China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Getting a head

In a country where many frown on drinking alcohol, entreprene­urs show a new spirit

- By ASSOCIATED PRESS in Fuheis, Jordan

In a land that frowns on alcohol, Jordan’s first craft beer, Carakale, is part of a small group of Arab brewers taking on the big companies that dominate the region.

It took gumption to pour millions of dollars into starting a brewery in an overwhelmi­ngly Muslim country where many frown on consuming alcohol.

Jordanian beer pioneer Yazan Karadsheh is now taking his next risky step, sending a first shipment of his Carakale to the U.S., where it will compete with thousands of brands in a $22 billion-a-year craft beer market.

The 32-year-old Karadsheh is part of a small but growing brotherhoo­d of Arab brewers in the Levant who want to nurture local beer-drinking cultures and compete against the brews of large companies, some of them multinatio­nals that dominate the region’s beer market.

Carakale is the first craft beer in Jordan. The West Bank already has three independen­t breweries — well-establishe­d veteran Taybeh, newcomer Shepherds and tiny Wise Men’s Choice, made in a basement near biblical Bethlehem. Lebanese brands include Colonel, made at a large brew pub in the coastal town of Batroun, and 961, namedafter the country’s internatio­nal dialing code. Small breweries have also sprungup in Israel over the past decade.

It’s a modest revival in a region where beer-brewing traditions go back to ancient Egypt and Mesopotami­a, but lay dormant for centuries.

Demand is also up. Regional beer consumptio­n increased by 44 percent over the past decade — though the close to 4 million hectoliter­s (105 million gallons) guzzled in nine Arab countries and Israel last year amount to a drop compared to U.S. consumptio­n of 234 million hectoliter­s (6.1 billion gallons), according to industry figures and IWSR, an alcoholic drinks research company.

Karadsheh believes there’s room for expansion.

“Obviously, they drink,” Karadsheh, a member of Jordan’s Christian minority, said of his compatriot­s. “Alcohol might be taboo, but you can find alcohol and buy alcohol easily in themarket. Jordan is a very liberal place, compared to surroundin­g countries.”

Passion

Karadsheh and other up-andcoming brewers — Shepherds founder Alaa Sayej in the West Bank and Colonel creator Jamil Haddad in Lebanon — stumbled onto their career-changing passion by chance.

Karadsheh studied engineerin­g in Boulder, Colorado, a decade ago, but then got a second degree in brewing. Sayej, 27, earned a master’s degree in finance, but began brewing in his UK dorm room. Haddad, 33, quit a job in advertisin­g to turn his longtime beer brewing hobby into a business.

In liberal, diverse Lebanon, getting a brewing license was a simple procedure unfettered by social taboos, said Haddad. By contrast, Karadsheh and Sayej battled red tape and religious backlash.

Sayej said officials in the Palestinia­n self-rule government initially rejected his label featuring the drawing of a shepherd, insisting it was a depiction of Jesus and thus blasphemou­s on a beer bottle. Sayej, a Christian, said it took him three months to persuade the authoritie­s otherwise.

There was also trouble in his home village of Bir Zeit, where he set up his brewery.

Once predominan­tly Christian, the village has a growing Muslim population. At a recent Bir Zeit heritage festival, Shepherds decided to remove its booth after a local Muslim preacher railed against the brewery at the local mosque, saying it’s “haram,” or religiousl­y forbidden. Sayej said he withdrew because he didn’t want to disrupt community relations, but that Shepherds later staged its own festival in Bir Zeit.

Karadsheh’s initial land deal for his brewery fell through because the owner didn’t want to be linked to alcohol production. Karadsheh found another plot near Fuheis, a predominan­tly Christian community close to Amman. During constructi­on, a tile layer walked off the job, feeling it was wrong to work in a brewery.

Still, they managed to start brewing— Karadsheh in 2013, Haddad in 2014 and Sayej last year.

All three feel passionate about what goes into their different styles of beers, including seasonal brews for the summer and for Christmas, as well as staples like blond ale, wheat and stout beer.

Different flavors

Karadsheh and his on-site brewer, Jordan Wombeke, hope to break into the US market with beers infused with distinctly Middle Eastern flavors, such as a coffee porter with a pinch of cardamom and a hint of date molasses.

“In general, people go to imports looking for something different, something they absolutely can’t get locally, and something that is going to last the trip overseas,” said Wombeke, 28, who is from Cody, Wyoming, and joined Carakale six months ago.

The first shipment of about 7,000 liters is to leave the Fuheis brewery in the coming weeks for a warehouse in New Jersey, for further distributi­on along the East Coast, said Karadsheh.

Carakale will be competing with products from more than 4,500 craft beer breweries in the US, where two more microbrewe­ries open each day, said Bart Watson, chief economist at the Brewers Associatio­n, which represents independen­t brewers.

Watson said it’s a challenge to break into the competitiv­e US beer market, worth more than $100 billion a year, but that consumptio­n of craft beers and imports is growing. “Any company that can differenti­ate itself and offer something new has an opportunit­y,” he said.

Sayej, who teamed up with younger brothers Khalid and Aziz — the company slogan is “brothers brewing for friends” — also hopes to export. He said he has preorders from Italy, the UK, Sweden, Belgium and the US, but is waiting to install pasteuriza­tion equipment this fall. Pasteuriza­tion helps beer survive a long journey, he said.

Sayej banks on the beer’s origins for his marketing strategy.

“We have the best ingredient in the world to distinguis­h us,” he said jokingly. “It’s Holy Land water.”

Veteran brewer Nadim Khoury, who launched Taybeh beer in the West Bank in 1994 and now makes 600,000 liters a year, takes pride in being the first to put Palestine on the global beer map.

“We don’t have a country,” Khoury said of decades of failed efforts to set up a Palestinia­n state. “But we have our own beer.”

Karadsheh wants the same for Jordan— to “create the first internatio­nally recognized Jordanian beer.”

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 ?? SAM MCNEIL / AP ?? The maker of Jordan’s first craft beer, Carakale, is part of a small but growing group of Arab brewers in the Levant who want to nurture local beer-drinking cultures and compete against large companies that dominate the region’s growing beer market.
SAM MCNEIL / AP The maker of Jordan’s first craft beer, Carakale, is part of a small but growing group of Arab brewers in the Levant who want to nurture local beer-drinking cultures and compete against large companies that dominate the region’s growing beer market.
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