'Everything old is new again' states the first line on the website of the newly established {- but mature for it's age -} Philadelphia Brewing Company. ( PHL Brewing ) - This got me thinking. This is appropriate for so many reasons but in a broader sense it rings very true. We are at a turning point in our short history. The rise of locally crafted beers are following the reintroduction of real American wine 30 years ago and coffee 20 years ago. Sure you still have industrial light lagers, jug wine, and instant coffee - but little by little the sheep are venturing away from the herd to explore. I know this because it wasn't that long ago that I began to drift from the group. Stop me if I get too metaphorical on you.
When did efficiency become cheap? And Industry become ... mindlessly big for the sake of big? We are tired of microwave dinners, fizzy yellow beer, oxidized coffee, and a blinding sameness everywhere you go. Happy meals don't make me happy anymore. Once you see the light you just can't go back to the darkside -you can only move forward. I'm not a cynic, I'm an optimist. And what better place to start than with a beverage like beer. It has changed the design of all of our past civilizations and it is changing us now. We're putting culture back into beer and it never tasted better. Don't think for a second that this is small. This is not your fathers/mothers Revolution - this is our Evolution. We may not be the catalyst but we can be the innovators. In the words of a great man, "We didn't start the fire, no we didn't light it, but we tried to fight it."
Sustainability. Local food and drink builds community. Everything old is new again. Drinking in moderation for personal enjoyment, for social lubrication, to support your neighbors. This brings people together. Fashionable again is the local farmer, brewer, vintner, artist, businessman. This is not just a treehugger trend - this is a new necessity. This is about regular people realizing that what goes around comes around. I'm not suggesting scrapping the assembly line. But let's re-think it. You have to take a step back and look at the big picture before you realize small can be beautiful. Old ideas working in a new World.
Enlightenment. When you know ... you know. Beer is not just beer. It was carefully crafted by a passionate brewer 10 miles away. It has a toasted malt flavor on top of which flowery hops dance with seductively smooth carbonation. For so long you had thought that beer only had one flavor - and that was 'beer'. Now your morning coffee suddenly has nuances you didn't think coffee could have because it was roasted 24 hours ago at a cafe down the road. It's fair trade certified and you think to yourself ... somehow coffee tastes better when you know it wasn't harvested on the backs of third world slaves. You can finally comprehend the meaning of terroir when you drink an estate wine from a farm/vineyard down the road from your home. You realize: all the wine snobs you know aren't so snobbish anymore. To make things even better the tomatoes you picked up from the local farmers market last Saturday are the best you've ever had. Your thoughts come clearer and you can literally breathe easier because your asthma you had since childhood has gone. Could this be the product of less carbon and sulfur in the air around your home?
Everything is connected. ~ I've rambled on long enough and hopefully the point has been made. Don't be afraid to ask a few questions and make a few changes. Make the old new again.
Friday, August 3, 2007
Wednesday, August 1, 2007
Art and Industry
I've decided to start a blog. I resisted for a good long time but my increasing addiction to reading them has prompted me to create one. I keep a personal journal of random thoughts but i believe this can be the 'yang' to that 'yin.' There is a huge difference between writing with the intention of privacy and writing with the possibility of anyone anywhere reading. A much different level of responsibility.
Further explanation:
Art & Industry ~ For the most part I don't like titles. They tend to be very limiting in any circumstance. But they do serve a purpose and I had to choose something. I stole this title from near the corner of American/ Susquehanna St.'s in Philadelphia. Painted long ago on an old Industrial brick building are these words all in caps and with a very industrial typeface. The white letters are faded almost completely over a black background. It must be 30' long and 8' high. I drive by this everyday as i approach the Kensington neighborhood on my way to work at the brewery. * Was there ever a more eloquent and inspirational phrase? I think not. It puts a smile on my face everyday. It embodies everything I aspire to be.
So there it is. This all-encompassing titled blog will likely be filled with sometimes serious thoughts, news, current events, ramblings, nonsense, lots of brewing and beer related things, and all the things that make up the entropy of my mind. If your reading - thanks.
Further explanation:
Art & Industry ~ For the most part I don't like titles. They tend to be very limiting in any circumstance. But they do serve a purpose and I had to choose something. I stole this title from near the corner of American/ Susquehanna St.'s in Philadelphia. Painted long ago on an old Industrial brick building are these words all in caps and with a very industrial typeface. The white letters are faded almost completely over a black background. It must be 30' long and 8' high. I drive by this everyday as i approach the Kensington neighborhood on my way to work at the brewery. * Was there ever a more eloquent and inspirational phrase? I think not. It puts a smile on my face everyday. It embodies everything I aspire to be.
So there it is. This all-encompassing titled blog will likely be filled with sometimes serious thoughts, news, current events, ramblings, nonsense, lots of brewing and beer related things, and all the things that make up the entropy of my mind. If your reading - thanks.
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