Craft Beer & Brewing Magazine

The Analysts

With dogged attention to details, Halfway Crooks gets Atlanta hyped about lager (lager, lager, lager). By Kate Bernot

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BREAKOUT BREWER

WHEN ATLANTA’S HALFWAY CROOKS Beer finally opened in July 2019, its three founders had persevered through delay after delay, surviving all the biblical plagues of brewery constructi­on: Flooding. Zoning hassles. Equipment-delivery delays. SNAFUS with their Belgian-born cofounder’s immigratio­n visa. A contractor going out of business.

But all of that, says Shawn Bainbridge, is nothing compared to what 2020 wrought.

Bainbridge and fellow founders Joran Van Ginderacht­er and Tim Kilic had been operating Halfway Crooks’ taproom for only about seven months when it had to close for COVID-19 restrictio­ns in March. While focusing on lagers and Belgian-inspired ales, their plan was to build the business through taproom sales. They quickly shifted virtually all of their beer into cans. Staff sold them out the front door, eventually finding a wholesaler to help get beer into area stores. For such a new brewery, the question of whether drinkers would show up in strong enough numbers to keep the business afloat was far from answered.

But show up they did—enough to keep the brewhouse and four employees working.

“It was a pretty warm feeling to all of a sudden see that you have been open for just a few months and to have that kind of support,” Van Ginderacht­er says.

This summer, the brewery was able to reopen its rooftop patio and turn its parking lot into a temporary beer garden, enabling

Halfway Crooks to serve draft beer on the site they’d poured so much time and effort into opening. Still, with the main taproom closed indefinite­ly this fall, it doesn’t yet feel like their dream is fully realized.

“The best way to look at all of this is to look at the long game,” Bainbridge says. “It’s the only way you can stay sane.”

The long game, as Halfway Crooks envisions it, is to sell simple, technicall­y perfect, refreshing beers out of a taproom that feels like the home of an eccentric, artistic aunt—if she also dabbled in 1980s-era computer programmin­g.

Mind Meld

In the way that Halfway Crooks’ quirky taproom aesthetics inexplicab­ly work, so too do the minds of its two brewers. Van Ginderacht­er and Bainbridge became friends and roommates just weeks after meeting at an event at Atlanta’s storied Brick Store Pub. Despite their disparate background­s, they share a singular purpose to relentless­ly pursue their vision of “sensible beer.”

Van Ginderacht­er had cofounded Brouwerij ‘t Verzet in his native Belgium in 2011 before becoming brewmaster at Atlanta’s Three Taverns Brewery two years later. He became interested in brewing in the United States through his uncle, Peter Bouckaert, the revered former brewmaster at New Belgium Brewing, now of Purpose Brewing & Cellars (Fort Collins, Colorado). In 2013, when Van Ginderacht­er met Bainbridge, the computer engineer and homebrewer immediatel­y struck the Belgian as “a vacuum cleaner when it comes to knowledge about beer.”

The brewers routinely examine technical aspects of their beers, from the provenance of their hops, to their transfer processes, to the sulfur expression in certain lager styles. They aim to produce what they refer to as “sensible beers”— simple beers with nuance and flavor that are moderate in alcohol, whose full expression­s take a bit of time (and maybe a second glass) to appreciate.

The pair discovered early on that they both wanted to build a beer culture that didn’t yet exist in Atlanta; it wasn’t until 2017 that Georgia’s restrictiv­e laws changed to allow direct-to-consumer taproom sales. Once those were legal, Van Ginderacht­er and Bainbridge set out to create a taproom that evoked Belgian beer cafes, serving straightfo­rward, technicall­y sound lagers and table beers.

In Pursuit

There is perhaps no more satisfying pastime for two detail-obsessed brewers than procedural analysis. When they needed a break from the chaos of the pandemic and election-year news cycle, Van Ginderacht­er and Bainbridge pored over their beers with a critical eye that is almost unrelentin­g.

Possible improvemen­ts to the brewery’s Belgian-style pale ale, for example, continue to rattle in their collective brains. Bainbridge calls it one of the most technicall­y challengin­g beers they brew.

“It’s not there yet,” Van Ginderacht­er says. Which part?

“I think we’re looking for a certain yeast expression that’s pretty tough to get, a brightness we’re searching for,” Bainbridge cuts in. He gives a small sigh. “It’s the entire thing. All of it.”

This isn’t just an approach they take with that pale ale. The brewers routinely examine technical aspects of their beers, from the provenance of their hops, to their transfer processes, to the sulfur expression in certain lager styles. They aim to produce what they refer to as “sensible beers”—simple beers with nuance and flavor that are moderate in alcohol, whose full expression­s take a bit of time (and maybe a second glass) to appreciate.

One of their greatest upgrades to date is the decision to kräusen their lagers. Despite the planning and time it takes, Bainbridge and Van Ginderacht­er say it has softened the beers’ carbonatio­n, enhanced the malts’ flavor stability, and reduced the final beers’ dissolved oxygen levels—important for preserving their freshness and stability.

Those results partially explain the popularity of Halfway Crooks’ pale German lagers, including Ada, a pilsner, and Metric, a helles. But the brewers also mention latehop additions of low-alpha-acid hops from Seitz Farm in Bavaria, lagering in horizontal tanks, and a precise minerality to the final beer as critical components. While they’re constantly fiddling with those dials, drinkers seem consistent­ly pleased.

“You feel like some thought has gone into every beer, that there isn’t a rush,” says Stan Hieronymus, the Atlanta-based author of multiple brewing books (and a Craft Beer & Brewing Magazine® contributo­r). “You can tell that there’s a conversati­on behind it.”

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 ??  ?? Left » Founders Joran Van Ginderacht­er and Shawn Bainbridge; Above » Old CRT monitors cycle through the brewery’s quirky ASCIIart-meets-european-folk graphics.
Left » Founders Joran Van Ginderacht­er and Shawn Bainbridge; Above » Old CRT monitors cycle through the brewery’s quirky ASCIIart-meets-european-folk graphics.

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