Dayton Daily News

Partnershi­ps help area breweries grow

- By Bailey Gallion Staff Writer

Brewing has become a competitiv­e business in the Dayton region, forcing beer makers to partner with other businesses and breweries to expand their customer bases.

Dayton-area breweries have partnered with coffee roasteries, candy makers, mustard companies, whiskey bars and more to expand their brands and increase revenue opportunit­ies.

Some examples in the Dayton area include:

■ Eudora Brewing Co. on Wilmington Pike makes Sky Ale, an exclusive beer available only at Sky Asian Cuisine.

■ Toxic Brew Co. on East Fifth Street serves a beer named after Practice Yoga.

■ Crooked Handle Brewing Co. in Springboro developed a beer with DiSalvo’s Deli in Kettering.

■ Woeber Mustard Manufactur­ing Co. makes a craft beer mustard using Warped Wing Ermal’s Cream Ale.

Warped Wing collaborat­es with about five breweries and other businesses per year, co-founder Nick Bowman said. One of the most well-known is the yearly holiday collaborat­ion with Esther Price Candies.

The first edition of Esther’s Lil Secret was a scotch ale brewed with Esther Price caramels in 2014. Bowman grew up with the grandchild­ren of Esther Price CEO Jim Day, so Bowman approached Esther Price about a collaborat­ion

soon after Warped Wing was up and running. The beer uses a different Esther Price ingredient every year and the ingredient remains a secret until the release.

It’s challengin­g for the brewery to develop a new beer every year, but Bowman said it keeps the collaborat­ion interestin­g.

“We like to think that we hit more home runs than not, and so far, we have, but you never know how people are going to receive it,” Bowman said. “But the feedback we got last year online was people love that stuff and it’s exciting to them. I think what I’ve seen is maybe some other beers, especially holiday beers, is it kind of runs its course . ... You’re never going to get bored with Esther’s Lil Secret.”

Esther Price makes a small profit off the beer when Warped Wing buys the ingredient­s, but the greatest benefit to the company is the marketing, said Esther Price Accountant Peggy Weaver .

“They really are the ones that approached us and came up with the formula and all that, and their marketing team did the design of the cans,” Weaver said.

Warped Wing has also collaborat­ed with the owners of Wood Burl Coffee, who own Press Coffee. The result was “Pirogue,” a Belgian-style Tripel ale containing a Wood Burl cold brew.

The brewery has worked with The Century Bar on Jefferson Street twice. One of those releases — the whiskey barrel-aged imperial stout Whiskey Rebellion — is now Warped Wing’s most sought-after barrel-aged beer, Bowman said.

When Warped Wing collaborat­es with other businesses, members of both teams discuss the flavor and style of the beer. The brewers at Warped Wing work out the technical details.

“They trust us to know the profiles of the beers, the raw materials, the malts, the hops we’re using, and then we trust them to know the flavor profiles of the chocolate, or the cream, whatever it may be,” Bowman said.

Springboro-based Crooked Handle Brewing Co. has several collaborat­ions of its own. It brews Crooked Stag with Springboro Scottish restaurant The Highland Stag. Crooked Handle has also worked with The Wandering Griffin Brewery and Pub.

The Springboro brewery recently developed a beer with DiSalvo’s Deli in Kettering. The Italian-style ale is available at both locations, and Crooked Handle co-founder Jason Moore said the brewery just tapped a new batch.

“People were digging it,” Moore said. “It’s not something they’d seen before. We didn’t know much about Italian grape ales ourselves until we started doing a little more research.”

The inspiratio­n for the beer was came from Heineken, Grolsch and Peroni, which are three favorites of Rinaldo DiSalvo, a co-owner of DiSalvo’s Deli. The collaborat­ion brew has a grapefruit finish and is popular with deli customers.

Though businesses and breweries benefit from collaborat­ions by introducin­g their products to new customers, they say that’s only part of the motivation. Collaborat­ion allows them to create something with their friends and meet new people.

Gaining new customers from collaborat­ions is a “fringe benefit” because the main goal is strengthen­ing community ties, Bowman said.

“Dayton’s already a really proud city,” Bowman said. “For us, that’s what gets us the most excited — not, you know, picking up a few new fans. ... The reason we do it is our town.”

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D ?? Dayton-area breweries have partnered with different companies to expand their brandsand increasere­venue opportunit­ies.
CONTRIBUTE­D Dayton-area breweries have partnered with different companies to expand their brandsand increasere­venue opportunit­ies.

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