Craft brewer launches bottles for retail

Toronto specialty on-premise brewer parlays recent developments in filling, capping and labeling machines to install a bottling line in its very own basement.

Just ahead of the labeler, air knives (above) dry the bottles to make them more receptive to the labels. The rotary cold-glue l
Just ahead of the labeler, air knives (above) dry the bottles to make them more receptive to the labels. The rotary cold-glue l

Beer lovers of Ontario have enjoyed Amsterdam Brewing Co.'s lagers and ales for years, but only in restaurants and taverns. That's because Amsterdam offered its brews solely in kegs. But that all changed last July when the Toronto craft brewer installed its very own bottling line and started selling 341-mL (11.53 oz) bottles of beer through Ontario's beer retailing system, i.e., outlets operated by either the Liquor Control Board of Ontario or by Brewers Retail, Inc.

"The packaging line is running beautifully," says head brewer Joel Manning. "Everyone is delighted at how smoothly the transition has gone."

No one is more delighted than Manning himself. When it comes to suppliers of automatic equipment designed for beer in modest volumes, the options are limited. "Once you get below one hundred bottles per minute, there aren't a lot of beer fillers out there," he adds.

Manning evaluated three sources of turnkey lines and visited a commercial installation of each. In the end, he selected Criveller Co. (Niagara Falls, Ontario, Canada). He's not disappointed. "We haven't had them in here since they left after the installation," he says.

Criveller didn't manufacture the equipment; instead, the company represents the Italian manufacturers (Fimer, Bertolasso, Oxe) that did. According to company partner Bruno Criveller, the emergence of machinery that meets the needs of small brewers is welcome.

"What small brewing operations often used to do is install a wine-filling system and adapt it to beer," says Criveller. "But such equipment isn't really designed for beer. It's not as acidic as wine, so with beer you need a machine that's more readily sanitized. Beer requires proper fobbing devices, too, so you can minimize residual oxygen in the headspace before applying the crown." The "fobbing" Criveller refers to is the practice of injecting a narrow stream of high-pressure filtered water into the filled bottle so that rising foam will drive out ambient atmosphere from the head space.

Filling at 40/min

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