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Sarah Real and Mike Dell'Aquila's Hot Plate Brewing was rated No. 3 in the nation by beer experts and USA Today readers.
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The hot plate that started everything hangs in a place of honor inside the brewery.
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Hot Plate's goal is to be welcoming to the community and offer events that bring people together.

Hot plate Brewing Co. on Becoming Top 3 Best New Brewery

By Breanna SteeleiBerkshires Staff
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Hot Plate is located at 1 School St. 
PITTSFIELD, Mass. — Hot Plate Brewing Co. was recently recognized as No. 3 in USA Today's list of  "Best New Brewery."
 
A panel of beer experts selected their top picks and then readers cast their votes to determine the "10 Best" breweries founded since 2022, according to the publication. No. 1 was Frazier Creek Brewing & Distilling Co. in Stuart, Fla.
 
Hot Plate, which opened in 2023, is owned by couple Sarah Real and Mike Dell'Aquila.
 
"I started home brewing first, Sarah was just much better at it than me," Dell'Aquila laughed. He got a home brewing kit in 2013 and a couple of years later Real decided to try and brew as well.
 
"Hot Plate was sort of born when we were living in Brooklyn and the city came and turned off the gas in our condo building because there had been a code violation so that meant no heat, no hot water, no functioning stove," he said. "But Sarah had already decided that she really wanted to pursue this."
 
Real bought a hot plate to start brewing, a hot plate that is hanging up at their brewery today. 
 
Dell'Aquila said he wanted to change the industry through diversity, equity, and inclusion.
 
"When we saw that less than 1 percent of breweries in the United States were owned by women of color and Sarah being a Hispanic woman, for me it was I could help tell the story and be a change agent for an industry that has been increasingly homogenized." Dell'Aquila said.
 
The couple did just that by employing a mostly female and queer staff, collaborating with a variety mission-aligned organizations, creating a mix of events and raising thousands of dollars for local non-profit organizations. They have been rewarded by organizations as diverse as the Massachusetts Alliance for Economic Development (MassEcon), the National Alliance on Mental Illness and Berkshire Pride, a local LGBTQIA+ organization.
 
They wrote up a business plan during the pandemic and looke for a place to open their brewery. Dell'Aquila remembered his time in Berkshire County, liking how close the towns are to each other but how different each is, and noticed downtown Pittsfield didn't have a brewery.
 
"When we were checking stuff out we found out that there wasn't a downtown brewery or an urban taproom and so for us being familiar with in Brooklyn, from early 2010s to the time we left here, was this boom of breweries and taprooms and spaces like this, we just saw an opportunity to put something here that we had been envisioning ourselves," Dell'Aquila said.
 
One of their biggest challenges they said is getting people back out after learning for years to stay home.
 
"You talk to restaurant owners kind of across the board and no one has seen a return from pre-COVID levels of people just like going out organically," Dell'Aquila said. "So that's why it's put more strain on us to always find new events and new things to do, to offer to the community." 
 
Hosting those events are one of the ways they create reasons for people "to meet at a certain time and space."
 
They were surprised by the USA Today poll and said it has not hit them yet. 
 
"It was an unexpected surprise and it felt very validating that all the things we've been working on for the last two years and all the different ways we were trying to show that we were endeavoring to do something slightly different than what everyone else was doing, that someone did notice that," Dell'Aquila said.
 
But the community is what made them the happiest.
 
"Seeing the way the community responded was more important than the win itself because it showed that we really did inspire and excite the community here," he said. "We're just looking for ways of bringing people through that are like minded to us and bringing them to Pittsfield."
 
One way is a free summer music series at Dunham Mall  that Hot Plate is hosting in partnership with Downtown Pittsfield Inc. They will provide a beer garden along with local food vendors and have touring bands every Friday night.
 
Hot Plate is located at 1 School St. and is open Mondays 3 to 9, Tuesday through Thursday 3 to 10, Friday from noon to 11 p.m., Saturday 9 a.m. to 11 p.m. and Sunday 9 a.m. to 8 p.m. It also offers coffee and teas, baked goods and prepared snacks but encourages patrons to order in food from local eateries. 

Tags: brewery,   recognition event,   

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Berkshire Towns Can Tap State Seasonal Communities Resources

BOSTON — Governor Maura Healey announced that 18 additional municipalities across Massachusetts have been designated as Seasonal Communities, opening up new tools, support and grant funding to help them manage seasonal housing pressures. 
 
Created as part of the historic Affordable Homes Act signed into law by Governor Healey in 2024, the Seasonal Communities designation was designed to recognize Massachusetts communities that experience substantial variation in seasonal employment and to create distinctive tools to address their unique housing needs. The law also established the Seasonal Communities Advisory Council (SCAC).  
 
The Affordable Homes Act identified several communities to automatically receive the designation, including:   
  • All municipalities in the counties of Dukes and Nantucket;   
  • All municipalities with over 35 percent seasonal housing units in Barnstable County; and   
  • All municipalities with more than 40 percent seasonal housing units in Berkshire County. 
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To identify additional communities, the Executive Office of Housing and Livable Communities (HLC) reviewed available data, specifically focusing on cities and towns with high levels of short-term rentals and a high share of second- or vacation homes.
 
In Berkshire County, Egremont, Great Barrington, Lee, Lenox, New Marlborough, Richmond, Sandisfield, Sheffield, West Stockbridge and Williamstown have been designated. 
 
"Our seasonal communities are a vital part of Massachusetts' cultural and economic fabric, but they're also home to essential workers, families, seniors, and longtime residents who deserve a place to live year-round," said Governor Healey. "That's why we're committed to supporting these communities with innovative solutions like the Seasonal Communities designation to meet their unique needs, and I'm thrilled that we're offering this opportunity to 18 additional communities across the state. Everyone who calls these places home should be able to live, work and grow here, no matter the season." 
 
As with the statutorily identified communities, acceptance of the designation for municipalities is voluntary and requires a local legislative vote. HLC will open an application for newly eligible communities that haven't accepted the Seasonal Communities designation to request consideration. 
 
The Affordable Homes Act created several new tools for communities who accept the Seasonal Communities designation to be able to:  
  • Acquire deed restrictions to create or preserve year-round housing 
  • Develop housing with a preference for municipal workers, so that our public safety personnel, teachers, public works and town hall workers have a place to live 
  • Establish a Year-Round Housing Trust Fund to create and preserve affordable and attainable housing for year-round residents 
  • Create year-round housing for artists 
  • Allow seasonal communities to develop a comprehensive housing needs assessment 
  • Permit tiny homes to be built and used as year-round housing 
  • Permit year-round, attainable residential development on undersized lots 
  • Increase the property tax exemption for homes that are the owners' primary residence 
 
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