Paul joined a homebrew club, retired his Beer Machine, went all grain and became president of his homebrew club. Under his leadership and with help from its talented members, HOME (Homebrewers Of Marin and Elsewhere) became the California homebrew club of the year. Paul started volunteering and working at Marin Brewing in his spare time where he started on the ground floor, quite literally. His first jobs were cleaning the floors and kegs. He eventually moved up to kegging and bottling a couple days a week and this is where Paul added real world brewing experience to his UC Davis education.
When Paul’s day job moved to Las Vegas he and his family decided moving to Sin City just wasn’t going to work for them and through a series of events (daughters attending UCSB, getting married etc.) he packed up his bags and moved to Carpinteria. It was then and there that Paul realized his dream and opened Island Brewing Company
What you should know…Once a month Island Brewing Co. features one of their beers as a cask conditioned ale. What makes this so special is that one cask (7.75 gallons) of the beer is racked off the batch before it is finished fermenting into a small keg. When the beer has finished fermenting and conditioning it is tapped on a “First Friday” of each month. The beer is served much warmer and at lower carbonation levels then usual but serving the beer this way allows the malt flavors to shine through. These beers are generally consumed by the end of the weekend so be sure to check out their website so you don’t miss the next “First Friday” cask tapping.
Island Brewing Co also ages some of their bigger beers (higher in alcohol and/or flavor and/or body) in bourbon barrels. The barrels they use have only been empty for only a week or two so when they get them they are full of bourbon flavor. Fresh beer is taken from the fermenter and put into the barrel where it will condition for several weeks. The beers are tasted throughout the aging process to check their progress and when they have just the right amount of bourbon flavor they are racked into a brite tank where they are conditioned and carbonated. Then the beer is bottled, hand labeled and numbered. Each batch produces around 250 bottles. Look for these bottles in their beer fridge next to the bar as they are rarely on tap. Island Brewing Co. has had much success with its bourbon barrel program. In addition to being some of my favorite BIG beers the Big Island IPA won first place at the Great American Beer Festival.