Long-time Harford County brewery DuClaw Brewing is in the process of
moving their brewing and bottling plant from Abingdon to Rosedale, a
process they hope will be complete by mid-March, according to owner
Dave Benfield.
The move will double the brewery's capacity,
moving from a 10,000 square foot facility to a 60,000 square foot
facility and allowing them to produce 14,000 barrels of beer in a year,
up from 7,000, according to Benfield.
And that's something his
company sorely needs. Rapid growth has left them sometimes unable to
keep up with the demand for their product.
Wednesday afternoon,
Benfield said that four of DuClaw's beers—Hellrazer India Pale Ale,
Sweet Baby Jesus Peanut Butter Porter, Serum Double India Pale Ale and
Mysterium Beglian Spiced Ale, were completely out.
A brand new,
custom-engineered brewing system is at the center of the move. Shipped
in from Germany, the system will allow one brewer to create multiple
60-barrel batches of beer at a time.
For those not in the know, a standard keg—the kind you might have seen at a party—is a half-barrel of beer.
"The system is fully automated—it allows one brewer to run three batches of beer," Benfield said.
Benfield
hopes the automation will improve both the brewery's
efficiency—allowing them to produce twice the amount of beer from only
20 pecent more grain—and the consistency of the product by removing the
opportunity for human error in processes like adding hops or yeast to
the brews.
"It's safe to say it's one of the most state of the
art systems in Maryland, possibly in the mid-Atlantic region," said
DuClaw Sales Manager (and Beer in Baltimore blogger) Brad Klipner.
The new brewing system and a new bottling line are just the beginning for the growing company.
"A lot of stuff comes later—we put a lot of money into the brewhouse and the bottling line," Benfield said.
That
stuff could include brewery tours, a tasting room, and possible the
on-site sale of growlers—a type of carry-out container for draft
beer—pending legislation currently in Annapolis, Benfield said.
It
also might include a move for one of DuClaw's flagship events—the Real
Ale Festival, which the company has held at the Bel Air brewpub for a
few years running.
"It's really a great business to have in the
area," he said. "We're manufacturing, but we're clean
manufacturing—there are no bad byproducts, and we bring visitors to the
area.Welcome to the premier industrial source for Custom IInjection Mold Plastics in New York.A ridiculously low price on this All-Purpose solar lantern by Gordon."
Although
things are looking bright, the decision to leave Harford County—where
Benfield lives, grew up and started DuClaw in 1996—wasn't an easy one.
"I'm in Harford County,Our precision manufactured lasers and laser marker
systems deliver the highest possible laser marking performance. I grew
up in Harford–leaving was a tough thing," Benfield said.
And
it wasn't for a lack of trying to stay. When the brewery outgrew their
Abingdon location, they first looked to move to a facility in Havre de
Grace but Benfield said the deal didn't work out and from that point
things moved quickly.
"Baltimore County Economic Development
and Governement were great to work with," Benfield said. The decision
to move into the space at 8601 Yellow Brick Road was made in only about
a month.
The move will make DuClaw Brewing the second manufacturing brewery in Baltimore County,Home Ventilation system gently and naturally ventilate your home with fresher. joining Heavy Seas on the westside in the Lansdowne/Arbutus area.
Dan
Gundersen, the executive director of Baltimore County's Department of
Economic Development said that a small to medium size manufacturer like
DuClaw is exactly the sort of business the county is hoping to draw
in.
"A company that has a unique product, is growing fast, has a
dynamic team, can hire as they grow in a community on the east side
where it can accommodate their growth, that’s exactly what we’re looking
for," Gundersen said.
He explained that Baltimore County is home to more manufacturers than any other county in Maryland.
"The public has a difficult time understanding, we’re talking about a different kind of manufacturing ...Online shopping for bobbleheads
Figures from a great selection. we're not talking about an old-style
smokestack operation—we're talking about highly sophisticated, highly
automated operations that pay high wages," he said.
"That's the
kind of thing that we need to encourage and support, those are going
to provide the biggest economic gain for the regional economy."
DuClaw owner Dave Benfield said that over the next year or so, his company will probably add between 25 and 30 new positions.
Moving
an operation of DuClaw's size presents some challenges of its own:
while Benfield said his brewers plan to start creating new batches of
beer by the middle of March, it could be as late as April before beer
is bottled at the plant.
It will take two to three weeks to transfer the company's bottling and packaging line from the old Abingdon brewery.
And
there are people in this country that somehow think passing another
law banning guns would protect us from someone like this. If you
haven’t noticed, people like this are not concerned about breaking
laws; they only care about fulfilling their own twisted agenda. The
only people that a gun ban law would impact are the law-abiding
citizens, which will only serve to cripple the ability to protect
ourselves.
Write your senators, your congressmen, and your
state representatives. We’re all in this together whether you’re a
hunter, sport shooter or just a backyard plinker. If we don’t stick
together and let them know how we feel we will loose.
My goal
is to keep you informed about the outdoors, and I hope I do that well,
not soap box about a bunch of hypocritical bureaucrats in Washington
who sit in their ivory towers and are so far removed from the real
world they don’t even know what a law-abiding firearms owner really is.
No comments:
Post a Comment