Custom brews on the menu
- Share via
Doug Tabbert
This do-it-yourself brewery and bakery, camouflaged in a small, white
business-suite strip mall off Heil Avenue in the inland reaches of
Huntington Beach, is a beer connoisseur’s dream come true. But Brew
Bakers is a dream he or she never had.
It takes an independent visionary, namely owner Dennis Midden, to
develop an enterprise this unique and fun. Operating as an antithesis
to the industrial revolution, patrons of Brew Bakers produce not just
the cash but the labor, too, from ingredient mixing to bottling and
slapping on idiosyncratic labels.
The shop has a cement slab for a floor that helps keep the
microbrewery cool but comfortable. The small lunch counter appears
even smaller as the ceiling towers above and is reminiscent of the
drug stores and soda fountains of the late ‘50s and early ‘60s.
Children were sucking down bottles of sweet suds during the summer
lunch hour -- there’s root beer, sarsaparilla, ginger beer and orange
or cream soda.
You can come in for some grub, a loaf of challah, a pint of root
beer and/or beer on tap, but the real fun comes when patrons make
their own soda or brew. There are recipes for 100 beers and more
labels than you can imagine with the option of designing your own.
Their bestseller is Wildfire Red, No. 58. The cookbook explains that
“Wildfire doesn’t truly emanate a beer on the market, and its roasty
taste in combination with a slight bitterness has won the hearts of
many.”
You need to make an appointment for brewing, which takes a good
two hours. Nascent brewers learn their craft step by step, learn the
preference of their beer-buds, and learn how scrumptious their
soft-pretzel-crust pizza is. It takes two weeks for the beers to
ferment.
The menu is brief, with roughly five items on it. I tried a
bratwurst sandwich ($4.50) that came on a cutting board with a bottle
of spicy mustard. The mild sausage was enveloped in a warm pretzel
bun. It was so satisfying that I almost had two, but I opted for a
pretzel roll ($1) instead. I suggest you leave your
carbohydrate-phobic pal at home.
Wes Birdsall, Brew Bakers’ manager, said they’re more than willing
to experiment and offered me a sample of his latest concoction: a
darker, full-bodied beer with enough sweetness to smooth out the
higher alcohol content often found in thick brews. Birdsall had hit
the bull’s-eye on this customer’s request. The beer was full of
distinct and harmoniously intriguing flavor.
A motto plastered in more than one location claimed, “life is too
short to drink cheap beer,” but the beer you make here isn’t that
expensive. On Thursday evening, you can make a case in one of the
26-gallon kettles that line the walls for only $33, a little more
than two bucks for a handcrafted microbrew -- not bad.
* DOUG TABBERT is the Independent restaurant critic. If you have
comments or suggestions, e-mail [email protected]
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.