Thursday, March 22, 2012

Home brewing

  • MADISON, Wisconsin -- An explosion of interest in home brewing is forcing lawmakers across the U.S. to review long-forgotten alcohol laws, some of which date back to Prohibition in the 1920s.
  • (Huffington Post)
  • By BARBARA RODRIGUEZ Associated Press MADISON, Wisconsin (AP) - An explosion of interest in home brewing is forcing lawmakers across the U.S. to review long-forgotten alcohol laws, some of which date back to Prohibition in the 1920s.
  • (msnbc.com)
  • The law could pretty much be the end of competitions in Wisconsin, he lamented. At least legal ones. An explosion of interest in home brewing is forcing lawmakers across the country to review long-forgotten alcohol laws, some of which date back to Prohibition.
  • (AP - msnbc.com)
  • At the end of the process, the student receives a certificate of a professional brewer. The schools also offer home brewing workshops for the more casual coffee enthusiast. Anybody that touches coffee needs some level of training, said Overbay.
  • (Boston Globe)
  • MADISON, Wis. — An explosion of interest in home beer brewing is forcing lawmakers across the country to review long-forgotten alcohol laws, some of which date back to Prohibition.
  • (Washington Post)
  • States are under enormous pressure. Its a revenue issue, he said. Everything is on the table these days. Gary Glass, director of the home brewers association, said its a balancing act when considering whether to pursue a change in the law.
  • (Northwest Herald)
  • MADISON (AP) - Wisconsin lawmakers Thursday passed a closely watched bill that would make crucial changes to how home-brew enthusiasts around the state share their suds.
  • (Eau Claire Leader-Telegram)
  • In the morning hours before she vanished, Maria Claudia Murphy was home brewing coffee and appeared in good spirits, her husband recalls. Before Frank Murphy, her spouse of nine years, left for work Friday morning, they kissed, he said.
  • (Sun Sentinel)
  • Robbins said he has been brewing his own beer for about six years. "This is the way beer was brewed for centuries. People spent their lives figuring out what we know now. I like keeping up with that tradition," he said.
  • (Cleveland Plain Dealer)
  • Two years ago, Starbucks ditched its relationship with Kraft, which also markets an at-home brewing machine, and last year partnered with Green Mountain on single-serve coffee.
  • (The News & Observer)

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