building is home to Wachusett Brewing Company. Parked in front was a vintage fire truck emblazoned with the logo and Wachusett Brewing Company name.
Admittedly we were a little early for the 12:00 opening and knew we would need to wait. It wasn’t long before employees started to arrive and customers began filling the parking lot. Many had their own growlers with them and were there to have them re-filled. Others like us where there for the tour.
Those of us there for the tour gathered in the tasting room where we meet Heather our tour guide for the day. She started us off the right way by offering us a sample of one of the 11 of their different brews on tap.
Heather started with a quick explanation of how Wachusett Brewing Company was founded. We learned that it was founded by three WPI students who all had an appreciating for home-brewing. The founders Ned, Kevin and Peter who were either engineering or biology majors put their education to work experimenting until they got the formula just right.
The walking tour of the brewery begins every hour on the hour. The full brewery tour takes about 30 - 45 minutes and is offered on Saturdays. Your tour guide will give you a brief history of the brewery and walk you through our brewing, cellaring and packaging. Children are welcome, but of course may not taste beer during our tasting session, which follows the walking tour. Altogether, the tour and the tasting last for about 1 hour, and tastings are limited to two (2) 2oz. samples.
We learned that the red barn depicted in many of the labels represents Ned’s Family farm in Westminster where they first brewed their beer. They stopped brewing their beer on the farm after they produced so much that they ran the well dry. The well supplied not just the barn but Ned’s parents’ home. The parents decided it was time for them to move their operation out of the barn and they moved into a portion of the current facility.
1994 Wachusett Brewing Co was producing 40 Kegs per week, today we do 3000 cases of bottles, 5000 cases of cans and 500 kegs in an 8 hour day. As a local craft brewery they brew roughly 30,000 barrels of beer in a year.
They are currently the second largest brewery in Massachusetts behind Harpoon. Sam Adam’s no longer brewed volume in their Jamaica Plain facility just specialty and small batches. They lead the way for Wachusett to take that No. 2 spot. They also have the only canning machine in the state and can beer for other brewers.
The third ingredient they use is hops which they get in pellet form from Washington State. They also grow a small amount locally which they occasionally produce special batches with. Hops grown on a vine up to 25 feet tall.
They fourth ingredient is yeast. There are two different types of yeast. Top fermenting of bottom fermenting yeast. Top fermenting yeast produces ale’s and bottom fermenting yeast produces lagers. The yeast eats through the sugars which then produces alcohol and carbon dioxide.
With that background of Wachusett Brewing Company we got a second sample. Dan and I both chose the Blueberry Ale. Once done with those samples we moved on to the production floor where we first entered the packaging area. This area serves as both as a shipping and receiving area. On one side newly brewed bottled and canned beer is palletized and then their newest tool the orbital wrapper shrink wraps those pallets to ready them for shipping. On the other side bottles and can’s are de-palletized and sent for cleaning and sanitizing.
The magic happens in the brew kettle. It boils in the brew kettle and the hops are added and it stays in for 75 minutes. It’s too hot to go directly from the brew kettle to the fermenting tanks so it passes through the whirlpool. Once down to temperature it is ready to be moved to one of their fermenting tanks. From the grist mill to the fermenter takes roughly 5.5 hours.
These fermentation tanks range from 70 brewers barrels to 180 brewers’ barrels. One brewer’s barrel is equal to 2 kegs and a keg is 15.5gallons so each run produces 140 – 360 kegs.
The operation is a 24/7 operation. If it is ready to be bottled or canned it can take place at any hour. The employees are brought in and it is completed. As mentioned earlier they are the only canner in the state of MA and often other brewers ask them to can their beer. In one of the bright tanks we noticed that they had BBC Steel Rail which was soon to be canned.
The bottling happens at the bottle fill station. They are cleaned and sanitized similarly as the can. They are shot with one drop of liquid nitrogen which not only cleans and sanitizes but forces all the air from the bottle. They are filled from the bottom to the top where it is capped and then sent to the label machine. Once labeled they are put into boxes and then cased and sent to the palletizer.
That is the whole process of making beer and distributing it to vendors for sale.
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