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Prince Edward Island will soon be increasing its production of craft beer, as Upstreet Craft Brewing has announced plans to open this Summer in downtown Charlottetown. Started by friends Mitch Cobb, Michael Hogan, and Joey Seaman, the brewery and tasting room will be located at 41 Allen St. All three were nice enough to provide a bit of background on themselves, and fill us in on the roles they will play in the brewery:

Mitch Cobb: Mitch has an MBA from UPEI and worked in the Business Administration Program at Holland College before coming on at Upstreet full-time. While at Holland College, he taught marketing and entrepreneurship, and he comes from an entrepreneurial background. Mitch is definitely a big picture kind of guy and will play a major part in overseeing the day-to-day operations of the company (keeping Joey and Mike in-line).

Mike Hogan (aka Hogie): Mike is a computer engineer by trade. He graduated from Dalhousie University in 2004; he also holds a diploma in audio engineering. His career path has taken many twists and turns through industries such as: veterinary software, offshore weather forecasting, tv/film post-production, and even Swiss Chalet delivery. The only constant has been a combination of building, tinkering and mad science — fortunately these are skills that can and will be applied to brewing, too.

Joey Seaman: Joey has worked in sales, marketing, business development and management roles with two start-up companies. He and his wife Suzanne are also involved in running Village Pottery, which is a 40-year-old family business and the longest running pottery shop in PEI. Joey is one of those strange types that just loves being an entrepreneur, seeing opportunities and making them happen. He’s also a big beer fan and has been a homebrewer for the past three years.

Last month, we exchanged emails with head brewer Hogie to get a bit of background on his brewing history, and what he and the others have planned for Upstreet when they open. We’re happy to share that information, now!

ACBB: Tell me a little about your homebrewing history.

I’ve been homebrewing for several years now. It’s safe to say I’ve done over a hundred batches by now, in three provinces. I won’t say they’ve all been exceptional, but not a drop was ever poured down the drain!

My friend Aaron was the first of our group to start making his own beer and wine. I think he was making the partial extract kits right away. I recall creating quite a mess in his kitchen with the three small pots on the stove required to boil all of the wort. I also shared a couple batches with another friend, Tim, in Halifax. He’s a hophead, and was into dry-hopping Festabrew kits before he started brewing his own all-grain IPAs.

Shortly after moving to St. John’s in 2009, I purchased my own homebrewing equipment and was making beer with liquid extract canned kits, by boiling them and adding my own hops. One of the earliest batches was a honey-brown with Fuggles. I was mostly satisfied with the end result, but knew that I wanted to have more control over the final flavours. That Christmas, I received Charlie Papazian’s The Joy Of Homebrewing and couldn’t put it down once I started reading about all-grain brewing and alpha-amylase. A couple of weeks later, I was at Home Depot, buying the hardware for my cooler mash tun, while a bag of barley and wheat malt sat in the car, waiting to become my first all-grain Hefeweizen. In similar fashion to Charlie Papazian’s first batch, by the end of the day the kitchen was an absolute disaster and every pot and utensil we owned was dirty. The efficiency was low but the satisfaction was high. I’ve come a long way since then, but the one thing that hasn’t changed is the pride that comes with crafting something from scratch.

What made you decide to take the step into brewing professionally?

I’ve always been very happy with the beers I’ve brewed, and so have my friends and family. I’ve been dreaming of having my own brewery for years, but I knew it was something I’d never be able to do alone. There are so many things that have to come together to pull off this kind of project, and fortunately Mitch and Joey have the business experience to make that happen, and maybe more importantly, keep the doors open. I’m confident the beer will be great, but I’m not foolish enough to think it will sell itself. Upstreet is a total team effort.

What steps have you taken so far getting everything up and running?

We’ve been working on this for well over a year now and learned very quickly there’s a lot more to opening a brewery than brewing beer. The first thing, and most important, was investing hundreds of hours into building a really solid business plan. I can’t stress enough how important this process was because it’s something we all learned a lot from and has guided all of our decisions from the beginning. The second major step was raising a fairly significant round of funding, which was a lengthy process but was strongly supported by everyone we worked with to get everything in place. Once that was sorted out the floodgates really opened up and we’ve been going flat out ever since. Some of the highlights would include finding an awesome location (it’s not easy to find an empty 7,000 square foot building in downtown Charlottetown), ordering our system from DME and working with a few talented friends to design the whole brewery. I won’t bore you with the rest of the details, but let’s just say there have been many evening and weekend meetings spent working through the project over beers, and appreciating how cool it is to be opening a brewery.

What size/type of system will you be brewing on?

We’ll be brewing on a 15bbl (~17 hL) system from our neighbours, DME. Our equipment should be arriving soon, with installation happening in April.

Do you know when your beers will be available to the public?

We’re on track for May right now. We may have a couple beers released initially, and should be up to four for the grand opening.

What are your plans for distribution? Plans for tap accounts, bottles, growlers, etc.?

You’ll be able to find our beers on tap at restaurants and bars across the Island. We will have 500mL bottles in the PEILCC stores eventually, too. At our tasting room, all the beers will be on tap and we’ll have growlers available for take-away.

Do you have any beer bars/restaurants in the area lined up to serve your beers?

There’s been an incredible interest and support from so many of the local restaurants. As long as we put out a great product I’m confident we’ll be in quite a few establishments across the Island early on.

Can you tell me about the beer(s) you plan on offering initially? Are you planning on offering a specific style, or genres (German, English, etc), of beer? Any seasonals, one-offs, or will you stick mainly with a “flagship lineup”?

We can’t comment on specific styles right now, but I can say the beers are all based off of recipes I’ve been honing over the past few years. We’ve been doing a lot of homebrewing on an electric pilot system and it’s been really fun trying out different hop combinations, yeast, temperatures, etc. Big shout out to Ryan Palmer for putting that system together! It allows for so much control over the brewing variables.

What inspired the name of the brewery?

Upstreet is an old PEI saying – like… “Johnny’s headed’ upstreet to meet the fellas”. It’s typically a term used for a spot just outside of downtown.  It’s perfectly fitting with our Allen St. location.  It also reflects our hopes to be rooted in the local community.  We’re all Island guys who have spent some time away, but are so happy to be putting down roots and pursuing our passions on home turf.  We love this town, and we just love the name.

Have you had any assistance from other breweries/people in Atlantic Canada (or elsewhere)?

We’ve chatted with many local breweries while we’ve been planning the business. I’d like to give a personal shout-out to Emily Tipton at Boxing Rock, who met us at their brewery in Shelburne, NS one Saturday morning about a year ago; she has always been there to answer a few questions via email ever since.

With the recent increase in the number of new breweries in Atlantic Canada, what will make Upstreet Craft Brewing different from the rest?

We’ll be introducing some beers that aren’t very prominent in Atlantic Canada yet. Many of these are locally-inspired interpretations of traditional beers that I’ve been brewing for years. There’s also a really strong farming community on the Island and we’ll be drawing additional local ingredients for our seasonals. In comparison to the other Atlantic provinces, the PEI craft beer scene is really in its infancy, so we’re really going to focus on working with the others to bring more attention to the great beer that’s coming out of PEI these days. We hope to see some interesting collaborations coming out of our brewery, not only with the other local breweries, but maybe even with some of the distilleries as well. Aside from the beer, a core piece of our business is also built around a strong sense of social responsibility and creating meaningful initiatives that will benefit the Island community. This is something that is really important to us.

Where do you hope to see Upstreet Craft Brewing in the next 2-3 years?

Early on, we hope our beers permeate through the local restaurant scene and that our tasting room becomes a favourite neighbourhood hangout. Over the next 2-3 years, we hope to expand our lineup of beers and have them available across the Maritimes, and hopefully further. We can’t wait for the day Upstreet is first on tap at one of the beer bars “on the mainland.”

Do you personally have a favorite beer style? Beer? Brewery?

I enjoy all beer styles and I’ve taken inspiration from all of the breweries I’ve visited, big and small. I won’t list them all, but some of the highlights include: Chimay, Pilsner Urquell, Stone, The Alchemist, Allagash, Garrison, Boxing Rock, and here at home, BarNone and PEI Brewing Company.

Do you have a specific ingredient in brewing that you like to brew with? E.g. a specific malt and/or hop variety?

Not really… anything’s fair game for me. I’ll brew anything, with anything. I may refer to my basement as Hogie’s Brauhaus but I’m no Reinheitsgebot purist.

From what/where/whom have you learned the most in respect to brewing? 

There are a couple of people I’d like to thank for helping make the move into professional brewing. One is Greg Nash. We’ve exchanged a few candid texts, emails, and calls these past several months about brewing. He doesn’t mess around, tells it like it is, and knows what works and what doesn’t.

The other is Michel Gauthier. The three Upstreet guys travelled to Ottawa-Gatineau in October and attended Michael’s week-long intensive brewing course. We not only covered the fundamentals, we also got to pick his brain and learned so much about optimizing the brewery process and brewing equipment. I’ve been applying that knowledge every brewday since then and can’t wait to get him down to Upstreet in the Spring so he can help make our system “go like hell!”

Is there something specific that got you into the world of craft beer?

Long before the days of Untappd, I was still drinking craft beer, but just not sharing my exploits with my beer nerd friends. One of the first craft beers I had was Rogues Roost Raspberry Wheat shortly after I moved to Halifax in 2001. It was quite a novelty for me. A little sweet though, so I starting mixing it half and half with their Cream Ale. It’s safe to say I started “crafting” my own flavours with beer right away.

Congratulations to Hogie, Mitch and Joey; we look forward to trying their beers when Upstreet officially opens in the near future! We’ll be sure to keep you updated on their progress. Also, keep an eye on Upstreet’s Twitter, Facebook, and Instagram accounts for news and more information as it’s released.

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Good morning! Thankfully, February is just about over, which means winter has to be ending soon… right? Let’s celebrate with some regional beer news…

Big Spruce had a special visitor at the brewery earlier this week: Don Campbell, brewer/co-owner of PEI’s BarNone Brewing; luckily for us, the purpose of the visit was to brew! The two brewers conspired – not collaborated – together to develop a currently-unnamed Imperial IPA expected to come in at around 8% ABV and 97 calculated IBUs. Bittered with Magnum, flavored with Bravo, and lots of aroma/flavor additions of both Citra and Cascade, expect plenty of hoppy goodness! When it’s ready, it will be available on tap at the Big Spruce brewery, and at select establishments in Nova Scotia; BarNone may brew it at their brewery for release in PEI. Stay tuned for more info in the near future!

• A couple of days ago, Picaroons released their first of a new series of beers that are “brewed by, brewed for, and named after” their staff. All 30 Picaroons staff members (ranging from brewers to delivery drivers) will have a chance to develop and brew a recipe of their own, with some help from head brewer Myles MacKenzie and owner Sean Dunbar. They’re even being encouraged to incorporate different yeasts other than their house strain, Ringwood. While there’s no exact schedule to each brew, every batch will be brewed on the smaller system located at the Brewtique in downtown Fredericton. The first beer, Griff, was brewed by longtime Picaroons brewer Ryan “Griff” Griffith. An English Pale Ale, it was “moderately hopped” with Willamette and some Fuggles to 20 IBUs, giving the beer a “nice and pleasant earthy tone”. An easy-drinking beer at 4.8% ABV, it became available in limited supply at the Brewtique for growler fills on Tuesday, Feb. 24th; a single keg was also tapped at the Lunar Rogue last night for a Picaroons staff party celebrating the new beer series. We’ll keep you updated on the staff brew series as more beers are developed and released!

• And speaking of Picaroons, their seasonal Maple Cream Ale will be available again this coming Monday, March 2nd. This year, however, the ~5% ABV beer – brewed with real maple syrup from Briggs Maples in Riverview – will be available on tap only, no bottles. Look for it at the Brewtique for growler fills, on tap at select bars and restaurants, and likely at ANBL growler stations in the near future.

Bad Apple Brewhouse is bringing back one of their most most popular and often-requested beers, Mosaic Double IPA. Winner of the 2014 Atlantic Canada Brewing Award in the Double IPA category, it will see its 2015 launch at the Fredericton Craft Beer Festival next week. The beer weighs in at 8% ABV, features a medium body, and of course, showcases the lovely Mosaic hop varietal, which was extensively added late in the brew, at flame out, and during dry-hopping. Due to the popularity, and more access to Mosaic hops, the beer will be brewed again in the Spring and Summer, with the possibility of a limited release in bottles at that time. The beer is also a passion project for Bad Apple owner Jeff Saunders and his wife Kari Smith, who will again be partnering with the Halifax Down Syndrome Society and donating all income (not just profits) from sales of the brew to ensure that all local children (along with their families and caregivers) will be able to attend the Down Syndrome Weekend at Camp Brigadoon, being held June 13-15. Look for the beer at the brewery, and on tap wherever craft beer lovers come together!

• The University of New Brunswick-Saint John will soon be celebrating their 50th Anniversary, and they’ve asked Hammond River to brew up a special beer for a party on March 19th at Beaverbrook House. Owner/brewer Shane Steeves has fittingly chosen a “Golden Ale” (aka Blonde Ale), brewed with 2-row and CaraRed malts, and lightly hopped with Cascade to 20 IBUs. Expect this beer to be smooth and easy-drinking, at ~5.2% ABV. The UNBSJ party starts at 5:30 pm; there’s no charge to attend, and your first pint of Shane’s new beer is free! Head to the party’s FB page to vote on what the beer should be named. Hammond River’s regular accounts will also be receiving kegs of this new beer once it’s ready, so look for it around Saint John around the same time.

Pump House will soon be releasing their popular Bière de Garde in six-packs; this award-winning beer (it took home a gold medal in the Belgian Style Specialty Ales category in the 2014 Atlantic Canadian Beer Awards) has been available on tap periodically at the brewery. A dark-red beer with an aroma of toasted dark bread and hints of spice, juniper berries, and pineapple, it’s allowed time to mature and age to let the flavors develop. Bittered to 15 IBUs with Goldings and Chinook, it’s full-bodied with notes of dark caramel, according to the brewery. Weighing in at 6.5% ABV, look for the sixers across NB and NS (and in Alberta!) by the second week of March.

Red Rover continues to celebrate their 1st Birthday, this time with a party at the UNB Grad House, starting tomorrow (Saturday) at 8 pm. There will be several seasonal ciders available on tap, including their newest brew, Winter Blues, a wild blueberry cider. Head to the event page and vote for which of their ciders you’d most like to see on tap, and you’ll receive an official invite to the party, where there will be live music, free birthday cupcakes… and your first cider pour is on the house (while supplies last). They will also be announcing a special collaboration with Big Axe Brewery that they will be introducing at next weekend’s Fredericton Craft Beer Festival.

• The latest Signature Event of the Nova Scotia Craft Beer Week, coming May 8-17, has been announced. The Science of Beer will see the CBANS and friends take over the Discovery Centre on Thursday the 14th from 6-9pm, for a night of learning about, and enjoying, our favourite beverage. Seven speakers will be exploring different scientific, and fun, aspects of beer, from the brewing, packaging, and tasting, and many more angles. To keep your tastebuds stimulated while your brain is working, six breweries will be pouring beer (Boxing Rock​, Garrison​, North​, Propeller​, Sea Level, and Wrought Iron​), and food from Ace Burger, Morris East, and Stubborn Goat. We’ll have more details on the speakers and topics soon, but we can tell you that Chris will be giving a presentation. Tickets are available online now, we hope to see you there! And don’t forget to pick up tickets for the Full House Craft Beer Fest on Saturday the 16th, at the Olympic Community Centre. While there are many left for the 12-3pm session, there are only a few tickets remaining for the 4-7pm session. For $25, you’ll have a chance to sample the wares of CBANS members from one end of the province to the other, all under one roof, for the first time.

• The Moncton Beer League is partnering with Chef Matthew Pennell (Champion of Chopped Canada), for a 4-course beer and food pairing meal at Legends Restaurant (in the Moncton Coliseum) on March 21st. Each course will be paired with a different NB beer, plus an additional welcome beer in a souvenir glass you can take home. Tickets are available online now, and if you purchase them before March 4th, you will save $10.

• The official announcement has been made, and the website launched: Unfiltered Brewing will be coming to Halifax’s North End this Spring! Greg Nash is partnering with long-time friend Andrew Murphy and opening the brewery on North Street, and a sister pub adjacent, opening in the summer. Follow along with the progress on Twitter and their mailing list, where they will be releasing details on becoming a member of their Growler Club when it launches. We’ll have brewhouse and distribution details shortly. Welcome Unfiltered Brewing!

There are a few seasonal and special beers back to our region this week: Tatamagouche Brewing‘s RR#2 Lager, brewed with their own Mt. Hood and Crystal hops is back on at the brewery; Boxing Rock was able to their hands on more Nelson Sauvin hops, and have brought back a second batch of Unobtainium, available at the brewery and private beer stores starting today; Sea Level has released this year’s version of  El Rojo Diablo Double IPA, brewed with Waimea hops, and it’s on tap at the Port Pub and will be in the private stores shortly. The James Joyce Irish Pub in Fredericton has added yet another NB brewery to their taplist; they should be pouring Railcar‘s Artisan Brown Ale starting tomorrow.

If you missed out on tickets for next weekend’s Fredericton Craft Beer Fest, the Crowne Plaza Lord Beaverbrook is holding a contest on Facebook, giving away a pair of tickets and hotel room. Share this post to enter, and be sure to say Hi to Shawn and Chris on Saturday!

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The third annual Fredericton Craft Beer Festival (FCBF) will be taking place on Saturday, March 7th at the Fredericton Convention Centre downtown. This year’s festival promises to somehow improve on last year’s event, featuring new breweries and new beers, while continuing to focus strongly on those represented by the Maritimes. The festival has many sponsors: event sponsors include Massive Graphics and the King Street Ale House; hotel sponsor is the Crowne Plaza-Lord Beaverbrook Hotel; and supporting sponsors Investors Group and Atlantic Canada Regional Council of Carpenters, Millwrights and Allied Workers.

This year’s FCBF sold out even faster than last year’s… all 1,050 tickets were spoken for more than two weeks ago, with the 250 VIP tickets selling out within hours of going on sale. The festival will run from 7:30-10:00 pm, and features 4 oz pours of a large variety of craft beers, ciders and mead. VIP ticket-holders get early access to the festival at 6:30 pm, as well as a custom tasting glass.

There will be several food options available during the festival; the full list hasn’t been confirmed yet, but we can confirm that Johnny 5’s Burger and Fries will have sliders and potato wedges available for purchase, and Magzy’s Kettle Korn will be there for the third year in a row.

For those visiting from out of town (or Frederictonians who want to make a full night of it!), the Crowne Plaza – located across the street from the Convention Centre – is once again offering their festival rate of $109/night for both Friday and Saturday (March 6th and 7th); that discounted rate is available here. There will be lots of craft beer available before and after the festival in the city – the King Street Ale House has been named as the Official Beer Bar of the festival, and always has plenty of options on tap and in bottles. Also, the James Joyce Irish Pub, located in the Crowne Plaza, has been steadily increasing their selection of draught craft beer lately, and they’re hoping to have at least one beer from almost every craft brewery in New Brunswick.

Last year’s festival saw a significant increase over the inaugural event in 2013, with 28 brewers and distributors pouring over 150 different beers, ciders and meads. This year, there will be even more: about 45 breweries and 190 different beers will be available! With the exception of Acadie-Broue, every brewery in New Brunswick will be attending this year. Both breweries from PEI will be there, along with seven breweries from Nova Scotia, making a large showing from the Atlantic provinces – more than half of the booths will feature local beers! As well, thanks to importers Good Pallets and ASWL, ticket-holders will see many new breweries from outside Atlantic Canada attending for the first time, such as Quebec’s Dieu du Ciel!, Trou du Diable, and Trois Mousquetaires, and Ontario’s Flying Monkeys and Grand River Brewing, to name a few.

While many favorites will be pouring from breweries attending FCBF, there are lots of one-offs that will be available for tasting, and several breweries are even bringing new beers brewed specifically for the festival! Fredericton’s own TrailWay Brewing will have three new beers (an APA, IPA, and Imperial Coffee Milk Stout); Big Tide is bringing a traditional Bavarian lager, Bucht Bock; Boxing Rock’s collaboration Rye IPA (The Next Chapter) brewed with Andrew “Esty” Estabrooks will be making it’s awaited debut; and Big Spruce will have UnRYEvaled Chocolate Rye IPA. As well, Petit-Sault will have their new beer brewed earlier this month for International Women’s Day, Phémie-la-Bootlegger.

All of the local breweries will have a brewer and/or brewery representative on hand to answer questions about their products. As well, Good Pallets will have several volunteers on hand; these volunteers have many decades of combined experience in the industry. So, feel free to discuss beer at the festival, instead of just consuming it! In addition, many breweries will have swag on hand for purchase.

Finally, two breweries planning to open in the near future will have brewers in the crowd: Riverview, NB’s A.W.O.L. Brewery will be represented by owner/brewer Robert Black, and the crew from Wrought Iron Brewing in Halifax will also be at the festival. If you can find them, be sure to stop and say hi!

Now, on to the brewery/beer list!  Keep in mind these products are subject to change, and some have not been announced yet. We will continue to update this list as we find out more information:

Atlantic Spirits & Wines (Dartmouth, NS) – Somersby Cider, Kronenbourg 1664, Holsten Festbock, Holsten Maibock,

Authentic Seacoast Brewing Co. (Guysborough, NS) – Rare Bird Pale Ale, Rare Bird Full Steam Stout, Rare Bird Red Ale

Bad Apple Brewhouse (Berwick, NS) – Black and Tackle RIS, Mosaic DIPA

Barnone Brewing (Rose Valley, PEI) – IPA, Pale Ale, Summer Sessions, American Wheat Ale

Big Axe Brewing (Nackawic, NB) – Big Axe Blonde, Shakesbeer Chocolate Oatmeal Stout, Wrath of Putin Imperial Pale Ale, Red Ale

Big Spruce Brewing (Nyanza, NS) – Tim’s Dirty American IPA, Cereal Killer Oatmeal Stout, Coade Word: Snowmageddon, UnRYEvaled Chocolate Rye IPA

Big Tide Brewing Company (Saint John, NB) – Fogbound Hemp Pale Ale, Bucht Bock

Black Oak Brewing (Etobicoke, ON) – 10 Bitter Years

Boxing Rock Brewing (Shelburne, NS) – Temptation Red Ale, Hunky Dory Pale Ale, The Vicar’s Cross Double IPA, The Next Chapter (Rye IPA)

Brasseurs du Petit-Sault (Edmundston, NB) – Tante Blanche, Bob LeBouef, Louis XVII, Canon Franchetti, Phémie-la-Bootlegger

Celtic Knot (Riverview, NB) – Dubh Loki Black IPA, Éire (Irish Red Ale)

Central City Brewing (Surrey, BC) – Red Racer IPA, Red Racer Copper Ale

Churchill Cellars (Toronto, ON) – Bavaria 8.6 (Original), Hacker-Pschorr Hefe Weisse, Schneider Wiesen Edel-Weisse, Amsterdam Natural Blonde, Amsterdam Boneshaker IPA, Amsterdam Orange Weisse

Creemore Springs Brewery (Creemore, ON) – Creemore Springs Premium Lager, Mad & Noisy Hops & Bolts, Granville Island English Bay Pale Ale

Dieu du Ciel! (St-Jerome, QC) – Péché Mortel, Moralité, Chemin de Croix

Double Trouble Brewing (ON) – Hops and Robbers Extra Delicious IPA, Prison Break, Fire in the Rye, Revenge of the Ginger, French Press Vanilla Stout

Flying Monkeys (Barrie, ON) – Hoptical Illusion, Smashbomb Atomic IPA, The Matador Version 2.0 El Toro Bravo, Genius of Suburbia, The Chocolate Manifesto

Garrison Brewing Co. (Halifax, NS) – Tall Ship Amber, Irish Red, Raspberry Wheat, IPA, Imperial IPA, Glutenberg American Pale Ale, Glutenberg Blonde, Glutenberg Red

Grand River Brewing (Cambridge, ON) – Plowman’s Ale, Mill Race Mild, Pugnacious Pale Ale, Curmudgeon IPA

Grimross Brewing Company (Fredericton, NB) – Cheval D’Or, Ben’s Bitter Pale Ale

Hammond River Brewing (Quispamsis, NB) – Too Hop to Handle DIPA, Breakfast Stout, Imperial Vanilla Porter (Bourbon version)

Lake of Bays Brewing (Baysville, ON) – 10 Point IPA, Top Shelf Lager, Old North Mocha Porter, Rock Cut Lager, Spark House Red Ale, Crosswind Pale Ale

McAuslan Brewery (Montreal, QC) – St. Ambroise Pale Ale, St. Ambroise Apricot Wheat, St. Ambroise IPA

McClelland Premium Imports (Mississauga, ON) – Erdinger Weissbier, Erdinger Weissbier Dunkel, Fruli Strawberry, Stiegl Lager, Stiegl Radler, Mort Subite Kriek, Mort Subite Framboise, Mongozo Premium Pilsner, Palm Amber Ale, Delirium Tremens, Delirium Tremens Christmas

Mill St. Brewery (Scarborough, ON) – Belgian Wit, Belgian Tank House, Belgian Organic

Moosehead (Saint John, NB) – Moosehead Boundary Ale, Moosehead Pale Ale, Clancy’s, Moosehead Radler, Hop City Barking Squirrel, Hop City HopBot, Hop City Big Mouth Pale Ale, Hop City 8th Sin Black Lager, Sam Adams Boston Lager, Sam Adams Rebel IPA, Sam Adams Cold Snap

Muskoka Brewery (Bracebridge, ON) – Mad Tom IPA, Detour Session IPA

Le Naufrageur (Carleton-sur-mer, QC) – Raccoon, Corte-Real, Saint-Barnabe, Swordfish, Carrick, Penelope, Ale Amerindienne, Ale Amerindienne Double Blanche (Tanaisie), Ale Amerindienne Myrique Beaumier

Northampton Brewing Company/Picaroons (Fredericton, NB) – Maple Cream Ale, Yippee IPA, and four casks: Winter Warmer, Scotch Ale, a Brown Ale, and one TBA

PEI Brewing Company (Charlottetown, PEI) – Sir John A’s Honey Wheat, Sydney Street Stout, 1772 IPA, Island Red, Iron Bridge Brown, Beach Chair Lager, Blueberry Ale, and a TBD cask

Propeller Brewing (Halifax, NS) – Pale Ale, IPA, London Style Porter, Double IPA, RIS, Irish Red Ale

Pump House Brewery (Moncton, NB) – Biere de Garde, Premium Pilsner, IPA, Blueberry, 4 Alarm IPA (on cask)

Railcar Brewing (Florenceville-Bristol, NB) – Artisan Brown Ale, Cafe Buzz Coffee Porter

Red Rover Brewing (Fredericton, NB) – Spring Cider, Summer Cider, Fall Cider, TBA Seasonal

Shiretown Beer (Rover Charlo, NB) – Blonde du Quai, Big Brown Ale, Siren’s T’Ale, TBA Special-release

Sleeman Breweries Ltd (Guelph, ON) – Sleeman Cream Ale, Sleeman Silver Clear, Sleeman Honey Brown, Sleeman Original Draught, Unibroue Maudite, Okanagan Mild Winter Ale, Sapporo, Dos Equis Special Lager, Old Milwaukee

Sunset Heights Meadery (Fredericton, NB) – Queen’s Nectar, Denim (Blueberry), Tart’n (Cranberry), Naughtea (Iced Green Tea), Shipwreck (India Pale Mead), Meadmosa, Bee Mine, A Peel

Tatamagouche Brewing (Tatamagouche, NS) – North Shore Lagered Ale, Dreadnot India Black Ale

TrailWay Brewing (Fredericton, NB) – a new APA, Imperial IPA, and Imperial Coffee Milk Stout

Les Trois Mousquetaires (Brossard, QC) – Porter Baltique, Hopfenweisse, Maibock, Sticke Alt, Kellerbier, Pale Ale Americaine

Trou du Diable (Shawinigan, QC) – La Pitoune, Morsure, MacTavish in Memorium, Dubaï Pillée, Le Sang D’Encre, Saison du Tracteur

Windward Imports (Halifax, NS) – Sea Dog Wild Blueberry Wheat Ale, Shipyard Export Ale, Shipyard Monkey Fist IPA

It’s always been a great time at the FCBF, and this year won’t disappoint! As the FCBF tagline states, “It’s all about the beer. Pure. Simple.” Both Shawn and Chris will be attending; we hope to see you there!