back to the brewery Brew LogFresh beer news here! Our HistoryA history of brewing in the Amana Colonies and the Millstream story. Our BeersA virtual sample of the Millstream brews. Find Our BeerWhere to find establishments serving our Beer and Soda. Brewery TourTake a cyber tour of our brewery and end up in the Millstream Beer Garden. EventsA listing of events in the Amana Colonies and surrounding area LinksLinks to other brewery related sites. Millstream Brewing Co.
Iowa's oldest Microbrewery
Since 1985

millstreambrewing.com

September 28, 2005

Oktoberfest is this weekend!

Filed under: Special Event — Aaron @ 11:11 am

We are getting ready around here for the main event.. .OKTOBERFEST. I hope you all are planning on coming out for the festivities. If you want to know what else is going on, I found that the Amana Society page has some great info… lots of stuff to do. Of course, the best part will be right here at the brewery. Gemütlichkeitis a german word that does not translate well into English, but is often referred to as the “feeling you get during Oktoberfest”. I think that says it all!

The Iowa City Beer Festival last weekend was a good time. I got to meet the folks with O’Fallon Brewing. They are really nice bunch, and the make really great beer to boot. Everyone seemed to enjoy their Pumpkin Beer, and it even got me itching to make one for ourselves. Glad to see them in Iowa.

September 19, 2005

One down…Iowa City is next!

Filed under: Special Event — Aaron @ 11:26 am

Last Saturday we had a great time at the Quad City Brew Ha Ha. The turnout was much more than expected! I was a little surprised at about 12:30 when I noticed a line of people to get into the fest… I had never seen that before! The next thing we knew, we were swamped with people. Person after person kept sampling the White ale. I would say, it was 5-6 White ale to any of our other beers. By 2:30pm, the John’s Generations White Ale was gone! We quickly moved the 20th Anniversary Dopplebock over to that tap handle.

Looking around, I saw that some other booths were out of beer. I was glad that I sampled some of the fine homebrew from Galesburg and Macomb, because they were pretty much gone by mid-afternoon. The Macomb Homebrewers had a fine Honey Ale that was made with Orange blossom honey and had orange peels in it… yum! They also had an experimental beer that was made with 50% Mountain Dew.. that was pretty unique and original. The MUGZ crew was really well organized.. they had 85 gallons of homebrew on hand! Very impressive. Eric Ware and Steve Slach really are doing a great job over there… congrats!

Bud had an impressive booth this year. It seems they are focusing more attention on Craft beer.. I think we can take that as a good sign, because their statistical trend watchers have been right many times before! Their booth had plenty of flashy stainless steel…

Check out their fancy tap boxes… they are pretty cool looking (and expensive!). Kind of a waste of a good keg though if you ask me.

Our 30 gallons was gone by 4:30 pm, next year we will have to bring more beer! In a way though we felt pretty good about it all!

Next week is the Iowa City Beerfest, behind Old Chicago in Coralville. Advance tickets are on sale now! I hope the turnout is as big as it was in Davenport. I think that Craft beer is really on a upswing, and this could be another sign of that.

September 11, 2005

Slow Food and Beer

Filed under: Special Event — Aaron @ 2:18 pm

Last night I was at the Field To Family Harvest Dinner at the Izaak Walton League, located just south of Iowa City. This dinner was the culmination of a series of events to celebrate and promote the Slow Food movement in Iowa. Slow food is organization opposed to the fast food culture of modern times and advocates eating local produce and supporting sustainable agriculture.

The Izaak Walton League dining hall is in a very scenic location with a nice view of the river, although I forgot my camera :( . Preparing the dinner was reknowned chef Odessa Piper from L’Etoile in Madison WI, as well as Kurt and Kim Friese of Devotay. I can attest that the food was very fine indeed!

I was busy serving Johns’ Generations White Ale, Oktoberfest, Warsh Pail Ale, and Root beer. We poured the beer into large wine glasses… something I really liked! For one thing, wine glasses don’t have a flat bottom and so the beer foams much less when poured. Also I think it gives our handcrafted beer the respect that they truly deserve! The Oktoberfest was the most popular, judging by the wieght of the kegs after the event.

I spent some time talking to Sherri Brooks Vinton author of The Real Food Revival. I found there were many parallels between the craft beer movement and the slow food movement. They both are trying to change consumers tastes from mass marketed stuff, to the higher quality local goods. Its seems both movements are making steady, if slow progress. Its really a matter of determination and time, for a grassroots organization to really make a change, especially in face of such entrenched things as radiation sterilized meat and fizzy yellow beer.

I suppose one could say that since beer is a food that it is essentially contained within the slow food movement, except that many of our ingriedents are not local, since they cannot be locally grown. Hallertau hops, for example, are only grown in Germany, and I bet they use many chemicals on them. Odessa Piper gave an excellent speech that essentially said that its important to follow the principle of the slow food, not every detail. Its currently very difficult for someone to use only locally grown produce, but to use some is better than the alternative. She gave the example of taking a frozen pizza, crisping it, and tossing the cut up pieces into a salad of local greens. I found that very enlightening!

Ok so much for philosophy. Also at the event, there were two ladies from the Czech Slovak Musuem of Cedar Rapids. They reminded me that October 7th is their Brewnost Celebration, which is a fund raiser for the musuem. Last year it was a heck of a good time, with plenty of good beer (courtesy of John’s Grocery) and food. I am looking foward to doing it again.

September 4, 2005

Iowa Festival of Beers = Success!

Filed under: Special Event — Aaron @ 4:02 pm

What great day! After much fussing and hardwork, the 1st Annual Iowa Festival of Beers was an unstoppable success. I would estimate that over the course of the day we had 200-300 people… not bad for a first-time event, that included such distractions as the opening hawkeye home football game!

Here are the breweries that showed up to pour their beer.
Old Capitol Brewpub of Iowa City
Raccoon River from Des Moines
Court Avenue Brewpub from Des Moines
Rock Bottom Brewpub from Des Moines
Olde Main Brewing from Ames
Lost Duck Brewing from Fort Madison
Granite City Brewing from Cedar Rapids
And of course ourselves to make a total of eight breweries. Thanks to all for making this possible!

We also had the honor of having the IBU/Ames hombrew clubs, and Iowa City’s THIRSTY homebrew club serving some of their hand made brews out to the public.

Everything worked out so well. The weather was great, the music was good (thanks to Nick Sticka), and we even had Ed Fallon jump on and play some accordian for us all!

Actually we did have some bizarre problems in the morning with some of the serving boxes. Thankfully we were at a brewery, and we had all the equipment (like rare tap gaskets) on hand to fix them.

We’ll be doing it again next year.. though we may change the location. We are planning on expanding our beirgarten next year, since Alliant has moved their gas substation from behind were our current biergarten is. That way, we’ll even have a scenic view of millrace!

After the event, all off the brewers seemed to agree it was good time, and everyone certainly enjoyed trying everyone elses beer. There was not a bad beer among them. Some of my favorites were the Canvasback Lager from Lost Duck which was very clean and crisp, Olde Main’s Scotch Ale which had an intense peat malt flavor, and the Amarillo craziness of the IPA from Rock Bottom.

We had the 20th Anniversary Dopplebock on tap, as well as the very last gallon of the Mystery Saison. The dopplebock was quite popular. I have saved the rest of it (including one entirely full keg) for serving during the next few beer festivals.. so you’ll get a chance to try it on draft again.

All the breweries set-up and ready to serve. Note our brand new tap box cover (handmade by Teresa!)

The guys from Lost Duck were quite friendly!

We all got to meet the brewers from Olde Main, one of Iowa’s most recent brewpubs.

The guys from IBU, many familiar faces… I’m sure we’ll see them all again at the November THIRSTY Classic:

Update: The results are in from the Best of Show vote. Lost Duck took first place with their Canvasback Lager.. good for them! Our Dopplebock came in second, and Old Capitol’s Straight Pipe Stout came in third.

We also raised over One Thousand Dollars for the Arthritis Foundation Charity. Next year we hope to do even better!

August 17, 2005

Madison Trip Wrap up

Filed under: Special Event — Aaron @ 12:03 pm

We are all back and recovered now from our trip to the Great Taste of the Midwest last weekend. I think everyone had a very good time!

The Main event was, of course, a knockout! Its really hard to say just what happened, when you are so busy sampling so many beers, and talking to so many people. I can say that our Mystery Saison was a pretty big hit. We ‘released’ a five gallon keg of it at 2pm. Within an hour, it was gone as people lined up for their two-ounce sample of our strange beer. There were so many people, it was impossible to fully explain the process or the mystery behind the beer… but everyone seemed to really think it was a good one. Infact, our Saison was by far the driest and most authentic example of the style that I found at the fest.

Our Colony Oatmeal Stout was also very popular..as was the John’s Generations White ale.

It did try to rain, but it was unsuccessful. It think we can still safely say that the Festival has had practically no rain in its 19 years.

Here we all are enjoying the day. (left to right: my friend Rob, myself, Teresa, and Buckley)

We did some exploring of Madison by night. We checked out the Great Dane, Angelica, and the Come Back Inn. The amount of interesting beers on tap is truly incredible. Buckley and I finished off Saturday night with a Breakfast Stout from Founders Brewing. Its was a good beer, but when Whispering Jeff from Cream City Suds got excited and gave me a big shake (I can’t remember what for) my beer ended up all over Buckley! Paul from Old Capitol seemed impressed by Kevin’s beer tye-dye!

Tickets went fast this year, and I just want to remind you all that next year they are expect to go even faster. So plan ahead and we will see you next year!

The next festival we are going to is going to be much closer… as in right Across the Street from our Brewery! Here is the info that is going out in our mailing list soon.

FESTIVAL OF IOWA BEERS
September 3, 2005
At the Millstream Brewing Co

Experience the flavor of Iowa beer! On Sept 3rd, from 1-5pm, all of the best beer that Iowa has to offer will be assembled in one place to tantalize your beer tasting taste buds all afternoon. Individual craft breweries will have their own brew masters pouring the beer and answering questions to enlighten you on their brews and the beer making process.

For $12 a ticket (purchased at the day of the event) you get a souvenir glass that can be filled over and over with more than 25 different beers brewed right here in Iowa.

Live music will be provided at the brewery by both Nick Stika (1pm to 3pm) and Dogs on Skis (4pm to 8pm).

What more could you ask for on a relaxing Saturday afternoon than the sampling of Iowa’s top brews, music and food?

There will also be a door prize for collectable items donated by each brewery. Proceeds from the door prizes will go to the Lift the Limit organization being formed to try to raise awareness and further educate the public and legislation on craft brews. Tickets to enter are only one dollar!

But wait, there is more…the grand finale will be up to the public as you get to choose and vote for your favorite brew at the festival. All the votes will be counted and the coveted “Peoples Beer Choice Award” will be given to the brew that receives the most votes.

So come join us for an afternoon of sampling, food and entertainment as we showcase what tremendous craft beers we make right here in Iowa!

You must be 21 with id available to attend.

Finally, in a very sad note, our brewery cat, Millie, passed away yesterday morning. :( She became inadvertently caught in the malt hoist, and before we knew what was happening, it was too late. We are all shocked and saddened. We all really enjoyed having a ‘family pet’, though, and so we may get another kitten… and lock them up before loading malt into the brewery.

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