No Result
View All Result
  • Best of Omaha
  • BOO Business Resources
  • Read Online
  • About Us
  • Advertiser Resources
  • Contact Us
Omaha Magazine
  • Directory
  • Today
  • Events
  • Arts
  • Living
  • Eats
  • Entertainment
  • Health
  • 60+
  • B2B
  • Subscribe
Omaha Magazine
  • Directory
  • Today
  • Events
  • Arts
  • Living
  • Eats
  • Entertainment
  • Health
  • 60+
  • B2B
  • Subscribe
Omaha Magazine
No Result
View All Result
Home Business

Gold-medal Beer and Hard Seltzer

by user
January 15, 2020
in Business
Gold-medal Beer and Hard Seltzer

Minnesota native Zac Triemert began working as a microbiologist and chemist with an agricultural company right after graduating from college. It was a solid career that landed him in Omaha, where he expected to stay a couple of years before being transferred to the next city. But an unexpected event changed his outlook.

“My dad, fairly young, got sick and passed away,” Triemert said. “It made me realize that life’s too short not to do what you love, so I immediately started looking for brewing jobs.”

In memorializing his father, Triemert also articulated his own purpose.

“I did a home brew in his honor called Jerry’s Pale Ale and I gave everybody in the family two bottles: one to drink and one to save,” he recalled. “I gave a little speech, and some people laughed and some people cried, and I realized I changed the experience with my beer. And that’s why I decided I wanted to do this…I’ve been brewing now for 20 years.”

A former owner of Lucky Bucket Brewing Co., Triemert’s latest endeavor, Brickway Brewery & Distillery, celebrated six years in December. Despite its association with a certain number, it’s been lucky, too.

“We began on Dec. 13, 2013,” said Triemert, who serves as president and head distiller. “If you look at our logo, the B in Brickway is also a 13.”

Brickway products also bear three words that nod to Triemert’s passion and purpose: celebrate, commiserate, commemorate.

“At Brickway, our slogan is, ‘It doesn’t matter if you’re celebrating, commiserating, or commemorating, Brickway is going to be there for you,’” he said. “I’m proud of it and I’m really working hard to get the message out there.”

The message is getting heard. Brickway’s single-malt whisky (the spelling honors the fact that Triemert earned a master’s degree in brewing and distilling from Heriot-Watt University in Scotland) has won three international gold medals in the last two years. The beer has also won honors. In 2019, its Jalapeño Pineapple Pilsner was awarded a gold medal from among 10,000 beer entries at the Great American Beer Festival.

“Our portfolios in both beer and spirits have grown tremendously,” he said. “We have probably 25 different beers throughout the year; in year one we probably had two. We have about 10 different spirits as well and our whisky program has just grown dramatically. We released Nebraska’s first-ever sherry barrel-aged single malt whisky in December. It was a huge success and if you’re a whisky lover it’s something you have to try. We also have Nebraska’s first hard seltzer. It’s called Aleius Cherry Limeade and is gluten-free; and has one carb, zero sugar, 98 calories. We hit all the buttons.”

Mark Wright, Brickway’s director of sales, said Brickway’s distribution has expanded to include retail businesses and bars throughout Nebraska and in select markets in South Dakota, Iowa, Kansas, and Missouri.

“Craft beer in general has just exploded to where people want to try out beers from neighboring states,” he said. “One of the biggest points of difference a brewer can have is if they have a product that’s unique. Our top-selling product has been our Coffee Vanilla Stout because it’s different from what’s out there and it’s super-drinkable.”

Brickway’s spirits are also regionally successful, he adds.

“We’re really blessed that Zac has created an amazing whisky that’s won several international gold medal awards,” Wright said. “When we’re marketing our spirits and setting ourselves apart, we lean on the fact that we make small-batch whiskies and don’t overproduce, and that we’ve won multiple gold medals. If you’re going up against somebody that has media power to get their brand out there, you capitalize on the local aspect. And since we are local and don’t have to pay for all the advertising, we’ve priced it better and give consumers a better value.”

“We are making beer and spirits every bit as good as the big guys,” Triemert said.


r

Visit drinkbrickway.com for more information.

rThis article was printed in the February/March 2020 edition of B2B. To receive the magazine, click here to subscribe.

You might also like...

08 April 2025- Greg Harris, CEO of Quantum Workplace is photographed at his offcie for B2B Magazine.
B2B

B2B Omaha – June/July 2025

The Berkshire Book You Can’t Buy On Amazon: Celebrating 60 Years of History
B2B

The Berkshire Book You Can’t Buy On Amazon: Celebrating 60 Years of History

18 April 2025– Wendy Wiseman is photographed at Constellation Collective for Marketing and Growth Strategies in B2B 0625.
B2B

Trust, Strategy, and Spend Drive Wendy Wiseman’s Marketing Success

25 April 2025– Kurt Cisar and Matt Neaderhiser are photographed at Holland Basham Architects for B2B 0625 voices of industry.
B2B

Hiring for the Long Haul: Holland Basham on People-First Strategy

17 April 2025– AnnMarie Marlier, Ph.D., VP of Leadership Development of Business Ethics Alliance is photographed at Creighton University for B2B 0625 feature.
B2B

AI Moves Fast. Should You? Navigating the Ethics of Emerging Tech

Made in Nebraska, Loved Everywhere: Six Nebraska Originals You Can Brag About
Food+Drink

Made in Nebraska, Loved Everywhere: Six Nebraska Originals You Can Brag About

Feeding the Fans: How Home Team Cookout Became the MVP of SlumpBuster Weekend
Food+Drink

Feeding the Fans: How Home Team Cookout Became the MVP of SlumpBuster Weekend

08 April 2025– Jackie Robbins, a barbecue pit master at Rib Shack Smokehouse, is photographed for a profile in OM0625.
Food+Drink

Barbecue and Grit: Jackie Robbins’ Rise to Pitmaster Status

Salted Edge’s Ryan McKittrick is the Student Chef to Watch
Food+Drink

Salted Edge’s Ryan McKittrick is the Student Chef to Watch

Join Our Newsletter

  • Faces-of-Lincoln
  • Best of B2B
  • Best of Omaha!
  • Things to Do
  • Locations
  • Advertiser Resources
  • Pay Your Bill
  • The Omaha Magazine Podcast
  • Newsletter
Facebook Instagram Youtube X-twitter Tiktok Microphone Linkedin
No Result
View All Result
  • Best of Omaha
    • Best of Omaha Business Resources
  • Omaha Magazine
    • About Us
    • 60+
    • Arts+Culture
    • Food+Drink
    • History
    • Health
  • Home Magazine
  • B2B
  • Business Directory
  • Events
  • Read Online
  • Subscribe to Omaha Magazine
  • Newsletter
  • The Omaha Magazine Podcast
  • Advertiser Resources
  • Wall Plaques
  • Contact Us
  • Latest News

Omaha Publications, LLC.

Skip to content
Open toolbar Accessibility Tools

Accessibility Tools

  • Increase TextIncrease Text
  • Decrease TextDecrease Text
  • GrayscaleGrayscale
  • High ContrastHigh Contrast
  • Negative ContrastNegative Contrast
  • Light BackgroundLight Background
  • Links UnderlineLinks Underline
  • Readable FontReadable Font
  • Reset Reset