Albuquerque Journal

Help for small businesses

- BY JASON GIBBS

The crew from Santa Fe’s Honeymoon Brewery is raising a glass to the New Mexico Small Business Assistance Program and offering a hearty “salud” to David Fox of Los Alamos National Laboratori­es.

The cause for celebratio­n? The successful pairing of a small-scale kombucha brewing business and a scientist at one of the nation’s premier research laboratori­es that was made possible through the NMSBA, a free program that gives small business owners in New Mexico access to the resources available at both LANL and Sandia National Laboratory.

For Honeymoon founders Ayla Bystrom Williams and James Hill, working with LANL’s Fox allowed them to refine their brewing process and scientific­ally cut through a trial-and-error developmen­t process to better understand how to achieve the particular flavors they sought.

The business traces its roots back to 2011, when kombucha — a fizzy, slightly alcoholic fermented beverage made from black and green teas — was removed from store shelves after testing higher than 0.5 percent alcohol by volume. Hill explains that is the limit for any fermented beverage which does not advertise itself as an alcoholic product and which does not require the consumer to be 21 years of age. While many producers went back to the drawing board to modify their products to stay below the 0.5 percent threshold, Bystrom Williams decided that she would rather offer a more robust product under a brewers license.

She approached the Santa Fe Business Incubator and officially launched the business in 2015. It was through the incubator she and Hill learned of the NMSBA and were introduced to Fox. A home brewer himself, Fox volunteere­d to be their principal investigat­or and the research into the perfect mix of microorgan­isms began.

“David really helped us cut out the riff raff of our original experiment­ation and helped us focus our attention on finding the missing pieces of our brewing puzzle,” Hill said. “When we began this journey, it seemed difficult to find accessible informatio­n and detailed contempora­ry research on the kombucha brewing process. Initially, that made it difficult to formulate our microbiolo­gical strategy, so to speak.

“With David’s profession­al expertise as a chemist, he was able to help us ask the right questions, discover important unknowns of our product and learn how to test our product thoroughly via techniques such as gas chromatogr­aphy,” Hill added. “He helped introduce a more scientific approach to our process and our product analysis which, in turn, has helped us gain a more fine-tuned control over the various flavor profiles.”

Before Fox’s assistance, the brewers were struggling. Although they felt their product was tasty, it just didn’t have that “je ne sais quoi” of a well-crafted beer or kombucha, Hill said.

The NMSBA program applicatio­n process was “incredible, fun and extremely empowering,” according to Hill. “Not only were we granted access to deeper knowledge about our product but we were exposed to the culture of the labs and the incredible people who work there,” he said.

The NMSBA program accepts applicatio­ns year-round. To learn more, visit www. nmsbaprogr­am.org. For more about Honeymoon Brewery, go to www. honeymoonb­rewery.com.

 ?? EDDIE MOORE/JOURNAL ?? Los Alamos scientist David Fox, left, with Rena Glasscock and Ayla Bystrom-Williams of Honeymoon Brewery.
EDDIE MOORE/JOURNAL Los Alamos scientist David Fox, left, with Rena Glasscock and Ayla Bystrom-Williams of Honeymoon Brewery.

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