USA TODAY US Edition

A pioneer of craft beer

Not a drinker? This craft brewer is trying to get everyone in America to love beer

- Lindsay Schnell

Deschutes founder wants you to love it, too.

Gary Fish likes to think that if you’re not a beer drinker, if you’d go so far as to say you can’t even stand the taste of the stuff, you just haven’t found the right one – and he’s convinced he can convert you. ❚ Thirty years ago, had he made that same proclamati­on, people probably would have responded by rolling their eyes. Back then Fish was just a “young-ish” guy with the wild idea of opening the first brew pub in Bend, a vacation city in Eastern Oregon. Now, he runs Deschutes Brewery, a company widely credited with helping pioneer one of the most important pieces of the food and drink world: craft beer.

Craft brew might be a thriving industry now – the Bureau of Labor estimated last year that there were 70,000 brewery employees across the United States, a stat that has almost tripled over the past decade – but in 1988, it was barely alive.

The same could be said of Bend, Oregon. A community that now boasts

90,000-plus residents with a booming tourism scene – 20,000 people a day visit in the summer – was depressed in the late 1980s, trying to recover from the timber industry crash. The economy, and the town, needed a boost.

Enter Fish, then 32, who had a background in restaurant management but didn’t know anything about brewing beer. He figured he could learn.

Fish’s father worked in the wine industry, so Fish knew the arduous process of wine-making. But that world didn’t appeal to him.

“There’s a minimum of five years before any profit because it takes so long to grow and harvest grapes,” Fish said. “But with a brew pub, you cut out the middle man, so within about 30 days your product is on shelves.”

As Fish struggled to get initial financing, he kept hearing the same line from supportive Bend residents: “If you really do open, I’ll be your first customer!”

That finally happened on June 27,

1988. It wasn’t exactly a packed house its first night – or a lot of nights after that.

Oran Teater, a former Bend mayor and longtime City Council member, laughed when recalling Deschutes’ opening.

“We thought he was crazy,” Teater said of Fish. “Innovative, but crazy. It was not on anybody’s radar that you would open a brew pub in Bend, Oregon. And I remember after the first couple beers I drank, I didn’t think it would work.”

Fish’s goal was to get Deschutes beers on tap at local resorts, a strategy that kept the brewery afloat while the brewery’s restaurant found its footing.

“There were a lot of nights no one was in the pub and I was thinking to myself, ‘What did I get us into?’ ” Fish said.

But Deschutes has done more than survive. The business has grown exponentia­lly; when it started in 1988, Fish had just 5,000 square feet downtown, which included both the brewery and restaurant. Now they’ve expanded to more than 200,000 square feet, includ- ing the downtown Bend pub, a Portland pub, plus the actual brewery in Bend. There are plans to open a pub in Roanoke, Virginia, in the next few years (Deschutes already has a tasting room there). The business employs 550 people nationwide, with 335 based in Bend.

Though Deschutes’ craft brew empire has major national reach – its beer is distribute­d in 30 states – Fish takes pride in maintainin­g a small community feel. Employees own roughly 8 percent of the company, and Deschutes regularly partners with Northwest residents for various projects. Every fall they commission a local artist to make the label for Jubelale, their annual holiday brew. A tour of the brewery’s upstairs hallway doubles as a local art show, with previous years’ labels displayed on the walls.

Deschutes is a trendsette­r, too, having played a direct role in Bend’s rebirth as a fun, funky city where people come to drink: Bend is a brew pub hot spot, with 30 breweries in the city.

“We would not have the brewery industry that we have without Deschutes,” said Roger Lee, CEO of the Economic Developmen­t for Central Oregon office. “That’s the cachet of Bend – it’s a beer town, a cool place to come. Deschutes helped give Bend an identity it historical­ly did not have.”

Deschutes also has become a jumping-off point for many brewers around the West who came to Bend to learn or perfect the craft before venturing out on their own.

John Harris worked at Deschutes as the main brewer from 1988-1992. He created Mirror Pond Ale, one of their best-selling brews, and was there for the birth of Black Butte Porter, a dark pour with notes of chocolate and coffee that’s considered Deschutes’ signature beer.

“Thirty years ago, people were afraid of different beer,” Harris said. “Back then, someone drinking a sour beer, yeah right, that never would have happened. They were afraid to taste what you were making – you can’t imagine that now.”

Harris isn’t exaggerati­ng when he said employees are encouraged to think outside the box. Deschutes brewers have come up with some wacky flavors over 30 years, including a beer that mimicked a gin and tonic and one that tasted like dill pickles.

 ?? PHOTOS BY DESCHUTES BREWERY ?? Gary Fish, founder of Deschutes Brewery, believes he can turn anyone into a beer drinker.
PHOTOS BY DESCHUTES BREWERY Gary Fish, founder of Deschutes Brewery, believes he can turn anyone into a beer drinker.
 ??  ?? Deschutes Brewery became the first brewery in Bend, Ore., when it opened in 1988. There are plans to open a pub in Roanoke, Va., in the next few years.
Deschutes Brewery became the first brewery in Bend, Ore., when it opened in 1988. There are plans to open a pub in Roanoke, Va., in the next few years.
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