Courtesy of the Oregon Brewers Festival |
The
main festival will serve 88 beers from craft breweries across the
nation, including two gluten-free products. The International Beer
Garden will feature six breweries from Japan – Baird, North Island,
Shiga Kogen, Shonan, Y Market and the winner of a national
beer competition in Japan hosted by the Japan Beer Journalists
Association; seven breweries from The Netherlands – De Molen, Frontaal,
Maximus, Oedipus, Oersoep, Oproer and Van Moll; plus two breweries from
Germany – Brauerei Nothhaft and Lang Bräu. The International Beer Garden
was incorporated three years ago as part of a cultural exchange of
ideas, knowledge and the worldwide celebration of craft beer.
The Oregon Brewers Festival offers a wide variety of beer styles ranging from Belgians to braggots, cream to coffee ales, goses to gluten free, pales to Pilsners and saisons to stouts. The event also features five days of live music, food booths, craft vendors and homebrew demonstrations.
The Oregon Brewers Festival is not a
ticketed event, and there is no admission charge to enter the festival
grounds. In order to consume beer, the purchase of a 2016 souvenir
tasting mug is required and costs $7. Beer is purchased with wooden
tokens, which cost $1 apiece. Patrons pay four tokens for a full mug of
beer, or one token for a taste. The purchase of mugs and tokens is made
on-site. The event is cash-only; there are eight ATMs on-premise.
Courtesy-HMS Photographic |
The
Oregon Brewers Festival encourages responsible drinking and urges
patrons to take the Tri-Met MAX Light Rail, which has a station just one
block away from the main entrance. Attendees can also take advantage of
the Hopworks Urban Brewery secure bike corral. The Crater Lake
Soda Garden provides complimentary handcrafted root beer and soda to
minors and designated drivers; minors are allowed into the event all
hours when accompanied by a parent.
The Oregon Brewers Festival was founded in 1988 as an opportunity to expose the public to microbrews at a time when the craft brewing industry was just getting off the ground. Today, that industry has flourished, especially in Oregon, which as of July 1, 2015 had 234 brewing facilities operated by 194 brewing companies in 72 cities across the state. The Portland Metropolitan area alone has more than 91 breweries. The economic impact of the festival on the local economy is annually more than $30 million.
Dutch Brewers and Art Larrance-Courtsey of Brian Gurney |
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