SARATOGA â The big can be small and the small can be big. In Saratoga, Wyoming, the Steinley Cup is definitely an example of the latter.
Itâs the OG microbrew festival in the state, started when the Cowboy Stateâs craft brewery industry was still just a baby nearly 30 years ago.
âThere were very few breweries in Wyoming at the time,â Mitch Kunce, brewer at The Library Sports Grille and Brewery in Laramie told Cowboy State Daily. âIt was just a handful. My recollection is that it was like Bowman brewing in Laramie, The Library, Snake River and there was a brewery in Cheyenne called Medicine Bow, and maybe the Otto brothers up in Wilson.â
These days, Wyoming has a beer trail that runs through just about every community and includes more than 40 breweries.
But 29 years ago, the bragging rights that came with the Steinley Cup â a play on words with the NHL championship trophy Stanley Cup â were everything. The traveling trophy still has tons of of cachet with the stateâs brewers, even as bigger brewfests have come along.
âWe come up here to Saratoga because itâs the Steinley Cup. Itâs the oldest brewfest in Wyoming,â Eric Kilmer with Freedomâs Edge Brewing in Laramie told Cowboy State Daily. âBut itâs also in a great spot, and itâs just fun coming up here and enjoying the brewfest itself, relaxing in the hotsprings, and just having a good time.â
Competing For The Cup
One reason the Steinley Cup has retained its reputation is that itâs not the easiest competition to win. It takes effort. Brewers canât just bring their most popular beer. They have to brew a specific style for the competition, and that style might not be one they normally make.
This year, for example, the beer style was pilsner, which is not the most common of brews in the Cowboy State.
âI donât make lagers very often,â Kunce told Cowboy State Daily.
Lagers take almost twice as long to make. They also require more yeast and additional refrigeration. A good lager canât be rushed.
Kunce also feels that his water source contains more minerals than is ideal for making lagers.
But he made three lagers over the winter and brought the best one to the competition. He also brought his crowd favorite, a pomegranate blueberry, which doesnât really fit easily into any particular beer style.
Itâs been a frequent Peopleâs Choice winner at the Steinley Cup, though, and itâs brought the brewery notoriety in other ways as well.
âEveryone does pomegranate wheat beers,â Kunce said. âSo I found this pomegranate blueberry from POM Wonderful, and I thought man, the aroma on this is really good. It has that wonderful blueberry aroma.â
So, he gave the juice a try in a beer, and it created a pleasant, refreshing and fruity summer beer. Word of mouth quickly spread and before too long, Kunce was taking a surprise phone call.
âIt was POM Wonderful, and they said, âYeah, we understand youâre using our product in a beer,ââ Kunce said.
At first, he thought he might be in trouble, but that wasnât it at all.
âThey go, âOh no, we think itâs great!â So great, they flew their whole operations department out to me to see how we use it,â Kunce said.
The Gold Standard
Freedomâs Edge won the Steinley Cup the last two years and was really hoping for a three-peat this year with its pilsner. That would have made it one of the only breweries to achieve a hat trick of Steinley Cup wins.
The bragging rights would have been huge, Kilmer told Cowboy State Daily, but the competition was stiff.
Blue Raven Brewery of Cheyenne was among brewers that came over to admire the Steinley Cup during the competition, and razz Freedomâs Edge about who was going to win.
âWeâre taking this home,â Nick Shassetz with Blue Raven told Kilmer with a big smile.
There was a little friendly banter between the colleagues before Kilmer filled up Shassetzâs beer stein with some of Freedomâs Edgeâs pilsner.
âPilsners are a very difficult style of beer, so weâll see what happens,â Kilmer said after Shassetz left.
Ultimately, neither Freedomâs Edge nor Blue Raven took home the trophy and the bragging rights. That went to Altitude Chophouse and Breweryâs team, which consisted of incoming brewer Jobiann Inman and outgoing brewer Sean Minichiello, who is graduating from University of Wyoming and taking a new job.
âThis was very special because itâs the first weâve won together,â Inman told Cowboy State Daily. âThis is our last brewfest together, so it was a beautiful special moment.â
It is actually the second time in a row that Altitudeâs Pilsner has taken home the Steinley Cup, Minichiello told Cowboy State Daily.
âThere have been different styles (of beer) in between,â he said. âAnd yet we win pilsner again. So, itâs definitely a legacy thing.â
Especially if, in five or six years, Inman can come back and win the pilsner again when that style of beer returns to the competitionâs rotation.
âIf you can get the same thing, I will be like, holy crap, I guess Altitude makes the best pilsners,â Minichiello said.
Win or lose, Kilmer said he always really appreciates the Steinley Cup, and how it highlights Wyoming beers. It also gives him the chance to share additional beers with people who attend the festival and get Freedomâs Edgeâs name out there.
He brought a watermelon gose, his ever-popular jalapeño chili beer, the pilsner and an apricot sour.
Over at the Blue Raven tent, brewer and co-owner Kevin Tighe agreed with Kilmerâs summation of the Steinley Cup as a cult classic in Wyoming, even though itâs now one of the smaller brewery competitions in the state.
âWe started our brewery two and a half years ago,â he said. âThe Steinley Cup is just like the coveted thing for Wyoming craft brews, so we come up here every year. Itâs like the best craft beer in Wyoming. Weâve been here every year, and weâre not going to miss one. This is my favorite brewfest ever.â
Contact Renee Jean at Renee@cowboystatedaily.com
Renée Jean can be reached at renee@cowboystatedaily.com.