All-Woman Brewery Brings Craft Beer to Kyrgyzstan
Publisher | EurasiaNet |
Publication Date | 9 December 2016 |
Other Languages / Attachments | Russian |
Cite as | EurasiaNet, All-Woman Brewery Brings Craft Beer to Kyrgyzstan, 9 December 2016, available at: https://www.refworld.org/docid/586380424.html [accessed 23 May 2023] |
Disclaimer | This is not a UNHCR publication. UNHCR is not responsible for, nor does it necessarily endorse, its content. Any views expressed are solely those of the author or publisher and do not necessarily reflect those of UNHCR, the United Nations or its Member States. |
Tucked away in an unlikely spot, wedged between a domino club popular with Turks and a Soviet-built apartment block, is a treat for beer-lovers in Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan's capital.
Save the Ales, a microbrewery set up by a Kyrgyz-Kazakh pair, Aida Musulmankulova and Arzu Kurbanova, may be small and spartan. But what it is doing to Bishkek's drinking culture is little short of revolutionary. While bland imported lagers and watery local brews have long been the norm, Save the Ales is turning out its own homemade craft brews, borrowing from a trend that has established deep roots in the United States and elsewhere.
"Wherever we have traveled, we have always tried good beer," said Musulmankulova.
Around three years ago, she and her partner, Kurbanova, decided to take the plunge.
"We decided to brew it [ourselves]. We learned everything from the Internet. It wasn't as difficult as we thought."
Craft beers tend to be more experimental than classic European-style lagers and pilsners, and are brewed in kegs rather than casks, as is the case with traditional British real ale. And it is not cheap either. Save the Ales charges an eye-watering $2.80 per glass, a sum way out of reach for most people outside the bar's target market of upwardly mobile Bishkek urban types and expats.
Musulmankulova and Kurbanova say they are spending the profits on developing their fledgling business and reinvesting.
The bar has been a stop-and-start affair. Save the Ales first opened in May, quickly gaining a strong following, but it had to shut for almost a month in late September due to an electrical fault. The dedicated aficionados of the pair's high-strength India Pale Ale, stout and fruit-flavored beers finally got their bar back in October.
A noticeable emphasis is placed on providing the real deal at Save the Ales. Bishkek has no shortage of novelty theme pubs that are low on character and often focus their efforts to lure in customers on big TV screens and loud music.
In established markets, craft beer is a big business. According to the US Brewers Association, the sector's retail dollar value in the United States was estimated at $22.3 billion for 2015, representing just over one-fifth of the country's beer market.
Beer is increasingly popular in Kyrgyzstan, but drinkers are prone to quote the old Russian saying "beer without vodka is money [thrown] to the wind." The market share for craft beers is statistically insignificant, but the mission of Save the Ales, where the beer is brewed on-site, for now is to slowly cultivate more refined tastes and habits. Unlike almost all Bishkek beer bars, Save the Ales served no food until recently, although it did finally relent by providing lite bites.
Kurbanova and Musulmankulova say that over half their sales are to expats, although the share of young, urban middle-class barflies is growing. And the contingent of baikes - a term denoting "elder brother" in Kyrgyz, but also synonymous with portly middle-aged men - is creeping up too.
"I remember one time this guy walked into the pub," said Sumsarbek Mamyraliev, who owns a production studio and is a friend of the owners. "He said, 'Get me a beer. Where is the shashlik? Where is the chechel [smoked cheese]? Where are the owners? How do your husbands let you brew beer? This will never work!"
When the new client tried the beer, however, "his attitude changed completely," Mamyraliev recalled.
"He was this patriarch with a gold chain. He said: 'You girls have put all the men in Kyrgyzstan to shame. If you ever have any problems with anyone, just call me.'"
Musulmankulova and Kurbanova for their part have nothing against hiring a male staffer, especially since brewing can sometimes be physically taxing.
"But friends told us we should keep on as we started out," Kurbanova told EurasiaNet.org. "So when we advertised on Facebook for a helper, we asked for a 'pomoshnitsa' (a female assistant), which caused a stir."
Mamyraliev argues the success of the tiny brewery pub points to an emerging start-up culture in Kyrgyzstan, which has Central Asia's most vibrant civil society. According to the World Bank's Doing Business index, Kyrgyzstan remains the easiest country in the region in which to register a new business.
Alan Laing, a British customer who works in international development, agrees the pub is "a hidden gem".
"It's unlike any other bar in Bishkek," he said, referencing various theme pubs in the city. "[Save the Ales] could be a bar in Brooklyn or Shoreditch (in London) before they became uber-trendy. It is simple, unfussy and all about the beer."
Kurbanova attributes their beer's popularity to a maximalist approach to brewing. They spare no expense in bringing in ingredients from Germany and the United States, in contrast to the cost-cutting attitude typical to other breweries.
That has led to invitations to serve beer at arts festivals and music nights, which the pair have accepted, as well as offers from admiring competitors to purchase their beer or even buy out the business completely. So far, they have resisted all such overtures.
"They come to us and say, we want to see your beer in our restaurant," Kurbanova told EurasiaNet.org. "We tell them: join the queue."