Roughly  three years ago -- long before The Buzz existed -- future correspondent  and all-around good guy Wes Eaton put a call in to craft beer  ambassador Sam Calagione of Dogfish Head. The resulting interview first  appeared in the May, 2008 issue of Wide-Eyed, an arts and music magazine  published in California. The interview is reprinted here (with  permission) for the benefit of our loyal readers, the overwhelming  majority of whom do not live in California and, as a result, probably  missed it the first time around.
Editor's Note:  Some may question the wisdom in posting a Dogfish interview when so few  of their beers are available at Siciliano's (due to complicated  distribution issues). To that we say, there is no spoon. Enjoy the interview! 
In   1993 Sam Calagione homebrewed his first batch of beer. The craft beer  scene at the time was limited and  underground; Calagione was about to  help change that. He looked around,  checked to see which way the mass  beer trends were flowing, and decided  to swim upstream. No light lagers  for Dogfish. Instead, to distinguish his creations, Calagione opted   for candied fruits, old-world spices, continuous hopping regiments and   parameter-shattering abv’s. Two years after  his first homebrew,  Calagione opened Dogfish Head Brewings and Eats in Rehobath Beach,  Delaware. Back  then he brewed ten gallons batches, an output more in  line with homebrewers than commercial breweries, and one positively  dwarfed by current operations.
In the spring of 2008,  Dogfish Head invaded California with a line-up of three big beers: 90  Minute IPA, a continuously hopped Imperial IPA; Midas Touch, a honey-  and  saffron-flavored, Muscat grape- and barley-based elixir inspired by  the ancients; and Palo Santo Marron, a strong Brown Ale aged in massive  (and expensive) Paraguayan wooden  vats. As evident below,  Calagione’s  Yankee ingenuity and rugged individualism epitomizes  America’s artisan  food and craft brewing cultures.   
Wes Eaton:  Would you give us some back story to your experimentation with  non-traditional ingredients with some culinary insight?
Sam  Calagione: Sure. When we opened in 1995 we were the smallest  commercial  brewery in America. At that time there were 800 US  breweries. I  researched what I wanted to do, I was just kind of a  manically obsessed  home brewer and back in my apartment in Manhattan I  was creating beers  while I was writing my business plan. I was always  trying to make beers  like nothing that was out there. Then, just as  now, the domestic beer  landscape was dominated by three breweries:  Miller, Coors and Bud, and  they’re all essentially making very slight  variations of the exact same  product: a light lager beer. So I knew  from the get-go I had no interest  in brewing those kinds of beers.  That’s when the concept of  off-centered ales for off-centered people  came about. Basically, we’re  never going to appeal to the majority of  people out there, so let’s just  have fun and brew for ourselves, and  hopefully there’ll be a growing  community of hard-core beer folk that  want to explore the outer-limit of  what beer can be. We opened our  restaurant with a tiny, inefficient,  ten-gallon brewery, and we had to  brew two, three times a day, that  small scale allowed me to experiment  without too much risk. I’d go into  the kitchen of the restaurant and  take some coffee or raisins or  licorice root and incorporate them into  that day’s brew. Our reputation  for brewing exotic brews came from  those humble beginnings. 
Eaton:  Talk about the  relationship between wine and beer. What do you want  people new to  this crossroads in alcoholic beverages to understand? 
Calagione:   Wine culture is further evolved than beer culture in America. The   average consumer understands that an amazing bottle of Merlot can   justifiably cost three times as much as a crappy bottle. That same   consumer is just now beginning to understand that an amazing four-pack   of wood-aged, 12% abv beer, fermented with organic brown sugar, as is  the  case with Palo Santo Marron, can still be a great value at three  times  the price of a six-pack of generic lager. The West Coast is  recognized  as the premier wine region in America and the average  consumer in that  region is more open to the idea of approaching beer  with the same  respect. 
Eaton: How do you think your distinct beers will be accepted here in California?   
Calagione:   It actually helps us that the wine culture is so evolved on the West   Coast because our beers are very wine-like in their flavor profiles,   alcohol content and their food compatibility. 
Eaton:  You’re  known to many as a poet, builder, brewer, filmmaker and writer –  was  brewing the key to the actualization of your passions? How do you  define  yourself?
Calagione: I’m the brewer  first; the rest of the stuff  is just hobbies. I mean for me they all  kind of augment the making and  the selling of beer. I write the books  as educational programs and  components which teach people how to brew  and get comfortable with  drinking beers that have non-traditional  ingredients. I try to teach  people just what Dogfish is, that’s sort of  what the first book is about  (Brewing Up a Business), and then 
He Said Beer She Said Wine  is all  about making wine people comfortable appreciating and  understanding good  beer in the context of food and beer people  understand wine in the  context of food.
Eaton: I  read Raison D’Etre was designed as a  beverage that would be the  ultimate complement to a steak dinner. Is  food pairing always this  important at Dogfish?   
Calagione:  Yeah. Right  from the beginning we knew that we were going to be brewing  beers that  were a lot closer to wine in alcohol content, complexity and  food  compatibility. The best way to highlight that was to pay careful   attention to what foods we recommended pairing with each of these beers.   Since we opened as a restaurant brewery, we also had the ability to   feature on our menu the idea that for every great food item there is a   perfect beer match. A lot of times, like in the case of the Raison   D’Etre, we were actually designing beers backwards from what would be   the ideal partner in the food world. 
Eaton:  Beyond beer, Dogfish  distills distinct spirits which stress the  definition even of “Extreme  Beer.” Are these natural evolutions of  continued fermentation  exploration or intentional directions for  Dogfish?
Calagione: We  use our mission  statement as a dynamic compass. If you pull out the word  “ale” and put  in “distilled spirits” it still rings true. We’re not  doing what the  big distilleries do; we’re following our own path as we  do in our  brewery. In the case of a distillery product like our Brown  Honey Rum,  (which is) aged on honey while it sits in oak, which is very  unique,  it’s perfectly in keeping with our vision. Our distillery is  1/1000th  the size of our brewery, but it’s still a fun little project  that we  think adds vibrancy to what Dogfish Head is all about.
Eaton:   Dogfish is also known for its historical and ancient ales like Midas   Touch and Chateau Jiahu, talk about these experiences and recipes. 
Calagione:   Certainly the majority of our recipes come from our own inspiration,  we  think about which unique ingredients will work in a beer that have   never been used before. But we sort of stumbled into being this   specialty brewery for ancient beverages, and that’s right up our alley.   (Ancient recipe beers) are like liquid time capsules. They allow people   to come face-to-face with the history of civilization, not just the   history of fermented beverages. In the case of our Chateau Jiahu, it’s   got a 9,000 year pedigree and is recognized as the oldest known  fermented  beverage. This also silences the naysayers about the validity  of  “extreme brewing” because it shows that at the beginning of  civilization  people were making really exotic, multi-fermentation sugar  source  beverages to celebrate special occasions. Therefore, Chateau  Jiahu has  sake yeast, sake rice, and hawthorn fruit. Midas Touch has  honey, grapes  and saffron. We’re doing another ancient ale with the  oldest known  chocolate discovered in Central America. Before humans  were eating  chocolate they were drinking it as a fermented beverage.  The beer  (called Theo Broma) therefore has Chilean cocoa nibs, cocoa  powder and  tree seeds and is coming out in August. 
Eaton:  There is a  culture clash within the brewing and drinking community  over the  ambiguously termed "Extreme Beers". Talk about your role in  formulating  these out-of-bounds beers. When you began brewing high  gravity, sugar-  and spice-infused exotic brews, did you know you were  taking part in the  next movement of the American Craft Beer Revolution?
Sam  Calagione:  I don’t think it was anything that conscious. Our motto of   off-centered ales for off-centered people wasn’t really derivative of   anything of the mid-nineties. Nobody was focused on strong, exotic beers   when we started. We were considered sort of side-show freaks and black   sheep, like what we were doing was novelty. But again, as beer culture   started to evolve and expand, this niche within the greater craft   brewing niche became extreme brewing. While we didn’t come up with that   term for it, [extreme brewing] was all that Dogfish did since the day  we  opened. Our brewery was recognized as a pioneer within that niche. 
I   don’t think there’s that much backlash (against extreme beer.) There   are a few isolated brewers who don’t like the term, but at the end of   the day it’s not really up to us to give it a name, it’s up to the   consumer. It’s sort of an elitist position to rebuff extreme brewing   because the people have spoken and they want these kinds of beers. Look   at the growth of breweries like Dogfish, Russian River, or Allagash,  who  brew these exciting and unique beers which people really enjoy.  Beer is  subjective. No brewer should be so elitist as to determine for  people  what they should be drinking.
Eaton:  Nine years ago the storied  “Beer Hunter” Michael Jackson and you spent a  day together. Raisin  D’Etre, Chicory, Shelter Pale and Immort Ale were  already on your menu  and a new 30-bbl brew house was being  constructed. Talk about the  changes you have seen in our beer culture  since then and your  contribution to this dynamic enclave.
Calagione:  In that era,  Immort Ale was among the first wood-aged beers and it was  [also] exotic, incorporating maple syrup, peat-smoked  barley and  vanilla beans. Frankly, we could barely give it away. Nobody  was  willing to pay $13.00 for a six-pack of beer, so we had a real  tough  time. We started as the smallest brewery, today we’re one of the   fastest growing breweries, and I think the 35th biggest brewery in the   country out of 1400. While I’m proud of all that growth, what I’m most   proud of is that we never discounted or dumbed-down our beers in order   to achieve growth. That shows that while we’ve been very lucky to be   able to stick to our original mission and achieve this incredible   growth, it’s really indicative of how far the average beer consumer’s   I.Q., experimentation and interest level has come. 
Eaton:  As you  and Dogfish Head redefine the term “beer”, do you find the  conventional  terminology frustrating or do you see it as a necessary  challenge?
Calagione:  Frustrating. Not because  of a few people who take shots at extreme beer  and want things to be  like they were 100 years ago, but because our  government is very  restrictive in the licensing process. When we go to  get a beer label  approved or new beer brand that has a non-traditional  ingredient they  make you go through a million steps. They’ve very  subjective on their  definitions. For instance, they will not let us call  the Theo Broma an  ale, even though it’s fermented with ale yeast.  Because of all the  special ingredients we need to call it a “malt  beverage”. That  undermines what we’re doing. “Malt beverage” sounds very  generic  compared to “ale”. The bureaucratic hoops that we have to jump  through  just to present these unique beers are stifling. 
Eaton: What really makes a craft beer craft beer?
Calagione:   Three things: craft beer comes from an independent brewery with no   ownership from a big brewery and is made by a traditional brewery which   uses barley or exotic, more expensive and flavorful sugars and not the   cheap rice and corn that the big breweries use. Also it has to come  from  a small brewery, defined by the Brewer’s Association as less than  two  million barrels (annual production). The consumer wants to know  where  their beer is made in the same way that they want to support  their local  coffee roaster, local baking company and to buy locally.  The big  breweries are seeing the small craft breweries growth and that  that’s  where the excitement in the beer industry is. They’re trying to  co-opt  that growth and in essence act as culture vultures and try to  confuse  the consumer as to what real craft beer is.  
Palo  Santo Marron  is an example of what Dogfish Head is all about. There’s  no precedent  for it. All other breweries are aging beers on oak, kind  of the go-to  wood of the beverage industry for malt whiskey, wine or  beer. We do some  beers in oak, but we found this really exotic wood  from Paraguay. A  high-end flooring salesman brought us some samples and  we did a test  batch and aged some beer on it. It has really high resin  content and the  alcohol, which acts as a solvent, strips the natural  oils from the wood  and we found that it imparted this amazing,  unparalleled, caramel,  vanilla character to the beer. So we went for  it, went all out, and  built the biggest wooden brewing vessel made in  America since before  prohibition out of this exotic wood. Each tank  that we built cost  $110,000. The return on the investment in this tank  in measured in  decades not even years, but we’re a private company we  don’t give a  shit. We’re not being held to investors to make more  profits every  quarter. This is a labor of love. While this is a very  expensive  project, it’s one that we believe enhances what our company  is all  about. Will it ever sell as well as 60 Minute I.P.A. or Raison  D’Etre?  Probably not, but we don’t care; it’s just another beer that  we’re  excited to drink and we’re glad people are excited to try it as  well.                     
Eaton: I’m excited; I’ll be drinking that one tonight.
Former Siciliano's employee Weston  Eaton is  currently pursuing a PhD  in Sociology at Michigan State  University. He  lives with his wife and  dog in Grand Rapids, MI, where once upon a  time Dogfish was not the rarity it is today.