Vancouver Sun

Another lockdown spinoff: home brew

- LAURA BREHAUT

Since South Africa’s dry lockdown started in midMarch, pineapple sales have increased by 900 per cent. With bars and bottle shops closed, many have fallen back on homebrewin­g to quench their thirst. Homemade pineapple beer, an establishe­d favourite, is the resounding beverage of choice. In Johannesbu­rg, people once bought 10,000 pineapples per day — that number has surged to 100,000 and prices for the fruit have more than doubled.

From the Zulu mfula mfula to Afrikaans pynappelbi­er, Atlas Obscura reports, the “quite pleasant” drink requires just a handful of ingredient­s: pineapples, sugar, water and an optional sprinkling of baker’s yeast to jump-start fermentati­on. Under different circumstan­ces and using milled grains and hops rather than tropical fruit, Canada is experienci­ng its own homebrewin­g resurgence.

Like many of the crafts people have been immersing themselves in during lockdown — such as sewing, sourdough and woodworkin­g — homebrewin­g involves going back to basics and focusing on fundamenta­ls. Making something from scratch requires patience and dedication to the journey as much as the finished object.

For Chris Jans of Dartmouth, N.S., making his own beer is a source of great satisfacti­on. He’s been homebrewin­g for more than a decade, and now — as manager of online homebrew supply store BrewHQ — he’s dedicated to helping others learn the craft.

“There’s that urge to know the process from start to finish,” says Jans. “It’s a fun hobby and it’s cost-effective, which is a nice bonus. But after it’s all said and done, to drink your beer and share it with your friends — when we can get together again — is a matter of pride.”

Since March, BrewHQ has sold four times as many kits, equipment and ingredient­s than it normally would.

When the craft beer boom began in the early 2000s, some homebrewer­s made the jump from amateur to profession­al microbrewe­ry operations. Others stopped brewing altogether, as fresh and interestin­g beer became readily available.

BrewHQ ships across Canada, and Jans has seen demand swell across a range of products and styles: From entry-level kits that include everything you need to brew your first batch of beer, to advanced all-grain brewing supplies; and from easy-drinking Canadian red lager, to citrusy West Coast IPA.

Jans has been surprised by the number of people looking for a challenge. Whereas a beginner might typically start with an extract kit or partial mash — using malt extract, crushed grains and hops — people have been bypassing simpler methods in favour of allgrain brewing.

“When you’re all-grain brewing, you’re brewing like a microbrewe­ry would — straight from grain. We’re noticing that more and more people are jumping to that top level, whereas 13 years ago when I got started, you took baby steps.”

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