The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Georgia breweries: Game changers

With expansions, cutting-edge beers, these 6 are changing the landscape.

- By Bob Townsend

I often say that when I first started writing about beer some 20 years ago, there wasn’t much in Georgia to write about.

Right now, though, the number of new and notable breweries in the state, and especially around metro Atlanta, seems to grow exponentia­lly from month to month and year to year, to the point that it can be overwhelmi­ng to keep up with.

Arches in Hapeville, Dry County in Ke n nesaw, Gate City and Variant in Roswell, Pontoon in Sandy Springs, and Wild Leap in LaGrange are beginning to make a mark on the scene — often with beers that reflect the cutting edge of the craft movement.

In the bigger picture, though, there are six brewing companies that I think are changing the game here and now, both with the quality and popularity of their beers, and expanding and experiment­ing with new equipment and facilities.

A New Realm

Opening in January 2018, New Realm Brewing is perhaps the biggest game-changer. Not only did it bring world-renow nedbre wmaster Mitch Steele to Atlanta, but it debuted a new kind of hybrid brewery restaurant concept and built it on a busy stretch of the Beltline that offers stunning sunset views of the skyline.

Steele came to Atlanta from San Diego, where as brewmaster at Stone he was at the forefront of the developmen­t of West Coast IPAs. But at New Realm, he’s been turned loose to explore almost any

style imaginable. And with a state-of-the-art brewhouse and pilot brewery, he’s turning out everything from Pilsner and Belgian blonde to hazy and triple IPAs.

Along with executive chef Julio Delgado’s takes on pub grub, as well as more sophistica­ted dishes, the space itself has already become a big draw. The former warehouse was designed and reconfigur­ed with a rooftop bar and beer garden, plus a growler bar with merchandis­e and beer to go. And with all that, it’s poised to take advantage of the recent changes in Georgia beer law.

The Scofflaw way

With a name that celebrates ignoring the rules, Scofflaw Brewing burst on the scene in August 2016 with Basement IPA, described as “a seriously juicy and tropical India pale ale made with Citra hops.” Much like Creature Comforts’ buzz beer, Tropicalia, it quickly became a sensation, and Scofflaw began a growth spurt that hasn’t stopped since.

Under the direction of cofounder and brewmaster Travis Herman, a microbiolo­gist who worked at two of California’s most revered breweries, Lost Abbey and Russian River, the lineup of imaginativ­e beers has expanded and so has the brewery. Outgrowing its 20-barrel brewhouse in record time, a new 50-barrel, four-vessel brewhouse is set to come online later this summer.

But while Scofflaw has exploded like no other brewery in recent memory, there have been growing pains, too. Co-founder Matt Shirah, who handles the business side with a pugnacious determinat­ion, has often been at the center of controvers­ies over quality control and branding. Shirah also engineered a unique partnershi­p with an internatio­nal renegade, BrewDog, with Scofflaw using the brewing and canning operation at its new U.S. headquarte­rs in Ohio.

More Creature Comforts

Arguably the hottest brewery in Georgia and the most recognized elsewhere, even when its beers rarely went out farther than Atlanta, Athens’ Creature Comforts made its name and built its business with Tropicalia. Described as “a balanced, soft and juicy IPA,” it has often been in short supply, and overshadow­ed a portfolio that includes great examples of Pilsner and Berliner Weisse styles.

But as the company celebrated its fourth anniversar­y in April, the opening of its new $11 million state-of-theart brewery was on tap, too. Housed in a 40,000-squarefoot building at the historic Southern Mill complex on North Chase Street in Athens, it boasts a fully automated 85-barrel four-vessel brewhouse from German manufactur­er Steinecker, 50,000 barrels of annual fermentati­on at current capacity, and room to add more fermentors on a “plug and play” basis.

Now the question becomes, what will Creature Comforts do with all that capacity? And will fans of its highly rated seasonal and one-off beers see more of their favorites from the brewery that Trop built? Of course, devotees can still enjoy one of Georgia’s best taprooms, as the West Hancock Avenue location continues to host new release and community events in the heart of downtown Athens.

Monday Night moves

Monday Night Brewing has taken on a new life lately. The company, which recently celebrated its sixth anniversar­y, has always been a respected and successful part of the state and local scene. But even with some major medals under Monday Night Brewing’s belt, beers like Drafty Kilt Scotch Ale didn’t always create a buzz.

Then, in September 2017, Monday Night opened a second location along a section of the Atlanta Beltline in West End. Dubbed the Garage, the ambitious 22,000-square-foot warehouse space at Lee and White streets was transforme­d into a new facility for sour and barrel-aged beers. And since then, the taproom and large event space have become lively destinatio­ns.

What’s more, a rebranding campaign that included new cans and new year-round and seasonal beers debuted around the same time. Han Brolo, a contempora­ry hazyjuicy pale ale, and Dr. Robot, a blackberry lemon sour/Pilsner hybrid, were both wellreceiv­ed. But Han Brolo took off to become one of brewery’s current signature styles, topping a Paste magazine blind tasting of over 150 pale ales.

SweetWater’s Woodlands

Atlanta’s SweetWater Brewing turned 21 earlier this year. Over that time, its accomplish­ments as one of the top U.S. craft brewing companies are myriad, including a slew of Great American Beer Festival gold, silver and bronze medals. But in spite (or maybe because) of that, it doesn’t always get the respect of younger beer bros, who tend to favor the new and unusual.

With that as context, it was a big surprise to many when SweetWater debuted the Woodlands Project in late 2016. It was conceived as both a barrel-aging and sour beer program and a brand, and I said at the time that it was poised to be a game-changer for Atlanta. Housed in a sleek new two-story brick building, the 37,000-square-foot space is deliberate­ly isolated away from the brewery operation in order to allow bugs like Brettanomy­ces, Lactobacil­lus and Pediococcu­s to go wild with wood and create new flavor profiles.

Cork-and-caged releases like the blackberry Brett beer Through the Brambles and the peachy Pit and the Pendulum have been well received. But barrel-aging takes time and patience. And for now, the Woodlands’ dual role as a tasting room and event space has perhaps been its most successful function, so far, hosting birthdays and wedding receptions among the foeders and wine and whiskey barrels.

Terrapin and the Braves

In major news in 2016, MillerCoor­s struck a deal to take a majority stake in Ter- rapin Beer Co., the popular Athens brewery. Terrapin was co-founded in 2002 by brewmaster Brian “Spike” Buckowski, who remains with the company, but according to the Brewers Associatio­n can no longer operate as a craft brewer.

Of course, Terrapin continues to be a major brand in Georgia and beyond with beers like Hopsecutio­ner IPA and seasonal W-n-B Coffee Oatmeal Stout among its most popular styles. But its place among the other five breweries on this list is because of the April 2017 opening of the Terrapin ATL Brew Lab and Taproom at The Battery Atlanta adjacent to SunTrust Park.

In its second Braves season, the combinatio­n restaurant, bar and brewery is a happening destinatio­n, serving up a combo of Fox Bros. BarB-Q favorites and Terrapin beers, including the signature Chopsecuti­oner Bat Wood Aged IPA. More innovative, the Brew Lab is home to a fivebarrel pilot brewery, where the Terrapin team is producing a series of new and oneoff beers that will be served at the Taproom and, like Chopsecuti­oner, might one day make it to seasonal or year-round production.

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D BY STEVE SCHAEFER ?? Patrons have a beer at the bar at the New Realm Brewing restaurant in Atlanta last week.
CONTRIBUTE­D BY STEVE SCHAEFER Patrons have a beer at the bar at the New Realm Brewing restaurant in Atlanta last week.
 ?? BOB ANDRES /BANDRES@AJC.COM ?? Transmigra­tion of Souls IPA by Orpheus Brewing, Han Brolo Pale Ale by Monday Night Brewing, and Drivin N Cryin IPA by Burnt Hickory Brewery are among the 12 best pale ales and IPAs in Georgia.
BOB ANDRES /BANDRES@AJC.COM Transmigra­tion of Souls IPA by Orpheus Brewing, Han Brolo Pale Ale by Monday Night Brewing, and Drivin N Cryin IPA by Burnt Hickory Brewery are among the 12 best pale ales and IPAs in Georgia.
 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D BY JACQUELINE HARNEVIOUS / MONDAY NIGHT BREWING ?? Monday Night Brewing opened the Garage in September 2017. It’s the home of the brewery’s sour and barrelagin­g facility. It’s located just off the Beltline in the Lee + White developmen­t in Southwest Atlanta.
CONTRIBUTE­D BY JACQUELINE HARNEVIOUS / MONDAY NIGHT BREWING Monday Night Brewing opened the Garage in September 2017. It’s the home of the brewery’s sour and barrelagin­g facility. It’s located just off the Beltline in the Lee + White developmen­t in Southwest Atlanta.

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