Showing posts with label Mishawaka Brewing Company. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mishawaka Brewing Company. Show all posts

19 April 2011

Mishawaka Brewing Company Has Closed

The string of bad news for Mishawaka Brewing Company started back in December of 2008, with the closing of what was then Indiana's second oldest brewpub.
The Brew Pub Ltd. restaurant located at 3703 North Main Street, Mishawaka will be closing at the end of business on December 3, 2008...

It should be noted for those who are not familiar with our structure that The Brew Pub Ltd is a corporation separate from The Mishawaka Brewing Company and The Pub (located at 408 W. Cleveland, Mishawaka at the corner of Grape & Cleveland).

The Mishawaka Brewing Company has continued to grow and in 2006 we opened a production brewery in Elkhart, IN. We will be consolidating the two brewing operations at our Elkhart location. Distribution will continue unchanged.
This morning we were made aware that Mishawaka's equipment and materials are up for sale, preceded by the following very short statement:
We have sold our brewery and have malted barley to clear out.
There's more here.

Does this mean the brewery has closed? That appears to be the case. We'll continue to look into the story and report back any findings. In the meantime, we'd like to wish the Schmidt family the best of luck in wherever they're headed next.

Thanks to Josh at Flat12 for the heads up.

31 December 2009

Winterfest 2010 Update #4


The Brewers of Indiana Guild's Winterfest 2010 tickets are on sale now online and will soon be available at breweries across the entire state (hopefully starting next week). Winterfest will be held in the Ag/Hort building of the Indiana State Fairgrounds on Saturday, January 30th, 2010 from 3pm to 7pm. Tickets are $30.

As we receive information from the breweries as to what they are bringing, we will let you know. Our first Winterfest update provided the beer lists for Upland, Great Crescent, Mad Anthony, and Brugge. Our second Winterfest update included Bee Creek Brewery, Lafayette Brewing Company, Two Brothers, Rust Belt, Bell's Brewing Co., and Atwater Block. Our third Winterfest update included Crown Brewing, Big Woods Brewing, Power House Brewing, and Rock Bottom Brewery North. This is our forth update to the beer list...


Back Road Brewery
LaPorte, Indiana
On draft at their booth:
Maple City Gold
Millennium Lager
Polt Shift Pale Ale
Small Beer Barleywine

In the outdoor beer garden:
2012 IPA (firkin)
TBD (pin)

Broad Ripple Brewpub
Indianapolis, Indiana
On draft at their booth:
Winter Wheat
Hopcicle

In the outdoor beer garden:
2001 “A Stout Odyssey” (firkin)

Mishawaka Brewing
Mishawaka, Indiana
On draft at their booth:
Four Horsemen Irish Style Red Ale
Replicale (Coffee-Oatmeal Stout)
Lake Effect Pale Ale (American Pale Ale)

Sun King Brewing
Indianapolis, Indiana
On draft at their booth:
Sunlight Cream Ale
Wee Mac Scottish Ale
Bitter Druid ESB
Osiris Pale Ale
Winter Replicale: Coffee Oatmeal Stout w/ coffee from B•Java
Amarillo the Princess Warrior Imperial IPA
Crab Apple Wit
Chile Cream Ale

In the outdoor beer garden:
Firkin TBA

Schlafly Beer
St. Louis, Missouri
On draft at their booth:
Dry-Hopped APA
Coffee Stout
C1 Oak Aged Dry Hopped Smoked Rye Pal Ale (Schlafly/NABC/O’Fallon)

Bottles at their booth:
Quadrupel
Grand Cru

In the outdoor beer garden:
Smoked Porter (firkin)
2009 Bourbon Barrel-Aged Imperial Stout (bottle)
2009 Oak-Aged Barleywine (bottle)

Goose Island Brewing Co.
Chicago, Illinois
On draft at their booth:
Bourbon County Stout
Pere Jacques
Matilda
UPDATED: Mild Winter

In bottles at their booth:
Sofie

North Coast Brewing Co.
Fort Bragg, California
Bottles at their booth:
Red Seal Ale
Old #38 Stout
Scrimshaw pilsner
Acme IPA
Old Rasputin Russian Imperial Stout
Brother Thelonius Belgian Abby Ale
Prangster Golden Belgian Style Ale

Left Hand Brewing Co.
Longmont, Colorado
On draft at their booth:
Milk Stout
Sawtooth ESB
400# Monkey English IPA
Polestar Pilsner

Look for more updates in the coming weeks. Plus, we'll be giving away two tickets to Winterfest 2010, so stay tuned!

12 May 2009

Beer Diary - Lunch at Zing


It was gorgeous outside at lunchtime in Indianapolis. So nice that a co-worker of mine and I decided we needed to do some outdoor dining before the upcoming rains turned al fresco dining into al wetto dining. We pondered our choices.

I recalled from a recent roundtable that I had dined and drank inside Zing, but the weather wasn't suitable for enjoying their large balcony with its views up and down Indiana Avenue.


Plus, much like my last visit, it was a Tuesday, which means Indiana Beer Night. Which is good all day. So it was Indiana Beer Day. We're drinking at lunch!

The lunch menu at Zing is different from their small plates dinner menu. They have big salads, sandwiches, and other entrees. I opted for the mahi mahi tacos off of the appetizer menu. I love grilled fish tacos. Oceanaire used to good ones, until they replaced it with a battered fish taco. Then Rock Bottom had good ones, until they recently removed them from their menu. So I am yet again searching for a good fish taco. Three tacos were $9. They were good and tasty, with a nice avocado sauce, but a little small for my needs. And they served the tacos in a fried flour tortilla shell, which makes it puff like a taco salad shell. An interesting take, but I'd prefer a regular soft taco shell (my next stop for fish tacos...Adobo).


But this isn't Hoosier Fish Taco Geek (yet), so let's talk beer.

My co-worker had a bottle of Three Floyd's Gumballhead, which he has had before and frequently enjoyed. I selected a recent addition to the tap menu: Mishawaka Brewing Company's Four Horsemen. I know I have had this in the bottle previously, but this is the first time I have had it on tap.

Mishawaka calls the Four Horsemen an Irish style red ale. Beer Advocate defines it as an APA. I can understand the confusion.


It is darker than a "red", looking more like a brown. It does taste like many reds I have had before, but it has more of a malt base, again leaner towards a brown ale. But on top of that, it is kicked up with a good amount of hop spice. No wonder there is confusion in its definition. Of course, I had a brewer tell me recently that Red Ales are a sort of catchall category...not malty enough to be a brown, not hoppy enough to be a pale ale, so just call it a red and be done with it.

Ignoring categories, the Four Horsemen was an enjoyable beer on this particular sunny day. And as it sat in the sun and warmed, the flavors improved. A smell also came from it, one I couldn't quite identify. Not good, not bad, just...there.

Four Horsemen, three bucks, on draft, on Indiana Beer Night...Day...Lunch...whatever, at Zing.