Anchor Brewing shutting down after 127 years
Anchor Brewing shutting down after 127 years
Anchor Steam forms the connective tissue binding the older American tradition of European brewing and the inventive era of craft brewing that followed. The processes used to make Steam Beer cast backward, but the formulation created the blueprint craft breweries would use when they emerged a decade
But to be honest their beers just weren’t good enough
That’s a bit much, don’t you think? Just because you don’t prefer them, did not mean they “weren’t good enough.” Beer (and drinks/food in general) are highly subjective, there’s no such thing as a definitive “good” beer, and thus their success is really controlled by marketing and business more than anything. That’s why gimmicks constantly come and go (remember kveik yeast?) and brewers race to see how much they can hop their IPAs. Anchor Steam hasn’t had a hold of their business side for a while, even after their acquisition, so they’re closing, there’s nothing more to it.
People put a lot of good work into Anchor, and their offerings were more unique than the dime-a-dozen breweries that are everywhere. Really frustrating to see you come here and not respect other people’s hard work and craft just because it wasn’t to your taste.
Craft beer isn’t new, but it has been building up to this point, especially in the last decade. The number of US breweries has quadrupled in this period and the past couple of years I’ve easily had many of the best and most interesting beers I’ve ever had in my life, often from local Bay Area breweries. That’s all very new, and the “classic” couldn’t compete when there’s better, or let’s say at least more interesting choices available. A more likely story for declining sales than “distribution and marketing issues” for a brand which is far more well-known than almost any other SFBA beer with the backing of a global megabrewer.
There’s too many IPAs though on that we can agree.
There’s a lot of interesting extra context, mostly as hearsay on Reddit SF (if you want to find it) and HN.
Basically it seems like:
Feels bad, Anchor was definitely one of my go-to basic beer from the grocery. Guess I’m getting more Fort Point now?
My bad, turns out the breweries being too small was a figment of my imagination. I reread the original Reddit comment, and it only mentioned the facilities were outdated.
It looks like Sapporo was targeting 360,000 barrels by end of 2024, whereas Anchor Brewing’s expansion into Pier 48 would’ve brought the volume to 680,000 barrels. Anchor brewed 135,000 barrels in 2016, which meant Anchor would’ve easily accommodated Sapporo’s volume.
I’ll edit the original comment.
So sad! I toured the place twice and enjoyed their beers in many good times. Their process was truly unique, with yeast strains suited to the cool and foggy climate of SF, and wide, shallow rooftop fermenters. I remember walking through the bottling area and seeing an employee grab one off the line and take it back to the nearby lunch table where he was eating :) The company was clearly not doing well financially and got sold at least once, but I guess they never found the financial backing or distribution they needed to survive :(
Fun fact from the tour: steam is not involved in the making of the beer, nor is it a variety of beer. The term comes from a time when steam engines were still commonly in use on large ships and it just had associations of strength and industry and energy. Steam was a modern and vital technology of that era. Today we might say “quantum beer” in much the same spirit.