Craft Beer & Brewing Magazine

Lone Pine Brewing

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BREAKOUT BREWER

In Portland, Maine, the brewers at IPAS yield big-time payoffs.

MOST BREWERS LOVE

to tinker, experiment, and push boundaries in the brewhouse. But most breweries—as businesses— aim to sell high volumes of their core beers. That simplifies operations and ingredient­s, and it avoids the sort of headaches that come with managing crowds for special releases or whipping up new labels every week.

In Portland, Maine, Lone Pine Brewing is one of those lucky breweries that get to do both. Since opening in March 2016, it has built its reputation on hop-forward core beers: Portland Pale Ale, Brightside IPA, and Tessellati­on Double IPA, recently adding a New England double IPA, OH-J, to the year-round lineup. Those beers constantly occupy the brewery’s largest 80- and 40barrel fermentors, and their sales are what keep the lights on. Meanwhile, their success also bankrolls what might be called “the fun stuff”—such as a series of beers brewed with actual doughnuts from fellow Portlander­s at The Holy Donut, or the Cannon IPA series that turns the haze dial to 11.

The popularity of its core beers made Lone Pine the fourth-fastest-growing American craft brewery in 2018, according to Brewers Associatio­n data. Cofounders find that tiny tweaks to its

Tom Madden and John Paul say their mission is to make Lone Pine’s beers approachab­le, adaptable, and available. In late 2017, they purchased Sebago Brewing’s former 13,000-square-foot brewery in nearby Gorham. That added production allowed Lone Pine to produce enough beer to send to 11 states as far-flung as Florida and Utah, as well as to overseas markets including the U.K., France, and Japan.

Going for Easy Appeal

It’s rare that, in the year 2020, a brewery truly excites consumers with a straightfo­rward American pale ale. As it turns out, an accessible, modern pale ale is what a lot of drinkers like to have in their fridges.

“We had this vision of refocusing people’s attention on something crisp and easy to enjoy, but using hops that appeal to people who are really into the craft-beer world,” Madden says.

The brewery splurged on the hop bill, using Citra, Amarillo, Centennial, and Falconer’s Flight blend. They chose an English yeast strain, instead of the classic Chico strain, to throw more fruity esters. The recipe keeps the protein content low, lending the body a lighter, refreshing texture. The aim was to be a middle-ground pale ale that still had its malt roots in Sierra Nevada’s classic but also nodded toward more boutique, fruit-punchier hop flavors.

It worked. Demand for Portland Pale went beyond what Madden and Paul expected—and, at times, beyond what their hop inventory could supply. Fast growth has helped the brewery secure much-needed, steady access to hop contracts, which in turn feed the pale ale and IPAS that are driving the brewery’s growth.

Cranking Up the Character (Carefully)

Brewers have been diligently tweaking yeast-pitching rates within the Cannon series, finding out how they affect not just the esters produced but also the haze level.

Brightside, the brewery’s flagship IPA, is another success story born of a similar origin: Madden calls it a “bigger brother” to Portland Pale. It uses almost the same malt bill, the same yeast strain, and just dials up the hop intensity—citra and Falconer’s Flight, plus Idaho 7—and the ABV by 2 percent. When the brewery found itself with too much Mosaic on its hands, the Tessellati­on all-mosaic DIPA—THE fourth core beer the brewery introduced—was something of a no-brainer: “We were like, ‘Let’s go to a double IPA and dial it up again,’” Madden says.

This isn’t to say that Lone Pine’s core hoppy beers aren’t distinct, but they are variations on a theme. Working with narrow variables and making small changes are what make those beers shine, Madden says, rather than reinventin­g the wheel with each new recipe. You generally won’t find Lone Pine brewers working with three strange ingredient­s and a new hopping technique at the same time. The team’s approach—even with its more adventurou­s Cannon series of Ipas—is to isolate and incrementa­lly adjust specific variables from batch to batch until the beer achieves desired flavors.

“Beers like Hawaiian T-shirt Cannon or the Holy Donut series seem a little off-the-wall, but in reality, our process and

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