Floodland Brewing (2019)

Discussion in 'Northwest' started by distantmantra, Jan 25, 2019.

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  1. distantmantra

    distantmantra Pooh-Bah (2,954) May 23, 2011 Washington
    Pooh-Bah Trader

    Taken from Adam's website:

    Floodland is a small operation. I don't see/respond to DMs on social media. I try to respond to emails, but if it's a question that's answered here you likely won't get a response.

    How do I get your beer?
    We sell bottles through online public sales for pick up in Seattle. We also sell bottles through Oakworks, our bottle club. The 2019 membership is full. The FAQ for Oakworks and public bottle sales are listed at http://floodlandbrewing.com/oakworks.txt

    We bottle most of our beer. Draught events are usually promoted on instagram. Ursa Minor on Lopez Island and Lucinda Grain Bar in Seattle may have a limited selection of bottles for on premise consumption.

    Do you have a taproom?
    We are focused on putting out bottled beer and there are no short term plans to have a taproom.

    How do I find out about _______?
    Floodland has an active instagram (@floodlandbrewing) that is a good source of information. The best way to get general news and information is to sign up for the mailing list on floodlandbrewing.com. There is also a Floodland thread in the NW section on TB that I respond to questions on.

    The archive of news emails is here:
    https://us14.campaign-archive.com/home/?u=407b088ec2a9ffaea61021197&id=dfb348882a

    Is Floodland one person?
    No. Floodland is one person full time and a bunch of people who have better shit to do half of the time. As of December 2018 Floodland is Aaron, Adam, Luke, Mike, and Tony.

    Are you a side project of or connected to another brewery?
    No, but our friends at Seapine Brewing and at Fremont Brewing both lend invaluable assistance/equipment for wort production because they are awesome and generous.

    Are You a Sour Beer Brewery? Are You a Farmhouse Brewery?
    We use both wild/native and lab yeast and bacteria. Some of our beers are fermented with a wild culture which was taken from a coolship fermentation on a Seattle porch in early 2016 and then repitched into barrels starting in 2017 without being lab isolated or banked. We use "wild" to mean a culture which came not from a lab or from beer or other fermented beverages, captured from an ambient/native source.

    We also have a saison mixed culture which was taken from a variety of appropriated strains which were mostly harvested and propagated in house. This culture started with four primary saccharomyces yeast strains from farmhouse/saison origins, and a brettanomyces strain and has evolved through open fermentation and repitching.

    Many of our saisons spend time in our open oak tank. In this tank the beer undergoes a primary fermentation completely open to the air in the barrel cellar, which allows for ambient/native yeast and bacteria to make their way into the culture. We in most cases temper and inhibit the production of acid in our beers with hops, which was always the tradition in English and Belgian beers prior the advent of sterile tanks and cultured yeast isolates. So although we use cultures that include bacteria, in this case "mixed culture" is a literal way to describe our fermentation, not always a euphemism for "sour." All of that said, many of our beers are to some degree more acidic than standard saccharomyces fermentations.

    We brew in a somewhat rustic manner with no refrigeration, and our beers are refermented and conditioned in the bottle and keg (as opposed to being force carbonated). Bottle conditioning is a lengthy process for our beers, but we believe that it is worth the effort and patience. That final refermentation in the bottle adds a lot of character to the beer and enahnces the ability of the beer to age gracefully. Additionally, we use only whole fruit (ie: not purees or syrups) for our fruit refermentations, which we source from local farms. At Floodland we enjoy dry, pale, low gravity, well conditioned beers with balanced acidity, and we brew what we like to drink.

    What is Field Blend?
    http://www.floodlandbrewing.com/fieldblend.html

    When was this beer bottled/released?
    We mark fruited beers based on harvest year and saisons/unfruited beers based on the release year. Because of our lengthy bottle conditioning, this means most fruit beers are released in the year following the fruit harvest. There is a log of bottles which have been released with packaging dates: http://www.floodlandbrewing.com/bottles.txt


    This link to the 12/22/2017 Floodland news email covers answers to some other questions:
    http://eepurl.com/dftE-P

    Your label is hard to read.
    That's not a question.

    Why is your website text?
    ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
     
  2. jpbebeau

    jpbebeau Initiate (0) Sep 11, 2011 Washington

    Hoping to pick up the latest batch of beers tomorrow.
     
  3. distantmantra

    distantmantra Pooh-Bah (2,954) May 23, 2011 Washington
    Pooh-Bah Trader

    Oh, I should also mention that if you get caught selling Floodland beers you will forfeit membership and the ability to purchase the beers in the future. So yeah, don't be a dick.
     
  4. sanford_and_son

    sanford_and_son Initiate (0) Jul 23, 2012 Washington

    Posting to say that my Oakworks membership is the best non-family/life essential thing I spend my money on. Also, it's dope when you've been taking your time with the previous allotment and still have a few bottles left and then you get the next one and your beer inventory suddenly looks baller as hell:sunglasses::sunglasses::sunglasses:
     
  5. ExVashonGujy

    ExVashonGujy Pooh-Bah (2,114) Mar 7, 2013 Washington
    Society Pooh-Bah Trader

    kemoarps, NWer and ewendel like this.
  6. ballardbeer

    ballardbeer Pundit (779) Nov 10, 2013 Oregon

    Firmanent & Light made for the best beer moment of 2019 for me... we were camping up in Larabee State Park after the Odesza/DCFC show. one of those nice, secluded walk-in sites where you can be hungover in peace. I cooked a campfire breakfast for six of us, popped open a F&L magnum and it was a straight up a show stopper.
     
    kingsleyr, kemoarps, eire and 2 others like this.
  7. sanford_and_son

    sanford_and_son Initiate (0) Jul 23, 2012 Washington

    Very stoked for the return of Grails & Waysigns in the Sept/Oct release.
     
    jpbebeau likes this.
  8. KevSal

    KevSal Pooh-Bah (2,940) Oct 17, 2010 California
    Pooh-Bah Trader

    anyone else try the lottery for the remaining 10 spots? i didnt get in this time, this club sounds like a fun one, and opened to proxies! how many bottles roughly are released to members?
     
  9. t4h2c0

    t4h2c0 Initiate (0) Jun 5, 2007 Washington

    I turned down joining Oakworks because there is no way in hell i am donating to Planned Parenthood. Forcing people to donate to PP in order to join a bottle club is the stupidest thing i have ever heard in the history of craft beer. I have followed Floodland/Adam’s work for a long time but Floodland has become an absolute joke.
     
  10. t4h2c0

    t4h2c0 Initiate (0) Jun 5, 2007 Washington

    This club is the opposite of fun...
     
  11. kingsleyr

    kingsleyr Initiate (0) Jun 20, 2005 Washington

    2018 was I think 10 bottles, mostly member only, 2 pieces of glassware, and a Tshirt. Plus of course the option to purchase other bottles & enter magnum lottery. Not sure exactly what 2020 includes, but expect similar.
     
  12. BBThunderbolt

    BBThunderbolt Grand High Pooh-Bah (7,846) Sep 24, 2007 Kiribati
    Pooh-Bah Trader

    Another BA and I shared a membership this year, and we each got 1 bottle if each of the 5 releases, and a glass. The beers are wonderful, but we each decided that $30+ per bottle was not for us, so we won't be renewing. As always, YMMV, and strokes for folks.
     
    KevSal likes this.
  13. vurt

    vurt Grand Pooh-Bah (4,504) Apr 11, 2004 Oregon
    Society Pooh-Bah Trader

    Really? You need to get out more.
     
  14. NWer

    NWer Pooh-Bah (2,145) Mar 10, 2009 Washington
    Pooh-Bah

    They were fun to try once out of curiosity but they're not so great they're worth all the effort. First I heard money went to PP. I'm fine with that and I didn't get a t-shirt.
     
    Reidrover, 66jzmstr and BBThunderbolt like this.
  15. BBThunderbolt

    BBThunderbolt Grand High Pooh-Bah (7,846) Sep 24, 2007 Kiribati
    Pooh-Bah Trader

    If I knew that some cash was going to Planned Parenthood, I might consider re-upping.

    Because, I love Planned Parenthood.
     
    7thSeal, PNW, shadetree67 and 22 others like this.
  16. KevSal

    KevSal Pooh-Bah (2,940) Oct 17, 2010 California
    Pooh-Bah Trader

    thanks for the insite, lots of stuff going on! if anyone would like to split a membership with me done the middle id definitely be game for it
     
  17. distantmantra

    distantmantra Pooh-Bah (2,954) May 23, 2011 Washington
    Pooh-Bah Trader

    Oakworks got so expensive with ALL THE BOTTLES that I kept being offered that I didn't re-up and now just do the public sales which is plenty of beer for me, and still ends up costing me roughly $100 every time, which while expensive, is much more manageable and doesn't lead to awkward talks with my wife anymore. Plus I have friends still in Oakworks who end up kindly sharing if there's something that really intrigues me.

    And it's Adam's beer, if he wants you to donate to Planned Parenthood for a shot at one of ten memberships (this was an email that went out to people on the public list: donate $20 to PP and be entered into a raffle for an Oakworks slot), then so be it. Get the fuck over it. People blow more than that on stupid fucking razzles for things that don't even qualify as beer anymore. At least here that $20 would do some good in the world and not line the pockets of shitlords.
     
    #17 distantmantra, Oct 11, 2019
    Last edited: Oct 11, 2019
  18. BBThunderbolt

    BBThunderbolt Grand High Pooh-Bah (7,846) Sep 24, 2007 Kiribati
    Pooh-Bah Trader

    Word.
     
    kemoarps, NWer and distantmantra like this.
  19. WA_Brian

    WA_Brian Pundit (780) Nov 17, 2015 Washington
    BA4LYFE Society

    10 bottles are included with the membership, 2x of 5 different beers. If you're talking about the allotment of beers you can buy, a lot more. If you assume there are 5 releases a year, there is generally 2-3 additional beers available to purchase usually with an allotment of 1-2 each.

    For example, the last release was 4 different beers. One was the membership beer, so I got 2x bottles of that as part of the membership price. Then 3 other beers were for sale, of which I got 2-2-1 so I walked away with 5 extra bottles on top of the membership.

    It's expensive, but it's not $30+ per bottle as mentioned earlier. It ranged from $22-30 this year, where the average was likely in the $28 range.
     
    kemoarps, kingsleyr and KevSal like this.
  20. Naikoon

    Naikoon Initiate (0) May 25, 2018 Washington

    1.) You've completely misrepresented the situation.
    2.) I hope your perspective isn't this narrow and small-minded in other areas of your life.
    3.) "Forcing" people to make a small donation to a good cause in order to have a chance at one of a tiny fraction of remaining memberships to a bottle club is the best and wisest thing I have ever heard in the history of craft beer.
     
    7thSeal, PNW, JonnyBeers and 17 others like this.
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