Published by American Palate
A division of The History Press
Charleston, SC
www.historypress.net
Copyright 2016 by Bill Yenne
All rights reserved
First published 2016
e-book edition 2016
ISBN 978.1.62585.506.0
Library of Congress Control Number: 2015957667
print edition ISBN 978.1.62619.952.1
Notice: The information in this book is true and complete to the best of our knowledge. It is offered without guarantee on the part of the author or The History Press. The author and
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CONTENTS
FOREWORD
The Bay Area has long captured the American ideal of the Land of Opportunity as a magnet for settlers, prospectors, seekers and the like. Like those who first put their feet on this soil to gain a fortune during the 1849 Gold Rush, many of us are here to experience something that we could not find from where we originated.
From the early settlers who traveled on the first transcontinental train west to those who became part of the 1960s music scene with the Grateful Dead and Jefferson Airplane, there is no shortage of ordinary or famous people who have found what they were looking for in the Bay Area. Some went on to create big opportunities for thousands of others in the Bay Area and beyond; Steve Jobs, Steve Woz Wozniak, George Lucas and Francis Ford Coppola are now household names in the Western world. And those of us in the brewing industry surely remember when Fritz Maytag, who some consider the father of the modern microbreweries, purchased the historic Anchor Brewing Company.
The Bay Area gives us all a place to land our creative and prospective ideas and to reinvent ourselves while also scratching our itch for opportunity and, hopefully, success. The San Francisco brewing community, then and now, is part of this very framework, giving another layer of richness and depth to the ever-changing and vibrant Bay Area community, offering the people a needed and desired social elixir.
Brewers dont make a product. That word is reserved for producers of ball bearings and disk drives. We make beer, and we do it well. In San Francisco, we get to use near-perfect water tunneled to San Francisco from the Hetch Hetchy reservoir near Yosemite. Like water, beer is a living beverage, ultimately brought to us by the real microbrewer, yeast. That single-celled aerobic organism performs that magical act of fermentation, producing alcohol and carbon dioxide by scavenging the sugar supplied by the malt upstream in the brewing process, balanced with the aroma and bittering compounds of hops.
When starting our brewery fifteen years ago in the historical SOMA neighborhood, we looked to the old San Francisco white pages for an inspirational name and came across the likes of breweries at that time that bore monikers such as the Eagle Brewery or the Hibernia Breweryall historically significant, but they didnt grab my business partner, Nico Freccia, and me as names that we could hang on a shingle. We realized we were floating in an era that was tied to the start and end of Prohibition, with the passage of the Twenty-first Amendment to the U.S. Constitution.
We took that name and made it ours. To us, it celebrates the demise of the noble experiment and the gradual return of the pub and brewing culture to the Bay Area and the community that came with it. The name further found us as we scoured the SOMA neighborhood for a viable location that could house a small production brewery with a restaurant. No other name seemed suitable to evoke our character. With our location on Second Street, a former coffee roastery and warehouse space, in the thick of the early San Francisco brewing community, we had landed.
Shaun OSullivan (left) with the author at the 21st Amendment Brewery. Authors collection.
Bill Yenne records and delivers an elegant view of San Franciscos brewing history. He gives us a front-row seat to our great citys brewing past and current progress. From the early wave of breweries populating the city to consolidations in the late 1800s and 1900s to the first and second explosions of modern craft breweries, Yenne has laid it all out before us as a tapestry of successes and struggles. What a long and winding road it has been. Grab a beer and enjoy this historical ride.
SHAUN OSULLIVAN
Co-Founder and Brewmaster, 21st Amendment Brewery
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
The author wishes to thank all those who have generously provided their time, referrals and stories and the useful information that made this book possible, as well as to all the brewers who took the time to speak with me in the course of this project and certainly those who offered to buy me a beer. I would especially like to mention Joanne Marino of the San Francisco Brewers Guild, Richard Brewer-Hay, John Dannerbeck, Brenden Dobel, Rich Higgins, Dr. Tom Jacobs, Dave McLean and Brian Stechschulte. A nod is certainly due to Allan Paul, gone from the San Francisco brewing scene but certainly still alive in the minds of many, especially this author. Finally, special thanks to Shaun OSullivan for penning the foreword and to Fritz Maytag, who has shared so many wonderful tales of the worlds last medieval brewery and how it became Americas first craft brewery.
Introduction
A PEARL WITHOUT PEER
San Francisco is one of those magical world citieslike Venice or Constantinople or New Orleanswhose historical reputation is equal parts poetry and commerce. It originated in the 1830s as a tiny cluster of buildings on the shore of a cove called Yerba Buena, about three miles from an old Spanish mission that had been dedicated by Franciscan friars to San Francisco de Asis (St. Francis of Assisi) in that auspicious year 1776.
The cluster of buildings became a town, and as trading ships arrived from the outside world, the town began to take the form of a little seaport. The town originally took its name from the cove, which took its name from yerba buena (Spanish for good herb), an aromatic plant that was plentiful in the area.
As the clipper ships called in Yerba Buena on their way to and from the Eastern Seaboard of the United States and the Far East, they brought with them the finer things of those more extensively developed civilizations. Among those finer things was beer. One of the earliest known documents confirming this is an Invoice of Merchandise in the collection of the California Historical Society that is dated September 20, 1843. It records a consignment of bottled beer that was shipped to Yerba Buena by the firm of the Boston merchant Benjamin T. Reed.
Yerba Buena was much smaller than Monterey, about one hundred miles down the coast, which was the Spanish capital of California and the principal trading city, but it was blessed with a fine natural harbor and began to grow. By the time it was officially renamed San Francisco after the patron saint of the mission in 1847, the little community boasted a population of 459 by the reckoning of Sam Brannan, the publisher of the California Star, the towns first newspaper. Of these, over half were Mormon immigrants who had arrived with Brannan himself in July 1846.
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