ANAHEIM, Calif. — For Beny Ashburn and Teo Hunter, being part of Disney's Food and Wine Festival is an opportunity that could further help launch their upstart craft brewery brand and make significant strides in the craft beer community and festival circuit.


What You Need To Know

  • Disney kicked off their annual Food and Wine Festival last Saturday and will run through April 26 at Disney California Adventure

  • The festival will feature several unique food and beverage items from Disney in-house chefs and cooking demonstrations from visiting chefs

  • During the festival, Disney is showcasing drinks from minority-owned businesses

  • Inglewood-based Crowns and Hops is looking to use the exposure at Disney's Food and Wine Festival to launch their craft brewery brand

There aren't a lot of Black, brown, and Asian brewers out there, said Ashburn and Hunter, the founders of Crowns and Hops in Inglewood.

But this is a chance to get their company out there and be an inspiration to those looking for a way in, Ashburn said.

"It's partnerships with companies like Disney that allow brands like ourselves to participate in events like these," Ashburn said to Spectrum News during a media preview of the two-month-long event at Disney California Adventure. "We are the first Black-owned brewery [showcased] at the Food and Wine Festival, and second female-owned brewery. ... We hope that being here inspires more change and inclusion in these types of festivals."

This year's Food and Wine Festival comes as the coronavirus pandemic wanes and people get their lives back to normal. Disneyland and Disney California Adventure, which had to close for more than a year, look to rebound from the pandemic-related closures and bring in the crowds. 

"It's been a long two years," said Gary Maggetti, general manager at Disney California Adventure.

The Food and Wine Festival is one of Disney California Adventure's staple events. The festival brings in tens of thousands of visitors to splurge on an array of unique and creative food and drinks specially made and only available during the event. 

This year, some dishes include chicharrón-crusted fried artichoke dip with smoked pepper crema and Oaxaca cheese, a petite avocado impossible burger with dairy-free pepper jack and peanut butter and jelly macaroni cheese with brown sugar streusel and strawberry crackle.

Cocktails include a spicy honey-apricot concoction, green apple and lychee mimosa and several wines from sauvignon blanc to pinot grigio.

The event, which runs through April 26, also features weekend cooking demonstrations and wine and beer mixology seminars.

In-house Disney chefs and visiting chefs such as Wing Lam, one of Wahoo’s Fish Taco founders, and Chef Soon Teoh and Khim Teoh of Malaysian restaurant Seasons Kitchen USA in Anaheim will host cooking workshops on select weekends. 

“This is what it’s all about: the neighborhood storytelling that we can only do with the partnerships that we have from incredible folks throughout the state,” Maggetti said during a media event. “This is what we’re known for, and we really leaned into it this year.”

Maggetti said the Disney team of chefs changed 90% of all the food and beverage items for this festival from previous ones.

“Huge diversity,” Maggetti said. “Huge new flavors.”

Disney also emphasized bringing in diverse and minority chefs and food and beverage professionals to round out the flavors.

Coral Brown of Brown Napa Valley said being part of the Food and Wine Festival is great exposure not just for her wines but her family's legacy. 

She said that Brown Napa Valley was the first and only Black-owned estate winery in Napa Valley. 

"We are so thrilled to be part of the Food and Wine Festival after all of these years of being isolated," said Brown, who for years had been working on getting her family's wine to Disney's restaurants and theme parks. 

"The commitment Disney has to inclusivity was very important to us," she said to Spectrum News. "It's one of our tenets of just broadening the scope of wines to more people and opening doors and not making it such an elite thing and making it inclusive that everyone can partake in."

Hunter of Crowns and Hops said being part of the Food and Wine Festival could launch their craft beer brand. 

He said Disney was very intentional in ensuring they had minority representation during the festival.

According to a 2021 Brewers Association survey, less than 1% or 0.4% of craft brewery owners are Black. In contrast, white brewers make up nearly 94% of the industry.

Despite the small number of minority brewery owners, the survey states there is a growing number of minority and female beer drinkers. And Crowns and Hops is looking to capitalize on that ever-increasing trend

What makes diversity in beer great, Hunter said, is that they come up with different beer flavors than traditional beer brands.

Crowns and Hops has a peach cobbler-style beer brewed with peaches, vanilla, cinnamon, coriander and graham cracker.

"Not to say no one has done it before, but I think our interpretation is something unique and something people will seek out," he said. 

Ashburn, Hunter's partner, said being part of the Food and Wine Festival is a way to get their story out there.

"We are pushing to make change that I don't think no one has ever seen before," she said.

And Disney is helping them along the way.

"It's really important to have large companies like Disney that have the bandwidth, that have the resources, that have the capital to make sure that we are present," Hunter said. "I mentioned before, they (Disney) purchased our beer. They purchased our beer to be made available for two months during this festival which is really important to us as a brand, as a start-up, and again to be one of the few Black-owned brewing companies in this country, it means quite a bit to have the exposure."