welcome to maine
Maine has only 47 breweries, but good beer has saturated the culture and pubs. Flickr photo via Jimmy Emerson.

Just before Thanksgiving, a Nor’easter blew into New England. It blanketed Maine under four or five inches of snow, followed by a cold snap that kept the countryside looking Rockwell-picturesque. Maine is almost entirely rural, and though it has many (many!) delights, few consider trend-setting to be among them. And yet, when I set out on a Saturday pub crawl under brilliant skies, snow crystals sparkling like gemstones on the roofs of 18th century farmhouses, what I found was arguably the richest vein of good beer in the country.

My first stop, at a brewpub called Bray’s in Naples (population 3,800), is a good example of why. Outside of the greater Naples-Poland region, I doubt few people have ever heard of Bray’s (and even some Mainers, like my wife, couldn’t remember exactly where Naples was located). It has survived in anonymity for 20 years, pumping out 3.5-barrel batches of beer to slake the thirst of locals distracted by Red Sox games. This is the last place on earth you expect to find anything experimental, and yet they were pouring a non-gimmicky, sweet-potato amber and a sour ale. They had Verhaeghe Duchesse De Bourgogne and Delirium Tremens on tap. The local cider option was made with Maine apples and fermented naturally. It was a big-city tap list in a small town.

The most intriguing beer, though, was a guest tap from Hidden Cove Brewing Co., a brewery in Wells. The name was innocuous enough—Crowsfoot Black Ale—but it arrived venting the unmistakable aroma of Brettanomyces. It turns out this is not exceptional: the regular line includes two more beers both made with brett, including an IPA with a 50 percent grist of rye. Hidden Cove has only been around since 2013, but if the Crowsfoot is any measure, it’s doing something special. The use of brett is clever and very understated; it gave the black ale a dry, austere snap that reminded me of descriptions I’ve read of 18th century London porters. Located in a town like Denver or San Francisco, this would be a buzz-generating phenomenon; in the Pine State it seems to have gone unnoticed.

Maine obviously can’t compete on numbers. The least-densely populated state east of the Mississippi, most of the towns are crowded down in the south and along the coast. It’s only got 47 breweries. People acknowledge that it has good beer, but it’s never placed among the most glamorous and it won just a single GABF medal this year. Nevertheless, in the ways that matter, Maine is at the beery vanguard. Good beer has saturated the culture and pubs—as Bray’s demonstrates—regularly have interesting, unexpected beer. None of this was unfamiliar to me—it’s been this way for years. What was striking was the degree to which breweries are now pushing the envelope on innovation and quality. As an Oregonian, I’m used to measuring cities by the number of years their beers trail ours. Maine’s scene isn’t trailing anyone, though, and their Portland may now be the equal of Oregon’s Portland. Seriously.

allagash
Once off the beaten beer path, Allagash Brewing Co. is now a major tourist stop. Photo by Jeff Alworth.

Part of this comes from having a long lineage of good craft breweries, including a couple that are world class: Geary’s Brewing Co. and Allagash Brewing Co.. Geary’s created the template still followed through much of New England for English-inflected ales. With London Porter, David Geary created a taste for dark ales and you find a greater density of porters and stouts than anyplace I’ve visited.

Allagash is more widely-known, and also hugely influential in the region. The last time I visited the brewery was in 2008, and it was a steel warehouse along an industrial row. They’d roughed out a little visitor’s room, but it was way off the beaten beer path. Now it’s a major tourist stop, with a vastly expanded tasting room and throngs of devotees and visitors.

infiniti
In’finiti Fermentation & Distillation brews beer and also distills and has rum, vodka, and white (unaged) oat whisky. Photo by Jeff Alworth.

Allagash White is still the workhorse, but the spontaneous fermentation project has yielded a strain of Brettanomcyes that produces a pure, juicy tartness laden with esters. They pitch it in other beers like Midnight Black, pouring when I visited, giving Rob Tod’s crew a dimension few breweries can match. (Not all brett strains are created equally, and the one that thrives in the north Atlantic air in Portland is exceptional.) Wild yeast experimentation has opened the door to wild ales like those being made at Hidden Cove and elsewhere. More broadly, Allagash has sparked an interest in Belgian beer strong enough to support places like Novare Res, a fantastic tin-ceilinged cellar bar specializing in low-country ales. (I made a stop there, too, and drained a Senne Taras Boulba. Smeirlap!)

In regions with immature beer cultures, new breweries can’t rely on a customer base to support beer that’s overly avant garde. In mature cultures, it’s the opposite—new breweries have to distinguish themselves to find an audience. Case in point: a new brewery located on the waterfront in downtown Portland, In’finiti Fermentation & Distillation. It doesn’t have a regular lineup, and instead relies on regulars to return for variety. And what variety—the day I visited it had everything from a helles bock and rauchbier (looked like Spezial, tasted like Schlenkerla) to English, American, and Double IPAs to Belgian strongs and two tart ales, including The Killing, made with cranberries. That last beer took the laurel for champion beer on my trip—it was about as acidic as wine and nearly as fruity, soft and crisp. I tried five of the beers at In’finiti, and they were all well above average. The rauchbiers and tart ale were exceptional. In’finiti also distills and has rum, vodka, and white (unaged) oat whisky—with a barrel-aged version to come eventually. They even do beer schnapps, a liquor so new it’s not mentioned on the website. It’s a brewery with huge ambition, and the throngs I saw seemed to approve.

I understand the folly in trying to measure the quality of beers by city or state. We all have different criteria and standards (not to mention personal experience), so this is a matter of philosophy, not science. I’ve been to a lot of places with great beer, though, and I’ve only encountered beer this impressive in places like Prague and London. As a fairly shameless home-state booster, I would still give Oregon the pole position for best state, but for the first time, I had to stop and question my rankings. If you think your state is a contender, book a trip to Maine. You will be dazzled and impressed.

Read more about In’finiti Fermentation in the January 2015 issue of All About Beer Magazine, on newsstands now.

Read more posts from The Beer Bible Blog.

Jeff Alworth is the author of the forthcoming book, The Beer Bible (Workman, 2015). Follow him on Twitter or find him at his blog, Beervana.