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Dickie and Watt, like Dogfish Head's Sam Calagione in Delaware, are priests in the temple of extreme beer. Last December, they decided to dip into their Scottish heritage and brew beers at whisky strength, upwards of 40 percent ABV. By chilling the beer to 70 below zero for three weeks in an ice cream factory, then skimming off the ice crystals (leaving behind the alcohol, which freezes at a lower temperature than water), they were able to slowly raise the alcohol content far above what normal brewing can achieve. The result was Tactical Nuclear Penguin, an imperial stout clocking in at 32 percent. They even made a funny little promo video. (Okay, it's funnier if you're kind of a beer geek, but my wife laughed. It might be the Scottish accents.)
See web-only content:
http://www.theatlantic.com/health/archive/2010/07/the-best-gimmicks-in-beer/60637/
What came next was a marketer's dream: a challenge from the Germans. A few months after BrewDog dropped Tactical Nuclear Penguin, Schorschbräu, a small brewery in central Germany known for producing ridiculously high-alcohol beers, released Schorschbock, a 40 percent ABV beer.
BrewDog, already at work on a follow-up beer at 41 percent, rushed it into release with the name Sink the Bismarck!, complete with another funny video, this time involving liberal use of the term "sausage-munchers."
See web-only content:
http://www.theatlantic.com/health/archive/2010/07/the-best-gimmicks-in-beer/60637/
It was war. (Even though Scorschbräu's head brewer, Georg Tscheuschner, refuses to use military lingo when discussing BrewDog; after all, he said in a radio interview, he's German, and "the world won't understand.") Earlier this year Schorschbräu responded with Schorschbock 43, which in turn begat The End of History. (And, yet again, a funny video. This one's seriously funny. I promise.)
See web-only content:
http://www.theatlantic.com/health/archive/2010/07/the-best-gimmicks-in-beer/60637/
The result has been an explosion in media coverage for BrewDog. A Google search for the name returns at least twice as many hits as one for any other craft brewery—an admittedly imprecise metric, but the results aren't even close. And clustered at the top are page after page of articles and blog entries about The End of History—even the New York Times Book Review's Paper Cuts blog had a comment. The End of History is obviously a gimmick; Dickie and Watt only made a dozen bottles. But it's a brilliant one.
This article available online at:
http://www.theatlantic.com/health/archive/2010/07/the-best-gimmicks-in-beer/60637/
