & the Blues at the Shore Club Hotel February 19 for the South Beach Wine & Food Festival.

Weintraub says the brewery is in the process of becoming operational, ordering equipment and making beer with a pilot system. It’s “all hands on deck” for Weintraub and the brewery’s owner, Carlos Padron.

Padron, a real estate and corporate attorney by trade, is a newcomer to the business of beer, also having imported Honduran cigars from maker Nestor Plasencia for two decades. Padron believes that, like the cigar business in Miami, craft beer is a place to find friendships.

“It’s a fun business because everybody gets along,” he says. “Everybody helps each other out.”

The Tank Brewing has been around since last year, with Weintraub coming on board in July. Before, he was a brewing consultant with Miami Brewing Company. Padron says he met Weintraub last year in a meeting with FIU officials. The company already has several employees.

Weintraub has an assistant brewer, Moh Saade, who’s been working with him for several years and is also a part of B.R.E.W FIU.

Padron says Tank Brewing has a brewhouse picked out and planned. He wants to keep the location secret for now but says it’s somewhere near the airport in unincorporated Miami-Dade County. Padron calls it a “destination location.”

The space is about 7,500 square feet, not including the tasting room, and equipment is in the process of being selected, Weintraub says, adding that the brewing system will be 15 barrels. He’s optimistic that the company will open this year but understands much of the work — from permitting to construction — has yet to be done.

“We’re hoping for an opening this year, but we know how things are,” Weintraub says.

Tank’s SoBeWFF debut is merely the beginning of its push into the consciousness of the Miami beer scene. Weintraub says a couple of beer dinners and other events are planned. With his experience in cigars, Padron is exploring the idea of hosting cigar and beer pairings. For now, though, it’s all about the brew.

Weintraub and Saade will have at least three beers pouring at Thrillist’s February 19 event: Freedom Tower Amber, La Finca Saison, and a black IPA.

The Tank won’t be the only one pouring at the event. Gravity Brewlab, B.R.E.W. FIU, and Daddy Brews will be there too.

Source: miaminewtimes.com