BCBusiness

June 2015 Captain Canuck to the Rescue

With a mission to inform, empower, celebrate and advocate for British Columbia's current and aspiring business leaders, BCBusiness go behind the headlines and bring readers face to face with the key issues and people driving business in B.C.

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58 BCBusiness JUNE 2015 has become the epicentre of a move- ment that has taken North America by storm. While most associate the Paci‹c Northwest with craft beer (Portland, Seattle and, of course, Vancouver, which celebrates its own craft beer week the ‹rst week of June), San Diego County alone has nearly 100 brewer- ies, microbreweries and brewpubs (more than all of B.C., and up from just 37 in 2011), with a craft-brewing scene that dates back more than a quarter- century. As a writer for the New York Times put it, beer "has become as much a part of the San Diego identity as surf and sun." One of the local hotbeds for micro- breweries is the trendy North Park neighbourhood, which lies just to the northeast of iconic Balboa Park. This is where we ‹nd Greg Hess, one of the brothers behind the ‹ve-year-old Mike Hess Brewing Company. "I think this is the number one town in the world for craft beer," says the blond, curly-haired Hess, who looks the part of a surfer but handles sales and distribution for the fast-growing company. A trained electrician and machinist, Hess helped build the current location (open since August 2013), where most of the beer is brewed and the tasting room (where I'm acquainting myself with the deli- cious coee-infused Grazias Vienna Cream Ale and the award-winning Umbrix Rye Imperial Stout) is located. Many of San Diego's craft brewers, like the Hess brothers, started o as home brewers. But the still-collegial- feeling scene is increasingly big busi- ness. A local think-tank, the National University System Institution for Policy Research, estimated craft brewing's economic value to the region doubled between 2001 and 2014 to some $600 million annually, with yearly sales approaching $850 million (up from $681 million in 2011). Today, brands like Stone and Ballast Point can be found in bars and restaurants across North America and beyond. "You've got some great brewers when you look around San Diego," says Hess. "You have Pizza Port. You have Alesmith. You have Ballast Point. You have Stone. You have Karl Strauss. You have all these big breweries that are not only producing great liquid and every- thing else; they're training other brew- ers, and those brewers are branching o and starting other breweries here. "Once you're in San Diego," he says, pointing out to the patio and the mid- day sunshine, "you don't leave." f Vancouver Brew Tour, by Wildside Vancouver (wildsidevancouver.com), offers a similar experi- ence locally: $69 to visit three craft breweries, which includes a driver and beer guide, and a flight of four 4-oz tasters at each of the breweries). f Brew Hop (brewhop .com) offers 2.5-hour tours of San Diego's craft beer scene for individuals and groups, starting at US$75 (which includes transportation, a host, private tours and all your beer samples at every brewery). BaR HOpping Brewery tours are a popular way to sample San Diego's best craft beers

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