Showing posts with label beer shop. Show all posts
Showing posts with label beer shop. Show all posts

Friday, August 10, 2012

Tim Hillman: A Gentleman of Beer

Tim Hillman: 1963-2012


For more than twenty years, Tim Hillman was the beer manager at The Wine Source in the Hampden neighborhood of Baltimore, Maryland, and at its predecessor shop —Rotunda Wine and Spirits.

His career, which began in 1992, neatly coincided with the birth of 'craft' beer in Maryland. Early on, he recognized its staying power, and became a powerful advocate, prominently stocking the beers in his store. Also, early on, he began organizing annual tastings of autumn, winter and Christmas beers; the results would be tabulated and reported by the Baltimore Sun.

Tim died this past Sunday, suddenly, of a heart attack. He was 49.

From the Baltimore Sun:
"Baltimore has lost a pretty big figure from the world of craft beers. He had an encyclopedic knowledge of beers," said Volker Stewart, owner of The Brewer's Art restaurant and brewpub on North Charles Street in Mount Vernon.

"Tim was a pretty super guy who was always very supportive of the craft business as a whole plus the local players, and has been conducting tastings for 20 years," said Hugh Sisson, founder of Heavy Seas Brewing Co. "He was always looking for ways to get people to experience what was in the market. Even though he was a back-of-the-house guy and pretty understated, you could rely on Tim. He knew the market, had his finger on its pulse, and managed to walk both sides of the street with equal respectability."

"Despite his encyclopedic knowledge of beer, Tim was not a beer snob," said Mr. Kasper, retired Baltimore Sun food columnist and author of Baltimore Beers: A Satisfying History of Charm City Brewing. "When asked, he would tell you what he thought about a particular beer, but if you liked it and he did not, he recognized that tastes differ."


Tim Hillman organizes 2008 Christmas beer tasting


A beer guy, yes, but more than that: Tim was a true gentleman.

He had a preternatural sense of calm. When customers were complaining, when salesman were fretting, when deliveries were late or arriving all-at-once, Tim would be the eye of the storm: always polite, multitasking without a curt word, not loquacious, but patiently answering customers' worries and dealing with store crises.

With me, during a time when I was attempting to deal with personal loss, he would always find the time to talk about family. I may have been just a beer salesman to his shop, but he invariably treated me as a friend. I haven't seen Tim since 2008, but those memories remain strong.
"He's our version of Cal Ripken. He came to work every day and never sought the limelight. He's both shy and very unassuming. Still waters run deep," said David Wells, owner of The Wine Source.

Tim was the quintessential behind-the-scenes guy. He quietly provided critical support for Maryland beer during its birth, then again during its difficult adolescence, and most recently during its robust adulthood. Beer will miss that. And, if you knew Tim Hillman as a person, you now mourn the loss of a true gentleman. There aren't many of them.

A Funeral Mass of Christian Burial was offered at St. Mark's Catholic Church in Catonsville, Maryland on Friday morning, 10 August. In lieu of flowers, the family requested that memorial contributions may be made to the LTRC Soccer Program, 121 East Ridgely Road, Lutherville, MD, 21093.

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Thursday, October 16, 2008

List-o-mania and beer shops

Those Top Ten lists.

Late night talk show host David Letterman's lists occasionally are humorous. Other such lists can be ponderous or inane.

Is #10 really better than all those #11s left off the list? What are the criteria? Were all choices researched? What are the qualifications or expertise of those judging?

But in that spirit,Imbibe Magazine, in its September/October issue, listed its top 10 choices for beer shops in the US.

The best ones are not just stores selling beer, they're destinations offering a carefully conceived selection, where beers are handled and stored properly, employees can recite the virtues of every ale on offer [what, no bock beer or other lagers?], and customers can go not only for their favorite suds [overused phrase alert] but for a sense of community and culture [amen].

From this area, two shops made the editors' cuts: Charlottesville, Virginia's Beer Run, and Washington, D.C.'s Chevy Chase Wine and Spirits.

Of relatively new Beer Run, they wrote:
In a college town where kegs of macrobrews may be the typical order of the day, Beer Run sells customers on an amazing lineup of bottled craft beers and serves some great draught ones on the shop's bar side. ...
Of the venerable Chevy Chase:
It stands to reason that a city full of diplomats would have a strong demand for international beers, and Chevy Chase meets that need with 1,200 options from around the world. ...

Larry Robinson of Chevy ChaseAs the editors implied, a crucial aspect in all this isn't mere size of inventory but rather a sense of welcome and discovery.

At Beer Run, that's supplied by brothers Josh and John Hunt and their mother Marianne. At Chevy Chase, it's father and son duo Buddy and Ian Weitzman, and Larry Robinson. Larry may remember more about beers past than most of us may ever learn about today's double Imperial bourbon-aged IPAs.

The full descriptions and the rest of the article are available in Imbibe's print edition only. I was alerted to this story by Julie Atallah, co-proprietor of Bruisin' Ales of Asheville, North Carolina, itself a wonderful store and on the list. Congratulations to all.

Thursday, August 21, 2008

Maryland Beer Map

Live in or near Maryland? Like beer?

If so, you might wish to refer to this Map of Maryland Breweries.

It was created by blogger Baltimore Beer Guy. He also has a useful list of shops in Maryland (and some in DC) at which to purchase good beer.

If a shop —or brewery/pub— is not listed and should be, contact him!