Craft Breweries Troll Budweiser With Pumpkin Peach Beers
A group of craft brewers has discovered that revenge is both sweet and a dish best served cold.
More specifically, for a nationwide group of breweries led by the acclaimed Bell’s Brewery of Kalamazoo, Michigan, revenge is an icy glass of pumpkin-peach beer. The idea for the strange-sounding beer came from a controversial Budweiser ad that premiered during this year’s Super Bowl, mocking the pretensions of the craft beer movement. In the ad, Budweiser branded itself as “proudly a macro beer.” Near its climax, the clip’s title cards take a dig at craft beer snobs: “Let them sip their pumpkin peach ale. We’ll be brewing some golden suds.”
Before that ad, there was no such thing as pumpkin peach beer, at least not at any commercial brewery. But Bell’s, along with several other microbreweries around the country, was inspired enough to make limited runs of exactly such a beer in response. Smokehouse Brewing Co in Columbus, Ohio, released one called “Fussy Sipper Pumpkin Peach Ale,” while Griffith Claw Brewing Company in Birmingham, Michigan, called theirs “Beechwood-Aged Pumpkin Peach Ale.”
Bell’s — best known for its bitter Hopslam IPA and complex barrel-aged stouts — produced just 48 bottles of its Pumpkin Peach Ale, which are on sale for $20 each at the brewery’s store in Kalamazoo.
“It’s a [screw] you to Anheuser-Busch,” Bell’s founder Larry Bell said in an interview with the Chicago Tribune. “Because they sent us a [screw] you.”
Larry Bell wasn’t alone in taking umbrage with the Bud campaign above; it inspired a rather vocal backlash among craft beer fans when it first aired. Many said that it was the clearest sign yet that Anheuser-Busch, by far the world’s largest beer producer, feels threatened by the explosive rise of craft beer over the past decade. And for good reason: although the market is still dominated in all metrics by twin brewing giants Anheuser-Busch and Miller Coors, craft beer outsold Anheuser-Busch’s flagship Budweiser for the first time in 2013.
For now, huge national TV commercials are likely Anheuser-Busch’s strongest weapon in the fight against craft breweries, which are mostly too small to take out ads on such a large scale. But even that is changing. Craft breweries on the larger side, especially Sam Adams maker Boston Beer Co., have started to run commercials on TV networks across the country. And this trolling by Bell’s proves that craft breweries will have brewing creativity on their side for the foreseeable future.
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