Hob Knob Brewing Company

Monday, June 25, 2012

Contest - Help Hob Knob Find Our New Location!

We're looking for some help from the Knob Nation (like the name?  I just made it up!)!  We've been looking for the right building off and on for the last 18 months, and nothing, nada, zip, zilch, nichts!  Just when we're on the verge of signing on the dotted line last week here in downtown Statesville, we get shot down so Statesville could get it's 3rd BBQ place within a 3 mile radius.  BBQs, 3 - Breweries, 0.  

I've looked for the last few days, and nothing seems to be the right fit for us.  The goal is now to be up and running by the end of the year, and we're enlisting the support of the Knob Nation to help get us off the ground and find a building!  We're going to make it interesting.  The Knobber who finds our future location get's their first month of pints/growler pours ON THE HOUSE!  So, put on your thinking caps.  Here's what we're looking for (we're trying to get as close to this as we can but realize that no building is perfect):

Location
Somewhere between exit 25 Huntersville, and exit 49 Statesville.  That includes the cities of North Huntersville, Cornelius, Davidson, Mooresville, Troutman, and Statesville.

Size
At least 3000 sq ft.

Rent
<$1500/month

Building
We're looking for a building with some character.  Historic buildings, unique buildings, etc. 

Building Features
  • Move In Ready, Low Up-fitting Costs
  • Concrete Floors (Trench Drains Would Be A Huge Plus!)
  • Climate Controlled
  • Patio/Outdoor Entertainment Area 
  • Not Out In The Countryside, But Not Prime Commercial Real Estate
  • Cellar
Contact me via facebook if you find anything worthy! :)

Prost!

Jeff

Wednesday, May 23, 2012

Hob Knob's Future Location

Hey folks, looking for advice on Hob Knob's future location! We've almost settled on a system, and are about 90% sure we'll be going with a 3BBL system built around speed to double/triple batch. We just checked out another location that was PERFECT, but it's in Statesville...which if you know the area, the craft brew following is in question, though the city did just invest a few million to spruce up the downtown area, and it actually looks pretty nice. It's within walking distance of where I work (2 blocks), but the city is questionable, and don't really want to be away from home 6-7 days a week (which is in huntersville). Right now, it's just 4-5 days a week. Anyways...seriously considering it because it was dang near perfect with hardly any upfitting costs, and with a little tweaking, rent could be reasonable. As for the building itself, it's a little rundown in certain areas, but it has an incredible amount of storage space with the 2500sq ft that make up the main floor...It's got a cellar that would be perfect for the fermentation tanks and possibly barrel aging, and it's small enough that a window unit could keep it at a constant temperature. Building has pretty nice old-timey character. The only work that has to be done is partitioning a wall for a cold room and the bar, which could be done in less than 2 days I think. Please check out the attached pictures of the building. Location is questionable and risky. It's in the middle of a small downtown area, but the town has no real beer 'yuppie' factor that I know of. Since we'll be primarily production based, and I commute 30 minutes a day, delivery to accounts up and down my commute won't be any real issue. There's about 6 towns in between where I work and live, though our biggest market, Charlotte, NC, would be about 40 miles. I suppose we could always look at a distributor, though that would probably exceed the capacity of a 3bbl system. There are NO other brewerys/brewpubs within about 25 miles, which is a good factor, and only one other small brewery within about 40 miles. I think the brewery could host some pretty large parties...the tasting room had to be close to 1200sq ft by itself. The biggest question is, can the local market support it? Would that even be an issue with a production brewery and delivery radius of 50 miles? It allows us room to grow if we need it, and has 15' ceilings that could hold some serious tanks. A drawback is no garage door, so making sure everything would fit is priority #1. Here's a link to google maps, you can use street view (drag the little yellow man to the location marked by the blue pointer) to see what the surroundings look like. It's the building with the open flag. Click Here. Images of the site: Tasting Room 1:
Tasting Room 2:
Brewery Floor 1:
Brewery Floor 2:
Brewery Floor 3:
Cellar:
The other location we're considering is much less public than the Statesville location and off bailey road, $800/month, includes 1200sq ft, and is about 1 mile from my house. You can walk across the parking lot to Assclown Brewery, which is currently getting setup as well (not entirely sure that would be a good or bad?) It's in the heart of yuppieville central and 3 towns, but not in any real type of retail area (in a business park). There's not really any room for a tasting room though, and we could run into an issue with parking as well for any type of large groups. Upfitting wouldn't be any major cost, as they already have a separate room that could be used as a cold room by just adding the insulation. Here's the link to this location. Click Here Pics of the building are here: Cornelius Location The problem that we are seeing is that there are no real ideal spaces around the area we really want to be in which is the cornelius/davidson area. I don't want to go south of cornelius because of where I work and live, so it has to be between exit 25 & exit 49 on I-77. If you look at retail locations, they all want $14/sq ft or more, which just isn't in the budget. Everything else that has around 1500-2000 sq feet either has a crappy location or they want too much for the space. So what's a brewer to do?

Monday, May 14, 2012

One Hour - Five Kegs - Our First Festival

First and foremost, thanks to everyone who dropped by. The event was more successful than we ever imagined, and we averaged around an 8/10 on our beer rankings. Our most popular was Pedro's Lager!

With a week's notice, we got invited to the NC Brewer's & Music festival at Rural Hill by Charles Willett from our local home brew club. It meant we'd have a busy week preparing! Time to batten down the hatches! We had 2 kegs ready to go, but had 3 in secondaries that needed to be transferred and carbed. With a little help from Shawn McBride and a few tips on flash carbing the brews, the beer was ready to go by Friday! But we still needed some beeraphenalia! We had no sign, no t-shirts, no nothing! Enter alpha signs & graphics in Statesville. Andy over there had us squared away on Tuesday, and everything was ready to pickup by Friday. Andy and Phil did some great work on our banner, and we highly recommend them. Here's a shot!


So Saturday morning, we loaded up the ramblin ranger and headed for rural hill. It was our first time there, and I must say, rural hill is a beautiful venue to hand out beer and listen to some great bands! As soon as 12:45pm hit, we started passing out the brews. Before the clock struck 1:45pm, we were dry as a bone! All 5 kegs were gone. We got great reviews from all sorts of people - from hard core craft brewers to the person trying craft brews for the first time. To say our brews were popular would be an understatement. Just check out this line!


Overall, it was an extremely inspiring event, and I must say, we're more committed than ever to getting our brewery up and running as quickly as possible in the Cornelius/Davidson Area! Thanks again to everyone who dropped by, and especially Mathew Taylor for helping us get everything put away before the canopy collapsed lol! Until next time!

Prost!

Jeff

PS...Took the gopro camera to the event and took a time lapse video...one shot, every 60 seconds.  Please ignore the last shot!!! :?)

Wednesday, May 9, 2012

Tee Shirts For Sale!

Hot off the presses!  Hob Knob Tee Shirts For Men (Sizes L, XL, XXL) and Women (Sizes S, M)
$20 +$3.99 shipping.


Email Jeffrey.Lever@Gmail.com to pick your's up today :)

Prost!

Jeff

Wednesday, April 25, 2012

Brewing with A.D.D.!

Hob Knob Brewing Co., Cornelius, NC


I figured I'd write this to help myself as much to update everyone on Hob Knob.  Putting my thoughts down on paper has always helped me in organizing them, and made me consider things I possibly hadn't thought of when rambling through dozens of thoughts per minute.  Such is the mind of a person with ADD.  Some consider it a weakness, but I've come to look at it as a strength.  While it is true that focus is more difficult, the fact that your mind bounces around to 50 different things a minute presents opportunities and considerations that a more focused individual might overlook or not even think of.  Another difficulty associated with ADD is obviously your attention span.  Things that interest me typically only do so for a very short time period.  The question is can you stay focused on something long enough to become truly successful at it.

My brewing 'prowess' has slowly, but steadily increased over the last 2 years to the point that I can make pretty good beers.  That doesn't mean I know jack about running a brewery, and only slightly more about running a business.  Knowing your weaknesses is a key in any business.  Knowing mine mean I need more people.  I need someone who knows breweries and machinery.  I need someone who knows the intricacies of the brewing process, namely yeast, malts, water profiles, etc.  I need someone who can keep the business focused while not restricting creativity.  I need a 'by the books' individual who can run the day to day operations and manage accounting, the government, new accounts, etc. In the end, I need a group of talented individuals with their own unique set of strengths in the brewing world.  Starting a production brewery like this would be futile by myself.

Which brings me to one hell of a difficult decision.  Do we offer shares of ownership in exchange for people's expertise, or do we keep the brewery in the family and pay out the wazoo for other people's expertise?  I'm very averse to offering partnership to anyone outside the family because of the inherent problems one inevitably finds in any partnerships.  Even in the family, they are never easy because of differences of opinions.  Still, through partnerships, you can work out of better locations, brew better beer, make fewer mistakes in starting up.  I guess the real answer to that question is how much startup capital can you amass, and can you survive the learning process if you want to go it alone.  There's no doubt about it, a partnership would be much less of a risk, but would it be worth the problems?  At 31, I've already been involved in both, and neither are easy.  Perhaps the best choice is a little bit of both.  The dogfish head brewery is an excellent model.  While Sam Calagione is the owner, his employees are all part of a profit sharing plan - all the way down to the dock workers.  As of right now, that sounds like it's probably the best option along with bringing my dad in, in a family partnership.  He's got a lot of strengths that could overcome my individual weaknesses.

So that brings us to the next difficult decision.  Where should you put Hob Knob?  Craft beer lovers tend to be yuppies (like me!).  They appreciate quality over quantity, and price for the most part is only a small consideration.  We've considered Statesville, but that doesn't really have the market for a craft brewery, nor does downtown Mooresville, which was another consideration. As my friend Todd said, both areas tend to be lager Mecca's, or as I put it, more country and less yuppie.  That leaves a few prospects - around downtown Davidson, near the Birkdale area (yuppie central at Lake Norman!), or in the business park that's about a mile from my house and near my friend Matt's brewery - Assclown.  All have their strengths and weaknesses.

One of the obvious considerations for the building is how appropriate it would be for Hob Knob, and at what level do we start.  Naturally, we want to prove our beers first and come up with some solid recipes.  The real question is in what format do you want to do that.  You can get the ball rolling with the gov't, and a small hole in the wall place to begin creating a buzz about the brews that you make, but you'd have to move up to a larger facility and production capabilities when you're successful.  That would be time consuming to say the least!  The other option is to continue doing what I've been doing.  Remain an enthusiastic homebrewer.  Obviously, there's no costs involved which reduces your risk, and allows you to put more money away faster for a much larger scale brewery.  The real question is the size of the steps.  Do you go from homebrewer straight into a 7-15BBL system - maybe, with the right personnel, but it still sounds risky.  The alternative is to take progressive steps.  Start immediately, and go from homebrewer, to glorified home brewer (but with commerical & gov't licenses), and then take the next big step into a 15BBL system?  

The scary thing is things are coming to fruition.  What have been dreams up to this point have reached the point of crystallization. My entire family is 100% behind me.  By the end of this year, we'll have the access we need to capital to go bigger than we ever thought possible a year ago.  I've got an incredible knowledge base to pull from both from people that have walked this path before, and from my brew club, the Carolina Brewmasters.  I've got just about all the literature I can bear to read on starting a brewery and perfecting the brews. 

What will our next steps be?  Make sure to like us on facebook and keep up to date on all the happenings.  I'll also be brewing like crazy, and will have more than enough to go around.  I'll be looking for feedback, so let me know if anyone would like a growler!

Cheers!

Jeff







Monday, March 19, 2012

System Up Up And Away-Grades!

The move to our new building for the family answering service business is finally complete! My new office has officially been dubbed the "boiler room" where nothing but big deals will get inked (Hey...a guy can dream can't he)!



The ideas of what Hob Knob will eventually be are still swirling in my brain like fresh wort in a whirlpool tank! Though the timeline has been pushed back with the new building acquisition and upgrades to the 'boiler room', the wife and I are still committed to bringing Hob Knob online sometime in the near future. Pops has always said the hardest thing was to set aside capital for a new business, and he was spot on (he sure would get a kick out of me saying that, no doubt with that corny 'I told you so' grin of his)!

Some day, the dream will become a reality. I've got a really cool business model for it that won't be like anything we've seen up to this point from other breweries.

The system has got some new upgrades! I now have an aging chamber, aka a new 12.4 cubic foot chest freezer with a temperature control module that ages the brews at 40 degrees. I've upgraded the HLT to include a rudimentary HERMS system controlled by the RANCO temperature controller. I have yet to try it out, but may give it a trial run this Sunday!

In the meantime, I've been brewing, brewing, and more brewing. The latest are an Oud Bruin (Old Brown Ale) modeled after one of my favorites - Adriaen Brouwer. If you don't know who Adriaen Brouwer is, he was definitely a man who lived life to the fullest (eventually having this great gold ale named after him)!




The one just before that was a variation on sweetwater 420 (dubbed Wellwater 840 lol). The 840 was colored for St. Patty's Day of course! Note the tint of green at the bottom of the tulip! :)



Happy Brewing Everyone! Until next time!

Prost!,

Jeff

Thursday, December 15, 2011

Yuletide Greetings From Hob Knob!

Did you know that "Yuletide" is actually a winter festival that was initially celebrated by the historical Germanic people as a pagan religious festival, though it was later absorbed into, and equated with, the Christian festival of Christmas. Just your useless holiday factoid of the day :)

Anyways, Happy Holidays & Merry Christmas everyone! First, an update on the brewery. We're still in a holding pattern for now. The family business, our Telephone Answering Service - Answerphone of America, is getting ready to begin moving into our new building that we just purchased. It looks like it will be a busy holiday season for us. Even with the old lady (the wife) working come next year, there won't be enough cash flow for the brewery. After next year is when things get exciting. The up-fitting costs of the new building will be paid off, and we should see some money start to come in from the investment. So fingers crossed, 2013 should be our year. I know...if the Mayans are right, we're screwed.

On to brewing. I've been staying busy brewing. I finally had a brew session go exactly according to plan. Hopefully, I'm starting to get the hang of this thing! That brew was my Coconut Creme Stout. I added the coconut to the secondary, and am hoping that it will be ready to go by Christmas. Just got another upgrade to the garage brewery - a 12.4 cubic foot freezer - which is presently cold crashing the Apricot Pale Ale I made a while back. I just added the Oatmeal Stout to the kegerator, and have to say it turned out pretty well.

That's it for now! Happy Brewing!

~Jeff