Memphis Made co-founders Andy Ashby and Drew Barton.
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 Memphis Made interview with company co-founders Andy Ashby and Drew Barton.
Memphis Flyer: Iโll start with the hard-hitting question Iโve been asking everyone. What is going on at Memphis Made?
Drew Barton: Beer?
(Laughs.)
DB: Well, the newest thing is weโre going to be getting some bottles back in the market soon.
MF: (Points to bottling machine.) Is that a temporary bottling line?
DB: I mean itโs temporary as in it will run until we break it.
So, weโre going to start doing (750 milliliter bottles), which is the same format we did earlier. Itโll be exclusively high gravity to get some different things out there.
MF: Whatโs the first beer youโll put out?
DB: Soulless Ginger will be the first thing in the bottle.
MF: Describe that beer for me.
DB: Itโs one of our cult favorites, Soulful Ginger, kicked up since we can do higher alcohol now. A little more alcohol, a lot more ginger, way less soul.
MF: When will it be on shelves?
DB: In the next few weeks.
Andy Ashby: Keep it vague.
DB: Alright. Vaguely soon. Soonish.
AA: We did some hand bottling and some mobile canning. But this is our first more-permanent solution.
MF: So, with that, Memphis Made will be available more regularly in stores?
DB: Yeah, in more package stores. Weโll certainly be on the shelves of the growler shops that weโre in right now because they carry bottled products. And weโll also be in โ we cantโ say the names specially โ but weโll be in โgrocery stores.โ Can you put that in quotes? A few convenience stores.
AA: Itโll be small-batch stuff. So, itโs not going to be everywhere all the time. Weโr north of 150 accounts in Shelby County. Basically, some of the places weโre at now are going have it, including some grocery stores.
MF: Yโall opened in 2013, right?
DB: Put out our first beers in 2013, yeah.
AA: October 2013.
MF: When did yโall open the taproom?
DB: Thanksgiving weekend of 2014, almost a year later.
MF: Howโs it going? (Laughs.)
DB: Pretty damn good! No, itโs great. Weโre tired but weโre happy. We threw out the business plan a long time ago.
AA: We started with six accounts from day one. Now weโre at more than 150. It started off, basically, just Drew and I and now we have employees and have the taproom open.
MF: Yโall just extended the taproom hours, too. Yโall are now open on Mondays and Thursdays and later hours on the weekends.
AA: Yep. Five days a week, the taproom is open from when we used to not have a taproom at all.
As weโre getting bigger, weโre not really looking outward as much. Weโre looking more inward, doing more stuff in the community and in our taproom.
MF: Almost more than any other taproom location, yโall are in the most-trafficked area.
DB: Oh, yeah. And we chose it for that reason. We both live in the neighborhood. So, we wanted something close to home and have something that wa amore vibrant in our neighborhood.
MF: Do you see more causal foot traffic? Or, is it that people are seeking you out?
DB: Itโs a good mix of those things. We have a lot of people who walk, bike, and push their stroller. Some publication named us the most family-friendly brewery in Memphis.
MF: Which one?
DB: I think it was Thrillist. (Laughs.)
MF: Thatโs fine. I love Thrillist.
MF: Iโve been talking a lot about beer names. How do you come up with your beer names?
DB: We donโt really have a process by any means.
AA: Yes, thatโs a great way to say it.
DB: Procrastination tends to be a huge part of the recipe. We wait until the very last minute to name something.
AA: Sometimes.
DB: Well, for the most part. There have literally been times when we have named it and sent it out that day.
MF: if you were lucky enough to live in Memphis on a particular day and time, you witnessed the Rockbone fiasco go down in real time.
DB: Yeah, and we go to immortalize it with a beer name.
MF: What is the biggest-selling beer yโall have?
DB: Fireside (Amber). By far.
MF: Even more than Lucid (Kolsch)?
DB: Way more.
MF: Is that surprising to yโall?
DB: Iโm baffled by it.
MF: What is that?
AA: Itโs different but itโs accessible. Every brewer out there has an IPA but a nice, malty amber that drinkable? People just really tend to gravitate towards it.
Itโs also very adaptable. It started a s fall seasonal. We started as seaonsal brewery. So, we had two different beer every quarter. So, Fireside started a s fan seasonal. Then, we did it as a fal and winter seasonal.
Every year we took it away and Iโd get lambasted. People would ask, why are you taking away this beer? I totally love it!
I remember the first year we made it year-round. It was spring and it was fine. But summer hit and I was worried. Is this amber gonna sell well when itโs 110 degrees out? And it didnโt miss a beat. Itโs pretty crazy. I didnโt see it either.
MF: How did you come up with Fireside? The name, I remember, was originally Fireside Ninja and the name was from another brewery.
DB: Yes, we got permission from that brewery. The beer itself, that was so long ago when I designed it, I donโtโฆwe just wanted something easy to drink, for sure. Itโs got a healthy base of Munich malt. I love Munich malt.
Weโre probably โ as far as our size goes โ weโre probably one of the biggest users of Munich malt in at least the Southeast, possibly the U.S.
That Munich gives it a nice little bread, biscuit-y base. Then, the flaked oats and barley in there make it nice and smooth. Thereโs a kiss of hops in there, just enough to balance it out but. Enough not to really offend any novice beer drinker but enough to let even a hardcore beer drinker know, hey, itโs got hops in it.
MF: Other breweries have said they sell a lot of darker beers, even in the summer. What does that say about the Memphis beer consumer?
DB: It shows a more malt-forward palette. Just because the coast loves itโs hops, doesnโt necessarily mean that makes it any better of a beer.
(Dark beers) are just what the market wants. We will certainly do some hoppy beers along the way for the hoppy beer market but I think as an overall, a lot of our beers tends to be less hoppy. Things like Soulful Ginger. Itโs neither hoppy or malty. Itโs nice and dry. Itโs not very hoppy.
Rye Felicia is malty. Slumber Party is nice and malty. Nut ReMix is malty with a little bit of hops.
MF: Whatโs next?
DB: We will continue to be as focused as we can on the local market. We donโt sell beer outside the local market. We have a good base out in the city. Weโre really just trying to give more and more people an opportunity to come and try it (at the taproom) with out extended hours and days.
We want to do more things here and have more on-site events. Do more small-batch stuff that only available in the taproom.ย We just want to get more people in here to say hey and have a beer with us.
AA: Thereโs a lot of different ways to grow. Since we self-distribute in Shelby County. Weโre not looking to get outside of that. Weโre trying to find ways to grow in other ways.
The Memphis beer market will mature this year. Wee finally have the high-gravity thing out of the way. We have some more breweries coming online.
We had three breweries open up in 2013, but here it is four years later. I think weโve all learned a lot and weโll start hitting our stride. Weโll be pushing more beers out there and educating people. I think the whole beer scene is going to start to get more mature.

