Exhibition - On Tap: Sonoma County Hops and The Beer Revolution
Wednesday, August 07, 2024 from 11:00am to 05:00pm
Museum of Sonoma County
425 Seventh Street
Something revolutionary happened in Sonoma County in 1977. Using discarded dairy tanks and other cast-off equipment, New Albion Brewery started making beer in the town of Sonoma, launching the first modern microbrewery in the United States. Today, we take microbreweries and world-class beer for granted. Every year, thousands of people descend on Sonoma County for the release of internationally renowned beers. But how did it come to be? Why Sonoma County?
Hops, the plant crucial to the flavoring of beer, was first established as an agricultural crop in Sonoma County in the 1850’s. On Tap traces the rich history of hop farming in the region, exploring the historical rise of hops as a local crop, the diverse participants who cultivated and harvested hops, and the notable reemergence of current hop farmers in Sonoma County decades after the demise of the local crop.
On Tap also explores microbreweries, both past and present. The 19th century was a time of numerous local breweries, but when Sonoma County saw a decline in regional hops farming, small breweries disappeared and national, mass-produced beers came to dominate the marketplace. In the 1970s, a new generation of craft brewers bucked this trend, with the widely acknowledged first microbrewery, New Albion, starting in the town of Sonoma. Today, Sonoma County is a productive hotbed of small batch brewers and entrepreneurs experimenting with different styles, flavors, and innovative approaches. Their brews, in turn, have encouraged the return of some local hop growing.