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Old 01-03-2004, 12:46 PM
reeb reeb is offline
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Dont think I will buy any !!!!









Low-carb beer biggest thing in breweries since light beer


Major labels join battle of the bulge


By Judy Lin
Associated Press

Friday, January 02, 2004


PITTSBURGH -- Cutting calories used to be enough for U.S. beer makers to lure Americans watching their waistlines.

Now they have to count carbs, too. But they're not complaining.

Not since Miller made light beer socially acceptable with its "tastes great, less filling" campaign has the beer industry been as excited as it is now about a growing line of low-carbohydrate beers.

"It's been the most successful new product since light beer," said Benj Steinman, editor of Beer Marketers Insight. "This is a phenomenon and no one really knows how high is high, but no one really knows when it's going to be over."

Michelob Ultra, the first major brand in the low-carb beer niche, now has a 2.1 percent share of supermarket beer sales, according to its brewer, Anheuser-Busch Inc. Rolling Rock recently celebrated the shipment of 1 million cases of Rock Green Light in less than three months after its launch. In March, Coors Brewing Co. plans to enter the low-carb market with Aspen Edge in 10 states.

Although it's still too early to tell how much of a market share the low-carb beer sector will claim, analysts say there are already more than a dozen low-carb beers competing for shelf space, and more brewers plan to join the trend.

"If I were guessing, every major brewery probably had a recipe they were testing," said Julie Bradford, editor of All About Beer magazine.

Industry analysts, however, are divided about the staying power of low-carb beer. Bradford predicts the low-carb beer sector will grow mainly at the expense of the light beer sector.

The industry generally recognizes light beers as having low calorie counts; low-carb beers are touted as having fewer carbohydrates. Beer experts say half the estimated $60 billion to $70 billion domestic beer market is from light beer sales.

The beer battle may also confuse consumers as companies compete over which brand of beer has the fewest carbs. Rock Green Light has 2.6 grams of carbohydrates and 91 calories. Michelob Ultra advertises 2.6 grams of carbohydrates and 95 calories.

Companies are catering to beer drinkers like Bill Trogler, a 44-year-old police detective who washed down a plate of fried clam strips with a glass of regional brew I.C. Light during the lunch rush in downtown Pittsburgh.

"It tastes good. I drink light to try to keep my weight down," Trogler said. I.C. Light is made by Pittsburgh Brewing Co., maker of Iron City beer.

At Primanti Bros. sandwich shop, engineer Ed Gourley, 34, said Yuengling, a regional lager, is his beer of choice but he's open to the idea of low-carb beers since shedding 20 pounds since August.

"I think if it'll keep the fat off me, that'd be great," Gourley said.

Low-carb beer makers are looking for specific market segments to target, such as female drinkers with active lifestyles. Michelob Ultra will become the official beer of the LPGA Tour next year.

And instead of settling for Rolling Rock's customer core ? men ages 24-29 ? Rock Green Light hopes to appeal to the health-conscious, said Jon Genese, director of marketing for Rock Green Light. The beer is being advertised in men's lifestyle magazines, and Labatt USA, which owns Rolling Rock maker Latrobe Brewing Co., will air national television commercials for Rock Green Light in February.

"We felt in order for us to make an impact and to be able to survive, we needed to be quick to market, and we thought it was a very exciting and hot consumer trend," Genese said.

Bradford said it was probably a smart move for Labatt to invest its advertising dollars on Rock Green Light instead of also trying to compete in the light beer sector with its light beer, Rolling Rock Light.

Along with gaining a bigger share of the market, Anheuser-Busch announced plans recently to offer 12-ounce cans of Michelob Ultra in early January, in addition to the bottles already in stores. Coors Brewing Co. hopes to take Aspen Edge nationwide by the end of the year. And Miller Brewing Co. has remarketed Miller Lite as a low-carb, low-calorie beer in television, radio and print ads.

Bradford said one drawback to the low-carb trend is the misconception that beers are high in calories. She says the average 12-ounce beer contains 150 calories, compared to just 40 calories less for light beers.

"My personal view is drink a full-flavor beer and skip the nachos," Bradford said.













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  #2  
Old 01-03-2004, 05:04 PM
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MORTARDUDE MORTARDUDE is offline
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Is it just me....for most of us in the 55 - 65 age range, we grew up before things got so chemically changed..For example tobacco, soft drinks, beer, food...and a bunch of other stuff...try to remember back when tobacco was dried right from the leaf with no chemical additives..frsh coffee beans were put in bags in the supermarket ( love that aroma !! ), soft drinks were sweetened with real sugar ( no aspartame, saccharin, splenda, saccarin ..yuck !!! )...beer was just beer ( and good ! ) and not bullshit, food was just like the food that my grandparents ate on their farm and on and on...on !

I am disgusted with the chemical industry and the way things have changed...

Is it just me ?

Larry
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Old 01-04-2004, 05:08 AM
reeb reeb is offline
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Mort,

NOPE, it is just not you.

My family has lived for years and years, and most pass away in their late 70 or early 80s, and we were around second hand smoke, and smoke the cigs, drink the real beer, eat the fatty foods, have eggs, even use alot of salt in our cooiking.

I pay attention to my home town paper in Ohio, and the ones that are doing all these new fangles shit, like jogging, not smoking, staying away from McDonalds, or the Outback, and doing their daily pills are dying left and right at the ages of 50 to 60.

I will keep on doing my life the way I see it fit, just like the salt deal, heck I put some in my beer every once in wahile ( we had to do them salt pills in Nam, so why not here.

But the low carb beer ( give me some shine ) instead of that crap.

Heck I bet I will outlast Humper.....

enough.........
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