Ask any craft brewer what led them to their career and the answer is likely to be a simple statement: "I started homebrewing."
Most of the early pioneers of craft beer were homebrewers who took their hobby one step beyond, a progression that continues to this day. Homebrewing truly is the originator of today's beer boom.
And the inspiration has come full circle. With the rise of commercially produced, full-flavored beer has come a corresponding rise in the interest in making full-flavored beer at home. The American Homebrewers Association estimates that there are currently 1.5 million homebrewers in the United States, two-thirds of whom picked up the hobby after 2005. They collectively produce more than 2 million barrels of beer annually — about 1 percent of the nation's total beer production.
There is a library of books available to help at-home brewers hone their skills, with many new titles released this year. They range from basic how-to manuals to almost poetic treatises on exotic beers and brewing techniques. Here's a taste of the new ones.
"Homebrew All-Stars," by Drew Beechum and Denny Conn (Voyageur Press, 224 pages, $24.99) carries on a tradition among homebrewers of sharing and mentoring. Through brewer profiles, interviews and recipes, it offers insight into the practices of some of the hobby's top practitioners that afford a valuable skill-building opportunity for beginners and longtime brewers.
Beechum and Conn divide homebrewers into four categories based on interests and methodology. "Old school masters" focus on reproducing classic styles and traditional brewing practices. "Scientists" wonk out on numbers, tweaking their brewing process for every possible efficiency. The "wild ones" are brewers who embrace bacteria and specialty yeast fermentations. "Recipe innovators" push the boundaries, incorporating exotic ingredients into their creations. Not surprisingly, I've noticed similar personalities among the many professional brewers I've interviewed.
These categories provide the structure of the book, with brewer profiles grouped into chapters accordingly. A short quiz helps readers identify their own brewing temperament, allowing them to focus their reading. Profiles include helpful process tips as well as the brewers' favorite ingredients and pieces of equipment. Each all-star brewer provides at least one award-winning recipe from their archive.
Although the information is dense, the writing is brisk, whisking the reader along. Beechum and Conn's humor and frequent self-deprecating jabs keep it entertaining.