Copyright
Copyright Robin LeBlanc & Jordan St. John, 2016
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise (except for brief passages for purposes of review) without the prior permission of Dundurn Press. Permission to photocopy should be requested from Access Copyright.
Editors: Cheryl Hawley and Dominic Farrell
Design: Courtney Horner
Cover Design: Courtney Horner
Cover Image: Atu Studio Atu Studio | Dreamstime.com
Epub Design: Carmen Giraudy
Library and Archives Canada Cataloguing in Publication
LeBlanc, Robin, 1984-, author
The Ontario craft beer guide / Robin LeBlanc, Jordan St. John.
Includes index.
Issued in print and electronic formats.
ISBN 978-1-4597-3566-8 (paperback).--ISBN 978-1-4597-3567-5 (pdf).-
ISBN 978-1-4597-3568-2 (epub)
1. Microbreweries--Ontario--Guidebooks. 2. Breweries--Ontario-
Guidebooks. 3. Beer--Ontario. I. St. John, Jordan, author II. Title.
TP573.C3L43 2016 663.4209713 C2016-900228-4
C2016-900229-2
We acknowledge the support of the Canada Council for the Arts and the Ontario Arts Council for our publishing program. We also acknowledge the financial support of the Government of Canada through the Canada Book Fund and Livres Canada Books, and the Government of Ontario through the Ontario Book Publishing Tax Credit and the Ontario Media Development Corporation.
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J. Kirk Howard, President
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Foreword
Twenty-odd years ago, what you are holding in your hands would have been little more than a pamphlet. When I published the first edition of my Great Canadian Beer Guide in 1994, Ontario boasted a mere thirteen microbreweries and twenty more brewpubs, the latter group being then licensed to sell their beer only on their premises.
That situation scarcely improved over the balance of the decade, with many breweries closing, selling, or otherwise changing course, and the total number of brewpubs actually declining by the time the second edition of the Guide hit, in 2001. Whats more, while there were some very good beers on the market, the range of styles they represented was limited for the most part to pilsners and pale ales, dark ales and golden lagers. As unlikely as it might seem today, the sighting of an actual IPA was then considered a rare and exciting thing.
Brewery tasting rooms, growler fills, brewpub bottle shops, and the Ontario Craft Brewers association? Double IPAs, barrel-aged imperial stouts, doppelbocks, and saisons? All but dreams, still years away from realization.
However, sometime well after the dawn of the new millennium there occurred a seismic shift in Ontario craft beer and the shock waves were many and far reaching. Suddenly, as if out of nowhere, beer drinkers were spoiled for choice, with local brewers cranking out beers in any number of styles and strengths, from nuanced takes on the German klsch style to generously hopped IPAs and unapologetically powerful barley wines. And just when we thought we had seen it all, those same brewers discovered yeasts and bacteria that could deliver bold, tart, and fruity flavours, and the excitement started all over again.
Today, of course, we live in the promised land of beer, or at least some sort of government-regulated, made-in-Ontario version of it. While we do remain saddled with the beer-retailing behemoth known as the Beer Store, we have also, thanks to the recent explosion of small breweries and the governments tentative steps into grocery-store beer sales, more brands in more styles than perhaps this province has ever before seen, and more venues from which to buy them.
Simply, it is a good, if occasionally confusing, time for beer drinkers in Ontario.
It is that second part, the confusing side, which makes this book so valuable. With such a plethora of breweries at hand and still more in development all the time, it is a challenge for even a full-time beer specialist to stay on top of things. Add in an endless stream of seasonal brews, special one-off editions, and inter-brewery collaborations, and you have a state of affairs that is as maddening to track as it is rewarding to sample.
What you hold in your hands is a snapshot of the Ontario beer landscape at the start of 2016, written by two of the most knowledgeable and keen observers of that scene. It is not the first word on Ontario beer and neither will it be the last, but it is an excellent jumping-off point for a richly satisfying journey of beer discovery. Your guides are ready, and the beer awaits, so grab your glass and get started!
Cheers!
Stephen Beaumont, Toronto, 2016
Author of The Beer & Food Companion and co-author with Tim Webb of The World Atlas of Beer
Top Breweries in Ontario
Here are the breweries that got the highest average ratings.
- Side Launch Brewing Company
- Folly Brewpub and Burdock Brewing (two-way tie)
- Tooth and Nail Brewing Company
- Bellwoods Brewery
- Stone City Ales
Tied for Sixth Place: Collective Arts Brewing, Creemore Springs Brewery, Great Lakes Brewery, Muddy York Brewing Company, Sawdust City Brewing Company
(We have excluded contract brewers from consideration.)
Youll find the beers that received the highest ratings on pages 2027.
Ontarios Craft Beer History
The renaissance of brewing in Ontario has taken place in approximately the same time frame during which the rest of North Americas brewing industry has blossomed again. All across the continent, there has been an immense growth in the number of breweries operating and the number and types of beers available.
For the most part, however, the history of the brewing industry in North America has been about the consolidation and shuttering of various plants under larger banners. In Canada, throughout the middle of the twentieth century, one of our most successful businessmen, E.P. Taylor, built Canadian Breweries, an empire that thrived on this model, reducing the number of players in the market and the selection of products available to beer drinkers. His empire was not limited solely to North America. In the United Kingdom, Taylors consolidation of breweries and their tied houses led to a situation where Carling Lager was served in over eleven thousand pubs by 1967.
Top Five IPAs
- Thrust! An IPa
- Bronan IPA
- Karma Citra IPA
- Black Swan IPA
- Headstock IPA
By the end of the 1970s, the number of players in the Ontario beer market was the smallest since the advent of industrialized brewing in the province. Molson, Labatt, Carling OKeefe, Northern Breweries, and Henninger were all that was left of an industry that a hundred years earlier had boasted nearly two hundred companies. The lack of selection in the marketplace briefly created a boom in sales. The late 1970s represent the historical high point of beer sales across North America.