A Peek Inside Live Beer Auctions
Photo via SkinnerThere’s no disputing the fact that beer culture has grown tremendously in the last decade or so—a growth that has led to long lines to purchase Goose Island Bourbon County variants, pilgrimages to acquire Alchemist’s Heady Topper and a robust black market for Russian River’s Pliny the Younger and other highly rated brews.
Luckily, the buying and selling of rare beer doesn’t have to be a shady, back alley endeavor. A number of websites and even a handful of auction houses are now selling rare beer alongside hard to find wines and spirits. Sites like Beer Auctions and My Beer Collectibles, as well as well-known auctioneers like Skinner in Boston, make hard to find beer available to the highest bidder. Skinner’s “Whiskey, Spirits & Ales” auction in January included a package of mixed bourbon barrel aged beers that sold for over $500. In March, Skinner auctioned a bottle of De Cam/Drie Fonteinen Millennium Geuze (1998) worth $1000.
Boston Chef Jason Bond frequents Skinner’s auctions to purchase beer for the reserve beer program at his Cambridge restaurant Bondir. “The live auctions are a fun time,” says Bond. Along with the auction itself, the events are catered and include wine tastings. “It’s a good place to meet and mingle with people who are into wines, food, and restaurants.”