Isle Brewers Guild Hires Leadership Team for New Pawtucket Brewery
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Isle Brewers Guild Hires Leadership Team for New Pawtucket Brewery
The new IBG Leadership TeamCraft beer cooperative Isle Brewers Guild (IBG) has hired new members of its brewing team to lead operations at the company’s brewery opening in Pawtucket in 2017.
The new hires are:
Jack Streich, 16+ years of brewing industry experience, has been named partner & Vice President of Brewing Operations
Jodi Andrews, a former brewer at Boston Beer Works and most recently Head Brewer at Jersey Girl Brewing Company, was named Cellar and Quality Control Supervisor
Jael Cordero will be IBG’s Packaging Supervisor. He most recently work at Stony Creek Brewery in Connecticut
Ken Hermann, formerly a senior brewer at Harpoon in Boston, will be Brewing Supervisor.
“We are thrilled to welcome this group of established, creative and talented brewers to IBG’s growing team. Jack, Ken, Jodi and Jael each bring unique skill sets to our business, and their endless dedication to their craft will help us serve our brewing partners – and, in turn, beer lovers in Rhode Island and beyond – at the highest level,” said Devin Kelly, co-founder and Managing Partner, Isle Brewers Guild.
The new team will work with IBG’s brewing partners on the development and delivery of their craft portfolio.
To this point, IBG has announced partnerships with Narragansett Brewing Company and Newburyport Brewing Company.
Additional partnerships are expected to be announced in January.
Isle Brewers Guild
Located on a 130,000-square-foot brewing campus at 461 Main Street in Pawtucket, the Guild will include a 100-barrel brewhouse, a tasting room, indoor and outdoor event space, classroom space and corporate offices.
Construction on The Guild started in 2015, and IBG expects the facility to be operational by early 2017.
15 Things You Didn't Know You Could do in New England - 2019
I didn't know I could get a coffee from the original Dunkin Donuts
Head over to Quincy, Mass and grab a coffee and a donut from the first ever Dunkin Donuts which opened in 1950. Coffee cost only ten cents at the time.
While this shop has been renovated many times since 1950, it was retro renovated in 2011 it to make it look like the original.
The shop is located at 543 Southern Artery
There is no drive thru.
PHOTO: Clayton Smalley/Wikipedia
I didn't know I could visit the oldest state capitol building still being Used
The New Hampshire State House, located in Concord is the oldest state capitol building in which legislature still meets in is original chambers.
The building was completed in 1819 with additions made in 1866 and 1910.
Vermont has the most maple trees in all of the New England states and produces more than 500,000 gallons of maple syrup each year.
At Sugarbush Farm, in Woodstock. you can see where and how the maple sap is collected and is turned into maple syrup. Take a walk through the woods to see the sugar maples, see how spouts are drilled and check out the huge evaporator where the sap is boiled.
Be sure to stop in the sampling room before you go.
I Didn't Know I Could See a Core Memory Unit From First Ever Computer
The first computer, Whirlwind I, was developed at MIT during the Cold War era for use by the U.S. Navy.
While the computer itself is in a museum in California, a core memory unit of the computer is on display at the Charles River Museum of Industry in Waltham.
I didn't know I could stay overnight at a lighthouse
Not a hotel, not an inn but a lighthouse.You can stay over night or for an entire week at the Rose Island Lighthouse located at 365 Thames Street in Newport.
I didn't know I could visit Author's Ridge at Sleepy Hollow Cemetery
Head to Concord, Massachusetts and then to the Sleepy Hollow Cemetery where you will find "Author's Ridge."
Author's Ridge marks the final resting place of legendary writers such as Ralph Waldo Emerson, Henry Thoreau, Nathaniel Hawthorne, and Louisa May Alcott.
I didn't know I could visit the site of Paul Revere's midnight ride
Old North Church, located on Salem Street, is Boston's oldest surviving church, and it's also the place where Paul Revere gave the signal that the "British were coming," on April 18, 1775.
Once he gave the signal, two lanterns were raised high, meaning that they were coming by sea to Lexington and Concord, not land.
I didn't know I could tour the Teddy Bear Factory in Vermont
Who doesn't love Teddy Bears? Assuming that you do, plan a trip to Vermont and take a tour of the Vermont Teddy Bear Factory and see how the bears are made.
Tours run seven days a week and children under 12 are FREE. The tours take about an hour and 15 minutes.
I didn't know I could sleep aboard a Maine Windjammer Fleet
Head to Maine and sleep aboard a National Landmark, the Maine Windjammer Fleet.
Go on a three, four or six day cruise and get closer than ever before to wildlife like whales, eagles and porpoises while you see some of the best coastal scenery that North America has to offer.
I didn't know I could stick my hand in a Whales Mouth at Mystic Aquarium
Ever thought about sticking your hand in a whales mouth? Probably not, but you can do so at Mystic Aquarium, located at 55 Coogan Boulevard in Mystic, Connecticut.
This opportunity comes courtesy of Mystic's Baluga encounter program, which runs may through October.
I didn't know I could shop at the L.L. Bean Flagship store at 3 a.m.
Need to do some shopping? Head to Freeport Maine and shop at the L.L. Bean Flagship store whenever you want. Literally, it's open 365 days a year and 24 hours a day.
In fact, the store took the locks off the doors in 1951.
3 a.m., 4 a.m. earlier, later, whenever you want to go, the store is open.
I didn't know I could use a Mercedes Benz convertible at Ocean House
If you are staying at the Ocean House, you have the opportunity to use one of four Mercedes-Benz convertibles, no charge. Once you have the car, you can pretty much do and go where you want to go, Newport, Mystic or other places worth cruising to.
You can take a car from either 7 a.m. to 5 p.m. or 6 p.m. to midnight.
Cars are available on a first come, first serve basis.
I didn't know I could touch two President's tombs in New England
Head to Quincy, Massachusetts and visit the United First Parish church, located on 1306 Hancock street.
The church offers the opportunity to visit the final resting places of John Adams and John Quincy Adams. Venture down into the crypt and touch the tombs.