Kane Brewing
Type | Craft Brewery |
---|---|
Location | 1750 Bloomsbury Ave, Ocean Township, New Jersey, USA |
Coordinates | 40°14′12″N 74°02′42″W / 40.2366°N 74.0449°W |
Opened | 2011 |
Key people | Michael Kane |
Annual production volume | 18,000 barrels a year |
Distribution | On-site |
Tasting | Tastings and tours on Wednesday through Sunday |
Website | https://www.kanebrewing.com/ |
Kane Brewing is a craft brewery in Ocean Township, Monmouth County, New Jersey.[1] It was started in 2011. It is New Jersey's third-largest craft brewery, after Flying Fish Brewery and River Horse Brewery[citation needed].
History
[edit]Kane Brewing was founded by Michael Kane. He started homebrewing at age 22 in order to recreate a German/Belgian style beer he tasted while on a trip in College.[2] After he won gold and silver medals at the 2009 National Homebrew Competition, he took his hobby more seriously and researched opening a brewery.[3] He took a job at a Wall Street mergers and acquisitions firm, but after four years, he quit to open his own brewery in 2011 in a former casket shop. The following year, New Jersey beer laws were harmonized with those of surrounding states,[4] allowing production limits to increase and giving Kane an opportunity to grow quickly into one of New jersey's biggest breweries.[5]
See also
[edit]- Alcohol laws of New Jersey
- Beer in New Jersey
- Beer in the United States
- List of wineries, breweries, and distilleries in New Jersey
References
[edit]- ^ New Jersey Craft Beer. "New Jersey Breweries & Brewpubs – contact info, tours, tastings and more" (21 September 2013) Retrieved 8 October 2013.
- ^ Parks, Andrew (2019-07-08). "19 Craft Breweries Worth Going Out of Your Way For". Food & Wine. Retrieved 2018-11-27.
- ^ Biese, Alex (2018-06-05). "NJ beer: Kane Brewing Company's secret to craft beer success". Asbury Park Press. Retrieved 2018-11-27.
- ^ Beym, Jessica (2019-01-18). "N.J. bill to boost microbreweries signed into law by Gov. Chris Christie". NJ.com. Retrieved 2018-11-27.
- ^ Stern, Karen (2016-05-20). "Wall St guy's path to happiness: Less banking, more beer". CNBC. Retrieved 2018-11-27.