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  #81  
Old Posted Sep 18, 2015, 6:50 PM
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Tooth and Nail Brewing have opened in the former print shop on Irving and Wellington West. The retail store isn't open yet, so now growler sales (and no date for when). Instead they have a West Coast-style tasting room (basically a bar) with $7 pints and snacks, including a set of cheese&charcuterie plates paired with each of their beers. They stripped the interior and exposed a pretty cool semi-industrial space.
Sweet, I will have to drop by, its literally 2-3 blocks from my place!
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  #82  
Old Posted Sep 24, 2015, 8:28 PM
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For those hoping that the painfully tentative and byzantine "liberalizations" to the Ontario beer regime were going to be the first step to be followed by many more incremental changes to come: sorry; it's a 10 year deal.

news.nationalpost.com/full-comment/chris-selley-if-ontario-banned-corporate-donations-would-the-beer-store-even-exist
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  #83  
Old Posted Oct 9, 2015, 5:07 PM
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Labatt Breweries buys craft beer maker Mill Street Brewery for undisclosed amount

David Friend, The Canadian Press | October 9, 2015 12:37 PM ET


TORONTO — Mill Street Brewery, one of Canada’s leading makers of craft beers, is been swallowed by Labatt Breweries — the formerly independent industry giant that now belongs to the world’s largest brewing group.

The acquisition of the privately held Toronto-based company will help Labatt market the craft label in new areas, including Quebec — the only province that currently doesn’t have any distribution of the Mill Street brand.

“We think that this partnership will really help expand awareness of craft across the country,” said Charlie Angelakos, Labatt’s vice president of corporate affairs, in an interview Friday.

“The folks of Mill Street have built a great business and we want to continue to help them foster that growth.”

Labatt didn’t announce how much it will pay for Mill Street but said it will invest $10 million into the company’s existing brewery operations, as Mill Street tries to keep pace with its growing popularity.

Over the past few years, Mill Street has seen average sales growth of more than 15 per cent annually, according to data provided by the company.

“Many craft brewers in Ontario are experiencing this huge surge just to keep up with demand,” said Mill Street co-founder Steve Abrams.

“This immediate infusion of capital will assist us in getting tanks and more equipment.”

Mill Street was started in 2002 with modest aspirations by its three founders, but its success pushed them to move its facilities to a larger space four years later that could handle the rising supply demands.

Since then, the company has amassed an array of accolades, including Canadian brewery of the year at Canadian Brewing Awards for three consecutive years starting in 2007.
Mill Street has attacted a loyal following of beer drinkers, and some of them took to social media on Friday morning to express their concerns over the craft brewer being gobbled up by a large conglomerate.

Labatt — once an independent giant in Canada’s beer industry — was bought in 1995 by a Belgian group that has continued to grow by buying and merging with other companies around the worl. The group, now called Anheuser-Busch InBev, is currently attempting to buy the world’s second-biggest beermaker SABMiller.

“Goodbye to craft. Hello average,” posted ??Simmsation on Twitter shortly after the announcement was made.

“Oh no! What a shame, I liked Tankhouse. I need to find a new beer,” added user nfitz1.

Others decided to take a more creative approach, considering ways that Labatt could mesh its Labatt Blue line with the Mill Street brand.

“Might I suggest ’Mill Street Blues’ as their first hybrid ale?” suggested jeremysale.

The popularity of craft breweries has been on the rise across Canada in recent years.
According to recent findings from data research company NPD Group, the consumption of beer declined by six per cent in 2014, but craft beer servings were up seven per cent.
Overall, the study found craft and microbrew beers accounted for 17 per cent of all beer consumed at casual dining restaurants.

Labatt has already been playing in the craft brew market with a relatively low profile. The company owns Shock Top, which is sold in the microbrew department at liquor stores.

“Craft beer in Ontario has gotten to the point where everyone is noticing,” said Abrams.

“This will hopefully bring it up to a whole other level.”

http://business.financialpost.com/sm...sclosed-amount
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  #84  
Old Posted Oct 9, 2015, 6:08 PM
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Nooooooooooooooooooooooo!!!!!!!!!!!
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  #85  
Old Posted Oct 10, 2015, 1:46 AM
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A ton of craft brewers are actually owned by large companies. Unibroue is owned by Sapporo, for example.
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  #86  
Old Posted Oct 10, 2015, 8:59 PM
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Originally Posted by jeremy_haak View Post
A ton of craft brewers are actually owned by large companies. Unibroue is owned by Sapporo, for example.
One of my favourites, Creemore Springs, has been owned by Molson for many years now. Molson, to their credit, have basically left them alone in terms of production, but have increased their capacity and distribution far beyond what they could have done on their own. This pretty much only came at the cost of having to use industry standard bottles for their product (I miss the old 500ml bottles...)
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  #87  
Old Posted Nov 4, 2015, 2:42 AM
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A new Brewery, Étienne Brulé, is opening up in Embrun according to The Brewbellion's Twitter feed:

Quote:
@TheBrewbellion

Another Ottawa area local brewery in the works calling Embrun home http://bit.ly/1MMO7Ta
Opening soon...

12:47 PM - 25 Oct 2015
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  #88  
Old Posted Nov 4, 2015, 10:34 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by McC View Post
Tooth and Nail Brewing have opened in the former print shop on Irving and Wellington West. The retail store isn't open yet, so now growler sales (and no date for when). Instead they have a West Coast-style tasting room (basically a bar) with $7 pints and snacks, including a set of cheese&charcuterie plates paired with each of their beers. They stripped the interior and exposed a pretty cool semi-industrial space.
That's about a 15 minute walk from my place. I might have to check it out.
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  #89  
Old Posted Nov 5, 2015, 3:39 PM
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Just a tidbit about Tooth & Nail in Hintonbourg. They now sell tall cans of their beer to bring home, which at first might sound like nothing exciting, but it is actually great for the area. Because when the LCBO across the street closes at 9, one can still wander over to Tooth & Nail to purchase a few cans. Not sure what the cutoff time is, my guess would be 11pm. I am happy to have this near my house, as I always envied my Toronto friend who could walk over to Amsterdam brewery 7 days a week until 11pm to buy beer in their store.
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  #90  
Old Posted Nov 18, 2015, 5:52 PM
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By next month, Ontario residents will be able to pick up a six-pack at Walmart

The Canadian Press, Financial Post 11.17.2015


TORONTO — Thirteen grocery stores and chains across Ontario have been chosen to sell beer as the Liberal government aims to have up to 60 locations selling suds by the end of the year.

The province has released a list of grocery stores it selected as the winning bidders. They must now apply to the Alcohol and Gaming Commission of Ontario for licences in specific locations.

The government won’t say at this stage of the process where precisely the stores are located, but say they upheld a commitment to ensure every region of the province is represented.

Ontario has previously announced there would be 25 in the Greater Toronto Area, 16 in western Ontario, 13 in the eastern reaches of the province and six in the North, split between large and small grocers.

Within three years, the government’s goal is to have beer sold at up to 450 grocery store locations across the province.

A 10-year agreement between the government and foreign-owned Brewers Retail, which owns 447 Beer Store outlets, will keep the same prices wherever beer is sold.

The Beer Store has enjoyed a virtual monopoly on retailing beer in Ontario since prohibition was repealed nearly 90 years ago.

The grocery stores approved by the government to apply to the AGCO for licences are:

— Coppa’s Fresh Market, with locations in the Greater Toronto Area
— Farm Boy 2012 Inc., with locations across the province
— Galleria Supermarket, in the Greater Toronto Area
— Hanahreuem Mart Inc., with locations in the Greater Toronto Area
— J & B La Mantia Ltd., in Lindsay, Ont.
— Loblaws Inc., with locations across the province
— Longo Brothers Fruit Market Inc., with locations in the Greater Toronto Area
— Metro Ontario Inc., with locations across the province
— Michael-Angelos Market Place Inc., in the Greater Toronto Area
— Pino’s Get Fresh, in Sault Ste. Marie, Ont.
— Sobeys Capital Incorporated, with locations across the province
— Starsky Fine Foods Hamilton Inc.
— Wal-Mart Canada Corp., with locations across the province

http://www.ottawacitizen.com/next+mo...262/story.html
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  #91  
Old Posted Nov 18, 2015, 6:40 PM
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Are there any requirements/limitations on what brands/types of beer can be sold? I don't care much for the legacy horse urine beers by Labatt, Molson, etc., but enjoy a nice craft beer from time-to-time. I'd expect a place like Farm Boy to be strong on local craft beers instead of or in addition to the usual stuff.
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  #92  
Old Posted Nov 19, 2015, 5:28 PM
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The Waller St Brewery opened officially in August but getting it to work was a much longer process" (From left: George Bush, Elie Dagher, Marc-André Chainey)

By Brandon Gillet
Three uOttawa alumni have opened a micro-brewery just a stone’s throw from their alma mater, offering a personal feel to the craft brewing experience. Marc-Andre Chainey (BASc ’07 Civil Engineering), Elie Dagher (BASc ’09 Civil Engineering; MEng ’12 Structural Engineering) and George Bush — sans “W.” or “H.W.” — (BASc ’07 Human Kinetics; BA Education ’09) opened Waller St. Brewing in August in the basement of the heritage building where the former Lunenburg Pub was located.

The brewery and bottle shop features a prohibition era theme inspired by the heritage building in which it’s located, while also serving as a neighbourhood brewery. It even offers five dollar flights (a sampling of beers) of which two dollars goes to a different charity every month.

“We decided to focus on being a real neighbourhood brewery, and that involves being active in the community and giving back,” said head brewer Chainey. “But it’s not just that. Prohibition was a time when we saw female political groups making a difference, the temperance movement and people of mixed colour and gender together in the same bars.”


The brewery's casks were built from scratch by Chainey and his father at the brewery because the old, narrow staircase and doorway were too big to fit large pieces through.
Chainey had been a self-taught home brewer for six years prior to opening the brewery, offering samples to colleagues and friends. When one of the colleagues (Dagher) began to talk about the location on Waller Street, which he held a lease for, talk of a brewery became serious.

By day, Chainey is a bridge engineer mostly working in recent years with a consulting firm on interprovincial bridge jobs in Ottawa. These skills came in handy once the group had to deal with the renovation process and building the brewing equipment from scratch.

When they secured the location for the brewery, the Lunenburg Pub was still open, so Chainey had to go in at 4 a.m. every day to do the construction work in the basement, before going to his engineering job.

“The brewery was literally half an inch from being impossible to build due to boundaries set with the building’s heritage status,” said Chainey. “We had to work with a lot of engineers and inspectors to make it possible.”

Dagher, like Chainey, is a bridge engineer who has worked on several projects in the Ottawa area. He is currently working on stage two of the LRT project. He has extensive experience in entrepreneurship ventures on his own, including with Hooch Bourbon House, and has been an active member of the Downtown Rideau BIA since 2011.

“I’m one of the founders of Waller St. Brewing and a business partner,” said Dagher. “I help out where needed but for the most part I’m behind the scenes taking care of business related matters.”
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  #93  
Old Posted Nov 19, 2015, 5:52 PM
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  #94  
Old Posted Nov 20, 2015, 2:38 AM
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As stubborn as a Brew Donkey
Beer tour brouhaha leads to new tourism regulation

By Steph Willems
Ottawa West News, Nov 18, 2015


Brew Donkey founder Brad Campeau credits his stubbornness for helping bring about a proposed regulatory change that would lessen the bureaucratic burden on some small businesses.

After being targeted by the Travel Industry Council of Ontario last summer for its one-day local brewery tours, the Ottawa startup sought the help of the province in order to salvage its business model.

Persistence paid off earlier this month when the province’s Ministry of Government and Consumer Services issues a new regulatory proposal that would make it easier for tour operators to operate single-day tours.

When it was first approached by TICO, Brew Donkey was told that it would have to either register as a travel agency or shut down its tours. Campeau decided to continue offering the already booked tours free of charge, which seriously impacted his business’s future.

Eventually, he found a work-around that allowed him to continue the paid tours, but sought to have the laws around companies like his reflect reality.

“What we’re doing was being done in other areas,” Campeau said. “Culinary tourism, exploring your local region – it’s been done for decades in Niagara and other areas … On Oct. 1 we came up with a fix. We’d no longer take money for the bus, and removed the bus portion from the cost of a ticket (about a quarter of the $100 ticket price). Customers are then redirected to another site to buy the portion of the trip that requires bus transportation. That company has a licence to sell retail trips.”

Campeau said they were “pretty vocal” about the damage the little-known Travel Industry Act regulation was causing his operation, but decided to use the system to fix the problem once and for all. That meant engaging local politicians – in this case, Ottawa Centre MPP Yasir Naqvi – as well as ministry officials.

The dialogue between Brew Donkey, the province and TICO resulted in a potential permanent solution, something Campeau is proud of. He said he wouldn’t have been so stubborn at the outset if he didn’t have the support of so many people in Ottawa and the craft brewing industry.

“It was worth fighting over,” he said, adding that he plans to expand Brew Donkey’s tours from ever weekend to four or five times a week in the coming year.

The added tours would mean the need to hire more staff – a fact that illustrates the burden to small business caused by the regulation.

“If I’ve got to go through three different channels to operate a tour that should be simple, it doesn’t make for an easy operation,” he said. “It would be impossible to operate five days a week if that were the case.”

The regulatory changes are currently in a comment period that runs until Dec. 18. They can be accessed through the province’s online regulatory registry.

Though no firm timeline has been nailed down following the comment period, Campeau is confident that the proposed regulation will become law, given how agreeable the parties involved have been up to this point.

http://www.ottawacommunitynews.com/n...a-brew-donkey/
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  #95  
Old Posted Nov 20, 2015, 2:39 AM
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Who knew? A craft brewery tour company!

http://www.brewdonkey.ca/
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  #96  
Old Posted Dec 15, 2015, 12:46 AM
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Heard through the grapevine from reliable enough sources that three Loblaws stores in Ottawa are part of the first 60 supermarkets that will be selling beer this month.

They are:
-the YIG in Stittsville
-The College Square Loblaws
-The Superstore on Eagleson Road in Kanata
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  #97  
Old Posted Dec 15, 2015, 12:50 AM
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^ Proof Sheet posted this in the Ontario forum
http://bensbeerblog.com/2015/12/11/l...ch-beer-sales/

In the East, the [Loblaws] stores that will sell beer are:
The South Kanata Superstore;
Loblaws College Square Market in Ottawa;
The Loblaws Princess Market in Kingston; and
Browns Independent Grocer in Stittsville.


The Star is saying 13 stores in the east for the first round, so there could be several more Ottawa stores
http://www.thestar.com/news/queenspa...n-tuesday.html
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  #98  
Old Posted Dec 15, 2015, 1:05 AM
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^ That article says the 18th, but I can definitely confirm that the Princess Street Market starts selling beer tomorrow (the 15th).

EDIT: Nvm, saw The Start article.
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  #99  
Old Posted Dec 15, 2015, 1:05 AM
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Citizen story
http://ottawacitizen.com/news/local-...arting-tuesday
Quote:
Loblaw’s College Square outlet has a Christmas surprise in store for shoppers. Beginning Tuesday at 9 a.m., between aisles 8 and 10, surrounded by crackers, soft drinks, baking goods and spices, you’ll find BEER.

Yes, that’s right. After decades of anxious debate, the provincial government has finally deemed Ontarians sufficiently mature to be able to buy their favourite brew — only six packs, mind you, and no wine — at some 60 grocery stores around the province. Four stores in the Ottawa area — College Square Market, the Real Canadian Superstore in south Kanata, Farm Boy in Orléans, and Brown’s Independent Grocer in Stittsville — are included in this initial rollout.

Cross noted that only six-packs would be available, and then, like any Beer Store, only between 9 a.m. and 11 p.m. during the week and 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. on Sunday. Prices will be the same as at the LCBO.
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  #100  
Old Posted Dec 15, 2015, 1:06 AM
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It is so unbelievably sad that this counts as "news". Outside of the Arabic countries, with very few exceptions, humans can buy beer in grocery stores.

What a sad province we live in.
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