Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Homebrewin­g surges in popularity amid pandemic

- By Andrew Selsky

SALEM, Ore. — On March 14, the day after the COVID-19 outbreak was declared a national emergency in the United States, I decided to take up an activity that I had abandoned decades ago.

I brewed some beer.

I became part of a trend. While states imposed stay-at-home orders, brewpubs closed, and people lost jobs and tried to economize, homebrewin­g in America has exploded in popularity.

“Our industry in a recession does well because not as many people are working, people are more cost-conscious and they have time on their hands,” said David Stuart, national sales manager for Ohiobased LD Carlson, a wholesale distributo­r of beer- and wine-making supplies.

Homebrewin­g also provides an escape from dwelling on the COVID-19 pandemic.

“It’s so easy to get wrapped up in the news, constantly feeling like you need to be updated,” said Gary Glass, director of the American Homebrewer­s Associatio­n. “So it’s a way to get away from what’s going on out there in the world, do something that’s fun and later drink that beer that you brewed.”

Northern Brewer, a major supplier of homebrewin­g and wine-making equipment in America, says business has shot up by 40% to 50%. But not all shops are seeing an upturn.

Gina Fox’s Salem Brew Supply in Salem, Oregon, has had a slight dip in sales since it moved from in-store sales to home deliveries. But she’s optimistic.

“I think with the tight community that we have — the homebrewin­g community — and with the fact that once people start homebrewin­g they usually continue down the road, I feel like we could survive this,” she said.

Hazy IPAs are trendy these days, but many customers are asking for “classic hops” — like cascade, centennial, chinook — that were popular years ago, said Mike Brennan, sales manager in the western U.S. for the homebrew division of BSG HandCraft, a wholesaler of brewing supplies.

“They’re dusting off their old equipment, the fermenters, and they’re going back and brewing some of those classicsty­le IPAs, those more bitter IPAs, like we used to do,” he said.

Homebrewin­g starter kits are also selling well, Brennan said.

I myself brewed long before Inda Pale Ales became the rage in America.

Back in the early 1990s, my first attempt, a brown ale, was a failure; I had added too much water. My third and last attempt back then, an Anchor Steam Beer style, turned out fine. It was a lot of work, including sterilizin­g all the equipment and bottles in the confines of our small apartment in Brooklyn.

Over the next 30-odd years, my wife and I moved frequently, with the brew kit accompanyi­ng our household goods each time. Finally, she suggested I dump the barrels, along with the tubes, rods, gauges and other parapherna­lia that look like they could have come from the workshop of a scientist or sorcerer.

Then last December, a big cardboard box with Northern Brewer’s logo arrived at my doorstep. This must be a mistake, I thought. I didn’t order this.

I called our son Sam, a homebrewer who lives in Washington, D.C., thinking he ordered it for himself. Turns out it was his and our other son Blaine’s Christmas present to me. I was delighted.

It remained in a closet for almost three months until, on an idle Saturday, I brought it to the kitchen and began brewing a batch of German-style hefeweizen.

It did take my mind off the pandemic. I put some music on, made sure the brewing kettle didn’t boil over, poured in hops and malt extract and, using a timer, followed the other steps.

One month later, it was time to pop the cap off a bottle and sample the fruits of my labor. It was delicious.

Next, I’m thinking about making an IPA.

 ?? ANDREW SELSKY/AP ??
ANDREW SELSKY/AP

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