Left Hand Brewing Company
40°9′30.588″N 105°6′55.604″W / 40.15849667°N 105.11544556°W
This article needs additional citations for verification. (March 2013) |
Industry | Alcoholic beverage |
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Founded | 1993 |
Founder | Dick Doore Eric Wallace |
Headquarters | , |
Area served | North America |
Key people |
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Products | Beer |
Production output | 78,000 US beer barrels (2016) |
Website | http://www.lefthandbrewing.com/ |
Left Hand Brewing Company is a craft brewery located in Longmont, Colorado.[1]
History
[edit]Left Hand began in December 1990 with a homebrewing kit that founder Dick Doore received from his brother. According to Doore, "it was all downhill from there." By 1993, Doore had teamed up with college buddy Eric Wallace and they resolved to start a brewery.
On September 21, 1993, they incorporated as Indian Peaks Brewing Company, and purchased a former meat-packing plant next to the St. Vrain River outside downtown Longmont, Colorado. A few weeks after beginning production, it was discovered that the name Indian Peaks was already in use by another brewery, so the name was changed to Left Hand, in honor of Chief Niwot (the Arapahoe word for "left hand") whose tribe wintered in the local area.
Left Hand's doors opened for business on January 22, 1994. Their first batch of beer was Sawtooth Ale In October of that year. Left Hand took home two medals at the Great American Beer Festival, a gold medal in the bitter category for Sawtooth Ale, and a bronze medal in the Robust Porter category for Black Jack Porter. In 1995, the brewery was able to start putting its logo on bottle caps. But when it came down to shrinking down the original logo to put on a crown, the design was illegible. Left Hand created a small hand to be the logo. It morphed into a sticker, and eventually into the company logo used today.
In April 1998, Left Hand merged with Tabernash Brewing, and doubled the size of their brewery. In June, they began packaging 12 oz. bottles for 6 packs (up to that point they had been bottling 22 oz. bottles and kegs exclusively). In November, they started their own distribution business, Indian Peaks Distribution Company. Tabernash was phased out and Indian Peaks Distribution Company was sold, allowing Left Hand to focus and redirect their energy back to brewing.
In recent years,[when?] the brewery has experience significant growth.[1] With over 30% growth in 2010, Left Hand has steadily increased its production, making the Brewers Association's Top 50 Craft Brewers list in 2012.[2] The brewery has added six 480 barrel fermenters, an additional 500 barrel bright tank, and a new KHS keg line. Left Hand has also expanded the brewery property, purchasing the warehouse across Boston Avenue to house offices as well as the site of a new 6,000 square foot cooler, bringing the total brewery acreage to 5.5 acres. In the fall of 2012, Left Hand opened a new bottling line that runs four times faster than their previous system and fills 200 bottles per minute.[citation needed]
On the first night of the 2011 Great American Beer Festival, Left Hand introduced Milk Stout Nitro in a bottle, which has become their most popular beer, making it both the first American and the first craft brewery to bottle a nitrogenated beer without a widget.[3][citation needed] Two years later, Left Hand expanded the bottled Nitro series with Sawtooth Nitro and Wake Up Dead Nitro.
Left Hand produced approximately 65,879 barrels in 2013.[4]
Bottled Beers
[edit]
Perennial Collection: |
Seasonal Collection:
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Big Mo Series (all 22 oz):
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Ambidextrous Ale Series (Draft Only):
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Discontinued Beers:
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Note: all active beers are available in 6 packs of 12 oz bottles unless otherwise noted.
Awards
[edit]Beer | Competition | Category | Year | Place |
---|---|---|---|---|
Milk Stout | Great American Beer Festival | Sweet or Cream Stout | 2014 | Silver Medal |
Smokejumper Smoked Imperial Porter | Great American Beer Festival | Smoke Beer | 2014 | Silver Medal |
Black Jack Porter | Great American Beer Festival | Brown Porter | 2014 | Silver Medal |
Sawtooth Ale | World Beer Cup | Ordinary or Special Bitter | 2014 | Gold Award |
Milk Stout | European Beer Star | Sweet Stout | 2014 | Gold Award |
Sawtooth Ale | Great American Beer Festival | Ordinary or Special Bitter | 2013 | Gold Medal |
Milk Stout | Great American Beer Festival | Sweet or Cream Stout | 2013 | Gold Medal |
Fade to Black Volume 1 - Foreign Export Stout | Great American Beer Festival | Foreign Style Stout | 2013 | Gold Medal |
Milk Stout | European Beer Star Competition | Sweet Stout | 2013 | Gold Award |
Sawtooth Ale | Great American Beer Festival | Ordinary or Special Bitter | 2012 | Bronze Medal |
Milk Stout | European Beer Star Competition | Sweet Stout | 2012 | Gold Award |
Fade to Black- Vol.1 | Great American Beer Festival | Foreign Stout | 2010 | Gold Medal |
Black Jack Porter | European Beer Star Competition | Porter | 2010 | Gold Award |
Smokejumper | Great American Beer Festival | Smoked Beer | 2009 | Gold Medal |
Milk Stout | European Beer Star Competition | Sweet Stout | 2009 | Gold Award |
Milk Stout | Great American Beer Festival | Sweet Stout | 2008 | Silver Medal |
Sawtooth Ale | Great American Beer Festival | Bitter or Pale Mild Ale | 2008 | Bronze Medal |
Milk Stout | World Beer Cup | Sweet Stout | 2008 | Gold Award |
Milk Stout | European Beer Star Competition | Sweet Stout | 2008 | Gold Award |
Milk Stout | European Beer Star Competition | Sweet Stout | 2007 | Silver Award |
Milk Stout | World Beer Cup | Sweet Stout | 2006 | Gold Award |
Tabernash Oktoberfest | Great American Beer Festival | German Style Marzen / Oktoberfest | 2001 | Bronze Medal |
Black Jack Porter | Great American Beer Festival | Brown Porter | 2000 | Gold Medal |
Tabernash Oktoberfest | Great American Beer Festival | German Style Marzen / Oktoberfest | 1999 | Bronze Medal |
Tabernash Golden Pilsner | Great American Beer Festival | European Style Pilsner | 1998 | Gold Medal |
Black Jack Porter | World Beer Cup | Brown Porter | 1998 | Gold Award[6] |
Tabernash Weiss | World Beer Cup | South German-Style Hefeweizen / Hefeweissbier | 1998 | Gold Award[6] |
Tabernash Munich Dark Lager | World Beer Cup | European-Style Dark / Münchner Dunkel | 1998 | Gold Award[6] |
Tabernash Munich Dark | Great American Beer Festival | European Style Dark / Munchener Dunkel | 1997 | Gold Medal[7] |
Tabernash Oktoberfest | Great American Beer Festival | Marzen / Oktoberfest | 1997 | Bronze Medal[7] |
Tabernash Weiss | World Beer Cup | South German-Style Weizen / Weissbier | 1996 | Bronze Award[8] |
Tabernash Derailer Doppelbock | World Beer Cup | German-Style Strong Bock Beer | 1996 | Gold Award[8] |
Tabernash Munich Dark Lager | World Beer Cup | European-Style Dark Lager | 1996 | Gold Award[8] |
Black Jack Porter | Great American Beer Festival | Robust Porter | 1995 | Gold Medal[9] |
Sawtooth Ale | Great American Beer Festival | Bitter | 1994 | Gold Medal[10] |
Black Jack Porter | Great American Beer Festival | Robust Porter | 1994 | Bronze Medal[10] |
Juju Ginger | Great American Beer Festival | Herb, Spice | 1994 | Honorable Mention[10] |
Tabernash Denargo Lager | Great American Beer Festival | Dark Lager | 1994 | Bronze Medal[10] |
Tabernash Golden Spike | Great American Beer Festival | Export / Helles | 1994 | Bronze Medal[10] |
Tabernash Weiss | Great American Beer Festival | German Wheat | 1994 | Gold Medal[10] |
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ a b Rochat, Scott (27 May 2014). "Gardner tours Longmont brewery, says bill to protect brewers' 'spent grain' to reach committee soon". The Longmont-based microbrewer. Longmont Times Call.
- ^ "Brewers Association Releases Top 50 Breweries". Brewers Association. Brewers Association. 2012-04-17. Retrieved 2013-03-09.
- ^ "Left Hand Brewing | Specialty Beverage of Virginia". www.specialtybevva.com. Retrieved 2018-02-21.
- ^ Ed Sealover (2014-03-31). "Left Hand Brewing leaps onto list of 50 largest U.S. brewers". Denver Business Journal. Denver Business Journal. Retrieved 2014-03-31.
- ^ a b Staff Writer (7 May 2014). "Left Hand Brewing expands product presence to Western Pennsylvania". Drinks Business Review.
- ^ a b c "World Beer Cup 1998 Winners List" (PDF). World Beer Cup. 2012. Archived (PDF) from the original on 2022-07-17. Retrieved 2024-07-08.
- ^ a b "1997 Great American Beer Festival Winners List" (PDF). Great American Beer Festival. Archived (PDF) from the original on 2024-06-17. Retrieved 2024-07-08.
- ^ a b c "World Beer Cup 1996 Winners List" (PDF). World Beer Cup. 2012. Archived (PDF) from the original on 2024-07-08. Retrieved 2024-07-08.
- ^ "1995 Great American Beer Festival Winners List" (PDF). Great American Beer Festival. Archived (PDF) from the original on 2024-06-26. Retrieved 2024-07-08.
- ^ a b c d e f "1994 Great American Beer Festival Winners List" (PDF). Great American Beer Festival. 2011. Archived (PDF) from the original on 2024-06-19. Retrieved 2024-07-08.