PDA

View Full Version : Brewers Association seeks to clarify beer-caffeine rules


mwedge
11-17-2010, 08:13 AM
The Brewers Association has announced that it will formally petition the U.S. Tax and Trade Bureau (TTB) to “conduct rulemaking on alcoholic energy drinks.”

The goal would be to allow brewers to continue to use ingredients such as coffee and chocolate in making beer.

The association’s action comes at the same time that U.S Senator Charles E. Schumer announced that the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) will rule that caffeine is an unsafe food additive to alcoholic beverages, effectively making products such as Four Loko, Joose, and others like them, prohibited for sale in the United States. Additionally, the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) plans to notify manufacturers that they are engaged in the potential illegal marketing of unsafe alcoholic drinks.

The Brewers Association states its 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.”

It adds, “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 said, “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.”

http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/RealbeercomBeerTherapy/~4/YZ3-fVm0pIY

More... (http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/RealbeercomBeerTherapy/~3/YZ3-fVm0pIY/)

kilted-txn
11-17-2010, 08:33 AM
I am glad someone has already thought of this because I didn't even think about all of the Breakfast Stouts we would lose out on because it has naturally occurring caffeine from the chocolate & coffee.

Hopefully who ever gets the petition is a craft beer lover.

I wonder how the petition & the announcement happened to come out on the same day....:eek: conspiracy theorist put on your tin foil hats your minds are being scanned.

Clint
11-17-2010, 10:15 AM
"We support a ban on the direct addition of caffeine.”

Charlie would be better off supporting principals of protected liberty and the use of legal products... the baby typically goes out with the bath water otherwise.

I'm waiting for them to create some stupid liberty crushing "protective" reg and then piss everyone off when an irish-coffee is no-longer legal

yeah guvment

:rolleyes:

BeerSawks
11-17-2010, 11:08 AM
I agree with Clint.

They are wanting to blame the products, however stupid they are, but the issue is the binge drinking college kids. It's just a fad and if they can't drink these then they will find something else to get trashed on. It's no different that vodka and Redbull.

It's not anymore unsafe than drinking anything else with alcohol. What's next are they going to start banning high gravity beers.

j00thInAsia
11-17-2010, 11:28 AM
It's not anymore unsafe than drinking anything else with alcohol. What's next are they going to start banning high gravity beers.

Don't give them ideas...

Sadly, I think a number of states do have ABV limits.