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E-Malt.com News article: USA, ME: Island Dog Brewing to become South Portland’s third craft brewery
Brewery news

A nondescript office building behind the Maine Mall in South Portland may become home to the city’s third brewery, The Forecaster reported on November 17.

The new addition to the burgeoning local industry is Island Dog Brewing at 125 John Roberts Road.

The business, approved unanimously by the Planning Board on November 15, is owned by South Portland residents Jim Denz, his wife Jodie, and their friend and fellow brewer, Tim Francis.

Denz, of Berwick Street, is planning to build a brewery in about 4,200 square feet of space in Suite 15 in the one-story office park. It will specialize in “small batches of craft beer,” according to its application, and will include a tasting room and tavern, with capacity for 58 patrons.

Denz and his team still have to obtain the proper licenses for alcohol and food consumption from the state before getting City Council approval, but if all goes well, the plan is to open next April or May.

Denz is seeking a retail food establishment license to brew and sell beer and food for on site consumption, to sell growlers to go. He also seeks a commercial beer processing license to sell wholesale to local restaurants and bars.

The operation will not include a commercial kitchen, but Denz is hoping the business can sell light snacks such as popcorn, and work with food trucks.

Denz, 48, has been brewing his own beer at home since 1994. He works in information technology support and said Wednesday that only last year did he and his wife start seriously considering starting a commercial brewing operation.

“A lot of people have told me, ‘Your beer’s really good,'” Denz said. When he and his wife would go to other local breweries, his wife, Jodie, would say, “‘Why can’t you do this?'”

Both of the city’s other breweries – Foulmouthed Brewing in Knightville and Fore River Brewing near Cash Corner, are on the other side of Interstate 295, leaving much of the Maine Mall area as unclaimed territory, Denz said.

The plan is to install a small, three-barrel system that brews about 100 gallons at a time. The size of the operation will similar to the size of Bunker Brewing when it first opened its doors in Portland’s East Bayside neighborhood, Denz said.

Four beers will be offered initially – an India pale ale, a brown ale, a saison and a stout. Eventually, Denz said, “I’d like to have eight total in the tap room.”


22 November, 2016

   
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