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Twin Peaks Restaurants building in-house breweryTwin Peaks Restaurants building in-house brewery

Chain to brew its own beers in a brewery to be added to a North Irving, Texas, restaurant

Ron Ruggless, Senior Editor

August 13, 2013

2 Min Read
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Twin Peaks Restaurants will break ground Friday on its first in-house brewery.

The casual-dining chain, which is known for its buxom waitresses, already emphasizes its selection of 29-degrees-Fahrenheit tap beers.

Addison, Texas-based parent company Front Burner Restaurants LP is building a 2,800-square-foot brewery addition to its newest Dallas-Fort Worth location in North Irving, which opened earlier this year in a converted Luby’s cafeteria unit. The City of Irving has also approved a 27-foot-tall grain silo as part of the addition.

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Tom Janik, the brew master for Twin Peaks, said the new brewing facility is scheduled open later in the year and will provide signature beers for another eight Twin Peaks restaurants in the area and possibly others in Texas.

“We’re hoping that we will be brewing right after Thanksgiving,” Janik said. “That should have us with product ready to be consumed by mid-December or Christmas, at the latest. All the dates are subject to change.”

For several years, Twin Peaks has offered a couple of in-house beers, including the Dirty Blonde and the Naughty Brunette. Those were contract-brewed by a local microbrewery. When the new brewery opens, Twin Peaks will add a third proprietary beer, a pale ale called Ginger’s Ale, Janik said.

“The company is also growing to the point that it could use the production capacity,” said Janik. “Not only is there demand, but the number of stores could max out a brewing facility. It also puts the company in charge of product quality.”

He said that control over quality is the biggest advantage of the brewery project. “It also allows us to tweak or fine-tune recipes as we see fit,” said Janik, who was brew master at the local Humperdink’s chain for 17 years before joining Twin Peaks.

The Texas Legislature changed some laws earlier this year to allow brew pubs to distribute beer. “That upped the production capacity and allowed for the distribution of products from one location,” Janik said.

The new legislation doubled the previous limits on brewpub production to allow restaurants with a brewery to sell 10,000 barrels of beer a year. The legislation also allowed craft brewers with a mixed-beverage permit to sell limited amounts of beer to distributors and retailers.

Twin Peaks, founded in 2005 in Lewisville, Texas, has 38 locations in 17 states. There are eight Twin Peaks restaurants in the Dallas-Fort Worth metropolitan area and 16 total units in Texas throughout Austin, Dallas, Houston, Odessa and San Antonio. In the next few months, the company plans to add one more unit in the DFW area, as well as one each in San Angelo and El Paso.

Contact Ron Ruggless at [email protected].
Follow him on Twitter: @RonRuggless

About the Author

Ron Ruggless

Senior Editor, Nation’s Restaurant News / Restaurant Hospitality

Ron Ruggless serves as a senior editor for Informa Connect’s Nation’s Restaurant News (NRN.com) and Restaurant Hospitality (Restaurant-Hospitality.com) online and print platforms. He joined NRN in 1992 after working 10 years in various roles at the Dallas Times Herald newspaper, including restaurant critic, assistant business editor, food editor and lifestyle editor. He also edited several printings of the Zagat Dining Guide for Dallas-Fort Worth, and his articles and photographs have appeared in Food & Wine, Food Network and Self magazines. 

Ron Ruggless’ areas of expertise include foodservice mergers, acquisitions, operations, supply chain, research and development and marketing. 

Ron Ruggless is a frequent moderator and panelist at industry events ranging from the Multi-Unit Foodservice Operators (MUFSO) conference to RestaurantSpaces, the Council of Hospitality and Restaurant Trainers, the National Restaurant Association’s Marketing Executives Group, local restaurant associations and the Horeca Professional Expo in Madrid, Spain.

Ron Ruggless’ experience:

Regional and Senior Editor, Informa Connect’s Nation’s Restaurant News and Restaurant Hospitality (1992 to present)

Features Editor – Dallas Times Herald (1989-1991)

Restaurant Critic and Food Editor – Dallas Times Herald (1987-1988)

Editing Roles – Dallas Times Herald (1982-1987)

Editing Roles – Charlotte (N.C.) Observer (1980-1982)

Editing Roles – Omaha (Neb.) World-Herald (1978-1980)

Email: [email protected]

Social media:

Twitter@RonRuggless

LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/in/ronruggless

Instagram: @RonRuggless

TikTok: @RonRuggless

 

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