Caring
For our environment, our community and one another
Innovation
Stay curious and seek better ways to do things
Quality
Never compromising the quality of our craft
Safety
Creating an inclusive workplace that prioritizes the physical, emotional and mental health employees
Growth
Growing responsibly as a company and as individuals
1995 - One Brewery. One Employee.
In 1995, Rob Tod opened a brewery. The year prior, he worked at Otter Creek Brewery—doing everything from washing kegs, to cleaning tanks, to brewing beer. Rob rented a spot in the corner of a warehouse in an industrial park and called it Allagash Brewing Company.
1995 - Yankee Ingenuity
Over the next couple months, Rob literally welded together a 15-barrel brewing system and jackhammered a few drains into the floor. After a couple pilot batches, he started brewing in earnest. He wanted to start with one beer, and one beer only: a Belgian-style wheat beer called Allagash White.
1996 - What's Wrong With This Beer?
At first, beer drinkers didn’t really know what to think of Allagash White. It was nothing like the clear, crisp lagers they’d been drinking for years. It was hazy. It was brewed with spices (coriander and Curacao orange peel). Luckily, once people started to get it, they came back to Allagash White again and again.
1998 - Allagash White Wins Gold
Allagash White wins its first Gold medal at the World Beer Cup.
1999 - Digging in on Belgian Beers
It was also around this time that we picked up a brewer from Vermont named Jason Perkins. A dedicated brewer who would help us expand our brewing operation far beyond that one Belgian-style wheat beer.
2002 - Another Medal at GABF
Allagash White wins its second gold medal, this time at the Great American Beer Festival.
2004 - Enter Curieux
By 2004, we were brewing quite a few more beers than White. One of our favorites, Tripel—a belgian-style golden ale—we tried aging in bourbon barrels. Depending on who you ask, Jason or Rob, it was either a happy accident or a calculated experiment. Either way, the resulting beer became Curieux, one of our most beloved year-round beers.
2005 - Going Wild
Jason’s initiative and brewing knowledge helped us build out our, now extensive, wild beer program. Interlude, a mixed-fermentation ale aged in wine barrels, was the first bottled wild beer we ever sold.
2007 - Brewing with a Coolship
Rob took a trip to Belgium with a storied group of brewers: Sam Calagione (Dogfish Head), Adam Avery (Avery Brewing), Tomme Arthur (Lost Abbey), and Vinnie Cilurzo (Russian River). While on the trip, Rob got the idea to try to brew traditional, Belgian-style spontaneously fermented beer back in Maine.
2007 - Brewing History
Traditional, Lambic-style spontaneously fermented beers had never been brewed on American soil before 2007. We just happened to be the first ones to try it. After around three years of aging in barrels, we blended the beer back together. The result: Coolship Resurgam, a beer we’ve been brewing ever since.
2008 - Pilot Beers
As we’ve grown, so has the number of people who can suggest a new beer idea. Everyone inside the company—from accounting, to production, to our lab—is encouraged to submit pilot beer ideas. Favorite beers like Two Lights, Ganache, Sun Drift, and more all started on this pilot system.
2010 - Building Out
While 2007 marked the first of many brewery expansions, 2010 was when things really began to grow. In 2010, we officially moved our primary brewing and bottling equipment out of our original building and into a larger brewery space we built next door. In 2011 we installed a new keg line. In 2013 we added on a larger tasting room and installed our high-efficiency BrauKon brewing system. And in 2015 we expanded our bottling line.
2010 - Night of the Great Thirst
Our spontaneously fermented beers happened to be so well received that we were invited to a Lambic festival in Belgium named “The Night of the Great Thirst.” For the next four festivals, held biannually, we were the only American brewery.
2011 - Bellagash
The idea came to Rob and Jason around 2010: once a brewery employee hits their five-year mark, let’s take them on a trip to Belgium—a voyage that we’ve since dubbed “Bellagash.” In 2011, Rob and Jason led the first group on a tour of storied Belgian breweries. Since then the groups have steadily grown and the effect of this magical trip has been enjoyed by a multitude of brewery employees. You can join a crew on their trip in our Bellagash blog.
2015 - Growing Up
In 2010 and again in 2015, we expanded our brewery. The whole time, since 1995, we’ve stayed on basically the same plot of land that we started in Portland, Maine. If you’ve ever enjoyed an Allagash beer, it came from right here.
2016 - Giving Back to Maine
As we’ve grown, we’ve never forgotten how much our community and state of Maine has given us. We make sure to give back in various ways: through philanthropic giving, through volunteer time off for employees, through grants, beer donations, and many more.
2016 - Award-Winning Brewers
In 2016, The Brewer’s Association honored our brewmaster Jason with the Russell Scherer award for innovation in craft brewing.
2017 - One Million Pounds of Maine-Grown Grain
In 2017, Rob made the pledge that by 2021, we would be using one million pounds of Maine-grown grain per year. The reason for the hard number was to give our Maine growing and malting partners something to bank on. That way, they could build out longer-term projects, knowing the demand would still be there.
2017 - Still Gold
Allagash White wins its first gold medal at the European Beer Star awards. To that point, here’s every medal it won:
- Gold, European Beer Star 2017
- Gold, GABF 2015
- Gold, World Beer Cup 2012
- Gold, World Beer Cup 2010
- Bronze, GABF 2010
- Gold, GABF 2005
- Silver, World Beer Cup 2004
- Gold, GABF 2002
- Bronze, World Beer Cup 2002
- Gold, World Beer Cup 1998
2018 - Yes We Can
In 2018, we installed our very first canning line. We canned various beers in that first year, including: Tiny House, Haunted House, Florette, The Stranger and the Crane, Starling Wit, Allagash White, and River Trip.
2019 - James Beard Award
After having been nominated as a finalist in 2016 and 2017, Rob won the James Beard Award from Outstanding Wine, Beer, or Spirits professional in 2019.
2019 - B Corp Certified
Work-life balance has always been paramount to us as an employer. We’ve been voted one of the Best Places to Work in Maine for seven years running, thanks to a generous benefit plan that involves volunteer time off, a trip to Belgium after five years of employment, post-shift beers, and more. Being a B Corp gives us specific structure to continue to improve the lives of our employees long into the future.
2019 - Sebago Clean Waters Pledge
In September, we pledged to donate ten cents for every barrel of beer brewed to Sebago Clean Waters (SCW), a collaborative effort of nine conservation organizations working to protect water quality, community well-being, a vibrant economy, and fish and wildlife in the Sebago region through voluntary forestland conservation. At an amount of approximately $10,000 per year, these funds will go directly toward helping SCW preserve the quality of the drinking water in Sebago Lake.
2020 - Gold Again
Allagash White won its fourth gold medal at the Great American Beer Festival. It’s hard to put into words how gratifying it is to see that a beer we’ve been brewing and working to improve for 25 years is still at the top of its style.
2021 - Brewery of the Year
We are very happy to report that we earned significant accolades at the 2021 Great American Beer Festival (GABF). For the first time ever, we earned the honor of Brewery and Brewer of the Year in the 15,001 – 100,000 barrels per year category.
Additionally, Allagash White took home silver in the Belgian-style Witbier category out of 121 entries, and Allagash Tripel won silver in the Belgian-style Abbey Ale category out of 98 entries.
2022 - Awarded
Allagash White wins its fifth gold medal at the Great American Beer Festival.
2023 - B Corp Recertified
In 2019, when we were first certified, we received a B Impact score of 83.8, just over the qualification threshold to be called a B Corp. In 2023, when our recertification was finished, we achieved a new score of 104.0. In B Corp terms—where points are meted out in .1 and .2 increments—this was a significant leap.
Looking Forward
We’ve got plenty of exciting news in the works for the future. We can’t wait to share it with you!