Every time someone opens a craft beer made in Alberta, it highlights the talent of the province’s brewers and the high quality of the local ingredients they use.
You could say the same thing about the taprooms that dot the province, too; each one is a showroom for Alberta’s craft beer industry, where proprietors sell the concept of drinking locally and preach the gospel of Alberta’s world-class barley to people who walk through the door.
The continued growth of craft beer in Alberta is proof that both methods are succeeding at winning converts — but, to an extent, each relies on customers taking the first step to order local pints or visit breweries.
In Red Deer, a group of central Alberta partners is doing the opposite: They’ve taken craft beer to the people by opening a brewery at the local farmers’ market. Craft Beer Commonwealth is making beer on-site with barley grown and malted practically down the street.
The brewery is a partnership between Red Hart Brewing in Red Deer, Blindman Brewing in nearby Lacombe and Red Shed Malting, which supplies specialty malt for breweries across western Canada made from barley grown near Penhold.
The brewery is at the Gasoline Alley Farmers’ Market, a year-round indoor facility that opened in late 2020 with more than 50 vendors selling local produce and handicrafts every weekend.
To the partners behind Craft Beer Commonwealth, the market is an ideal place to introduce craft beer to people who are already inclined to ask questions about where their purchases come from and how they’re made.
“So much of craft beer caters to its fanbase. At the market, you have other people who want to support local,” says Jarod Griesbach, co-owner of Red Hart Brewing.
Craft Beer Commonwealth anchors one end of the building, with gleaming stainless steel tanks beckoning the curious from an upper-floor mezzanine. In addition to customer seating upstairs, the ground level of the brewery is part of a large, licensed and kid-friendly food hall where customers can grab fresh meals from any of the six kitchen stalls. It’s thought to be the first arrangement of its kind in Canada.