WELCOME TO ODD ALEWIVES!
We warmly invite you to visit our farm, wood fired kitchen, and beer garden…..essentially welcome to our passion project.
We make wood fired pizzas from scratch and with love. Many of the ingredients are sourced from our farm (or from local food based small businesses) and we have a lot of fun coming up with new pizza combinations.
Our 1/2 acre beer garden and 1820’s renovated barn are a perfect place to spend time with your friends and family. We look forward to your visit!
Cheers,
John & Sarah
Tintypes by our friend Jay Gould Thank you Jay for sharing your photography talents and creating such a memorable experience!
PLEASE NOTE: We are not normally this serious.....the pose took 50 seconds and we had to stand completely still and were very focused on not blinking.
WHAT OTHERS ARE SAYING ABOUT ODD ALEWIVES:
Our hyper-local smoked alewife pizza is featured in this issue of DownEast Magazine
DownEast Magazine: 2021 Editors pick for Best Taproom/Tasting room
Maine Department of Tourism (VisitMaine) “Senses are Transformed” feature
Explore Maine video featuring Odd Alewives, GLP Films.
Odd Alewives Farm Brewery Feature, The Urban Exodus.
Women You Should Meet in Maine’s Midcoast, Kirsten Alana Travel Blog.
Waldoboro Brewery Uses Kitchen Built by Community to Give Back, Lincoln County News.
Morse’s Sauerkraut in a Beer? Not as Odd as it Sounds, Maine Today.
The Rural Reboot: The Beer Effect, WGME News.
Maine’s Hidden Farm Brewery is Unexpectedly Awesome, Only In Your State.
Of Fish & Fermentation: Maine’s Odd Alewives Farm Brewery, The Feast Podcast.
Check out these New England Breweries for Great Beer, Food, Fun, The Boston Herald.
Best Wineries and Breweries for Agritourism, Verbal Gold Blog.
A Love of All Things Odd, Lincoln County News.
Maine Alpaca Farm Transformed into a Craft Brewery, Bangor Daily News.
Odd Alewives, New Waldoboro Farmhouse Brewery Opens, Pen Bay Pilot.
Spotlight on Odd Alewives, The Waldo Theatre.
Above image: A seventeenth-century engraving of a dubious Alewife, Mother Louse, from Oxfordshire.
Courtesy of: Wellcome Library, London. http://wellcomeimages.org http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
(Photo taken during the spring alewife run at the Damariscotta Mills fishladder.)
THE STORY OF OUR NAME
We often get questions about our name, Odd Alewives. The first part of our name is a salute to the unusual, a fascination with the strange and whimsical, and our announced love of oddballs.
The alewife part of the name is a nod to both the history of beer and our geographical region. Up until the Black Death, beer was primarily brewed both commercially and domestically by woman, who were referred to as alewives and later on many female tavern owners were called this as well. It was one of the few trades that both single and married women could incorporate into their domestic duties to earn extra income. Changes in the beer industry made it a more specialized trade (and more lucrative) and therefore alewives were pushed out of the business due to lack of: access to capital, social and cultural resources, owning land/buildings, and where further excluded as members of guilds that became involved with the craft. Even today many of the stereotypical images we associate with witches, the black cauldron, black cat, pointy hats, and brooms stem directly from Alewives and how they marketed and brewed the beer, which further portrayed them in a seedy negative light.
As for the regional connection, the Medomak River flows through the village of Waldoboro, and the name translates from Abenaki as “the place (river) of many alewives.” The alewives in the river are small anadromous fish in the herring family that spend most of their life in the sea but return to fresh water to spawn. They closely resemble blueback herring and are mainly identified as having a larger chest, as a result the name derived from an association with rotund female tavern owners and brewers. They have also experienced a decline in their population due to dams and over population.
Although alewives (both the fish and female brewers/bar owners) are less common today then in the past, they are both brimming with tenacity and we are confident in the resurgence on both fronts. We raise a glass to all you Oddballs and Alewives!