The world of brewing – one I am reasonably new to professionally, but not on a home brewing level (and certainly not on a consumer level) is often a strange, absurd world, full of oddballs, misfits and crackpots – and so, landing a job in a brewery isn't necessarily a straightforward qualification/job interview/9-5 salary path. Brewing is mostly vocational, and so not necessarily an academic study – which is great, because it means you don't have to be formally educated – at least to begin with – to start brewing for a living. Assuming you are a home brewer hoping to break into professional brewing, here's 5 tips to help you along the way.
1. Achieve things with your home brew. Don't just brew standard beer to drink at home – find the stories. Go to home brew festivals and clubs and tell your prospective employer about these amazing meetups you to go to share your beer. Enter competitions and get your beer scored, keep the paperwork and take it with you to your interview. Take a keg to parties and events – brew special beers to open on special occasions. Follow historic recipes, use strange ingredients and build bits of kit to brew like a caveman. Do a little beer tourism when you're on your jollies. One question I was asked in the interview that ultimately landed me my first brewing job was “what's the craziest thing you've ever brewed?” Being able to answer an “Imperial Black Saison aged on red wine soaked oak chips” certainly raised a smile and broke a lot of ice. I once participated in an online group brew challenge where we had to brew without using modern technology (thermometer and hydrometer were allowed.) Having these points to talk about in an interview, even an informal one, will go a long way to your employer building a positive picture of you.
2. Take some minor “brewing interest” qualifications. Assuming you already love beer and know a good chunk about it, there's plenty of not quite accredited but reasonably well respected taster courses out there to help you step into your professional development. Cicerone Certified Beer Server ($69, reasonably easy), Beer Judge Certification Program ($15, reasonably difficult), Craftbeer Beer101 ($20, extremely easy), and BJCP Beer Academy Foundation Course (£130 + VAT, no exam, City and Guilds qualification) are all low cost exams that will look great on your CV and demonstrate an understanding of beer in general without too much study. You're not aiming to show you can operate a state of the art macro brewery here – you're proving you have an interest in beer, some knowledge, and a desire to study for more.
3. Volunteer. Yep, get volunteering. I don't think there's a better way to gain brewing experience than to offer your labour for free – volunteering has massive benefits to you as a potential professional brewer, and most micro breweries can always use a hand digging out the mash tun or cleaning the copper. It's a great chance to learn the trade inside out on a real working level, and can get you into a close knit network that's probably tighter than you think – brewers talk, brewers are mostly friends and if there's an opening somewhere, you'll probably be first to be recommended, if they can stand to lose you. Many employers will simply look for experience, and listing a brewery you've worked for on your CV is a very essential box ticked for many breweries – entry level jobs are often simply a matter of turning up on time, being willing to put the graft in and appreciating the end product. Keep putting yourself out there – again, brewers are weird folk and may need convincing – so get yourself to a brewery, drop them a couple of home brews off and have a friendly chat, and you might find yourself weighing out hops sooner than you think. There are voluntary positions available at beer festivals too – you'd be surprised how man brewers and breweries attend, how many people you'll meet in the trade, and how many of the same people you see at these events time and time again.
4. I'll stress this again – take some beer with you. My boss's favourite saying is “the proof is in the pudding” and he's not wrong. You can have all the processes, ingredients and branding in the world, but people taste with their eyes, nose and mouth, and beer drinkers are, it's not unfair to say, among the most opinionated in the world. Brewers love beer. Give them a beer you're proud of and they'll have confidence in you. There's not a brewery alive that will string you up for taking alcohol to your job interview – in fact, all of the interviews I have attended have all resulted in beer tasting.
5. Play to your strengths. Working in a brewery is a mixed bag – I always say that the 8 or 9 jobs I've had over the course of my life were my real education. McDonalds taught me processes, food hygiene/safety and customer service – ASDA taught me inventory mangement – bar work taught me, well, to serve beer. Landscape Gardening taught me to run a business, take accurate records, and how much coffee to drink before shovelling a tonne of spent grain out of the mash tun. My hobby of pratting about on photoshop has lead to me designing our pump clips, adverts and promotional material. Every job or hobby you've ever had is likely to play a part in your transferrable skills, and you'd be surprised how much is relevant, so don't leave them out.
6. Be cool. Brewers are artisans, so any artisan hobbies you have are worth bigging up. Make an effort to get on with your potential employer on a personal level – this can be a stressful industry, and nobody wants to work with a beer snob, an irritating know-it-all, or a general pillock. Make yourself somebody that people want to share a beer with at the end of the day – because chances are, that's what you'll be doing.
Any tips or questions? Feel free to comment...
The Weatheroak Hill Brewery Beer Blog
Friday 26 August 2016
Saturday 30 July 2016
Everybody is brewing Grisette, and that's just awesome.
I’m at a 21st party in
Birmingham’s newest craft beer bar, Tilt – alongside a range of 8
fantastic keg beers, they serve loose leaf tea, fresh coffee, cakes –
oh, and the place is full of pinball machines. Awesome. Towards the end
of the night I always get bottle hungry, and scanning the list I find
Brew By Number’s Lemongrass Grisette. It’s great – it’s light,
refreshing, citrus infused without an insane dose of hops and a little
hazy – I wish it was on tap and served in pints. An uncommon style gains
a new fan.
Over the last few years we’ve seen a massive rise in the popularity of Saison in the UK. Saison is historically regarded as a farmer’s drink – the name literally meaning Summer - dry, slightly sour and usually utilizing wild yeast for a unique twang, a beer style open to massive interpretation went from almost impossible to find unless you know a guy who knows a guy, or happen to have a Belgian speciality bar in your town (thanks Cherry Reds!) to Marston’s mass producing a version for Tesco. Grisette is the little brother of Saison, originally (apparently) served to miners in the Hainut area of Belgium - true to form, the Mild Ale of Belgium - and boasts many of the same traits as Saison, but is often brewed with a decent portion of raw wheat and considerably lower in ABV. Think of it as a Table Saison with some spiciness and graininess from the wheat – nice.
Summer is coming, and it’s time to start thinking about session beers, so this is a great “lawnmower” style to drink young and serve cool and well carbonated. As with Saison, it’s open to interpretation – in fact, sources sometimes point to little more than “low-alcohol, light bodied, saison-like golden ales of no great distinction.”
Belgian beers usually rely on a base of Pilsner malt with Noble or English hops and a region specific yeast – with this in mind, feel free to experiment however you see fit. Listed below are two recipes, one with herbs and spices, the other with noble hops. Be careful not to over hop this beer – with a very light body and a very dry finish, you’ll want to dial back what you usually aim for a little. Fermenting at higher temperature ranges will kick out more esters, ferment lower for a cleaner beer. Raw wheat can come whole, terrified or flaked – flaked are the easiest to use. Trappist, Saison and Witbier style yeasts are all acceptable, so use what you can find. If you want to increase the body of the beer, add a cheeky portion of Carapils, Flaked Oats or Vienna malt, although this is not entirely true to style.
Lemon Balm & Orange Peel Grisette
Dry and refreshing with strong citrus notes
23L
1.030 OG – 1.002 FG
3.6% ABV
3.8 EBC
23 IBUs
All Grain
2.7kg Pilsner Malt (or 1.7kg Pilsner Liquid Extract)
0.45kg Vienna Malt
0.2kg Flaked Wheat
55g Bobek 4.1% Leaf @ 90 mins
20g Bobek 4.1% Leaf @ 0 mins
1 pint Lemon Balm leaves @ 0 mins (loosely packed)
10g Dried Orange Peel, Bitter (or peel of 5 large oranges, pith left behind) @ 0 mins
Ferment with Safbrew T-58 Yeast
Noble Hopped Grisette
Crisp and subtle, easy drinking
23L
1.027 OG – 1.002 FG
3.3% ABV
3.0 EBC
20 IBUs
All Grain
2.5kg Pilsner Malt (or 1.7kg Pilsner Liquid Extract)
0.5kg Torrified Wheat
20g Saaz Leaf 4% @ 90 mins
20g Saaz Leaf 4% @ 30 mins
35g Saaz Leaf 4% @ 10 mins
Ferment with Wyeast Belgian Saison #3724
Over the last few years we’ve seen a massive rise in the popularity of Saison in the UK. Saison is historically regarded as a farmer’s drink – the name literally meaning Summer - dry, slightly sour and usually utilizing wild yeast for a unique twang, a beer style open to massive interpretation went from almost impossible to find unless you know a guy who knows a guy, or happen to have a Belgian speciality bar in your town (thanks Cherry Reds!) to Marston’s mass producing a version for Tesco. Grisette is the little brother of Saison, originally (apparently) served to miners in the Hainut area of Belgium - true to form, the Mild Ale of Belgium - and boasts many of the same traits as Saison, but is often brewed with a decent portion of raw wheat and considerably lower in ABV. Think of it as a Table Saison with some spiciness and graininess from the wheat – nice.
Summer is coming, and it’s time to start thinking about session beers, so this is a great “lawnmower” style to drink young and serve cool and well carbonated. As with Saison, it’s open to interpretation – in fact, sources sometimes point to little more than “low-alcohol, light bodied, saison-like golden ales of no great distinction.”
Belgian beers usually rely on a base of Pilsner malt with Noble or English hops and a region specific yeast – with this in mind, feel free to experiment however you see fit. Listed below are two recipes, one with herbs and spices, the other with noble hops. Be careful not to over hop this beer – with a very light body and a very dry finish, you’ll want to dial back what you usually aim for a little. Fermenting at higher temperature ranges will kick out more esters, ferment lower for a cleaner beer. Raw wheat can come whole, terrified or flaked – flaked are the easiest to use. Trappist, Saison and Witbier style yeasts are all acceptable, so use what you can find. If you want to increase the body of the beer, add a cheeky portion of Carapils, Flaked Oats or Vienna malt, although this is not entirely true to style.
Lemon Balm & Orange Peel Grisette
Dry and refreshing with strong citrus notes
23L
1.030 OG – 1.002 FG
3.6% ABV
3.8 EBC
23 IBUs
All Grain
2.7kg Pilsner Malt (or 1.7kg Pilsner Liquid Extract)
0.45kg Vienna Malt
0.2kg Flaked Wheat
55g Bobek 4.1% Leaf @ 90 mins
20g Bobek 4.1% Leaf @ 0 mins
1 pint Lemon Balm leaves @ 0 mins (loosely packed)
10g Dried Orange Peel, Bitter (or peel of 5 large oranges, pith left behind) @ 0 mins
Ferment with Safbrew T-58 Yeast
Noble Hopped Grisette
Crisp and subtle, easy drinking
23L
1.027 OG – 1.002 FG
3.3% ABV
3.0 EBC
20 IBUs
All Grain
2.5kg Pilsner Malt (or 1.7kg Pilsner Liquid Extract)
0.5kg Torrified Wheat
20g Saaz Leaf 4% @ 90 mins
20g Saaz Leaf 4% @ 30 mins
35g Saaz Leaf 4% @ 10 mins
Ferment with Wyeast Belgian Saison #3724
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