Annex Ale Project aiming for 'butcher shop model' microbrewery - Action News
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CalgaryFOOD AND THE CITY

Annex Ale Project aiming for 'butcher shop model' microbrewery

The latest addition to Calgary's burgeoning craft beer scene isn't planning to make simple beers.

'Where you go to the baker for your bread, the butcher for your meat, and the brewer for your beer'

Andrew Bullied and Erica OGorman created the Annex Ale Project, one of the latest microbreweries in Calgary's burgeoning craft brewing community. (Julie Van Rosendaal)

As temperatures rise, patios fill and the city gears up for Calgary International Beerfest this weekend, it's a good time for a pint. Fortunately there's another microbreweryin Calgary's burgeoning craft brewing community the Annex Ale Project, created by Andrew Bullied and Erica O'Gorman.

Bullied went to brew school in Niagara and moved on to be head brewer at Village Brewery while O'Gorman was head chef at Village Ice Cream. They've been working on securing their own space for a couple of years and finally found it just off Macleod Trail and 42nd Avenue S.W.

While they got the brewery up and running, Bullied and O'Gorman brewed their own root beer with roots, spices and other botanical ingredients. The creamy pop with a vanilla-mint finish is available at Village Ice Cream as well as in small wine stores and eateries around town. It's also on tap at the brewery for those who want to forego the booze.

"Nobody else in Calgary is making craft soda," says O'Gorman.

"It's hard to get a license to make liquor if you don't have your own space. Considering the time and effort that goes into making the beer, we figured the root beer would be another opportunity."

'We never wanted a safe beer that was going to appeal to the masses,' co-owner Andrew Bullied says. (Julie Van Rosendaal)

It's also allowed them to build brand recognition while sorting out the complex details of setting up a brewery.

When it comes to the beer, the duo favour a bit of complexity there as well.

"We've always been about applying the Pacific Northwest model to beer in Calgary," says Bullied.

"I'm a huge hops guy, we never wanted a 'safe' beer that was going to appeal to the masses. We've got something that everyone can appreciate, but we don't do a lager or a klsch or a blonde, that sort of thing. We're not going there. The market in the Pacific Northwest is a little more developed, and you don't need to have that safety net."

There are a few simple snacks on the chalkboard homemade hops-seasoned chips from Bullieds cousin Andrea Harling of Made Foods, and small bowls of salty, stringy, Middle Eastern cheese called jibneh mshallaleh. (Julie Van Rosendaal)

Tasting rooms seem to be the place to hang out these days, and on a recent weekday, dozens were gathered in Annex Ale's sunny new spacestylish with whitewashed walls, blonde wood and hanging plantswith growlers adorned with their logo at the ready to fill and go.

Annex hastwo regular brews on tap, an extra pale ale (XPA) and a bitter and there are four in constant rotation, allowing them room to play.

There are a few simple snacks on the chalkboard homemade hops-seasoned chips from Bullied's cousin AndreaHarlingof Made Foods, and small bowls of salty, stringy, Middle Eastern cheese calledjibnehmshallaleh, which comes from Quebec and is studded with tiny blacknigellaseeds. Pulled into shreds, it's a brilliantly perfect nibble alongsidecold beer.

Besides Annex being a relaxing, off-the-beaten-path place to hang out, it wants to be part of Calgarians' shopping routine.

"We'd like to go by the butcher shop model," adds O'Gorman.

"Where you go to the baker for your bread, the butcher for your meat, and the brewer for your beer."