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Industrial Arts Brewing: The Art of Scaling Up a Hazy IPA

A young craft brewer in New York’s Hudson Valley was maxing out the capacity of its 25-hL brewhouse. A second, larger brewhouse from Krones Steinecker was highly customized to handle its hoppy brew.

The high volume of hops used to make Industrial Arts’ hazy IPA required some innovative thinking to optimize brewing.
The high volume of hops used to make Industrial Arts’ hazy IPA required some innovative thinking to optimize brewing.
Liam Goodman

Industrial Arts Brewing began operations in the summer of 2016—in a sprawling pre-Civil War complex along the Hudson River in Garnerville, N.Y. “We were aiming to be a New York City area supplier of really fresh, hoppy beer. We stumbled on a Hazy IPA as our flagship, and that’s sort of driven what we do,” says Jeff O’Neil, Industrial Arts founder and owner. The brewery’s Wrench IPA has had great success in the tri-state area of New York, New Jersey, and Connecticut. “The fundamental difference between ours and a lot of the other ones that we’ve tried is ours is really dry and well fermented and has a decent amount of bitterness.”

The Garnerville plant operates with a 25-hL brewhouse from BrauKon and 100-barrel fermenters. Though happy with the operation of the brewhouse, they were quickly running out of capacity. “We do our best to fill those fermenters. We brew high-gravity wort and dilute it in the whirlpool—we do everything that we can to max out the capacity there,” O’Neil says. “We’ve grown relatively fast over our first five years, so we’ve always been trying to squeeze a little bit more out of all of our resources.”

By its fifth anniversary, it was time for Industrial Arts to move beyond the limitations of its original Garnerville facility. It expanded to a second facility in Beacon, N.Y., across the Hudson River, on the edge of town, where the brewer has turned an abandoned factory into a vibrant brewery campus.

Compared with its 25-hL brewhouse at its original facility, Industrial Arts’ new 100-hL brewhouse achieves more efficient extraction and hops utilization because of its bigger scale.Compared with its 25-hL brewhouse at its original facility, Industrial Arts’ new 100-hL brewhouse achieves more efficient extraction and hops utilization because of its bigger scale.Liam GoodmanInstead of a 25-hL brewhouse, the Beacon location has a 100-hL brewhouse—a CombiCube from Krones Steinecker. It is a fully automated brewhouse capable of eight to 10 brews per day, depending on the wort gravity. And it’s had an immediate impact on Industrial Arts’ ability to get the most out of its raw materials and supply the market with its Wrench IPA and other brews.

“We are seeing some increased efficiencies and some really wonderful yields out of the CombiCube,” says Mike McManus, director of brewing operations for Industrial Arts. “We built the CombiCube with Krones in order to cast out 100 hL with our flagship beer Wrench. But with every turn of Wrench, we’re getting a bit more than that. Yields have been excellent, and efficiencies have been as advertised or better.”

“At this bigger scale—100 hL vs. 25—we are getting much more efficient extraction from our malt, we are getting much more hop utilization from our bigger boil, and we’re getting better yields out of the conical sedimentation tank we have rather than the traditional whirlpool,” O’Neil says. “We’re squeezing significantly more extract out of every bit of barley, wheat, oats, and hops that we put into the system.”

The Industrial Arts hazy IPA

As a very hoppy, hazy IPA, the flagship Wrench presents some challenges in how the beer is made and thereby how the brewhouse is optimized. The CombiCube brewhouse from Krones Steinecker is designed for modularity, enabling brewers to put together a full system that works for its particular needs.

The high volume of hops used to make Industrial Arts’ hazy IPA required some innovative thinking to optimize brewing.The high volume of hops used to make Industrial Arts’ hazy IPA required some innovative thinking to optimize brewing.Liam GoodmanIn the case of Industrial Arts, the process begins at the wet mill, where the pilsner malt and wheat get milled. That fills the mash kettle from the bottom with warm mash. The barley and wheat are blended into the mill while the oats drop down into a hydrator and get mixed in later in the mash kettle. The mash temperature is then ramped up before it’s pumped over to the lauter tun. The lauter tun runs to a receiving tank, which is a buffer tank used while the kettle is tied up. Once the kettle is clear of the previous batch, the next brew starts to fill again from the receiving side.

“We boil for 75 to 90 minutes, depending on the wort. Then we have a heat exchanger between the wort kettle and the sedimentation tank which allows us to knock the temperature from 100°C down to 80°C. So we’re cooling that wort down a lot,” O’Neil explains. “And then we make that big hop addition that I talked about. We add almost no hops during the boil.”

The idea is to retain more of the aroma compounds from the flower. “It volatizes fewer of the aroma compounds, and it just creates a different perception than a traditional hotter whirlpool addition,” O’Neil says. “It definitely helps us to create a different character than every other brewer. There’s a lot of similarities between hazy IPAs. We use a lot of the same varieties of hops, a lot of the same sort of ratios, but we’re able to create some different layers and some different characteristics with this control in the brewhouse.”

After knocking the temperature down and making the hops addition, the mixture rests in a sedimentation tank. After that, the wort is taken through a bed of whole hops flowers in a hop strainer, also known as a hop back, in order to maximize surface contact between the hot wort and the hops. The hop back was subcontracted out to Rolec.

The hop strainer, O’Neil explains, works much like a tea bag, with hop flowers placed inside a perforated wall. “Then the wort flows through them from above—kind of showers down through a bed of flowers and hydrates those dry flowers and flows through the flower to get some more hop character,” he says. This gives the beer more of a floral character, he explains, and also a bit of a mouthfeel. And at the lower temperature provided by the heat exchanger, Industrial Arts is able to treat those hops a little more gently than most brewhouses are able to accomplish.

System optimization

Throughout the brewhouse, Industrial Arts had special specifications that it needed along the way. The CombiCube’s modularity played into the ability to refine everything for the hazy IPA. “There are challenges that present in lauterability, which is to say how fast the wort can flow through the lauter tun—because there’s such a high fraction of wheat and oats relative to traditional beers,” O’Neil says. “For instance, it’s a lot easier to make with a wider lauter tun.”

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