Wayside Cider Tap Room: Showcasing Cider and Community in Andes, NY
Just off Main Street in Andes, NY, down a meandering dead end road that weaves through tree-spotted rolling hills, something special is brewing — or rather — being pressed. The Wayside Cider Tap Room, which officially opened its doors late last month, is a handsome gathering place serving cider bottled just beyond the bar, as well as other New York State libations and locally sourced meats and cheeses. It is a collaboration between Wayside Cider owners Alex Wilson and Irene Hussey, and designer Sean Scherer who owns the antique and curiosity shop Kabinett & Kammer just up the road. Together, with a handful of hardworking and talented community members, they have transformed a run down barn into the bright new face of a cider revival that is swiftly taking hold across the state.
With its walls dotted by relics from near and far, the tap room channels the warmth and conviviality of a European watering hole while showcasing both the heritage and the creative capacity of Delaware County. A given glance might produce a late 19th century image of the Catskills, aged clippings from American Agriculturist magazine, or a handmade light fixture made of vintage ale bottles; each piece is at once thoughtful on its own and an integral part of a larger collection. A wall of floor-to-ceiling glass doors opens up onto a courtyard lined with Bavarian beer hall tables and fire pits. “Cider is very much a social drink,” Alex says of the decision to open shop, “and we really wanted to have a space where people could come and experience it with good food, amazing music, and a beautiful backdrop.”
The tap room is pressed up against the cidery itself, where Alex and Irene are on track to make about 10,000 bottles of cider this year. 2016 will be the third vintage for Wayside Cider and although they have more than tripled production since their first year, the duo are humbly pacing themselves. “We’d spoken to other cideries,” recalls Alex, “and they said, ‘if you want to stay small, a tap room is a great way of keeping small.’” The pair plan to produce just enough cider to satisfy the tap room needs while continuing to provide for their existing clients both upstate and down. Wayside Cider can currently be found on the menus of establishments such as The Pines, Brunette, Brushland Eating House, and Spruceton Inn. Opportunities for the new space are seemingly limitless, but it is clear that creating an incubator for community activity sits at the top of the list of ambitions. The outdoor area will eventually host open-fire cookouts, discussions led by local cheese makers and distillers, and amateur cider competitions. “Cider doesn’t exist in a vacuum,” says Alex. “Where cider really works is where there is a culture of cider. And cider goes with the food, the cheese, the community, the music, and this is a place where we can develop all those things.”
Photos by Natalie Chitwood, Words by Hannah Leighton