Brew Skies Happy Hour
Crack open a cold one and join brewer Bret Kollmann Baker and beer historian Michael D. Morgan as they explore how America went from fewer than 100 breweries in the late 1970's to more than 10,000 today.
Episodes
20 episodes
Ep 20: Jim Koch of Boston Beer Company - Part 3
Jim Koch’s impact on the beer industry goes way beyond being a craft brewing pioneer. For example, when a variety of German noble hops was on the verge of extinction due to wilt, Jim Koch spearheaded the effort to save them. When a global hop s...
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Episode 20
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31:51
Ep 19: Jim Koch of Boston Beer Company - Part 2
“The ethnic cleansing,” is how top executives at Anheuser-Busch described their effort to destroy Sam Adams, Jim Koch, and the nascent craft beer industry in the 1990s. The efforts of Anheuser-Busch, makers of Budweiser and Bud Light among many...
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Episode 19
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27:58
Ep 18: Jim Koch of Boston Beer Company - Part 1
As the founder of the Boston Beer Company - makers of Sam Adams and many other brands - Jim Koch was an early pioneer in the craft brewing industry. Not one to mince words, his father’s reaction to the news that his son was starting a brewery w...
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Episode 18
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40:36
17: Yellow, Watery, and Flavorless - Part 5: Miller Time
In the early 1970s, Miller was a second tier and mostly regional brewery. That begins to change when they're acquired by Phillip Morris and by the end of the decade they were number 2 and nipping at Budweiser's heels. Miller's rise is largely d...
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45:00
16: Yellow, Watery, and Flavorless - Part 4: Tastes Like Schlitz
Schlitz was once the second best selling beer in the US behind Budweiser and for a few years in the 1950s it occupied the top spot. These two brewing behemoths were neck and neck until the 1970s when Schlitz made a few bad decisions and fell of...
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45:11
15: Yellow, Watery, and Flavorless - Part 3: The Mad Men Cometh
Like many aspects of American life in the post war era, advertising transformed the brewing industry in a myriad of ways. Those who spent big dollars on advertising would thrive while many of those that didn’t would close their doors forever. M...
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43:08
14: Yellow, Watery, and Flavorless - Part 2: The Long, Sweet, and Sugary Shadow of Prohibition
Prohibition radically altered the American palate. After more than a decade of using fruit juice and other sweeteners to make bad hooch and bathtub gin drinkable, Americans had no taste for anything bitter or sour. People wanted things that wer...
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44:02
13: Yellow, Watery, and Flavorless - Part 1: Zee Germans
In the late 1970s when the craft beer revolution was in its infancy, the vast majority of beer available in the United States was watery, yellow, and flavorless. How did we get to such a sad state of affairs? Turns out it has a lot to do with G...
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54:02
12: Did We Learn Anything?
In the Season 1 finale, Bret and Mike break down what they've learned with friend, fellow beer enthusiast, and podcaster, the Gnarly Gnome. In addition to breaking down our takeaways on why some breweries succeeded beyond the founders’ w...
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Season 1
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Episode 12
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57:57
11: A Rocket Flight to the Sun
Founded outside of Cincinnati in 1987, Oldenberg Brewery was the first significant craft brand in the Midwest and it was at the forefront of craft beer in almost every way. Oldenberg’s massive beer hall contained the world’s largest collection ...
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Season 1
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Episode 11
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1:14:29
10: A Photographer, America’s First Brewpub, and New Styles of Beer
Bill Owens found success and national acclaim for his photojournalism, particularly his capture of suburban northern California in the 1970s. Then things took a turn. When he found his career in peril and his marriage in divorce court, O...
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Season 1
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Episode 10
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56:46
9: Revenge of the Beer Nerds
In 1974, the Maltose Falcons became the first homebrew club in America, making illegal brews behind a wine shop on Ventura Blvd. outside of Los Angeles. Author and Maltose Falcons historian Drew Beechum tells the story this revolutionary...
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Season 1
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Episode 9
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1:01:19
8: Making The Bible Belt Wet
Today, Asheville proudly advertises itself as “Beer City USA,” but in the early 1980s North Carolina was a ruby red Bible belt state with very restrictive alcohol laws. Then a German immigrant named Uli Bennewitz naively decided that the...
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Season 1
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Episode 8
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1:20:28
7: America's Complicated History with Alcohol
Maureen Ogle, famed author of Ambitious Brew, one of the best selling and undeniably the best written comprehensive histories of the beer industry in the U.S. takes us back to the beginning. Together, we journey through the nasc...
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Season 1
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Episode 7
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1:17:06
6: The Paul Revere of Beer
When nuclear scientist Charlie Papazian started brewing beer in the basement of an elementary school, he was quietly turning an illegal hobby into a revolution. Founder of the American Homebrewers Association, Zymurgy Magazine, ...
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Season 1
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Episode 6
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1:06:53
5: Sierra Nevada Pale Ale and America’s First Craft Beer
Ken Grossman, founder and owner of Sierra Nevada Brewing Co. learned to brew at age 14 when his neighbor - a retired rocket scientist - agreed to teach him. Starting with a glorified home brew system in a northern California ...
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Season 1
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Episode 5
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57:03
4: Beers with the Smithsonian
Dr. Theresa McCulla, curator of the American Brewing Initiative at the Smithsonian talks to us about why the nation’s most important museum has an entire department dedicated to craft beer; and she shares some of the most interesting&nbs...
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Season 1
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Episode 4
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59:55
3: An Appliance Heir, an Impulse Purchase, and "the Knowledge"
In 1960s San Francisco, Fritz Maytag was an ambitious but aimless recent Stanford graduate. Looking for a purpose in life, he bought a flailing 19th century brewery called Anchor Steam that made really bad beer. Faced with certain failur...
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Season 1
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Episode 3
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1:08:10
2: America’s First Craft Brewery
In 1976 an unemployed sailor named Jack McAuliffe dropped $5,000 on a bunch of repurposed materials and built New Albion Brewing Company by hand. Childless and certain that he never wanted kids, Jack got a vasectomy in his 20s which we only bri...
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Season 1
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Episode 2
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50:53
1: Who are these clowns and what are they talking about?
Attorney, author, and University beer professor Michael D. Morgan, and Urban Artifact owner, head brewer, and biochemist Bret Kollmann Baker introduce themselves and discuss the fundamental question of this podcast which is, how d...
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Season 1
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Episode 1
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27:03