Telegram & Gazette

Brewmaster

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breweries, such as Double Down, so he can have beer available when he opens next month, both on tap and to go in crowlers.

“It will enable us to open up with a full tap list and keep me busy running around the state doing these collab brews,” he said.

They have called these beers “Side Piece Projects,” including a New England IPA brewed with Seven Saws Brewing Co. in Holden, and both a black lager and a cedar-aged wheat lager made in collaborat­ion with Cambridge Brewing Co., where Roesch once worked part time as he veered from a potential career in forestry.

Murder Hill won’t look to hire any staff, Roesch said. He and Adrienne will handle everything as a team.

Housed in a former 19th-century cotton mill, Murder Hill’s 50-seat taproom needs few if any renovation­s, Roesch said, owing to the upkeep and prior buildout by the former tenant, Purgatory Beer Co.

In good hands

Brian Distefano and Kevin Mulvehill’s partnershi­p spanned 15 years. It started with the pair home brewing together, a mutual interest they discovered while dropping their children off at the same day care. The friends became business partners, and the brewing became profession­al in 2017.

Purgatory got a strong start but later struggled through the pandemic. The stress that those times caused on the two friends and their families compelled them to start thinking about their exit from the brewing industry.

“The idea through this whole adventure was to have fun until it starts to become more work than it’s worth,” Distefano said. “We had a couple offers during the pandemic to buy the brewery. We weren’t ready to do anything at the time, but they were the catalyst for us.”

Purgatory’s destinatio­n taproom, sitting amid the Blackstone Heritage Corridor, looked as natural in Northbridg­e as one of Purgatory Chasm’s myriad rock formations.

Distefano will always remember in 2019 when Purgatory hosted fundraiser­s to keep Northbridg­e’s hockey team afloat, and the team would go on to win the Central Mass. Division 3A title.

Along the way, he and Mulvehill were honored to host weddings and celebratio­ns of life. They watched their bartenders grow up, graduate college and start families.

Distefano and Mulvehill’s friendship will survive Purgatory’s end, and the two may even take up home brewing again. Both agree they found in Roesch the perfect brewer for the taproom and brewhouse they invested over seven years of their lives into.

“You’ve got this guy who’s a staple in the Massachuse­tts brewing community,” Distefano said. “He helped start Wormtown, for crying out loud.”

Till next time, not goodbye

Roesch has left Wormtown, the largest brewery in Worcester, on good terms and remains in touch with CEO David Fields. In fact, Fields and Wormtown were close to buying Purgatory with the idea that Roesch would run it as separate outpost.

Roesch, however, wanted the opportunit­y to break out on his own. Fields did not try to change his mind.

“This is Wormtown’s 14th year now. It’s been an incredible evolution, and the people that Ben trained, coached and taught are an amazing group,” Fields said. “Our perspectiv­e, selfishly, is we’re in great shape. Selflessly, I’m so excited for Ben and Adrienne, both because it will be a really cool opportunit­y for him to own his brewery and taproom, and he gets to do it alongside his partner in life.”

Through Roesch’s time as brewmaster, Wormtown expanded twice, surpassed 20,000 barrels brewed and opened Worcester’s first distillery.

“The thing I’m going to miss the most about Wormtown is the people,” he said. “Thankfully, I’ll have an opportunit­y to see them in their taproom, and they’ll be able to see us in our taproom. It’s not an end. It’s a till next time, not a goodbye situation.”

For updates on Murder Hill’s progress, including when it sets an opening date, visit https:// www.murderhill.com.

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