Toby Sells
Ghost River’s Jerry Feinstone, Suzanne Williamson, and Jimm Randall (background) with a Ghost River Gold (foreground).
For those thirsty for more on the Memphis beer scene, we’re presenting barely edited versions of the interviews done by Toby Sells for our cover story on the Memphis Flyer and Aldo’s Beer Bracket Challenge.
Here’s the Ghost River interview with head brewer Jimmy Randall, marketing vice president Suzanne Williamson, and owner Jerry Feinstone.
Memphis Flyer: Ghost River won our (Beer Bracket Challenge). Congratulations. No matter what was going to happen in that final round, yโall were going to win.
Jimmy Randall: It was exciting pulling up the voting for the final round. It was like, oh! Hey! Alright!
MF: I think it says something about how long yโall have been around and the legion of fans you have out there.
So, here, Iโll ask the hard-hitting question Iโve asked the other breweries, what is going on at Ghost River?
JR: Well, at this exact moment, weโre cleaning and weโre putting Golden Ale into bottles. Thatโs todayโs process.
MF: Yโall just opened the taproom inโฆ?
JR: November 5 was the official grand opening day.
MF: Howโs it been going?
Jerry Feinstone: Weโve been very pleased. You get a sunny day like today and everybody wants to show up, especially if they can sit outside. Theyโre having fun and playing games. So, itโs great.
MF: Itโs a different way to interact with the brand.
Suzanne Williamson: We didnโt have that before. When we first moved into this building, you had to have a full kitchen to have a taproom. When the laws changed, we were in the middle of a big expansion. So, we had to put this on the back burner. Itโs been great. Just happy to be able to do it, finally.
MF: Yโall just had a big brand change, too. That came right along with the taproom. You didnโt change any of the styles. Did you change any of the recipes?
JR: No, we didnโt change any of the recipes. Same beers. We did a little bit of name changing. The Honey Wheat, which is our summer seasonal, that has become Lost Hive. It finally got a name of its own.
We sat around in meetings for probably three weeks in a row, trying to come up with a good name for the honey wheat. Everything we picked, someone had already used it.
So, when Josh Horton and Hieroglyph did the rebranding, they came back with Lost Hive. We were like, thatโs perfect.
SW: We did the re-branding because we were brand focused and not style focused. We wanted people to see this as Ghost River IPA not as Ghost River [first] and, then, oh, itโs an IPA.
We had a hard time working with our old font and the tree. Thatโs when we decided that if weโre going to do this โย and itโs expensive changing everything โ we might as wellโฆ
Itโs been 10 years, weโre going to have a taproom. Itโs time to change it. The taproom reflect the branding. It all fits.
JF: Losing the tree made me cry.
SW: You and a lot of other people.
JF: But I think itโs OK. We may end up with some retro products one day.
The (old branding) was very hard to get on a tap handle. The tree was fluffy and it didnโt workโฆ
SW: And when you made it smaller it looked like an ink blot.
MF: The lantern is cool. It tells a lot about your brand and still connects your brand to the river.
JF: As the contest showed โ being the first โ the leader always carries the lantern.
MF: Chuck Skypeck told me one time that the pioneers get the arrows and the settlers get the land.
(Laughs.)
MF: How long have yโall been open now?
JR: Itโs our tenth year. Itโll be our 10th anniversary of the first brew on New Yearโs Eve this year.
MF: Back then, there wasnโt really any other craft beer in town. Yโall have been doing it since before it was cool, as they say.
JF: Breaking ground can be fun. It worked out.
SW: There were a lot of arrows. How about that?
MF: Have yโall always been in this location?
JF: Yes.
MF: So, yโall were pioneers for the neighborhood, too.
Iโve been talking to other brewers a lot about beer names. Golden Ale got a name change. Itโs now just Gold.
SW: Itโs our bread and butter. I mean, itโs the number one craft beer in Memphis, right? According to the Memphis Flyer. (Laughs.)
MF: Golden Ale is, of course, a golden ale. Does anybody remember what went into the naming of that beer at all?
JF: Just a color. (Laughs.) Itโs a style. I guess if youโre the only game in town, you have all the names available to you. We werenโt smart enough to think of something fancy for Golden Ale.
SW: We were excited to get it in kegs and get it out to the market.
JF: Just getting these projects going is hard enough without trying to figure out a great name for everything.
MF: What was it about that style of golden ale that made you want to make that beer?
SW: Being the first, we were the introductory to craft for Memphis palettes. We wanted to, maybe, set the Golden next to a major brand that wasnโt necessarily craft. Weโd say, youโre drinking this, how about try this?
It helped with the whole perception ofโฆyou know some people thought craft beer was heavy or too hoppy or whatever. I donโt even know if people recognized what it was that made it heavy. But we were like, just try this.
They would and theyโd say, oh wow, this tastes good. Itโs a very easyโฆitโs a transition beer.
MF: The gateway beer.
JR: Yes, a wonderful stepping stone into all the different flavors craft beer can produce.
SW: But people go back to it. Itโs kind of your go-to beer in your refrigerator. You want to try all these out-there styles. But when youโre like, I just want a beer, itโs Golden.
JR: Youโve got your Southern comfort food. Weโve got your Southern comfort beer.
MF: Has Golden changed over the years?
JR: Itโs been the same. Weโve made minor tweaks for raw material processes. But in the grand scheme of things, that recipe has remained untouched.
MF: When you say Golden Ale, people know what that flavor is.
SW: People come in our taproom and theyโll say, Iโll have a Ghost River. I know exactly what they mean. Itโs the Golden.
MF: Jimmy, what are people tasting when they taste your golden ale?
JR: Itโs your light American blonde ale. Itโs very soft malt flavors, enough hops to kind of balance the profile out. It doesnโt come across as hoppy or bitter. It doesnโt come across as malty.
You get those light golden malt flavors and just enough of a balancing hop to keep it from wanting to present itself as being too sweet on the palette. That little bit of bitterness we do get for the hops helps counteract against the sweetness.
MF: Another high profile beer for yโall is 1887. Where does that name come from?
JR: Way back in the year 1887 was the first time the Memphis Sand aquifer was tapped. We celebrated for that reason. On the branding for it, it is a youโre looking top down into a well.
JF: Thereโs a story on each label. You have to figure it out, though.
MF: Is Gold the biggest seller?
JR: In overall production, yes. Golden is, by far, the number one beer wโere producing. It sells the best out in the trade. In the taproom itโs a little different. We have different things that are only available in the taproom.
Then, thereโs our other light beer, which is the Grindhouse. It tends to be our best seller here in the taproom.
MF: Did yโall make Grindhouse originally just for the (FedEx) Forum? Is that where the name came from?
SW: We were introducing cream ale and we had bars at the Forum. We wanted to brew a beer that people could dink during sporting events. That was the initial mindset of the naming of Grindhouse.
There will be some exciting things happening with our Grindhouse this spring. With our rebranding, we have a broader interpretation of Greenhouse that weโre excited about. Thereโs an overall connection with Memphis in music.
JR: Not only do you think about the Grindhouse as the FedEx Forum but also your juke joints are your grindhouses as well.
JF: The story is coming in the spring.
JR: We brought Grindhouse in when we were looking for that dryer, drinkable, very approachable style. We wanted something thatโs a little lower in alcohol. You can drink several of them throughout the game and not get yourself too sideways and get in trouble.
MF: Whatโs the alcohol on (Grindhouse)?
JR: 5.25 percent
MF: Yโall have been around a long time. How have you seen the Memphis market and Memphis beer drinkers change over time?
SW: I think theyโre more open to try new styles. I think the new mentality is โwhatโs new?โ Thatโs the national trend. So, I think weโre catching up with that. With more education and more beers to taste and more variety.
MF: So, what do yโall think about winning our Beer Bracket Challenge and being the two finalists?
JR: Overjoyed. Iโm just so grateful for the continuing support weโve received from our hometown.
JF: It was pretty terrific. Sometimes you donโt expect it. You see new beer come on the market, new names. Then to realize that thereโs a bunch of people out there who love your product. It makes you feel good and makes you feel good about what you do.
Itโs a real good feeling. I donโt think any of us in the craft brew business have enough money on advertising or anything. So, we just have to blame it on people going out and trying beers and tasting beers and saying, โthis fits my palette. Iโll have another.โ

