Your cart is currently empty!

Steven Coulson
Steven has been drinking beers, wines and spirits for decades and has a propensity to go about them at length after a few drinks.
Latest Posts
- Dissecting The Beer Menu – An Irish Pub & Layered Brews
- Has anyone else noticed that every “limited release” somehow stays on shelves for months?
- Dissecting The Beer Menu – An Irish Pub & Layered Brews
- Headed to Asheville – looking for top breweries to get German style in cans / bottles
- Does anyone else feel guilty drinking beer alone because it’s supposed to be a social experience?
Categories
Tags
Social Links

The Illusion of Limited Releases: Are Breweries Overplaying Their Hand?
Have you ever strolled through a bottle shop and noticed that many products marketed as “limited releases” linger on the shelves for weeks, if not months? It feels like a common trend that raises eyebrows among avid craft beer enthusiasts.
Just yesterday, I popped into my local bottle shop and spotted a so-called “extremely limited” barrel-aged stout that has been sitting there since October. The display proudly declared, “only 500 cases produced,” yet the reality is that many consumers seem uninterested in a $25 beer that tastes like countless others in the bourbon barrel stout category.
In the past, staples like KBS (Kentucky Breakfast Stout) and BCBS (Bourbon County Brand Stout) would fly off the shelves, often with enthusiasts braving long lines for a taste. Nowadays, it’s a stark contrast; I can walk into a well-stocked shop and casually pick up vintage 2020 BCBS as if I were grabbing a six-pack of a mass-produced lager. The sheer volume of these so-called “limited” brews being released means that a significant portion fails to find a home before reaching their “drink by” dates.
This apparent marketing tactic of artificial scarcity is becoming somewhat laughable.
As a dedicated beer lover, I’m growing weary of shelling out premium prices for beers that are less exclusive than some widely-available brews. It’s time for breweries to either genuinely limit their production or stop cloaking their contact-brewed, barrel-aged creations in a veil of false exclusivity. After all, authenticity is what truly resonates with consumers. If something is marketed as rare, it should genuinely be hard to find. Let’s hope the craft beer industry can return to its roots, celebrating rarity in a way that feels meaningful instead of manufactured.