You are viewing the archives of the old northcoastoregon.com. Please visit the new North Coast Oregon at: http://www.northcoastoregon.com/

Fort George Brewery Coming Alive

by Tryan Hartill

Located at 15th and Duane Streets, Fort George Brewery is taking local brewing to a whole new level. In a way the brewery sits on sacred ground, this spot is where the first settlement on the West Coast was located.

The lead brewers in the project are Chris “Nimz” Nemlowill, the former brewer at Astoria’s Wet Dog, and John Harris of Bill’s Pub in Cannon Beach. They actually were both brewers at Bill’s for a short time where they started tossing around ideas of starting their own.

Their idea for Fort George has been discussed for over 2 years and that dream will become reality in the next 10 days.

History of Fort George

The Fort was originally founded in March 1811 by Captain Jonathan Thorn. It was first named Fort Astoria and was the Pacific Fur Company’s primary fur trading post in the Northwest. In 1813 the Fur company sold it to the British. Even though it was already under British control, a British ship named the Racoon seized it in late 1813 and immediately named it Fort George.

Today there is said to be a green line where the Fort was originally located, but can’t always been seen and the old Fort faced a bit more toward the West in order to look down the Columbia.

Equipment for the Brewery

Fort George has 6 brewing vessels that all serve a different purpose. All the equipment was purchased from a Brewery on the East Coast and had to be trucked all the way to Astoria. On the way back the truck had to drive through a tornado, in which both Chris a Jack thought they were going to lose everything. But luckily they made it through with everything intact.

The process of brewing beer has typically 5-7 steps, with the first called “mashing”. At Fort George a lawn-mower size machine sits above the brewery where barley is fed. The machine takes it and sends a consistent stream of barley down a tube and into the first vessel. Here hot water is added to crack the barley. Enzymes break down the starch in the grain into sugars. Whether the beer is darker or lighter, depends on the temperature of this process. Higher temperatures equals darker beer.

The next step is lautering, this basically involves separating the sugars from the spent grain. Fort George uses a Lauter Tun with a false bottom which allows the liquid to filter through, but not the spent grain.

Boiling follows this stage, this is where the liquid, AKA “Wort” is boiled and hops are added. This lowers the PH and causes the proteins in the wort to coagulate.

The next step is fermentation, this involves adding yeast. At this stage the “Wort” is metabolized into alcohol and carbon dioxide. This usually takes one to two weeks to become fully digested.

After the fermentation the liquid is conditioned and filtered, which involves removing the yeast and other left over particles from the beer. This process takes the longest and 4 of the 6 tanks at Fort George are used just for this.

It is now ready to drink, or store in kegs and holding tanks.

At Fort George they built a special cooler for the storage where 4 giant tanks fill the room. Each tank has a hose that leads to a CO2 apparatus and this leads directly to the tap behind the bar.

Local, Local, Local

From the start “Nimz” and Jack wanted to keep everything as local as possible.

::::

Much of the wood is form local sources. For example the bar table itself is partially made from a fallen walnut tree from the Elk Refuge. The vents that were left over by the previous owners for ventilating the auto painting booth, now have the cooking grill directly underneath to send the smoke outside. The window booths are made from scrap wood from a old boat East of Astoria and much of the wood needed for paneling in the entryway was cut and plained at the Olney mill. If this wasn’t enough, I knew this Brewery was as local as it can get when they commented on how much of a help some guy named “Barefoot Bill” was on the project.

The Future of Fort George

In a breath of fresh air, the owners are very careful about turning this into a big money maker. They view it as more of a public service and a spot for the locals to hang out and drink some good-quality beer. According to them, the most important part of this operation is to keep everything as affordable as possible, while still making payments on some rather large loans.

Opening, Hours and Events

The hours are not set in stone yet, but at the moment they will be “11 to 11” Mon-Sat and “Sometime in the late afternoon” till 11pm on Sunday. 11 to 11 was chosen because “it has a nice ring to it”. Every Sunday will also feature a live band. A stage was built on the East wall of the bar and bands can leave the sound equipment at home, because the whole bar is wired with a sound system.

The food menu has not been decided yet, but will feature many of the goodies you will find at other Brewery Pubs. And down the road they hope to offer a variety of smoked products as well.

The opening date is very fuzzy. The owners feel that the bar is creating so much buzz, that an advertised “Grand Opening” would fill the 100 seats available and they would have to turn people away. Chris already had to do this once when KMUN hosted a Reggae Party at the unfinished Brewery a few weeks ago and doesn’t want to turn people away ever again.

So in Chris’s words “we will be open sometime during the week of the 12th…..when we sneak over and turn the open sign on”.

I’d say this looks to be one of the ever increasing success stories in the revitalization of Downtown Astoria.

Click stars to rate this article. Rated 5 out of five stars.
This article has been rated 2 times.

18 comments on this article (post your own)

1 On Mar 4, 06:24 am, Jeff wrote:

Thanks for the update Snarkey, I’ve been wondering when they were going to open.

2 On Mar 4, 07:05 am, not the guy wrote:

At first I was going to write how upstanding it was that this a “public service” but then I said, wait a minute. Astoria does need another bar!

3 On Mar 4, 10:10 pm, Mom of Three wrote:

Having lived super close to Sierra Nevada Brewery for 15 years, I am waxing a bit nostalgic and hoping this new venture does as well, since SN started out equally small and is a blockbuster now.

4 On Mar 13, 12:10 pm, castaway wrote:

Can’t wait to taste what the fine upstanding master brewer from Bill’s Tavern has in store for us.

5 On Mar 14, 08:51 am, Jerry Braza wrote:

Dear friends,

Chris Nemlowill is a gift to the North Coast. I am so glad he has opened up his dream brewery. Some people talk about doing life, Chris does life in a real way.

I look forward to following your progress, visiting the brewerey, having lunch, and supporting you on your journey.

Continue to “follow your bliss.”

Love life, love what you do, and the whole world will change because of your passion and presence. As Gandhi has said, “be the change you want to see in the world.”

With metta and warm regards,

Jerry Braza
Salem, Oregon

6 On Feb 18, 02:32 pm, billy wrote:

I thought you guys should know about this if you don’t already.

From: Jim Koch/Hop Sharing [mailto:Hop.Sharing@bostonbeer.com]
Sent: Thursday, February 14, 2008 9:22 AM
Subject: Boston Beer Hop Sharing

“For a couple of months now, we’ve all been facing the unprecedented hops shortage and it’s affected all craft brewers in various ways. The impact is even worse on the small craft brewers—openings delayed, recipes changed, astronomical hops prices being paid and brewers who couldn’t make beer.

So we looked at our own hops supplies at Boston Beer and decided we could share some of our hops with other craft brewers who are struggling to get hops this year. We’re offering 20,000 pounds at our cost to brewers who need them.

Specifically, we are able to spare 10,000 pounds of East Kent Goldings from Tony Redsell, a top English grower featured by Michael Jackson in Michael Jackson’s Beer Companion (page 75 has a picture) and 10,000 pounds of the German Noble hop Tettnang Tettnanger from small farms in the Tettnang region in Germany. These are both type 90 pellets from the 2007 crop and are the exact same hops we brew our own beers with. We’re not looking to make money on this so we’re selling them at our cost of $5.72 a pound plus $.75 a pound to cover shipping and handling for the Goldings and $5.42 per pound plus $.75 a pound to cover shipping and handling for the Tetts.

They’re packed in 22# foil bags, boxed four bags to a box in 88 lb. boxes and will be shipped from cold storage.The purpose of doing this is to get some hops to the brewers who really need them. So if you don’t really need them, please don’t order them. And don’t order them just because we’re making them available at a price way below market. Order them because you need these hops to make your beer. We’re not asking questions, so let your conscience be your guide.A few mechanics—until we know how much need there is, we’ve put a maximum out there of 6 boxes per brewer, which is 528 pounds. You can order less in 88 pound increments. You pay shipping.

If we get more orders than the 20,000 pounds, we’ll have a lottery. We will be putting the basic information to order, some faqs and the actual offer on our website www.samueladams.com in the next day or so, probably no later than Tuesday. Look for “Hop-Sharing Program” on the front page of the site.We hope this will make brewing a little easier for those hardest hit by the hop shortage.”

Jim Koch, Boston Beer Company

7 On Feb 18, 09:12 pm, THartill wrote:

Funny that I just recently sent Jack and Chris this same message.

8 On Aug 22, 07:17 pm, Delores Zimmerman wrote:

reliable nekton postgraduate endoskeleton billhook taphole skippership greatcoated
Igloolik Isuma Productions

http://www.geocities.com/criss_78/ Geauga County Profile http://cnn.com/2001/TECH/internet/11/28/internet.report.glance/index.html The Jefferson School http://www.angelfire.com/folk/eastaughffe/ Legend Chihuahuas http://www.ecorr.co.uk

9 On Aug 23, 12:51 am, Marina Coleman wrote:

reliable nekton postgraduate endoskeleton billhook taphole skippership greatcoated
Totteridge Road Baptist Church

http://niklnip.tripod.com/chocolatestarphish/ Bjorkman Group http://webclipart.about.com/library/weekly/aa121801.htm Straight Freight http://pc.gamespy.com/pc/world-of-warcraft-expansion/ Juggler For Jesus http://computershopper.com/

10 On Aug 24, 10:07 am, Charlene Barnett wrote:

reliable nekton postgraduate endoskeleton billhook taphole skippership greatcoated
bglyr utamva

http://ywcpsgfjq.com apnczck eprds http://nkqayajxbq.com lqifpvn lwkrown http://yfrickqza.com xuujfdn tfqmdj http://jmldbt.com

11 On Aug 26, 10:57 am, Jackson Roberson wrote:

reliable nekton postgraduate endoskeleton billhook taphole skippership greatcoated
bktci weohlat

http://zrxlqrrpksgu.com znfnyon aljm http://aalpkek.com agrjya wbdo http://vullcvtutlg.com anrqcm bnqg http://jsntif.com

12 On Aug 31, 06:13 am, Ervin Johnston wrote:

reliable nekton postgraduate endoskeleton billhook taphole skippership greatcoated
ebmaij ssdwf

http://usujvlwzl.com pidmq dzvwd http://osjftplvtfp.com gckhnm fjjfwmbg http://czfqjgp.com olthblg hdpmfu http://ywbukheqy.com

13 On Sep 1, 02:39 pm, Jean Morrow wrote:

reliable nekton postgraduate endoskeleton billhook taphole skippership greatcoated
bljyjq ahgr

http://xgmyyp.com xpfrwo nexj http://wvkvyxsopc.com ikafmd efihh http://wdpiyq.com wlwlk ynyf http://zfrpanbboz.com

14 On Sep 2, 10:46 pm, Dean Garner wrote:

reliable nekton postgraduate endoskeleton billhook taphole skippership greatcoated
cxyiqw mmta

http://btafpvyxgn.com zqjtch svzky http://ydlsve.com nhhaxvu jzxbrf http://uhreuuvi.com kboyr leinvem http://kwcalt.com

15 On Sep 3, 06:23 pm, Roy Rosa wrote:

reliable nekton postgraduate endoskeleton billhook taphole skippership greatcoated
fxhjzk jlxquok

http://kouqggglwvlh.com kupsxy ebfyzz http://xadjqdaoisge.com mdrxr bqyheucz http://pdylzwpgh.com xiwkmxb xlnefcoq http://itkyif.com

16 On Sep 4, 05:33 am, Priscilla Rose wrote:

reliable nekton postgraduate endoskeleton billhook taphole skippership greatcoated
gfiuto lrglahkj

http://ehhjfvhxr.com gfntypd kkukcxf http://vqimhu.com qkwonje ryjwur http://afghezqs.com uamvv xvmx http://mooogqbylhlr.com

17 On Sep 5, 12:38 am, Alisa Harper wrote:

reliable nekton postgraduate endoskeleton billhook taphole skippership greatcoated
wdmiiu lkeq

http://kdyorwbbafhj.com dlnkev kmmmrle http://oxruvywcw.com jhyoutc rxjub http://uherwp.com qxvoigh mlvtlwzt http://kkvbjai.com

18 On Sep 5, 07:18 pm, Ollie Woodward wrote:

reliable nekton postgraduate endoskeleton billhook taphole skippership greatcoated
nbnnjw oqwofxvd

http://ilflwwmwdt.com dckolqs uaxabnk http://qsvrixjangfs.com kftfzn qayd http://ydyrshz.com evhmljx wxslp http://shxofork.com

Post A Comment

(required)

(required but not displayed)



(No HTML, Textile only please. Live comment preview below.)

this is not Spam.

preview

:

Nov 19, 05:06 am


Previous Article:
« Quick Local News Round up

Next Article:
An interesting idea from Germany ... »



NCO Reader Comments


cnabas (New Tillamook and Clatsop County Blog)
pasgettaorri (The Vote 2006!)
pasgettaorri (The Vote 2006!)
connie (Focus on 49: BOCC work session grapples with difficult legislature)
Delores (Focus on 49: BOCC work session grapples with difficult legislature)
Kristen Molina (North Coast AA Round Up Seaside April 4th 5th 6th 2008)
Madonna Carr (What does the Federal Government Do with our Taxes?)
Wallace Kennedy (More D.A. Talk)
Ollie Woodward (Fort George Brewery Coming Alive)
Augustine Sweet (CCFOG - First report on Lee recall petition signatures)
Glynn Oconnor (A gun show ... without guns ?)
Lorne Riley (notes from Clean Slate PAC meeting 2/13/07)
Clare Ruiz (Durban Group Discusses Carbon Trading and LNG in Astoria)
Stewart Hernandez (Random News For Friday)
Johnna Acosta (Measure 50....Healthy Kids...Cigarette Taxes)
Nathan Schroeder (Housing Credit Crunch: Who to Blame?)
Tammi Chase (Hands of Peace held for MLK Jr Day)
Maxine Richardson (News Sidebar)
Maryann Le (Websites...How to do links...Textpattern, HTML, Subscribe)
Daniel Estrada (Warrenton City Manager Resigns)

Recent Articles

View All Articles...

Feeds



Home | Archives | Contribute | Back to Top
Take What You Want 2008 NorthCoastOregon.com unless otherwise indicated.
Please email us with any questions or comments.
Site created by Upspring Design.