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A little over two decades ago, Stephane Ostiguy was studying biology at McGill. More than studying, actually. He was gunning for his PhD, trying to solve complex problems about living things. He’s in his lab one day, hunched over a microscope and in walks Jean-Francois Gravel, a young Master’s student specializing in molecular biology. They were going to be lab partners for the year. But other things were brewing.
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Stephane and Jean-Francois hit it off and became friends almost instantly. They’d frequently go out for beers after long days in the lab. They turned into beer nerds, to the point where beer was almost all they’d talk about. And then one of them said it: let’s make our own beer.
It seemed like a reasonable idea. They were both biology students, after all. The beer would be another experiment, a chance for them to use the scientific method in real life. What would happen if they used one kind of yeast instead of another? What about different hops? Should we sample that control group again?
“We worked a lot”, Ostiguy says. “Mostly on the beer. We wanted to work with different yeast strains, to see how they changed the taste of the beer. We were constantly coming up with new recipes and testing them.”
Their pub is kind of a dive — albeit one that serves award-winning $9 IPAs. It’s exactly the kind of place that would be dreamed up by a couple of mad scientists.