Bottled beer
Merchant du Vin’s monthly newsletter contains some obvious but often-forgotten thoughts about bottled beer. Yes, the advice is self-serving because much of MdV’s beer (notably Samuel Smith) is available in bottles only. But it’s worth sharing:
Remember to ask for the bottled beer list next time you are out at a pub or restaurant.
Draft beer is great: some beers are only available in kegs, the packaging is reusable, and look at the money that breweries spend on tap handles: the wacky shapes, the lights, the full-figural full-color artwork, the motion features, the extreme materials . . . they want to catch your eye!
We just want to point out that every beer account should also have a selection of bottles, for several good reasons.
Variety: It’s quite easy to add a bottled beer to a bar’s offerings - the management doesn’t need to bump off a beer, as they must when adding a draft beer.
Opportunity: Customers benefit from the chance to try something different - maybe something very special that might not sell enough volume for a draft line. And the bar has the opportunity to sell something that not only makes the customer happier but yields a “vertical selling opportunity” - a higher selling price. A benefit to the consumer and to the bar owner? That’s a win-win.
Style: Sometimes a draft beer is just different from the bottled variety. It may be the conditioning (carbonation level) or it may actually be a different beer in composition. Plus, the carbonation level in a keg is affected by the draft system’s dispense pressure, especially as the level in the keg drops. Some styles - especially those with very high or very low carbonation - are more reliable in a bottle.
Drama & presentation: Many bottles of beer have labels that are information-packed, or that have really great art on them. Other bottles may be fine custom glass; they may be cork-finished; they may have a foil capsule; they might have a fun or quirky crown cap. In the case of a bottle, the customer has a personal interaction with the brewery’s effort, hard work and magic: by holding the bottle in their hand, they hold a little piece of the brewery.
Bottle-conditioning: A tapped cask-conditioned keg has quite a short shelf life, maybe only a day or two at peak. Bottle-conditioned beers - consumed at one sitting - have a very long shelf life. Some bottle-conditioned beers improve with age.
Portion control: Sold and counted in units, bottles are easier to control at the rare pub that has “inventory shrinkage” issues . . .
Offer the benchmarks: When customers want to compare a new beer to a classic, why not make it easy for them? We think every bar in America should probably have Samuel Smith’s Nut Brown Ale, Ayinger Celebrator Doppelbock, and Lindemans Framboise Lambic . . . but we may be biased. If you operate a pub or restaurant that doesn’t offer these beers, we have the solution for you: simply order in a case of each and make sure your server and bartenders know they are available. Then your customers will let you know what they think of these beers, via their big tips and big smiles.
I like that idea of the benchmarks. What else would you add to that list? Here’s a few imported standards that I think excel in bottles:
- Schneider Weisse
- Chimay Blue
- Westmalle Dubbel
- La Fin du Monde
- Fuller’s 1845
- Samichlaus
- Aecht Schlenkerla Rauchbier Marzen
- Saison Dupont
- Cantillon Gueuze
- Delirium Tremens
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