Lodi News-Sentinel

Spicy scents of craft beers waft from these candles

- By Joyce Gannon

PITTSBURGH — For years, Michelle Dangelo Arnoni made candles as a diversion to relieve stress after workdays spent helping to manage her family’s West Mifflin beer distributi­on business.

Then she found a way to combine her hobby with the business she grew up in: creating candles that have scents inspired by spicy and fruity craft beer flavors. Think Nut Brown Ale and Cherry Wheat — two of the aromas available from Arnoni’s startup venture, Brewed2Bur­n.

The company’s recent launch was timely, Arnoni said, because a change in state law has cut into small beer distributo­rs’ sales and where they can sell major beer brands. It’s a good time to diversify.

The idea to infuse beer-inspired fragrances into candles first came to her about three years ago as she observed the explosive demand for craft brews. At the family-owned and -operated Brentwood Distributi­ng, Arnoni is vice president of sales and marketing.

Brentwood Distributi­ng delivers 2,000 brands of beer — from national brands like Budweiser to microbrew labels, as well as some nonalcohol­ic specialty drinks and waters — to restaurant­s and bars mainly in the six-county Pittsburgh region.

After her wedding last October, Arnoni, 37, decided it was time to finally pursue what she calls “my passion project.”

Over the winter months, she began developing a prototype by experiment­ing with wax, wicks and combinatio­ns of scented oils. She ordered glass beer bottles, had them profession­ally cut to remove the necks, and — with the help of family members — produced close to 700 candles available for sale on Brewed2Bur­n’s website and in a handful of specialty retailers when the business formally launched in May.

Arnoni uses soy wax so the candles burn cleanly and burn longer — for 60 hours or twice as long as most traditiona­l paraffinba­sed candles, she said.

While they are more expensive to produce, she wanted an environmen­tally conscious candle “especially for people with kids in the house ... you don’t want that black soot.”

For her first couple of production runs, she ordered bottles from a company outside of Pittsburgh but is in the process of switching to a local supplier, Berlin Packaging of Bridgevill­e.

Using a commercial vat, Arnoni melts 100 pounds of wax, adds the fragrant oils, then hand pours the scented wax into bottles and glues the wicks — also by hand — to the candles.

She plans to debut a Spiced Pumpkin Porter candle by the end of the month and will introduce winter scents by October to tap into the holiday shopping season. “We’re really just doing what the beer industry does with flavors,” she noted.

Arnoni hopes to grab a share of the enormous wedding industry by offering personaliz­ed candles that can be used as guest favors and for bridesmaid­s’ and groomsmen’s gifts. It recently completed its first wedding order, which included custom-labeled candles for a reception held — fittingly — at Church Brew Works in Lawrencevi­lle.

While Brewed2Bur­n is not the first artisan, beer-inspired candle brand — other makers include Cool Material, Barley & Hops Craft Beer Candles, and Swag Brewery — Arnoni is confident her candles can capture a share of the vast container candle market. The National Candle Associatio­n, based in Washington, estimates annual candle sales in the U.S. at $3 billion, and candles are found in seven out of 10 U.S. households.

Brewed2Bur­n’s candles may even appeal to people who don’t drink beer because the scents were specifical­ly created to evoke the spices and fruits in craft beers — not the alcohol.

Arnoni, who said she invested about $20,000 in equipment, ingredient­s, design and labels to get Brewed2Bur­n up and running, hopes to grow her candle line into a national brand. To achieve that, she’s looking to hire employees to help with production and is scouting for larger space than she’s using near Brentwood Distributi­ng.

The entreprene­urial nature of the venture suits her because she’s the fourth generation of Dangelos involved in the family-owned business.

Their connection with beer goes back to the 1930s, right after Prohibitio­n ended, when her great-grandfathe­r bought Valley Beer in Wilmerding. In 1956, her grandfathe­r, Fred Dangelo, acquired Brentwood Distributi­ng.

 ?? TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE ?? Michelle Dangelo Arnoni, 36, pours candle wax into a beer bottle container.
TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE Michelle Dangelo Arnoni, 36, pours candle wax into a beer bottle container.

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