Man-O-man, once I saw this group's name, I knew I had to join. I'm a big fan of finely hand-crafted brew, and my figure shows it
I live in Houston, Texas, and we are fortunate to have St. Arnold here. I'm not all that familiar with their history, but they are Texas' oldest craft brewery and recently won two World Gold Medals for their brews. They still refer to themselves as a micro brewery, but they manage to keep the local grocery and liquor store shelves well stocked. My favorite is their Winter Stout, which is hard to find outside a well-stocked liquor store. Next is their Elissa IPA.
Up in Ft. Bragg California, well north of San Francisco, is the North Coast Brewing Company. Their Old Rasputin Stout is one of the best stouts I've ever tasted. Guiness? Fagedaboudit. They wish they could brew a stout as good. I discovered this elixir five years ago while visiting a friend who lives up thataway. Fortunately, Spec's, the best-stocked liquor store chain in Houston, carries it.
Actually, one of the best stouts I've had (can you tell I like stouts?) can't be bought anywhere. My nephew has a bud who's into zymurgy. Last year, this guy showed up at a party at my sister's house with a keg of his own dark brew that was just knock-your-socks-off spectacular. Made me want to try the brew-your-own thing using his recipe, it did.
I have a question for you guys -- Anheuser Busch has recently begun to offer a variety of "handcrafted" brews. This link shows what they offer:
http://www.michelob.com/public/agegate.aspx?ReturnUrl=/default.aspx
Most of them, I like a lot, especially the Pale Ale, the Irish Red, the Porter, and the Marzen. So, I'm thinking that growing breweries, such as Sam Adams, and successful micro breweries, such as St. Arnold, have been cutting into the Big Boys' sales to the point where they're beginning to sit up and take notice. So, do you think that, with this sort of move (a brilliant one, I think, btw), AB will be able to wrest market share away from the smaller micro breweries, or are the micro breweries fairly secure in the niches they've carved for themselves?