"At an April ceremony in a ballroom overflowing with over 2,000 craft-beer luminaries from around the world, Summit EPA took the World Beer Cup gold medal for Classic English Style Pale Ale."
That was 2010. I penned those words in my debut column for the Star Tribune's Taste section, published a decade ago, almost to the day. I was in that crowded Chicago ballroom to watch Summit receive the award and to snap a picture of the elated brewers as they came off the stage. It was the first of seven medals that Extra Pale Ale would receive in national and international competition over the next seven years.
Over those years, I've written 125 pieces for the Star Tribune and covered everything from taproom openings and beer styles to cider, beer books and kombucha. I've outlined taproom tours by train, car and bicycle — both inside and outside the metro freeway loop. I've recommended pairings for the holidays, Halloween candy, truffles, cheese and Super Bowl snacks. It's been a wonderful journey.
Change was in the air in May 2010. There was a sense in Minnesota, and nationally, that something big was about to happen for beer. A massive expansion was just beginning to get underway. There were only 20 breweries in the state when that first column was published, six of which have since closed. Compare that with the approximately 225 currently operating.
This growth is reflected in my columns. In 2012, I wrote two pieces about new brewery openings — seven of them in all. That fall I wrote, "Five new breweries in three months may seem like a lot, but the rush is hardly over. Several more are set to open later this year or early next year." The total for 2012 was 17.
In July 2014, I wrote, "July saw three new brewery openings in as many weeks, giving area beer fans a slew of new options to gather for a pint." I covered five new breweries that year, and those were not the only ones to open. A year later I reported, "There are currently 25 taprooms inside the 494/694 loop. As many as 10 more could open by the end of this year."
By July 2016 that number had nearly doubled. "The Twin Cities is awash in beer," I wrote. "The number of breweries in the immediate metro area is approaching 40." Then in a June 2018 piece on brewery tours by bicycle, I pegged the metro area count at 50. There are currently around 80 breweries in and around the Twin Cities.
Taprooms, the single most important factor in that exponential growth, were still a year and a half away in May 2010. Surly wouldn't announce its plans to build a "destination brewery" for another eight months. It wasn't until May 2011 when the lobbying push and grassroots pressure campaign that followed Surly's announcement resulted in the passage of Minnesota statute 340A.301 subd. 6(b), allowing brewery taprooms to become a reality.