Former Korbel Staffer Finds a Second Career in Beer
Douglas Garrison participating in his first Great American Beer Festival competition
A longtime Colorado homebrewer and avid beer fan, Douglas Garrison (MA 鈥12) has attended the听听(GABF) many times in the past.
And though he won鈥檛 be at this year鈥檚 event 鈥 which runs Oct. 5鈥7 at the Colorado Convention Center in downtown Denver 鈥 it will be the first time that Garrison, now a brewer at听听in Lakeland, Fla., has created a beer that will be in official competition at the GABF.
鈥淚t鈥檚 kind of surreal,鈥 he says. 鈥淚鈥檝e entered my own beers in homebrewing competitions before, but to think that I will have an actual imprint on beers that will be judged by the best brewers and judges of beer in the country is really special. That鈥檚 pretty awesome.鈥
And if one of his beers were to win a prestigious GABF medal?
鈥淚 would lose my mind,鈥 he says. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 even want to think about that. That鈥檇 be something else.鈥
Garrison鈥檚 road to the beer industry took a detour through 成人AV鈥檚听Josef Korbel School of International Studies, where he was first a graduate student, then a staffer at the school鈥檚听Center for Middle East Studies. Garrison thought he was set for a career in international relations, but when he and his wife had their first child and decided to move to Florida to be closer to family, things changed.
鈥淭he realization that an academic lifestyle, with field work, with language training, the general lack of a personal life 鈥 it dawned on me that it wasn鈥檛 very conducive to being a family man, so to speak,鈥 Garrison says. 鈥淚t was going to be really, really tough to balance work and family.鈥
So Garrison, an avid homebrewer since his sophomore year at Colorado College, set his sights on suds. He apprenticed at a pair of Denver breweries 鈥 including the 成人AV-adjacent Fermaentra 鈥攂efore landing a job in Brew Hub鈥檚 packaging department.
鈥淚t gave me some exposure to the industry. It gave me a taste for what I could expect so I wasn鈥檛 walking into the industry blind,鈥 he says. From packaging he worked his way up: canning, cleaning tanks, then carbonating, fermenting and flavor-treating beer. 鈥淲e have a centrifuge for filtration, and I ran that for a couple months until I finally got the call up to the big leagues, so to speak 鈥 to actually get on deck and start brewing. I got the full tour of the brewing industry.鈥
Working at small local breweries was just a warmup for Brew Hub, whose main business is contract brewing for existing regional breweries looking to expand their output as they grow their markets. As Brew Hub鈥檚 website explains it, the process 鈥渁llows craft brewers to not only brew their beer to [their] exact specifications 鈥 but also to package and distribute from the Brew Hub brewery and make their beer available for export to national and international markets. This concept allows craft brewers to expand their distribution without the overhead costs of building a new brewery, storing or transporting product.鈥
In other words, when they aren鈥檛 working on Brew Hub鈥檚 own creations 鈥 four of which they are bringing to this year鈥檚 GABF 鈥 Garrison and the company鈥檚 three other brewers are making beer for such labels as Cigar City Brewing, Orange Blossom Pilsner, Green Man, MIA Beer Co., Brew Bus and Toppling Goliath.
鈥淲e鈥檒l take their brands, their recipes, scale them up and then work with them to fine-tune and streamline those recipes,鈥 Garrison says. 鈥淔ind where they can save money or get better utilization out of different hops, better efficiency out of a different grain, that kind of thing.鈥
And while Garrison hopes to open his own brewery at some point, for now he sees Brew Hub as the perfect training ground.
鈥淵ou really can鈥檛 get bored. You鈥檙e brewing different beers every day,鈥 he says. 鈥淲e manage something along the order of 15 yeast strains 鈥 which for a normal brewery is totally unthinkable 鈥 17 partners and between 30 and 40 unique brands that we brew. So it keeps it interesting. It鈥檚 something new every day, and it really helps you hone your craft. Brewing everything from a pilsner to a Russian imperial stout, you see it all.鈥

