Twenty-five kilos of malt
Liam worked three years at Highland Brewing, Asheville's oldest brewery. His boss was named Earl. He talked little. He taught what gets taught without speeches: that beer doesn't forgive rushing and that ego doesn't improve the hops. Liam did what was his to do. He cleaned tanks, moved twenty-five-kilo sacks of malt, monitored temperatures. And watched.
Three years doing someone else's work before doing his own. Most people need much less time to convince themselves they already know enough. Liam needed three full seasons — three autumns of peak production, three slow winters, three springs starting from scratch — to feel he'd seen enough.







