If you have recently traveled to Quebec, you may have noticed cosmic clothing that microbreweries are growing in cities and regions of the province. Otherwise, a simple visit to a grocery store or convenience store will convince you that the beers produced by artisanal breweries are increasingly popular and readily available. Is that we are witnessing cosmic clothing a revolution cosmic clothing in the world of beer in Quebec, that is to say that consumers value more local brewers at the expense of large multinational cosmic clothing breweries, to the delight of local communities. This relatively cosmic clothing recent phenomenon rapidly liberalizing both regionally in town, and it involves a variety of practices and methods related to sustainable development, organic agriculture for local consumption and tourism.
Beer is probably one of the first liquor produced by humans. His appearance dates back as far back as Neolithic or at the same time as the beginnings of agriculture. Produced from fermenting grains in water, it was probably discovered by mistake, cosmic clothing then beer accompanied most societies throughout history by its ease of manufacture, as well as for its euphoric effects. If the wine was considered a divine and consumed mainly by the rich drink, beer was the drink of the people rather as more accessible and less expensive to produce. The beer is now the most consumed alcoholic beverage in the world.
It was Louis Prud'homme, who in 1642 is considered the first professional brewer in New France, although it was preceded by others in the manufacture of craft beer to approximate revenue. Whether the Jesuits cosmic clothing in their bar Sillery, or Louis Hébert, thanks to its hardware Apothecary, cosmic clothing all produced beer using local ingredients and water, or yeast, spices or spruce root (yes, spruce beer was once a real ale). Later a little more, in 1668, Intendant Jean Talon founded the first commercial brewery vocation in Quebec City; Despite big ambitions, it will close its doors ten years later. Attributed to the competition of ciders, wines and other alcoholic beverages imported from Europe, the lack of enthusiasm of the population of New France to local breweries.
It was not until the arrival of the English and the beginning of industrialization to see the emergence of genuine commercial breweries. Indeed, the most famous brewery is undoubtedly one founded cosmic clothing in 1785 in Montreal by Briton John Molson. This brewery has become over time a major icon in the Montreal landscape by its imposing building located at Pied-du-Courant, but also through his involvement in various fields, especially in hockey. Molson Coors-(the two companies cosmic clothing merged in 2005) is today one of the largest brewers and beer distributors in the world. cosmic clothing
Quebec beer scene has long been monopolized by essentially three large industrial breweries or Molson, Labatt and O'Keefe. These three breweries controlled until the late 1970s, no less than 99.9 percent of the beer market in Quebec. By cons, from the 1980s, craft brewers have emerged in the province, they have the distinction of being close to the community in which they operate, but also to provide more refined product to say that micro-breweries announce somehow return the "true taste", as opposed to standardized and bland taste that offer large breweries.
In Quebec, the recent emergence of a multitude of micro-breweries in a context of recovery of local ingredients. cosmic clothing Thus since the founding in 1982 of the first modern microbrewery or brewery Massawippi North Hatley (Unibroue since 1990), Quebec are thirty years later, eighty-four dispersed throughout the almost all administrative regions of the province. This phenomenon is related to a desire on the part of citizens, whether at a remote area or an urban area, to reclaim the production of the products they consume. In this sense, micro-breweries play an important role in the economic and cultural development of the environment where they take place, to bring up a powerful sense of local people towards them.
According to statistics from the Ministry of Economic Development, Innovation and Export (MDEIE), the market share of Quebec microbreweries amounted in 2010 to 6.7% marc