In the early days, drinking craft beer was almost counter-cultural. Rigberg tells me, “It was like a cult if you were drinking really good beer.” Hummel remembers scrutiny from a neighbor who commented, “‘You keep drinking that orange beer.’ Because I’d have a glass and it wasn’t yellow.” It wasn’t that Americans weren’t drinking beer, drinking craft beer was simply “other.”
The difficulty of obtaining the beer, and the cultural stigma of drinking it in public meant that folks like Rigberg and Hummel who were into it, got really into it. If they wanted to enjoy their beer, they had to spend time and energy, all the while enduring strange looks from the run-of-the-mill lager drinker. This kind of hard-nosed approach to craft beer pushed it forward into American popular culture, and, to some degree, the two of them still stand by that approach.
For Rigberg, especially, craft beer has been a space where experience is earned and not always respected. She explains, “This beer industry simply grew on the strength of men of George [Hummel]’s generation drinking that beer. It was really a guy thing back then. That’s the way it grew exponentially.”
Indeed, Rigberg can speak to an even broader history of women in brewing. “The women used to be the brewers before the Industrial Revolution, and men took over because there was power and money in it. They took it out of the house.” Her experience in craft beer has compounded the “other” of early craft beer with the biases of the emerging male-dominated craft world.
Hummel comments, “She used to have trouble working the counter if I wasn’t around, because guys would come in and think, ‘What does the chick know?’ I would say, ‘Dude, if you’re doing a triple decoction, all grain pilsner, she probably doesn’t want to talk to you.’” Rigberg finishes the thought, “Because you’re wasting your time on the scale that you’re doing it.” The technical side of this back and forth is way above my head, but that’s the point–Rigberg knows more than almost anyone.
Of course, sexism in the world of craft beer is not an issue of the past, but the fact that Rigberg developed her career and expertise in a doubly hostile environment speaks to the level of dedication she has had towards the beverage.
In other words, craft beer has always been a creative and flavorful space, but pioneers like Rigberg and Hummel had to fight to build that space up for everyone else. For this reason, their concerns over the present state of craft beer are valid. They don’t want their hard work to go to waste.