Everywhere L-R Daniel Muñoz, Keith Pumilia, Stefan Weber, Ryan Dick, Jeremy Grinkey, and Alli Rae Halliday. Photo by Greg Nagel

After hearing about Everywhere Beer Co’s grand opening on August 5th, the word “everywhere” got me thinking about terroir in beer. Historically, terroir is what carved out many of the world’s classic beer styles: Pilsner from Pilsen,  the lightly hopped Munich Helles, and even the spectacular British Pale Ale, all born because of the local water, yeast, hops, and malting techniques.

Brewers of today, armed with solid hop contracts, a Brewer’s Supply Group account, and a super-rad reverse-osmosis system can seemingly dial in whatever global beer style is desired. Hell, even some Lambic-inspired beer made spontaneously in Southern California has rivaled some of the originals.

Daniel Muñoz, serving some beers. Photo John Holzer, @fourbrewers

“When Keith [Pumilia] and I were just starting Bruery Terreux, we were very cognizant of the part of terroir in beer you can control…and that’s the feeling in the cellar, the feeling in the space, and having that harmony in who you work with,” notes Everywhere’s co-owner/co-founder, Jeremy Grinkey. “I’ve worked in wineries in the past where you don’t have that, and the end product always suffers,” he continued.

In this case, Everywhere Beer Co., which is specifically opening in the city of Orange, California, has me more excited than usual for a new brewery opening, mostly because I know the team behind it has over fifty years of experience combined at their previous employ at The Bruery and beyond.

Foedre Duders. Photo John Holzer @fourbrewers

But with all that experience and pedigree comes high expectations. “I think people are going to be very vocal if there’s something they don’t like,” says Jeremy Grinkey. “Yeah, but we worked at the Bruery, we have thick skin,” adds Daniel, welcoming any feedback, good or bad.

I think a lot of people hear the word Bruery and think of big adjunct 750’s getting dusty in every local beer geek’s closet. Yet Everywhere’s list of opening beers looks more down-to-earth. “One of the obvious things about opening Everywhere is we have our own voice…obviously, we are super proud of the beers we’ve made at the Bruery, almost 180 unique beers a year, but they were what someone else wanted to make, even though we put our own spin on them,” notes Daniel.

One Radler, two Hazies. Photo John Holzer, @fourbrewers

On day one, the tap list looks like a beer-style greatest hits playlist. Sure, there’s the ultra aromatic west coast IPA, a light and summery hazy, and a sessionable German-style Pils…all done flawlessly. What I didn’t expect to see was a bright violet Jamaica boozy lemonade seltzer, nor a 6.5% juiced-up Painkiller. Looking through the glass into the brewhouse, brewer…

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