Rebecca Bennett (brewer) explained

Rebecca Bennett
Birthname:Rebecca Reid
Alma Mater:Purdue University
Occupation:Brewer/brewmaster

Rebecca Bennett (born Rebecca Reid in 1983) has worked in various brewmaster positions at Anheuser-Busch InBev, most recently as a senior quality manager in Baldwinsville, New York. She also held the assistant brewmaster post (2015–2018) at the Baldwinsville facility and previously was a product development specialist (2010–2015) and group manager (2005–2010 at the St. Louis, Missouri, facility. She graduated from Purdue University with a bachelor's degree in chemical engineering in 2005.

Education

Rebecca Bennett was born in 1983 to Vickie and Christopher Reid; she and her brother, Timothy, grew up in Fort Wayne, Indiana.[1]

Bennett's father was an electrical engineer, and as a high school student she learned about a Women in Engineering outreach program, something that increased her awareness of her father's work and made that a plausible career for her.[2] In her freshman year at Purdue, Bennett learned more about the versatility of chemical engineering and spent two summers at Eastman Chemical, working on chemicals used in plastics and gas-collection systems.[3] Those internships showed her that she didn't want to work for large chemical companies and caused her to question her major; she met staff from Anheuser-Busch at Purdue's Industrial Roundtable and it shifted how she thought about her career possibilities. Pete Kraemer, a fifth-generation brew master at Anheuser-Busch, was a guest lecturer in one of her classes, and that experience showed her that her schoolwork was applicable to making beer.[4]

Work at Anheuser-Busch

She graduated in May 2005 and was working for Anheuser-Busch in June. Before joining Anheuser-Busch, Bennett said she "always liked beer, but I honestly didn't know a lot about it when I got here." She learned quickly, working first as a production supervisor at the main brewery (2005), a member of the innovation group (2010), and head of the pilot brewery (2013). Unlike Pete Kraemer, Bennett didn't grow up in a house where beer or brewing were prevalent, but her science background was helpful. In her work at the pilot brewery, Bennett experimented with new beers in a scaled-down replica of the main brewery; each batch of beer is 10 barrels and most of the 500 recipes she and her team brewed each year never moved beyond the experimental stage.[5] She liked being able to combine her STEM studies with management, marketing, and tasting.[6]

Bennett developed the recipe for Bud Light Platinum and Michelob Ultra-Light Cider. She and Jill Vaughn developed Shock Top and the Straw-Ber-Rita.[7] [8] After her move to Anheuser-Busch's Baldwinsville Brewery, Bennett worked on Bud Light Seltzer.[9] [10]

Bennett is creative with ingredients; she mixed hibiscus flowers with wheat and lemon peels to approximate the taste of a “strawberry lemonade” beer, an idea that emerged from a baking recipe with chocolate chili powder cupcakes and hibiscus frosting. She has also found inspiration in cocktails: "from an ingredient perspective, there's a lot of fun things happening in cocktails, and being able to cull inspiration from that and work that into beer is exciting."[11]

Impact and demographics

Bennett says she doesn't feel like a trailblazer in a brew master's masculine world, citing an increase in women brewers and her work at Anheuser-Busch InBev with Jane Killebrew and Jill Vaughn.[12] At the same time, the gender imbalance in consumers and brewers is real. In 2013, Teri Fahrendorf, brew master and founder of the Pink Boots Society, estimated that 99% of brew masters are men; the Siebel Institute, a brewing academy, says only about 5% of its students are women.

As an African American, millennial in the brewing industry, Bennett is outside the norm of industry demographics.[13] She said that "People have a perception that brewers are all guys with beards and are surprised when they see me, an African-American female. I tell them that I am a brewer, and that the brewing process is really rooted in science. There is so much you can do with a STEM degree."[14]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Obituary for Christopher L. Reid Nelson Memorial Gardens, Inc.. Inc. Nelson Memorial Gardens. Obituary for Christopher L. Reid Nelson Memorial Gardens, Inc.. en. 2020-04-28.
  2. Web site: Boiler Brewers. digital.watkinsprinting.com. 2020-04-28.
  3. Web site: ChE Alumna Rebecca Reid is featured in Wall Street Journal - Summer 2013 -. Purdue Engineering Impact. en. 2020-04-28.
  4. Web site: How These Women Became Top Brewmasters At One Of The World's Biggest Beer Companies. Smith. Jacquelyn. Business Insider. 2020-04-28.
  5. News: Esterl. Mike. A Craft Chemist Making Over Big Beer. 2013-01-26. Wall Street Journal. 2020-04-28. en-US. 0099-9660.
  6. Hazelwood. Janell P.. September 2014. Female master of the brew: how STEM skills make the difference in a male-dominated industry.. Black Enterprise. 45. 35. Gale Academic OneFile.
  7. Web site: Pink Boots Collaboration Brew Day - Pinedale, Wyoming. www.pinedaleonline.com. 2020-04-28.
  8. Web site: A Revolution Brewing. 2019-09-20. Open The Magazine. en-GB. 2020-04-28.
  9. Web site: Popular New Spiked Seltzer Made In Baldwinsville. spectrumlocalnews.com. en. 2020-04-28.
  10. Web site: Bud Light Seltzer is brewed exclusively at the Anheuser-Busch InBev brewery near Baldwinsville, N.Y.. Cazentre. Don. syracuse. en. 2020-04-28.
  11. Web site: 5 Women Running the Show Behind Iconic Male Brands. 2014-06-09. Marie Claire. en-US. 2020-04-28.
  12. Web site: Meet the Women Brewing Your Favorite Beer. www.anheuser-busch.com. 2020-04-28.
  13. Web site: Perspective: Making Bud & Clydesdales part of the conversation. Hieronymus. Stan. 2013-02-02. Appellation Beer: Celebrating Beer From a Place. en-US. 2020-04-28.
  14. Web site: ESSENCE Network: Beer Maker Rebecca Bennett on Brewing Success. Essence. en-US. 2020-04-28.