Here’s the Brewers Association’s official response to today’s news that the FDA will rule alcoholic drinks with caffeine added as unsafe. The press release below mentions only the TTB, not the FDA, by name. The TTB is the regulatory agency for alcohol in the U.S. and will ultimately enforce any rulings that come down on this subject. I’m really not sure whether this is just a precaution or if this is something that craft beer drinkers have to worry about…anyway, here is the release that was sent out in the last hour or so.
(Boulder, CO) – The Brewers Association announces today that it will formally petition the U.S. Tax and Trade Bureau (TTB) to conduct rulemaking on alcoholic energy drinks.
The petition seeks to disallow synthetic and pure caffeine additions to alcohol beverages, but allow incidental caffeine from ingredients that have a long tradition in brewing, such as coffee, chocolate and tea. The petition seeks to clarify that coffee, chocolate, herbs, spices, seeds and fruit are ingredients that should remain available to brewers to make beers for responsible enjoyment by beer drinkers.
Certain alcoholic energy drinks have received significant negative attention from state attorneys general, public health groups and concerned citizens. Many states are taking action this fall before the federal government has responded, leaving a patchwork of different regulatory wording, all with the same intention. The goal of this federal petition is to provide a clear and consistent national standard to assist state-based rulemaking under the 21st Amendment. This standard would remove the products of concern from shelves without creating unintended damage to the hundreds of craft brewers who, for many years, have been using traditional ingredients like coffee, tea and chocolate to responsibly craft interesting and flavorful beers.
Brewers Association President Charlie Papazian stated, “Responsible brewers have successfully used coffee, chocolate and tea to add interesting flavor and complexity to their beers for decades. In fact, the Aztecs brewed a corn, honey and chili-based beer that contained cocoa. Many craft brewers build on these traditions today using coffee, tea and chocolate. On the other hand, the addition of artificial caffeine not from a natural ingredient source has no heritage or tradition in brewing. We support a ban on the direct addition of caffeine.” The Brewers Association invites TTB to open up public comment and rulemaking on whether these products are appropriate for responsible consumption.
What about moonshot? I mean what about adding peanuts to beer, the kids might have an allergic reaction! What about, god forbid, car-bombing your guinnes or harp? I think Four Loko changing their recipe is obvious http://beerpulse.com/2010/11/four-loko-going-caffeine-free-says-drinkmaker/, they are small, but if drinking age folks want certain things in their beverage then they should have it. They Artificially put caffeine in coca-cola for god sakes.
I need my BBC Coffeehaus Porter
Thanks for the comment, Jeff. Actually, Phusion Projects is among the top dozen “beer” vendors according to industry figures & they’ve had a massive year -> http://twitter.com/#!/beersage/status/2542184624562176
I’m sorry Brewers Association, but I think you move back and forth too much. On one hand, you talk about the traditional values of brewing very often. Then you brag about representing the most innovative brewers in the world. Yet when you talk about protecting the use of atypical ingredients in beer, you call it traditional. While their may be history of these ingredients, it is not historical to add chocolate or chili pepper or any such ingredient to a hops and barley beverage. What’s so exciting about these beers is THAT THEY ARE INNOVATIVE. And saying that you only support tradition in this statement, you are only hurting innovation. Say you don’t like four loko because it’s a sugary alcohol vehicle. Not because adding purified caffine to be is a non-traditional process. Recognize tradition, but support and appreciate the innovation that makes the American Beer Scene the best in the world!