Thunder and Lightning

Photo by Brewtography Project

In order to run a malthouse, one has to bet pretty big on barley.

It’s an understatement to say that barley is our cash crop. Sure, we grow some wheat and rye and corn. We dabble in heritage grains. But barley, as most craft enthusiasts know, is the backbone of beer (and it’s often used in spirits, too!) so running a malthouse means bringing in the barley - and lots of it. In order to keep our malthouse running at full capacity, we need to harvest about 900 successful acres of barley which translates to about 3 million pounds of grain that goes into our malting drums annually.

Like we said: we’re big on barley.

It makes sense then, that at Olander Farms, we want to be constantly honing our barley-growing craft. Yes, we’ve been doing this for five generations. But no, we don’t know everything.

Shocking, right? Mother nature is so complicated.

And things change.

Like climate change.

Here’s a little beef on barley: (Ohhh, speaking of which, if you haven’t tried beef and barley soup, you should. Look it up! We also have beef for sale, so shoot us a line!)

Photo by Emily Sierra Photography

Traditionally, in the US, barley has been a spring-planted crop. That means precisely what it sounds like: it is planted in early spring, and harvested by mid-summer. This is different from warm-season crops, like corn, which are planted in late spring after soil temps have had a chance to warm up, or fall-planted crops which go in in early fall and overwinter in the ground.

Barley is a chill crop: not only does it make beer, which you can sip with your friends as you grill and chill, or Netflix and chill,…but barley also likes chilly weather. Or cool weather, at least. Heat stresses barley out, and stressed barley produces unusable grain. It makes the protein content too high. Unusable grain is bad business for a malthouse.

That’s why barley has traditionally liked spring. It gets the cool, early-season weather, and comes out of the ground just as things are getting brutally hot, leaving the scorching days for heat-loving crops like corn.

But now, our springs are getting warmer. And drier. The barley is getting a little stressed, a little beat up. This year, we lost 200 acres of our harvest to barley with high protein content, largely due to heat and drought. As much as we would love to see this trend turn around, that’s not something we’re about to bet the farm on (in quite literal terms) so what’s a malthouse to do? We can’t just go out and order some cooler weather, or just do a rain dance…can we?

Well, maybe. Sort of. We did order some Thunder and Lightning, but there was no dancing involved.

Thunder and Lightning are two new barley varieties developed by Oregon State University, and they are cool. Like, way cool. Like winter cool, with lots of snow.

Thunder and Lightning were developed to be fall-planted varieties of barley. These seeds go in the ground in late summer/early fall, get established, then go dormant when the really cold weather hits, chilling in the cold ground until spring when they pop up and start growing again.

Fall-planted barley is - in laymen’s terms - completely nuts. Typically, barley is one of the cereal crops most susceptible to winterkill - meaning (again, precisely as it sounds) that cold winter temps kill it. But OSU has developed these two varieties that are more resistant to the cold, and when dealing with warming springs, fall-planted barley has some real advantages: namely, they get all the winter moisture in addition to spring rains, and they spend less time in the heat of summer.

They have some real risks, too. Colorado winters can be pretty stinking cold. They’re bred to be cold-resistant, can they really handle a Colorado winter?

There’s only one way to find out.

We’ve got 16 acres of each planted and we’re keeping our fingers crossed. We’ll see how they grow. Then, we’ll see how they malt. Because growing a new variety of barley is one thing. Figuring out how it malts is entirely another. In fact, to date, we don’t know of any other folks malting these new barleys, yet. They may be out there, but if they are, we’re part of a very small crew of experimental maltsters, indeed.

But we like beer. And we know you like beer (and whiskey and bourbon). And we want to keep bringing you the best barley to make the best beer to keep you grillin’ and chillin’ for years to come.

So we’re trying to stay on the cutting edge of things, trying to beat the heat.

Fall-planted barley it is then.

Wish us luck.

Brewery of the Month: Wild Edge Brewing Collective: Cortez, CO

You’re probably overdue for a road trip.

We know…summer just ended, families are trying to get back into the school/work routine, and life feels busy.

But it’s fall y’all. The air is crisp, the evenings are cool, and pumpkins and aspen leaves are in season. Fall is for sipping on some fine beers on fine patios with spectacular weather, and if you haven’t experienced fall in Southwest Colorado, well…

You are, indeed, overdue for a road trip.

Southwest Colorado is one of our state’s lesser-trafficked gems. From Durango to Cortez, Mancos to Dove Creek, and through many small towns in between, fantastic scenery meets perfect weather, and stellar mountain biking is made all the better when followed with small-town craft beer.

Admittedly, most of the breweries and distilleries we serve here at Root Shoot are in the Front Range corridor, but we’re always honored and excited when other Colorado (and beyond!) businesses seek us out and choose our malt. And the prize for the brewery in the furthest reaches of our glorious state has to go to Wild Edge Brewing Collective in Cortez, Colorado.

Owned by Tucker Robinson and partners, Wild Edge sits in a remodeled warehouse in downtown Cortez and specializes in craft beers with an emphasis on sours - both kettle and barrel-aged. They also serve up some mean IPAs, Saisons, and Belgians.

An anthropologist by schooling and an archeologist by trade, Tucker spent 10 years working in the archeology field in the history-rich Southwest Colorado area before making the leap to professional brewing. From studying ancient communities to building new ones, people remain Tucker’s focus. Although he’s proud of the beer Wild Edge produces, he’s even more proud of the community space the brewery provides.

“On any given night, it never ceases to amaze me the diversity of people that are in the brewery,” he says. “People of all ages, political leanings, genders, beliefs, and economic standing, all enjoying the same space over a pint of beer. The power of beer to build a better and more inclusive community always impresses me.”

Cheers to that.

Despite the geographic distance separating our two businesses (NoCo meets…SoCo? SoWeCo?) companies that beer together, conserve together. Isn’t that how the saying goes?

We had the pleasure of working with Wild Edge on the Colorado Strong Ale of 2020, the proceeds of which went to the victims of the Cameron Peak/Troublesome Fire twin disasters, and we bonded over a common interest in land conservation and doing good with beer.

Three of the founding partners of Wild Edge met through their work on the board of directors of the Montezuma Land Conservancy, and if you all don’t know how we feel about Land Conservation yet, well…you should do a little digging through our social media feeds. All of which is to say that once Tucker, Emily, and Todd got in the same room and enjoyed some barrel aged sour beers together, a wonderful land-conservation-inspired, beer-infused partnership was born.

Case in point? The recently-released Juniperus, a beer that even Tucker admits to be one of his favorites (and brewers so rarely claim to have favorites!) It’s a Root Shoot beer made with local juniper, one of the primary native plants of Southwest Colorado, and the proceeds from  it go to support the Montezuma Land Conservancy.

Juniper not your thing? We can’t understand that, but there are some other fantastic beers coming on tap this fall and winter, like a rye whiskey barrel aged stout with berries and vanilla bean (in collaboration with Telluride Distilling Company,) and a barrel aged sour beer with quince grown by Wild Edge’s friends at Sutcliffe Vineyard

Quince! How many quince beers have you ever had? Do you even know what quince is? No? Here’s a little help.

Have we convinced you, yet? To live on the Wild side? To live on the Edge? To at least take a road trip south (or north, depending on where you may be!) and go check out this badass little brewery in an absolutely gorgeous part of the state?

And while you’re down there - if we might ask - could you bring us back a barrel-aged sour or two? We promise we’ll share.

No, we don’t. We’ll probably drink it all immediately and realize we’re overdue for a road trip, then head south and buy more. But that wouldn’t be all bad.

It would actually be pretty great.

Open roads, small towns, artisan breweries, good people.

You’re killing it in Cortez, Wild Edge! We’re proud to have you as part of our family.

Your Root Shoot "Cheat Sheet"

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These businesses are our Craft Malt Certified (or equivalent) breweries. But there’s more!

Coming soon… a list of Root Shoot’s 2022 brewery and distiller partners. Stay tuned!

Brewery of the Month: Barquentine Brewing

Photo courtesy of Barquentine Brewing

Here in Colorado, we have water issues.

Living in a land-locked state with a semi-arid climate that also happens to be in the throes of a mega-drought, water is not just a precious commodity - it’s a bit of an obsession. Coloradans are super-psyched when our reservoirs are full and we can pretend we live near a “lake.” When they’re not full, as has unfortunately been the case as of late, we shrug and camp out on the muddy edges pretending we live near the beach. We proudly fish in rivers that, anywhere east of the 100th meridian would simply be referred to as creeks. On a warm summer day, you’ll seek trucks and trailers with speedboats and jet skis headed out to find some navigable puddle to splash in, even if that means sailing around in small, tight circles for hours on end.

We love water! We need water! We’re sea-faring, ship-building mariners at heart! We’re…

Okay… we’re not. But we do find water a bit exotic around here, so it only makes sense that if you’re a landlubbing Colorado native with a penchant for beer (sailors love beer!) you’d open up a ship-themed brewery, right by a lake.

Photo courtesy of Barquentine Brewing

Such was the case for Kyle Knudson, owner of Barquentine Brewing located in the Edgewater Marketplace right near the banks of Sloan’s Lake.

Kyle, who owns Barquentine in conjunction with his father, Ed, was born and raised in Colorado as were his parents (a Colorado native born of a Colorado natives? Unheard of!) and his land-locked, semi-arid desert childhood naturally led to an infatuation with 19th century sea-faring history. Barquentines were old-world sailing vessels that, among other things, ferried beer making supplies among the brewers of Europe. Outside of the sea and his ship, there’s nothing a sailor loves more than his (or her) drink and Barquetine Brewing is here to ensure that all of us wanna-be sea dogs have a place to indulge in our waterlogged dreams.

Photo courtesy of Barquentine Brewing

Specializing in authentic Belgian beers, Barquentine draws its recipes from tradition, but their beer - and location - are definitely up to par for the modern-day Colorado beer nerd. Located in the trendy Edgewater Public Market, a beer-drinker can find plenty to explore for an afternoon, or even well into the evening. Cruise the adorable shops, grab a bite to eat, get a massage, take a yoga class, or attend one of the regular Edgewater Public market events: Monday night movies, monthly knitting groups, Bingo, necklace making, and more. There’s always a lot going on and with Barquetine around, there’s a brew for every activity and every mood.

Photo courtesy of Barquentine Brewing

Are you feeling fancy? Try the Sloan’s Lake Yacht Club Ale. You’ll feel high-class because you now belong to a yacht club, and you’ll know that you’re a discerning beer aficionado since that beer won them a sliver medal in the World Beer Cup this year. Had a rough work week and looking for a pre-noon beverage to kick off your weekend? Late to Brunch, a blood-orange ale will do the trick. Feeling feisty and want to pick an argument with your fellow beer buddies over something silly? The Opinionator Golden Strong Ale will help you, coming in at an argument-inducing 9.3% ABV!

Spunky beer names aside, however, Barquentine takes their brewing business very seriously. They had to, in order to survive. Barquentine is one of a number of Root Shoot supporting businesses that opened up right before the world closed down for COVID. They welcomed their first patrons on Leap Day of 2020 and two weeks later, the whole country shut down. As they navigated the craziness of those COVID times, they discovered the value of local supply chains.

“ We had committed to brewing with high-quality ingredients from the beginning,” says Kyle, “but when the international supply chains fell apart, it was Root Shoot that stayed true to customer service and quality, locally grown malt.” 

Turns out that having your farmers (and maltsters) just up the road can smooth out some bumps in uncertain times. And here at Root Shoot, we are benefitting from the relationship as well. Not only do we get to work with a World Beer Cup-winning brewery, we see the potential for training up future farmers…well, one future farmer at least. Namely, Kyle’s four-year-old son who - upon seeing his first combine at our Field Day promptly climbed up into the driver’s seat and cried tears of joy. You go, little buddy! In 17 years or so, we’ll train you to drive that thing!

While we wait, we’ll hang out on Barquetine’s big summer patio, drink some Sea Bear Saison, and dream of the ocean. Maybe take a quick paddle around Sloan’s Lake. Savor these last days of summer on what water we can find, and enjoy some crisp Belgian brews.

We may not live on the beach, but with places like Barquentine around, Colorado in the summer is the only place that we want to be.

Field Notes: When It's not all Whiskey and Rainbows

Here at Root Shoot and Olander Farms, we like to think we’re pretty photogenic.

We work some amazingly beautiful properties. We get to spend our days in sunny fields with the Rocky Mountains as our backdrop. We’ve got bright green rows of crops under bright blue skies. We use some sexy looking tractors and some handsome vintage trucks. We’re still living the farm life, something that less than 2% of America’s population gets to experience, and everything is downright idyllic and bucolic…right?

Photo by Brewtography Project

At moments, yes.

When the sun sets behind the mountains as you’re checking irrigation lines, when you drive through a golden field of barley in just the right light, when the big skies of Colorado open around you and fields lay out in front of you, this farming thing can feel pretty darn good.

But just as often, farming is unbelievably hard.

Imagine, if you will, that you’re working away at your job. Maybe you’re working from home, happy in your pajamas, a cup of coffee in hand, tapping away at the computer, prepping for your first Zoom meeting of the day when suddenly, a nasty thunderstorm rolls in: wind, rain, lightening, hail - the works. You watch it blow through, thank the lucky stars the roof didn’t fly off the house…then open an email from your boss to discover that, suddenly, you’re going to make 10% less income this year than you thought. Immediately, you start calculating what to cut, where to cut, and how you can possibly make life work with this unexpected financial development.

This is also farming.

Hailstorms take out full fields of crops right before harvest. Irrigation ditches get shut off in the middle of a drought. We have an early freeze, a late frost, or a herd of elk plows through a ready-to-harvest field flattening plants in their wake.

Photo by Root Shoot Malting

Right now, we’re in that in-between space of loving what we do and wondering how it can be so hard. Two-thirds of our harvest is in (winter wheat and barley) with corn (distiller and silage) still to go.

The winter wheat did okay - not terrible, not great, but decent enough considering the brutally dry fall and winter we had. 300 acres of dryland wheat grossed 5,000 bushels of grain that we’re storing away for malting.  The barley - ufff, the barley. We harvested 700 good acres, the equivalent of 56,000 bushels, or 2.6 million pounds. It sounds like a lot. It is a lot, but to fully supply our malthouse for one year, we need 3 million pounds or 900 acres, harvested. That’s what we planted, but we lost 200 acres of malting barley because it didn’t meet the specifications required to serve our brewers and distillers. Stress on the plants, largely in the form of drought, caused high protein content which makes the barley unusable for malting. Add to that hail damage from storms, and voila - we’re down almost 30% of our primary crop.

Photo by Root Shoot Malting

As for the corn harvest - it’s still up in the air. Things look good now, but corn requires lots of water and we just got word last week that the ditches are running low and our water will be shut off “soon.”

How soon, we don’t know. The irrigation guessing game is part of the gig in farming. We’ve had a good monsoon season, maybe the afternoon storms will help make up for an early shut off. Maybe they won’t.

We don’t know.

Nor do we know how many acres of our leased land we’ll lose to development this year. We don’t know if we’ll find acreage to make up for what’s lost (fingers crossed that we do, we really need to plant more than 900 acres of barley.) We don’t know if diesel prices are going to come down or if tractor parts are going to become easier to find. We don’t even know if all the work we’re doing to switch to regenerative farming is going to pay off. Sometimes, even that seems to be harder than we ever banked on.

But…

We’re not in farming for a get-rich-quick scheme.

Honestly, we’re not in it for a get-rich-at-all scheme.

We’re in it because we love it, because the country needs farmers, because it’s what we do. We need to earn a living too, to be sure, but we believe the best way to earn a living is to do what you do well, work through the setbacks, and then do it even better.

We’re not going to cut corners.

We’re not going to sell sub-par malt just to save a dime. This year, we’ll supplement. We’ll have to buy the other 400,000 lbs (!) of barley from other growers, but if that’s what it takes to provide quality malt for our brewers and distillers, it’s a price we’re happy to pay. Next year we’ll plant another 900 acres of barley, and next year we’ll try again. We’re experimenting with some test plots of new varieties and we’re always tweaking our processes.

It’s hard sometimes - oftentimes - but we’ll plug away, learn more each year, and in the meantime, we’ll try to enjoy the bucolic moments. Because we are photogenic, gosh darn it! I mean, just look at this good looking team in this good-looking field of alfalfa and corn. They’re the picture of grace and beauty! Of farm-built athleticism and strength! Of…

Okay…they’re a little weird, but still. They’re ours. And they’re what make this project happen.

For every day spent tearing our hair out when things go wrong there are other days spent cartwheeling (albeit badly) through alfalfa fields. In our lives, and hopefully, in yours.

It’s not all whiskey and rainbows, but there are rainbows enough and we promise - come drought or hail, storms or marauding elk - that they’ll be malt enough to ensure the whiskey never runs dry.

Cheers!

—Your Root Shoot/Olander Farms Team

Field Notes: Bring on the Barley! (And other crop updates)

If you reap what you sow…

We should have a whole lot of whiskey and beer coming our way, soon!

It’s barley season, and the barley is coming in strong, something for which we are always thankful since it is the heart and soul of our entire operation. At last check, it has reached its full height, the seed heads are looking solid, and soon we’ll be cutting off irrigation. At most, we’ll give it one last good dousing with the center pivots, and then we’ll let the Colorado weather do what it does best: dry things out. The barley will dry down in the fields, changing from this bright green color you see now to the renowned “amber waves of grain.” If we had to warrant a guess as to when we’ll begin harvest, it’s looking like mid-to-late July.

Speaking of July, what’s the old saying? Corn knee-high by the 4th of July?

If that’s the case, ours is either seriously overachieving or the owner of those particular knees is a heck of a lot taller than us.

The knee-high anecdote is a good rule of thumb, but any plant’s height in any given year is dependent on dozens of different variables: planting date, soil temps, soil composition, water availability, plant variety, and more. Our distiller and silage corns are looking good (corn mid-thigh by the 4th of July??) but it’s our heritage Abenaki that’s really showing off, precisely as we hoped.

The Abenaki is what’s called short-season corn. An old Native American variety that we have talked about before in this post, Abenaki was bred by indigenous populations to grow to maturity in areas with relatively short summers. Whereas a typical commodity corn variety will take around 130 days to mature. Abenaki takes around 90. If you’re a Native American living in the cold Northeast before modern technology, having corn that matures in 90 days rather than 130 can mean the difference between having enough food for winter or starving. For us, the situation is slightly less dire. But it does mean we get a 40-day head start on making the next batch of whiskey! That’s over a month more of bourbon in your glass!

Figuratively speaking, however, the corn is not yet out of the woods, yet. A bit of a water hog, corn requires significant irrigation. Up until just last week, we were able to irrigate with free water from overflow snowmelt off the Big Thompson River. When that was shut off (as it is every year) we switched to watering via our irrigation ditches. As one might guess from the consistently dry weather this year, those irrigation ditches are running low. We don’t know how long the water will last, but if it runs out too soon, it could still damage the corn. We’ve tried to plan for that by reducing the number of plants planted per square foot in order to allow for more soil moisture per plant, but like farmers all over the state, we’re crossing our fingers and praying for rain.

And finally: the wheat. Our poor winter wheat.

In a year where news of wheat shortages dominates the market, it’s tough to say that this year’s winter wheat harvest is looking less-than-stellar, but that’s the truth of it. We grow our wheat on our dryland fields - fields without irrigation capacity. In a normal year, the wheat goes in in the fall and the winter snow brings enough moisture to allow it to germinate, grow a little, then go dormant until spring.

Last fall was brutally dry, however, and winter snows weren’t great either. In a relatively rare occurrence, our wheat didn’t sprout at all until spring, putting it behind schedule right out of the gate. Since then, we’ve only received two inches of rain, and there is virtually no residual moisture in the soil so the wheat is hurting. We’re sending it all the good mojo we can, but mojo isn’t enough: we need rain.

The season’s far from over and there are many things that could still go wrong…but for that matter, there are many things that could go right, as well.

As farmers, our success is not always within our control: we are inextricably tied to Mother Nature and her whims, to unpredictable market fluctuations, and fickle supply chains. But mostly, we’re tied to our land and to our community: our friends, family, and the wonderful businesses that support us.

That’s more than enough for us to believe that this whole project will turn out just fine.

Cheers to the upcoming barley harvest! We look forward to growing the grain to supply many more toasts to come!








Cocktail Recipe of the Month: Sonoran State of Mind by Ballmer Peak Distillery

Ah, summer.

The pools are open, the mountains are prime for adventuring,, and patios all over this great state are beckoning with their promise of cold drinks, good company, and happy hours every day of the week.

The warm weather has us trading in the winter stouts and dark bourbon drinks we love in favor of lighter fare and tropical flavors that make us think of…vacation. Of beaches. Of time off from work to just enjoy the summer heat and chill with a good drink in hand.

We want drinks that make us feel like we’re sunning ourselves on a beach in Mexico without a care in the world.

We may not make it to Mexico this summer, but for this month’s cocktail recipe, we’re bringing you the next best thing: a Sonoran-inspired beverage that brings a little slice of vacation right into your home.

Brought to you by Ballmer Peak Distillery in Lakewood, Colorado, this Sonoran State of Mind cocktail is easy, approachable, and - above all - delicious. It’s a drink you can whip up in your kitchen, take out to the back patio, and sip with your swimsuit on and your feet in a kiddie pool.

It may not be Mexico, but it sure is enjoyable.

Cheers to Ballmer Peak for sending it our way, and be sure to send us some photos if you try it!

Sonoran State of Mind

by Ballmer Peak Distillery

Ingredients:

Instructions:

  • Combine all ingredients into a cocktail shaker with ice and shake.

  • Strain into a rocks glass with ice and garnish with an orange twist or dehydrated orange wedge.

    *Cactus fruit syrup can be difficult to source to make at home. We recommend purchasing a pre-made syrup available at many restaurant supply stores on Amazon.

Brewery of the Month: Joyride Brewing

We have to admit that here at Root Shoot, we…

We can sometimes be beer snobs.

We’re not stuck-up, we swear! It’s just hard to settle for less than the best when your job entails being around so much good beer from so many great breweries all the time. We get a little spoiled. We can be a little finicky. And when we’re feeling particularly hoity-toity, we’ll admit it…we’ve been known to demand the best beer in the world.

Luckily for us, that beer can be found just down the highway from the malthouse at Joyride Brewing, a stellar craft brewery overlooking Sloan Lake in Edgewater.

Joyride Brewing makes the best Kolsch in the world. We mean this quite literally: they took home the gold medal for their Ice Cutter Kölsch in the German-style Kolsch category of the World Beer Cup.

Think about that for a minute. The WORLD Beer Cup. Not the Colorado Beer Cup. Not the American Beer Cup. This wasn’t even the Great American Beer Festival. This was putting their Kolsch out there on the world stage and having it come home the winner.

Hot damn, Joyride! We’ll toast to that!

Winning a gold in the WBC is a heck of a way to celebrate eight years of beer, which is precisely what Joyride will be doing this month. July 15-17 marks their eighth anniversary bash, and they know how to throw an epic party. Every year for their anniversary, Joyride hosts a huge block party and this year is no exception. Streets will be closed, live music is lined up for the entire weekend. There will be food trucks, kids’ activities, and, of course, world-class beer.

All of this is quite impressive from a brewery that began as a Christmas gift re-gifted.

The Joyride seeds were planted when co-owner Dave Bergen bought his dad a Mr. Beer kit for Christmas. His dad didn’t really get into it, so he gave Dave the kit back. Dave started brewing with extract for a few years, got hooked, and dove deep into the all-grain world in 2009. He and his brewing buddies (now business partners) realized they were actually pretty good at it, and a business plan was born.

Today Joyride Brewing sits right across the street from Sloan Lake and the brewery itself is pretty spectacular. One of our favorite features? It has a rooftop patio. A rooftop patio serving the best beer in the world with a lakefront view.

Pinch us, please.

The Joyride people are just as great as their beer. They’re an enthusiastic bunch, always down for brewing collaboration beers, hosting events, or just serving you up a cold one. There is, however, one employee who stands out as being exceptionally stellar: Roger, the Joyride elephant. He’s by far the most dedicated Joyride employee and, since he takes payments in peanuts and beer, he’s also the most affordable.

In all seriousness, however, if you’re going to visit one brewery this month, make it Joyride. Check out their upcoming anniversary bash. Visit for a Friday post-work beer. Spend a Sunday staring at the lake from the rooftop patio. Order yourself a Kolsch. Or an IPA. Or anyone of the 16 beers currently on tap.

Then raise a toast to this killer Colorado craft beer scene that allows breweries like Joyride to thrive, and that lets us be the beer snobs that we are.

Here in Colorado, we only drink the best beer in the world.





Cocktail Recipe of the Month: Talnua Distillery - Hop to It!

With summer patios on our mind and so many great distilleries in our Root Shoot family, we’ve decided to collaborate with a few of our amazing partner businesses and post a Cocktail of the Month recipe for you spirit-sippers to try at home. This month, we have a Finglas Dubdair Barrel Aged Gin hoppy paloma from Talnua Distillery.

Sound fancy? That’s because it is! In fact, we’ve got two variations of this recipe: one for those of you who are aspiring mixologists at home, and a simplified version for those of you who like to sip, but don’t know much about mixing.

Not up for mixing your own at all, but think it sounds good? This cocktail is currently being served in Talnua’s cocktail lounge, so cozy up to the bar and give it (and all their other amazing cocktails) a try!

HOP TO IT: A Finglas Dubdair Barrel Aged Gin Hoppy Paloma

Photo courtesy of Talnua Distillery

Ingredients:

  • 2 oz Finglas Dubdair Gin (you can purchase here)

  • 3/4 oz fresh grapefruit juice

  • 1/4 oz fresh lime juice

  • 1/2 oz cinnamon simple syrup

  • 1/8 oz grapefruit hop tincture (for aspiring mixologists) OR 1/8 oz of your favorite West Coast IPA

To Make Cinnamon Simple Syrup:

  • 1 cup water

  • 1 cup sugar

  • 1/4 cup cinnamon sticks, broken into small pieces

  • Bring the water to a boil

  • When it has come to a boil add the sugar and cinnamon and stir until the sugar is dissolved.

  • Turn the heat down to a low simmer and continue to stir occasionally for 20 minutes

  • Transfer the contents into a heat resistant container and put in the fridge overnight

  • Strain out the pieces of cinnamon

To Make Grapefruit Hop Tincture: (Not up for tackling the tincture? No worries! As noted in the recipe above, just replace the tincture with your favorite West Coast IPA and you’ll get a similar finished product!)

  • 30 g Simcoe hops

  • peel of one whole grapefruit cut into thin strips

Procedure:

  • Place grapefruit peels and 15g of hops with 500mL of neutral grain spirit (something like vodka) into an ISI whipper (whip cream canister)

  • Charge it once with NO2

  • Shake it, shake it

  • Place whipper into simmering hot water bath for 30 minutes (sous vide)

  • After 30 minutes, take out of hot bath, place in ice bath to cool down for 5 minutes

  • Release gas from whipper carefully

  • Add remaining 15g of hops

  • Charge whipper again with NO2, shake for 30 seconds

  • Rest for 30 minutes

  • Carefully vent gas

  • Strain through coffee filter

  • store in light-resistant container

Brewery of the Month: Iron Mule Brewing

It’s one thing to support craft malt.

It’s a whole different thing to own a craft-malt certified truck.

And when your craft-malt certified truck comes in a bright cherry red, adorned with sage, yet beer-y, advice (It’s easier to start the day when you know it will end with beer) and the picture of a friendly mule looking you in the face, well…you must be Bill Benson, owner of Iron Mule Brewery in Castle Rock and one of our favorite malthouse visitors on pick up days.

Just look at this truck. You can’t not be happy when you look at this truck. The fact that it’s filled to the brim with Root Shoot malt, well, that just adds to the good mojo this truck brings. If you ever see the Iron Mule Jeep on the highway, honk, wave, and smile because that’s a batch of good malt going to make a bunch of batches of good beer. And that driver, Bill, also happens to be a really good guy.

For starters, who else regularly drives up all the way from Castle Rock to pick up malt? Bill and (let’s be honest) Bill’s Jeep are kind of malthouse celebrities. While Bill grabs his grain, we always grab a few photos of the Jeep.

Bill Benson (left) and malthouse production manager Craig Miller.

We met Bill and his Iron Mule project in 2017 when Bill called looking for a bag of malt. Still officially a homebrewer at the time, but In the midst of opening Iron Mule, Bill had discovered Root Shoot malt through The Brew Hut and, impressed with our products, began using it to brew. On that fateful day, however, The Brew Hut was out of our malt, so Bill shot us off an email and we dropped a 50 lb bag of malt at Bill’s front door.

That was the first and last time that we ever made it to Bill’s house, because shortly after that, the Iron Mule opened its doors. Now, nearly five years later, Bill has returned the favor dozens of times over with the Iron Mule Jeep.

A side note,: that fortuitous 50 lb bag of malt was used in Bill’s Mule Skinner, a Baltic Porter that took a homebrew competition Gold Medal and is still brewed and served on Iron Mule’s taps today!

A reluctant homebrewer, Bill Benson never wanted to own a brewery. With over ten years in the foodservice industry, however, he did want to open a restaurant. “If food trucks had been a thing back then [early 2000s]” Bill told us, “ Iron Mule might never have happened.” Knowing his appreciation for cooking and craft beer, a neighbor of Bill’s continually pushed him to try homebrewing. Afraid it was a rabbit hole he would never dig out of, Bill continually refused. Then, in 2005, the neighbor asked him to meet at a local brewery that just so happened to be connected to a homebrew store. Bill left that day with everything he needed and promptly jumped with both feet down the rabbit hole. He brewed three batches of extract on the stove, then skipped straight to brewing 10 gallons of all grain. Less than a year later, he joined ProBrewer.com and developed the concept for Iron Mule. He built a 1 BBL brewing system in his garage and, when that wasn’t enough, opened a whole darn brewery.

Iron Mule is the embodiment of the phase, “Well, that escalated quickly.”

Truly, we’re glad that it did.

Iron Mule Brewery is (in our humble opinion) one of the coolest little breweries in Colorado. Built into the old ACME water tower building, the space reminds us a little of our grain bins (we mean that in a good way!) Originally small, taking up just half of the building’s first floor and seating just 30 people, Iron Mule has been steadily expanding since their opening. They’ve grown from a 2 BBL system to a 6 BBL system, acquired a patio, took over the entire first floor, began canning beer, and are now entering the final expansion of their brewhouse.

It’s a busy life.

Yet somehow, through the business of it all, Bill still finds time to be our biggest fan.

Seriously. This man is about as subtle in promoting Root Shoot’s malt as…well…as a bright red truck with a mule’s face on it driving down the highway packed to the gills with malt.

Bill is on a one-man (one-mule?) mission to promote Root Shoot. In his own words: “I have a big mouth. Really. If I like a product I will talk about it, to it and try to convince anyone that they should use it too. I’m not sure if I have converted anyone [to Root Shoot], but I know a couple of breweries that are using it based on my never shutting up about it.”

Solid. We appreciate that, Bill!

Visiting Iron Mule means preparing to have your ideas around beer stretched.

“We brew beer, not styles,” says Bill. “That may sound weird, but it comes from my cooking background. One of our IPAs started as an American Pale Ale. We listed it as such, and no one would drink it. We changed the name from Pale Ale to IPA and it sold like crazy. (It’s still an American Pale Ale.) I stopped taking stock in styles at that time. I love the creativity that beer offers. We won a local event with our Imperial Black Currant Saison last year. Three types of unique hops. Honey from Hawaii and two different yeasts. We have successfully brewed over 60 unique beers from heirloom/historical styles to full-on crazy.”

Full-on crazy beer? We’ll take it! In actuality, we’ll take everything about Iron Mule: its dedication to craft, its pride in local, its emphasis on quality, and commitment to local relationships.

And its really cool Jeep.

Have we mentioned it has a really cool Jeep?

So, today’s toast (we’re choosing the Cit'n On a Mule American IPA) is to Iron Mule and the entire team behind it. We’d be nowhere without our breweries, and we couldn’t ask for a brewery more dedicated to the craft cause.

Cheers, Iron Mule! You may say that your beer “Tastes Like Happy” but in reality…it’s just you. You make Colorado - and the craft beer world just a little more Happy.









A Damn Handsome (Home)Brewer

We started our Homebrewer Highlights last month in honor of National Homebrew Day. At first, we figured we’d do a short blog post featuring three or four Root Shoot homebrewers and their beer, but as responses came in to the form we sent out, and as we started seeing all the amazing projects homebrewers are tackling with our malt, we decided to extend the project. It’s heart-warming to hear stories of cool people doing cool things. Especially when those people are exceedingly handsome.

Damn Handsome, one might say.

But we’re not biased. Heavens, no. We’ll just let this (Handsome) brewer fill you in himself. Meet…

Craig Kneeland, the Damn Handsome Brewer

A South Dakota native, Craig grew up on his family’s farm (naturally, he immediately won us over with that little tidbit!) and stayed in South Dakota through college, where he studied Financial Planning and Business. In fact, it wasn’t until he moved to Colorado with his now-wife Jen that he got into the craft beer scene but when he did…he jumped in with both feet! He joined the Liquid Poets Homebrew Club and has been an active member, serving as president twice as well as Events Coordinator, Membership Coordinator, and on the board at large.

He’s about to take the next biggest plunge that a homebrewer can take, but we’ll let him tell you about that himself.

How did you get into homebrewing?

I was always intrigued by taprooms. I enjoyed the environment and the idea of consuming something right from the source. I have a creative mind and seeing everything that went into brewing - the equipment, the details of the taprooms, and the beer, brought me joy. So, one day I decided to try brewing on my own. I started with an Amber Ale and it turned out alright. Knowing what I know now it would be fun to go back and taste that beer. For that first beer, I was brewing extract on a stovetop 5 gallons at a time, yet I had already had the idea of opening a brewery in my head. My wife and I lived in Denver at the time and would spend every single Wednesday visiting a new brewery. The obsession grew from there.

What do you love about Homebrewing?

I love the flexibility of creating something entirely your own and something that others can enjoy as well. I’ve also met good friends through homebrewing. In 2016, I joined the Liquid Poets Homebrew Club and that’s when I really started to get into it. I switched from brewing extract to all-grain and couldn’t believe how much more control I had over the final product. Some of the members that I met had infinite knowledge and were always willing to help share techniques and ingredients. 

Trickiest Part of Homebrewing?

Patience and cleaning/sanitizing. There are a handful of things that can go wrong if your vessels are not cleaned properly. Brewers make wort, and yeast makes beer, if your cleaning practices aren’t dialed in you may end up with an infection or an undrinkable product. Recipe design can be tricky too. Know where your ingredients are coming from and know how different ingredients blend together. 

Memorable Brewing Experience (Good or bad)

Thankfully, in all my years brewing, I’ve only had to dump 2 or 3 batches. When I first was getting started, I didn’t quite understand the process and ended up adding some lactose to one brew too late in the process and the beer ended up tasting overly sugary. I named that one “Sugar How’d You Get So Fly.” Another difficult brew was the first time I brewed a Wet Hop IPA with freshly picked hops. I didn’t account for the amount of wort that would get absorbed into the hops. I ended up having to take taking the lid of a pot and press out as much wort as I could just to yield enough wort. That one got named “Wet Hop Press IPA.” It was the most trying beer I’ve brewed, but it turned out great.

Over the last couple of years, I’ve won some Pro-Ams {Pro-Ams are competitions where amateur brewers get their winning beer brewed at a professional brewery} so that has definitely been a highlight. My first gold medal and Pro-Am (DC Oakes) was for a Cream Ale that I had no intention of even entering into a contest. I wanted to brew a light ale and happened to taste it a couple days before the deadline of a local competition and thought it hit all the marks. I named that one C.R.E.A.M. (Cream Ale Rules Everything Around Me.) The second Pro-Am I got most recently was for an Imperial Stout named Night Sweats Imperial Stout. That one will be on tap at Verboten in early fall.

Advice for new homebrewers?

Go for it! Start small. I started brewing extract kits with a speckled canning pot and carboy to get the process down and an understanding of what fermentation is, Later, I was able to move to all-grain. Join a local homebrew club for feedback and inspiration and remember that the end result will likely be beer. “Relax, don’t worry, have a homebrew” - Charlie Papazian

What's the best beer that you brew?

The best beer I’ve brewed recently was the Night Sweats Imperial Stout that won me the Verboten Pro-Am. It comes in at a sneaky 10% ABV. Recently, a friend and I re-brewed it and put it in a barrel from Dryland Distilling out of Longmont. We’ll see how that comes out!

What's next for you in brewing?

It might be a shameless plug, but I’m looking to open my own brewery, Damn Handsome Brewing, in Fort Collins/Northern Colorado. We are in the search of a location. We missed out on a spot a little over a year ago and since then, we’re determined to find PERFECT location. I love the neighborhood feel of taprooms. Outdoor space, a welcoming and inclusive environment, special releases, barrel projects, and local ingredients are all part of the plan. Not to get too far ahead of ourselves, but eventually, we’d maybe even open a second location in the mountains, near the Granby area.

Since this is a shameless plug anyway, make sure to check us out on Instagram and Facebook @damnhandsomebrewing to follow along in our brewery-build process. The website is up as well, although it’s still a work in progress: www.damnhandsomebrewing.com

And the last very important question: if you had to pick one (non-homebrew) beer that would be the only beer you would be allowed to drink for the next 10 years, what would it be?

Juicy Bits by WeldWerks Brewing is my desert-island beer!

Field Notes: Local Agriculture and Heritage Wheat

Lately, global wheat production has been big news in the news.

That’s unusual.

While we, admittedly, read a lot (like A LOT, a lot) of news articles on the latest developments in agriculture, we also know that’s not most people’s standard choice of reading material. But this year, the current wheat shortage, and the related potential for severe worldwide food shortages, are acute enough that wheat production, something usually considered quite mundane, is now being covered with no small amount of regularity, and a fair amount of alarm.

Here’s the short version of how we got here:: in 2021, the world was already facing a wheat shortage due to a combination of factors: heatwaves and drought hit the US and Canada causing wheat production to plummet. China faced record-breaking rains that damaged almost 30 million acres of wheat and delayed the planting of 18 million more. On top of that already-concerning scenario, Russia, the world’s leading exporter of wheat invaded Ukraine, the world’s 5th leading exporter of wheat, putting the supply chain from both countries on very precarious ground. Now, in 2022, this year’s wheat supply in North America is again in question as the ongoing drought shows no sign of letting up.

But what if it didn’t have to be that way?

What if, instead of worrying about floods in Asia or supply chain disruptions in Euope, we were instead running next door to purchase a bag of flour from a farmer? Or a dozen bagels from a local baker (who, in turn, purchased from that same farmer?) What if farming came home to serve the people in a farm’s community - the couple next door, and the family in the next town over?

We’ll be the first to admit that this manner of thinking, while romantic, is over-simplified and presents its own set of issues. Not every community in the world has the capacity to produce its own crops, and not every climate is can grow every crop. Plus, making food hyper-local creates its own precarious scenario: one hailstorm could wipe out an entire community’s crops.

Yet in a world that has become so black and white, so all-or-nothing, we like to think there’s a happy medium. How can we promote more local agriculture, making food security for our community a priority, while also staying informed and connected with larger markets? What if it’s not all-or-nothing, local or global, but a mix of both? What if we strive to put our own community first, but take the excess and work hard to get it out into global markets that need it?

Musings of a couple of farmers who definitely don’t have all (or possibly any) of the answers, but who learn a little more each day. And as we stare this year’s wheat shortage in the face, knowing our own winter wheat harvest is on shaky ground unless we get more water, we’re starting to take a closer look at our Oland Wheat.

A heritage wheat passed on to us from Finnriver Farm via the WSU Bread Lab, Oland wheat defies easy categorization as white or red, landing somewhere in between. It has grown well for us, it performs well as an adjunct in beer, and, in these times of wheat scarcity, we have lots of it. Literal tons. It’s a downright solid little wheat and its status as a heritage/heirloom means it’s open-sourced: we don’t have to purchase seed annually from a seed company. It’s ours to hold back and replant at will and we can pass on the seed to whomever we wish.

It’s Food Freedom in a tiny seed. Up until now, we’ve kept our Oland acreage limited as we learn to grow it, but with the current global wheat situation, we’re considering planting a little more. In trying times, the world could use more heritage grains, more unpatented seeds.

Right?

We don’t actually know. But we can try. And encourage others to do the same.

So if you’re a brewer or distiller and would like to give the Oland wheat a try, we’re currently offering it at the same price as our standard white wheat and plan to do so for the foreseeable future. Give us a shout, and we’ll get you some ordered. If you want to save back a handful of seeds and plant them in your own garden, go for it.

We don’t care.

We might even encourage it.

Let’s get more grain out there. Let’s teach people how to grow food. Let’s plant seeds and trade them, and plant them again and grow food as a community, for the community.

And maybe, if we have a little extra time in there, we can squeeze in making a wheat beer or two for the community, as well. We are kind of beer fans after all.

Cheers, friends. Wishing you wonderful wheat harvests and glorious fields of grain.

—Olander Farms


Lifting our Spirit(s): a Toast to the Five Elements

 
 

We didn’t actually plan it this way. Really.

Six years ago (six, already!), when Root Shoot was just beginning and we were trying to figure out what in the world to use as a logo, we thought, “Well, we’re a malthouse…why don’t we represent the malting process?” After some artistic debate, we settled on the four icons we posted on social media over the last week or so: Farming, Steeping, Germination, and Kilning.

As we dove further into our malthouse project, we realized just how inextricably linked malting and farming were. (Yes, it’s obvious, but after years of both farming and malting, it became even more obvious) and we realized that all of these symbols we had selected also represented key elements of agriculture. The first icon was clear: the seed in the ground was farming. But water is key in growing crops, not just in steeping. Our seeds germinate twice, once in the ground when we plant them, then again in our malt drums as we slowly rotate them. And long before our sprouted grain is dried to make malt, it is first dried in the fields for harvest.

From the grain in the ground to the malt in the kiln, we were pleased that our logo it tied it all together.

We continued farming. And malting. And in 2018, we had an idea. We were still a new business at the time, just one and a half years old, and selling 1 million pounds of malt without proving we could actually create globally recognized malt was…tough. We had a huge surplus in the malthouse, and we also had our initial "screw up" batches that weren't quite good enough to send out to our customers, but were too high-quality to just feed to the cows

We also knew Vapor Distillery had a LARGE still. At that time, it was the biggest pot still in the state. (It might still be - it’s huge!). They had extra capacity, we had extra malt.

Why not utilize our awesome local distillers, give them craft malt to play with, and create some of the best-tasting American Single Malt Whiskey around?

In 2018, we sent Vapor 16,000 pounds of Pilsner, Light Munich, and 6-row Munich Malts to be distilled and begin aging in barrels. The following year we tasted, sampled, and considered future batches.

Our next couple of batches were sent to them in 2020 and we doubled the amount of grain: 16,000 pounds of Specialty Roast (8%), Cara Ruby (15%), Distillers Malt (32%), and Pilsner (45%). and a second batch of 20,400 pounds of Specialty Roast (8%), Hella Dark (15%), Distillers Malt (32%), and Pale (45%) malts.

We sent more batches in 2021, and came to the firm conclusion that, intentional or not, we were now in the business of spirits.

Spirit.

We thought about our logo. We thought about how often we utter the words “Grain to Glass.” We thought about the whiskey aging in barrels.

Something was missing.

So we commissioned a new icon to add to the logo: one based off of the shape of a single pot still. We added it to our others, and then had an aha moment that nearly blew our minds.

Seeds in the soil, water on the field and in the steep tank, seeds germinating into open air, heat drying them in the kiln, and spirits, the final product, poured in a glass.

Earth, Water, Air, Fire, Spirit - the five elements of existence according to many old religions, not least the ancient Greeks.

Don’t worry - we’re not going to go all hippy-dippy on you (at least not totally) but we did think that was pretty cool. Maybe the Greeks were on to something. Maybe these five elements, so closely tied with the earth and farming, really do stand up to the test of time. So much so, that we accidentally landed on them as a logo.

Whew. That’s heavy.

Something to ponder while you sip on your first batch of Root Shoot American Single Malt Whiskey.

Our initial run is coming out this year and will be about 3,000 bottles. It will be branded under Root Shoot, and distilled by Vapor, a partnership we’ve been working hard to craft to ensure it’s a win-win for all! Especially, for the spirit-lovers among you.

Grain to Glass: we’ve finally included the “glass.” So here’s a toast to whiskey, to spirit(s) of all sorts, and to those pesky five elements that just keep showing up in our lives. We’re quite fond of them, really.

Stay tuned for whiskey info. It will be coming soon…

 
 

Brewery of the Month: The Gilded Goat Brewing Co, Ft. Collins

Photo courtesy of Gilded Goat Brewing Co

Frequently, in our social media posts, we use the hashtag #graintoglass. Yes, it’s indicative of what we do at Root Shoot, and what we hope to continue doing in ever-more meaningful ways. And yes, it’s also a marketing strategy, a communications ploy along the lines of #supportlocal that will catch both the attention and the hearts of potential customers and nudge them toward supporting us. 

But sometimes, #graintoglass is a hoppy IPA sipped on a sunny patio on a warm summer evening; or a milk stout in front of a wood stove in the dead of winter. Sometimes, it’s a cold pilsner on a rafting trip, or a fruity Saison at a music festival. 

And sometimes, the best times, #graintoglass is an entire brewery, an entire farm, an entire local ecosystem that is working just the way we imagine it should.

Those times are the time we spend with The Gilded Goat Brewing Company in Fort Collins.

We grew up with the Gilded Goat.

As a business at least. Craft beer aficionados that we are, even we didn’t grow up making the craft brewery rounds as kids. 

As adults starting a small business, however, we jumped in feet first around the same time as owner and head brewer of the Gilded Goat, Charlie Hoxmeier and, over the years and through the blood, sweat, and tears of running a business, what started as a straightforward partnership has evolved into a close friendship and - we still pinch ourselves thinking about it - the perfect example of what we hoped the Grain to Glass movement would be. 

The Gilded Goat opened the doors of its first location, a mid-town Fort Collins brewery in 2017, just a year after Root Shoot began malting, and they started sourcing malt from us right away. Earning the support of a new client is always an honor. Earning the support of The Gilded Goat…well, it was downright flattering. 

The Gilded Goat is owned by Charlie Hoxmeier and his family, and to say that Charlie knows his stuff…well, it’s sort of like saying that Root Shoot likes beer: it’s an understatement egregious enough to be embarrassing. 

A microbiologist by training and a CSU Fermentation Sciences professor in his “free” time (or maybe he’s a brewer in his free time and a professor by trade, we can’t keep it all straight, nor do we know how he manages it all) Charlie used to work for the CDC, possesses a deep understanding of things like biochemistry and microbiology and is actually paid to teach people, university students specifically, how to become brewers. 

He is, to put it mildly, a rather well-informed dude.

And he makes unbelievably good beer.

Charlie Hoxmeier (center) and the GG crew. Photo courtesy of Gilded Goat Brewing Co

So when he chose us to supply a significant portion of his malt, we knew his standards were high. Supporting local choices is great, but it will never work if that local product isn’t as good -  or better - than everything else on the market. With folks like the Gilded Goat in mind, we strive daily to live up to those standards. The grain from our fields got straight into our malting drums, and then into Gilded Goats fermenters to end up as a Nokhu IPA, or a Poudre Pils.

But with Charlie’s connections to CSU, there’s another aspect to Grain to Glass that, to be honest, we didn’t even consider when we were first starting up and just hoping that we would make it, but that now has become an important part of our connection to the community.

Education.

Charlie’s role as a Fermentation Sciences instructor has allowed us to become involved in bringing up the next generation of brewers. Every semester, he brings his students to the malthouse for a firsthand experience of malting and a glimpse into life on a family farm. For the Grand Opening of CSU’s new Fermentation Science and Technology facilities this year, we sponsored a Poster Project for some of their students who completed research and presented on the science of kilning. And our own Alex Moss, who runs the bagging line at the malthouse is a graduate of Charlie’s program and came to us at his recommendation. 

Grain to Glass: 

A small business supporting a local farm.

A local farm supporting small business. 

Both businesses supporting education.

Beer in your glass; grown, malted, fermented, and poured all within the same small community. 

The beer. We didn’t forget the beer.

Just this past month, The Gilded Goat opened its second location, a beautiful little spot in Old Town, so now we have not one, but two locations to grab their brews at, and their brews truly are some of our favorites. We, personally, are huge fans of the Tangerine Nokhu IPA. In fact, if you like hoppy beer, The Gilded Goat has an amazing IPA flight. Try it side by side with their sour flight like we did last visit, and you’re in for a sensory treat. 

We know what we like, but what would the real pro say? We lobbed the very unfair question of “What’s your favorite Gilded Goat beer?” to Mr. Hoxmeier himself and, much to our delight, rather than dodge it like so many brewers, he answered! Albeit with a disclaimer that picking one’s favorite beer is a bit like picking one’s favorite child. But everyone has a favorite child…right…?

Lightfoot Coffee Pale Ale. Photo courtesy of Gilded Goat Brewing Co

My personal favorite is our Lightfoot Coffee Pale Ale. The orange, citrusy El Dorado hops blend perfectly with a custom lightly-roasted Ethiopian coffee from Harbinger Coffee here in Fort Collins. The coffee provides the classic coffee aroma you expect, but the flavor is full of violet, black tea, and white peach. All of these flavors are supported by Root Shoot’s Genie Pale malt and Double Honey malt. Each aspect of this beer, the craft malt, local hops, and craft coffee, shines through.

Sold.

If you’re ever in Fort Collins and want to see what the Grain to Glass movement looks like for us, swing by The Gilded Goat. Chat with the bartenders. Try their beer. Look for the subtle flavors of locally grown malt. And check on Charlie. Chances are, he’ll either be in the brewhouse concocting something great, or behind the bar cleaning glasses and slinging beer. 

Photo courtesy of Gilded Goat Brewing Co

Wherever he’s at, chances are, he’ll be wearing his Root Shoot hat. In six years, we have never seen him without it. It’s a small gesture of loyalty, but one that makes us smile every time. 

So rather than hats off, we say hats on to you Charlie and The Gilded Goat! Whenever that cap gets a little worn, we’ll have a new one waiting for you! We’re happy to have the Gilded Goat as part of our community and among the crew of supporters keeping the #graintoglass movement flowing.

Cheers. 

Field Notes: Ears Coming Out of Our Ears

Of corn that is. We’ve got ears of corn coming out of our ears.

Well…no we don’t, actually. Not yet. But we’re prepping in hopes that we will!

May is corn-planting season, and although barley is our key crop (you know we run a malthouse, right?) we have a lot going on when it comes to corn. 

Annually, Olander Farms grows three different types of corn: silage, which is used as feed for dairies, distilling, which is used to make those tasty spirits at our partner distilleries, and Abenaki, a heritage corn that we’re just beginning to experiment with in partnership with The Family Jones. All three types will get planted this month, for a grand total of 83 acres of silage corn, 200 acres of distiller’s corn, and 10 acres of the experimental Abenaki. And that’s just for us! We’ll also plant a couple hundred acres more of silage corn for some of our local farmer friends. 

Corn is tricky. Soil temperature, seeding rates, timing, water availability, and nitrogen availability all can make break a corn crop. It’s a little more sensitive than the other grains we grow, especially in a drought year like this one is shaping up to be. We always consider ourselves farm nerds, but growing corn requires us to really dig deep and find the innermost nerdiest of nerds to devise a plan that coordinates all of those factors into a successful harvest.

Wanna be the nerdiest of nerds with us? We’ll be geeking out on the topic of corn this month in our #fieldnotesforfarmnerds series. Follow the hashtag and never miss a post.

Because impressing your friends by quoting corn seeding rates in a drought year versus a normal year will absolutely make you the coolest person in the room.

No, really.

Corn aside, we’re also hoping to see the first of the irrigation water turned on this month. The complexity of Colorado’s irrigation system makes corn planting look simple. The short version: farmers have to “call” for water when they need it. But just because you call for it, doesn’t mean you’ll get it. The water won’t be sent through until enough farmers call. If it’s dry, it might be turned on sooner. If it rains, it might be turned on later, regardless of calls. 

You know the childhood rhyme, “I scream, you scream, we all scream for ice cream?” Replace ice cream with ditch water, and kids with farmers, and it’s a not-inaccurate (albeit entirely oversimplified) analogy for how irrigation works. 

We’re confident the water will come, however, though we don’t know how much with as dry as it’s been.

While we wait, we’re just gonna sit here and enjoy these photos and videos of Abigail the Bovine Dog. 

Abigail is one of this year’s calves whose momma rejected her. Chad, one of our farmhands, took her and now she’s living her best life with him, his fiance…and the family dogs. She’s running around the yard, playing with her pals, and probably developing a bit of an identity crisis that will take years of therapy for her to overcome (What do you mean…I’m adopted?? I’m not a dog?)

In the meantime, however, it’s all pretty dang cute.

A Merry May to you all! 

“May” your malt be local, your brewery patios warm (but not windy) and your entire month filled with the joy of spring!







Spring Cocktail Recipe - Santanico Pandemonium

Photo courtesy of Molly Brown Spirits

It’s spring, it’s finally starting to feel like spring, and we’ve been craving some fresh-tasting beverages for patio sippin’. Luckily, we know lots of great folks who are excellent at putting together tasty cocktails! We reached out to a few of our favorite distilleries and asked them for ideas. We’ll be sharing their mixed drink recipes here throughout the spring and summer. The best part? All of them are (naturally) made with Root Shoot malts.

First up, Santanico Pandemonium by Molly Brown Spirits! A true grain-to-glass distillery out of Denver, Molly Brown makes Bourbon and High Rye Bourbon, both delicious to sip on straight or to blend into cocktails. This month, they’ve shared a recipe with us that would make an excellent alternative to sugary margaritas for Cinco de Mayo, or a great addition to any Taco Tuesday.

Check it out below, then grab some Molly Brown Bourbon and get mixin’!

Santanico Pandemonium Recipe

by Molly Brown Spirits

2 oz bourbon, 4 jalapeno wheels (no seeds), 1⁄2 lime (cut into quarters), 1⁄2 oz simple syrup, soda water

Serve in pint glass

Build in pint glass. Muddle lime wedges and jalapenos in bottom of pint glass, add bourbon and simple syrup, stir well. Top glass with ice and fill with soda water, stir well.

Root Shoot Homebrewers - Meet Mark Boelman

National Homebrew Day is May 7th, and while we often spend time touting the breweries and distilleries that work with us, we want to take a minute to recognize another group that holds a soft spot in our hearts…the folks that go the extra mile to brew their own beer with our local Root Shoot malt!

A dedicated group of beer aficionados that concoct tasty brews out of their garages, on their back patios, or wherever they can make space, Root Shoot’s homebrewers are an enthusiastic bunch who have been key in helping us get our name out in the community. We’re indebted to them for their loyalty and their hard work on behalf of Root Shoot, so over the next couple of months, we’ll be featuring a few of them on our socials!

This week, we wanted to start with a Homebrew Powerhouse, Mark Boelman.

Mark was one of our picks for a Homebrew Highlight, not just because he is an excellent homebrewer (this guy took home a GABF medal!) but because of his involvement in the homebrew community - he’s an active member of Weiz Guys Homebrew Club - and his efforts to guide the Weiz Guys (and others!) in philanthropic activities for the wider Northern Colorado community. Mark has organized turkey drives for the Larimer County Food Bank, coat drives for the bitter cold months, and, most recently, he and the Weiz Guys joined the call by Pravda Beer Theatre, a brewery in Ukraine that, after the Russian invasion, released five of their recipes and encouraged brewers world wide to use those recipes to brew beer and raise funds for humanitarian efforts. Weiz Guys will be matching all donations by its members made to the Red Cross. As mastermind behind the fundraiser, Mark will be brewing Ukrainian Golden Ale using Root Shoot Odysessy Pilsner Malt and RS Wheat and tapping it on National Homebrew Day, May 7th.

We wanted to give a shout out to the good dude behind all these good causes, so please meet…

Mark Boelman, Weiz Guys Homebrew Club

Number of Years Brewing: 12

Favorite Style of Beer for Drinking: I’m a fairly seasonal drinker - big barrel-aged stout and barleywine in the colder months and light and refreshing in the summer. I don't like to discriminate!

How did you first get into homebrewing? Since venturing out on my own at 19, and missing my mother's cooking I learned to enjoy being in the kitchen - I was interested in making recipes to enjoy and share with friends. When craft beer exploded in Colorado, I was blown away at the flavor that beer could have. Combine those two life experiences with a chance to learn from a neighbor, I was hooked....especially when that first beer I made was good!

What do you most love about homebrewing? I love being able to share my beer with friends and family - I love the process from idea to recipe formulation to brew day to the anticipation of the carbonated beer flowing out of my taps - I love the community of homebrewing and the craft beer community - I love opening up a tap and pouring a pint of a beer that has been lagering for months and enjoying that crisp taste on a hot day and the satisfaction of knowing I made it.

What do you believe to be the trickiest part about homebrewing?

I think the trickiest part is paying attention to all the intangibles. You can watch out for the big stuff like sanitation and temperature control but I really think it is a culmination of giving time and attention to all the small things, that as a whole, make a big difference.

What is the best beer that you brew? Right now, I feel like the NE IPA's I am making are amazing. I love buying these in the market but at $20 a 4pk to be able to have better beer on tap at the house is kick-ass. Sometimes I pour a pint and step back and think, "Holy shit, I made that (in my garage!) I got some validation of this last summer by winning the Boil Rumble, a competition hosted by Melvin Brewing, a brewery known for hop-forward beer. Our club got to travel to Alpine Wyoming and brew my NE IPA at their location....using Root Shoot Malt!

What’s a memorable homebrew experience (good or bad) that you have had? The coolest experience I have ever had was winning a GABF medal as a homebrewer. Odell Brewing in Fort Collins picked up a beer I had entered at the Liquid Poets competition. A dark raspberry sour. Being able to get on stage and accept that award, is something I will never forget. It was super cool too, as I was volunteering with the American Homebrewers Association at the pro-am booth, I was able to serve my beer to attendees after I had won.

What’s next for you in brewing? What are your goals?

I am currently getting my lineup ready for the National Homebrew Competition. In 2018, I was runner-up for the Ninkasi Award (Homebrewer of the Year) - to be so close and not win! I have sights set on pulling that off although I know, the competition is fierce and takes a ton of luck.

And the last very important question: if you had to pick one (non-homebrew) beer that would be the only beer you would be allowed to drink for the next 10 years, what would it be?
Hmmm, I love this question. If I had only one beer to drink for ten years - I would probably go with Trumer Pils: It is exceptionally well-crafted and is actually the only beer the brewery makes and it shows!

Brewery of the Month: Launch Pad Brewery

Planes, Trains, and Chardonnay.

A description of our upcoming vacation to the wine region of France?

Mais, non! You know we’re not wine people. Plus, farmers don’t get summer vacations.

An Imperial Blond Ale made with Chardonnay grape juice and orange blossom honey now on tap at one of our growing Aurora breweries?

Now, that’s more our speed - even if we can’t (yet) get there by plane or train. We have to do the old-fashioned driving thing from NoCo to Aurora. Once we arrive, however, we belly up to the bar, order an Imperial Blonde, (or one of the other 30+ beers on tap) and…blast into outer space.

Launch Pad Brewery located on South Buckley Road in the largest of the Denver suburbs, is a space-themed brewery founded by a group of friends, flying nerds, and Air Force veterans. 

Launched (ha! get it?) in 2015 by best buds David Levesque and Henry Rusch, and later joined by Paul Mahoney, Launch Pad Brewery serves up a huge taplist in an open taproom with a view of the brewhouse behind it. Everything is space-themed: there are glowing star on the ceiling, a Cape Canaveral mural behind the bar, and framed rocket specs on the walls. The brewery’s theme ties with the area’s connections to the space and air industry and the clientele regularly shows up in NASA to imbibe their craft beer rocket fuel.

That is, actually, the brewery’s motto: Craft Beer is Our Rocket Fuel and it’s a renewable resource we can fully get behind. Out of fuel? Grab another beer! Out of beer? We’ll send  another batch of malt! Out of malt? We’ll plant another field of barley, and then come have a beer while we wait for it to grow!

Even if we did drink Launch Pad beer during an entire growing season, however, we still don’t know if we could work through everything they have to offer. They always keep a spectacular number of beers on their taplist (current count 33!) ranging from Wild Ales, to Barleywines, to Double IPAs. There’s even a hard seltzer throw in the mix.

Launch Pad caters to a dedicated crowd of locals and it seems the commitment to their customers and their craft rocket fuel is paying off. They are in the process of expanding into the space next door to their current location and upgrading to a 20 bbl system. One might say they are really blasting off…

So, if you’re planning a trip to the cosmic reaches of the craft beer universe (or, really, if you’re just headed to Aurora) here are a few tips for the journey:

  1. Wear your NASA t-shirt. In the absence of NASA gear, any Air Force schwag certainly will do.

  2. Read the entire beer menu and the clever names just for fun, then order a drink based purely on the name. Sort of like ordering a wine based purely on the label but much better because a) it’s beer, not wine and b) it’s craft. Our personal favorite buy-by-the-name-beer? Enter Spaceballs Joke Here - a low ABV Schwarzbier.

  3. Follow it up with a Root Shoot-specific beer. Co-owner Paul Mahoney recommends Chaotic Orbit, a traditional American Pale Ale made with Genie Pale. Support craft breweries and craft malt!

  4. Plan carefully for re-entry to the (real) world: with so much good beer on tap, it’s easy to get carried away. Make sure you have a Designated Rocketship Driver for the ride home, or call for a re-entry ride. We’ve heard that Elon Musk and Uber might be partnering to offer SpaceX-Uber services, soon. Spuber!

  5. Stock up on rocket fuel before you go. With individual cans, crowlers, and 4-packs, there’s no reason you should ever run out of gas.

We’ll see you off on your journey and wave from the top of our malthouse grain bins as you go! Bon voyage, beer lovers! 

You won’t regret the trip.

Running On Mother Nature's Time

Seeding barley

The best-laid plans…

Quick! Pop quiz!

How many of you can actually finish that saying? 10 kernels of our heritage Abenaki corn to anyone who can answer without Googling it. Got it?

“The best-laid plans of mice and men often go awry.”

Mice? Planning mice? What kind of nut came up with that one?

Robert Burns, Scottish poet from the 18th century. It’s from his poem, To a Mouse and the actual line reads, The best-laid schemes o’ mice an ‘ men/ Gang aft agley

We were going to title this blog post Gang Aft Agley just for fun, but we were worried folks might think we’d been hitting some of that (delicious) Talnua whiskey a little too hard, so we went with something a little more understandable. Can’t speak for Poet Burns though. Maybe he just wrote funny because he lived in the 1700s. Or because he was Scottish. Or because he was a Scottish poet living the 1700s and hitting that Scottish Ale a little too hard. If he was talking to mice about planning, the latter seems a distinct possibility.

Regardless, the possibly-tipsy original version has been paraphrased and shortened to the more modern, yet cryptic “The best-laid plans…” that we know today, and while we have absolutely no idea how things are going for the mice in our fields, we can state with great confidence that our best-laid plans this season have most definitely gone awry. (Or have ganged aft agley??)

It is often said that farming is a lesson in patience, but sometimes it feels like a lesson in chaos. Or flexibility. Or creativity. Or, on some days quite simply a lesson in Not-Panicking.

We have software that lays out what we’ll plant in each field and calculates exact acreage. We have schedules for tractor maintenance and schedules for our farmhands. We put seed orders in months in advance and we plan our crop rotations years in advance. We can plot, plan, scheme, and schedule all we want.

But, as every farmer knows, we cannot control the weather.

The Front Range has not gotten an epic amount of snow this season by any means. We had a terribly dry fall followed by a few decent-though-not-impressive snows this winter and, most recently, several light snows in March.

With farming and moisture, however, it’s not just about quantity. It’s also timing.

Weather permitting, March 1st is when we start planting barley and we keep right on planting until it’s all in, ideally before the end of the month.

March

This year, the weather was definitely not permitting.

The March snows, though hardly blizzards, have meant that the ground has been too wet to plant (working wet soil is one of the biggest no-nos of growing as it can lead to compaction and other problems when it dries) and our planting schedule was kicked back by a week, then two weeks, then nearly a month.

Finally, however, we’ve gotten some good runs of decent weather, and we’re hoping to get back on track. We’ve changed plans before (by which we mean every single year) and we’ll certainly have to do it again. Corn is going in next, and it can be even more finicky than barley. It needs to be planted in the spring in order to have time to grow to maturity, but it also hates cold soil. It can tolerate some coolness, but really, it’s happiest in baking hot weather, gettin’ its sunbathing on with a sexy pair of shades and a margarita in hand.

Corn is kind of a diva.

We are definitely nowhere near sunbathing-and-margarita weather, but we’ll see how the rest of this month goes. (Rain? Snow? A two-foot blizzard? 90-degree days?) Regardless, we’ll just have to roll with it. There’s no choice when dealing with Mother Nature.

It’s a good reminder for life. We can plan and plot and believe we’re in control. But we’re not. None of us., We adjust to what comes and keep on, keepin’ on.

Even Robert Burns knew that. Turns out his whole To a Mouse poem is actually about a farmer apologizing to a mouse whose house he has destroyed when plowing his field and the impact that might have on her.

That’s kind of sweet.

Maybe Burns hadn’t imbibed as much ale as we thought.

Photo courtesy of Loveland Aleworks

So while we’re waiting for our fields to dry, maybe we’ll grab a McAllister’s Scottish Ale from Loveland Aleworks (Root Shoot malt, of course) and take a stroll through our fields to warn the mice that the tractors will be coming soon. Only seems fair to give them a little advance notice.

In the meantime, as you’re going through your daily lives and things don’t go according to plan, remember us scrambling in the fields to finish our barley planting late, and start our corn planting even later. It’s not how we planned it, it will probably be a little frantic, but farmers have been farming for thousands of years - through drought, floods, late snows, and early frosts and we’re still here, figuring it out.

You will, too.

Happy Spring.

—Olander Farms


"Take No Sh*t and Trust Your Gut" - Root Shoot's Women in Brewing

When Sandra Day O’Connor asks you to brew her an IPA, you brew the woman an IPA.

“That was our first, holy sh*t moment,” says Betsy Lay, co-founder of Lady Justice Brewing in Aurora, Colorado. “We got an email in 2015 from the son of the first woman Supreme Court Justice, Sandra Day O'Connor. He reached out to let us know that Justice O'Connor had heard about us (before we even opened!) and asked if we could brew her an IPA.”

Hell, yes, they could. A well-suited request for the female-owned, justice-themed establishment. The Sandra Day IPA now sells out of their taproom and to states all over the country via their beer shipping page

Lady Justice forms part of a minority of breweries that are female-owned. According to new statistics released by the Brewers Association at the Craft Brewers Conference in September of 2021, female-owned breweries make up 23.7% of all craft breweries. That’s not even a quarter of breweries in a country where women make up over half of the population.  

March 8th is International Women’s Day, and we wanted to take a minute to recognize some of the badass brewers and brewery owners in our Root Shoot community who also just happen to be female. And since we started with Lady Justice, let’s continue with Lady Justice. Please meet…

Photo courtesy of Lady Justice Brewing

Betsy Lay, Lady Justice Brewing

Role: Head Brewer, Co-Founder

Lady Justice is not your typical brewery.

When they say “community-focused” they don’t mean just taproom events and a welcoming atmosphere, though they have those in spades. 

They mean that they’ve donated over $20,000 to community causes and that giving is a core part of their business plan. 100% of the profits from their Community-Supported Beer (CSB) program go directly to their partner non-profits.

That’s not a shabby outcome for a brewery that Betsy describes as originating as “a tipsy idea with my two best friends.” Betsy and her best-friends-turned-business-partners, Kate Power and Jen Cuesta, began Lady Justice in 2014. Betsy took the reins as head brewer from 2016-2019, and again took on the role in January of 2021. We sat down with her (okay, no, we didn’t, we communicated virtually with her, but same-same) to pick her brain about being a Lady Brewer at Lady Justice.

ROOT SHOOT: (Settling in and trying not to be socially awkward at interviewing.) Tell us, Betsy, what’s your brewery superpower? What do you, personally, absolutely rock at in the craft beer world?

BL: I have two specialties: 1) Bringing social enterprise, philanthropy, and beer together and 2) I brew the best dang ESB you will ever have.

ROOT SHOOT: (Frantically scribbling note-to-self. “Try the ESB. Step up community game to be as Badass as Betsy. Send complimentary note to Sandra on her IPA.”) And what do you love about your brewery? What are you proud of there?

BL: Our community and our neighborhood. We have the best staff and the best customers. Our crowd cares deeply for others and loves to give back to its community.

ROOT SHOOT: (Pumps fist and raises roof, even though roof-raising dates us terribly.) Hell, yeah! You go! Lady J! Lady J! Lady J!  (Tries to settle down.) Do you have any words of wisdom for women new to the craft beer world?

BL: Take no shit and trust your gut.

ROOT SHOOT: Preach it, sister.

Trusting one’s gut sounds good in theory, but in the day-to-day of life, it can be absolutely terrifying. Starting a business is a leap of faith. Running a successful business is loads of work. Starting a business during a pandemic and then keeping it successfully running over the ensuring two years of insanity is…well, exactly what our next brewery owner did, following her own gut instincts. Meet…

Photo courtesy of Wah Gwaan Brewing Co

Harsha Maragh, Wah Gwaan Brewing Company

Role: Co-Owner, Co-Founder

Wah Gwaan Brewing Company in Denver is a happy place. Caribbean-themed, (Wah Gwaan means What’s up? in Jamaican Patois) the beers have hints of ingredients that feel scandalously exotic like hibiscus, jackfruit, and pomegranate. The entire building is decked out with Jamaican and Caribbean-themed art, the company is excellent, and the crowd is diverse.

“I am proud of how we have created a space that feels comfortable, inclusive, and welcoming to anyone that walks through our doors. It's beautiful to see the diversity we have in our taproom on any given day,” says Harsha Maragh, co-owner and co-founder along with her business and life partner, Jesse Brown.

A first-generation Jamaican-American, Harsha grew up in New York City, as the daughter of Jamaican immigrants. Upon moving to the Front Range, she found it hard to connect with other Jamaicans. She wanted a space where Caribbean immigrants and other first-generation Caribbean-Americans could get a taste of home. So, naturally…she opened a brewery. 

Now, that’s dedication. 

We’re not Jamaican or Caribbean, but we’re abso-freaking-lutely delighted to work with a brewery with a different vibe. You may have noticed that the Colorado beer scene has a lot of beards and flannel. We fully support flannel. (I mean, have you seen our own Todd Olander, lately?) but Wah Gwaan’s spirit and spice are a welcome breath of fresh, Caribbean air. Speaking of fresh air, you’d never guess Harsh’s background.

ROOT SHOOT: Tell us a little about your time and experience in the craft brewing world. What got you where you are today?

HM: I co-founded Wah Gwaan with Jesse, back in 2020. Prior to officially starting the brewery, we were homebrewers and avid beer lovers and learners for years. Like many others in Colorado, one of our favorite hobbies was to explore different breweries and sample any and all styles.

My background is in meteorology and sustainability planning and management. Although it doesn't seem like those fields relate to brewing, I am constantly using skills that I have developed in previous roles as a brewery owner. 

ROOT SHOOT: (Silently high-fiving ourselves for working in a breath of fresh air pun. Accidentally.) What’s one memorable brewing or brewery moment that comes to mind?

HM: Our opening weekend (June 19-20, 2021) will forever be one of my favorite memories. After countless days of planning, many late nights, and lots of hard work, it was indescribable to see Wah Gwaan come together and customers enjoying beer that we made. The support, love, and kind words that we received that weekend still make me emotional to this day.

ROOT SHOOT: (Dabbing eyes, and updating note-to-self. “Be as Badass as Betsy and as Heartfelt as Harsha.”) Do you have any words of wisdom for women new to the craft beer world?

HM: Be bold! Don't be afraid to be you and put yourself out there. You never know what you are truly capable of until you put your all into something.

ROOT SHOOT: Preach it, sister.

And so, we figured, it would be perfect to wrap up with a real-life example of what putting your all into something look like. Bring on…

Photo courtesy of Stodgy Brewing Company

Natalie Yoder, Stodgy Brewing Company

Role: Co-Owner, Co-Founder

Natalie does it all. 

Well, almost all. We’ll get to what she doesn’t do in a minute. But first…

Run farms? Natalie does it. Teach horticulture classes? Natalie does it. Operate heavy machinery? Also Natalie. Analyze supply chains to identify weak links and fix them before they’re an issue? Natalie. Run a hopping brewery in a spectacular location in Northwest Ft. Collins? Natalie-freaking-Yoder. 

Like Wah Gwaan, Stodgy Brewing made the stunningly bold decision to open during the first wave of the 2020 pandemic. Like Wah Gwaan, they’ve also beat the odds. Judging by the patio crowds and constant stream of customers through the taproom, they’ve managed to thrive despite all the COVID-inducted chaos of the last two years.

Part of the charm of Stodgy is due to their space. Previously a commercial building that sold fireplaces, Stody’s taproom has a log-cabin feel to it. One of our favorite Google reviews refers to it as “An incredible new brewery in Fort Collins, that has you feeling like you're a part of Davy Crockett’s world!” 

Accurate. And the log-cabin charm is bolstered by a beautifully planted outdoor patio space. It’s like no other patio we’ve ever seen. There’s Natalie’s advanced horticulture degree to thank for that. Previous to opening Stodgy with her partner, Tyler Olpin, Natalie worked for CSU in their specialty crops division. One of her primary focuses? Hops and hop farms. 

ROOT SHOOT: (Giggles self-consciously) A farming background and a soft spot for the beer industry? We might have a crush.) How long have you been into brewing? What got you where you are today?

NY: Before [CSU] I was a homebrewer,  I brewed my first batch of beer in 2009, Unicorn Sparkle Butt.  It was terrible. I kept brewing for a few years, created a few drinkable items, but moved away from homebrewing when I met Tyler, a homebrewer with a better knack for making tasty things.  I'm a big picture person. Meeting someone with a mind focused on details like Tyler was key to our success as a brewery.  Big picture and small details make for a great whole picture.  We couldn't have made it this far without the work ethics I learned from agriculture (or the power tool skills) and we wouldn't be the same without my tie to the land. I know where our beer comes from and how it came to be.  I know farming, I know soil, I know hops processing. I build things and I fix things, that's my superpower.

ROOT SHOOT: Unicorn Sparkle Butt?? This must come back. This has to come back. Please tell us that Stodgy will do a Unicorn Sparkle Butt Beer. (Breathes deep and focuses) What do you love about your brewery? What are you most proud of there? 

NY: I’m proud that we serve beer that is 100% local malts and that our beer is excellent.  Supporting your local agriculture economy does NOT mean you have to sacrifice quality and I think we're doing a great job of demonstrating that.  I'm also proud that most of our beers are 100% local hops too.  We chose to support regional ingredients as a principle when we first opened and we're sticking to it.

ROOT SHOOT: PREACH IT, SISTER! Ahem…we mean, good work! Do you have any words of wisdom for women new to the craft beer world?

NY: People get excited about the [female] brewers that start a brewery, but if you're the backbone of the business and a woman - I see you. Your work is really hard and not as glorified and you still think about your business at all hours of the day. Female brewers are awesome and exciting and I also want them to thrive and grow, but there are women in all parts of this business and I want to make sure they're all seen and heard. I was self-conscious about not being a brewer and owning a brewery. Was I advancing women if I wasn't a brewer? It was something I had to get over because big things can't be done alone.

Big things can’t be done alone. 

Not in brewing, not in malting. 

Not in farming, not in business. 

Not in life. 

Small business ownership is hard. it’s even harder as a minority. On this International Women’s Day, we hope you’ll take a minute, seek out a female-owned brewery and buy yourself a beer. Or buy them a beer. Buy everybody a beer and let’s work together to move this industry, and the women in it, ahead. 

Be bold. Don’t go it alone.

And whatever you do, take no shit and trust your gut.

You’ve got this ladies. We’re so proud to work with you.

Cheers,

— Your Admiring Root Shoot Team