My holiday season always begins with my stepmom asking me if there's anything I want for Christmas.
It's a question I dread more and more every year, because I have to think harder and harder for an answer. Well, an answer that isn't "money."
This year, my first thought was the thing I'd spend some of that money on: beer. This frigid season marks the release of many beers in one of my favorite styles, imperial stouts and porters, which also happens to be one of the priciest styles. So I told my stepmom about a few that are either on shelves now or arriving there soon.Â
She said she'd keep her eye out for them. And then she said something that stuck with me.
My stepmom said my beer wish list reminded her of decades ago, when I'd ask her to track down another elusive item to deliver under our family Christmas tree: action figures.
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Where once she would scour Toys "R" Us and K-B Toys for Star Wars and X-Men characters, now she'll scour Wegmans and bottle shops for Founders' Canadian Breakfast Stout.
Still, I might not have thought much about the similarity if it wasn't for a strange coincidence. And that was the to Genesee Center, across from Thirsty Pug Craft Beer Market, earlier this month. The toy shop features many of the action figures I collected as a child, including those very Star Wars and X-Men characters.
The sight of the action figures I used to collect across from the beers I now collect drove the similarity home. First, of course, it made me think my personality is maybe a bit too compulsive. But it also made me think that the craft beer industry is speaking to the same compulsion in others — if not courting it directly.
The timeline tracks: Like me, many craft beer fans in their 20s and 30s grew up with cards, action figures and other collectibles. And craft beer has enough in common with them to make it a new collector's paradise for that older audience: product scarcity, attractive package art and even a means of flaunting one's collection in Untappd.
Don't get me wrong: I still love to drink craft beer, superficialities be damned. Nor is this to say that all craft beer fans are sublimating some youthful collector impulse into their purchasing behavior. I may even be the only one. But, somehow, I doubt it.
And I don't know when we'll outgrow it.
Gallery: Cayuga County's new craft beer scene

From left, Joe Shelton and Mark Grimaldi are the brewers and owners of Aurora Ale and Lager Co.

Growlers are on display at the recently opened Aurora Ale and Lager Co.

From left, Mark Grimaldi and Joe Shelton are the brewers and owners of Aurora Ale and Lager Co.

Lunkenheimer Craft Brewing Co. owners Derric Slocum and Kristen Lunkenheimer-Slocum stand in front of their truck and brewery in Weedsport in 2015.

Kristen Lunkenheimer-Slocum prepares a flight of beer at Lunkenheimer Craft Brewing Co. in Weedsport in June 2015.

A flight of beer is prepared at Lunkenheimer Craft Brewing Co. in Weedsport in 2015.

Brewer Ben Maeso gets help from his brother Dan Maeso with mashing grains at Prison City Pub & Brewery in Auburn in July 2015.

Head brewer Ben Maeso mashes grains at Prison City Pub & Brewery in Auburn July 16.

Prison City Pub & Brewery head brewer Ben Maeso and owner Dawn Schulz work together to promote their house-made craft beer and pub-style food.

Grain sits ready to be mashed at Prison City Pub & Brewery in Auburn. Mashing is the process of extracting flavor and sugar from grains combined with water. The mixture is then heated to make it a more easily fermentable substance.

Ben Maeso gets help from his brother Dan Maeso with mashing grains at Prison City Pub & Brewery in Auburn July 16, 2015.

Hop pellets will be incorporated during the brewing process at Prison City Pub & Brewery in Auburn July 16.

Garrett Shepherd serves a beer as his mom, Debbie DiNardo, helps behind the bar June 19 at The Good Shepherds Brewing Co. in Auburn.

Garrett Shepherd serves a beer to musician Brian Clare June 19 at The Good Shepherds Brewing Co. in Auburn.

The Good Shepherds Brewing Co. is one of four breweries to open its doors in Cayuga County in the last year.

A beer rests on the windowsill at The Good Shepherds Brewing Co. in Auburn.

Garrett Shepherd talks to a customer as his mom, Debbie DiNardo, helps behind the bar June 19 at The Good Shepherds Brewing Co. in Auburn.

Mike Sigona, owner of Thirsty Pug Craft Beer Market, pours a beer with his new tap system. Sigona recently expanded from carrying a variety of craft beers in cans and bottles by adding a six-tap system that offers "hard to get" draught beers.

An IPA from the Thirsty Pug Craft Beer Market in the Genesee Center mall on Genesee Street in Auburn.

The Thirsty Pug Craft Beer Market offers a vast variety of craft beer in the Genesee Center mall on Genesee Street in Auburn.

The Thirsty Pug Craft Beer Market offers a variety of craft beer in the Genesee Center mall on Genesee Street in Auburn.
What's on tap
Mark Grimaldi and Joe Shelton's King Ferry brewery is now canning 16-ounce containers of any beer it has on draft, for takeout purchase. With the ability to fill cans directly from their brite tank, the brewery will also offer limited runs of four-packs, Grimaldi and Shelton said. And as soon as their labels are designed, Aurora Ale & Lager will begin wholesaling cases.
New at the brewery is a dry-hopped rye IPA, formerly known as Ray-Ray. Grimaldi and Shelton are also aging a Belgian quad in whiskey barrels for release in mid- to late December. It'll be about 10-percent ABV, they said.
Derric and Kristen Slocum's Weedsport brewery will also be releasing limited amounts of four-packs of 16-ounce cans, they said. Dates will be posted to Lunkenheimer's Facebook page.
The brewery will also attend the fifth annual New York Craft Brewers Festival at the Landmark Theatre in Syracuse Dec. 2. And, making use of its farm brewery license, Lunkenheimer has recently added a small list of wine, cider and craft cocktails to its drink menu.
Dawn and Marc Schulz's downtown Auburn brewpub recently released a few new creations from brewer Ben Maeso: Good Behavior pale ale, hoppy Kolsch Meestah Calista and Riot Down Under, Prison City's first New England-style double IPA.
Maeso and assistant brewer Rob Bowen also recently went to Barrier Brewing Co. in Oceanside, Long Island, for a collaboration IPA that combines Prison City's Mass Riot with Barrier's Money. The result, Bug Juice, was released at Barrier this week and will come to Auburn in the next couple of weeks.
Last, Prison City recently announced its third anniversary event Tuesday, Dec. 19. More details will be posted to the brewpub's Facebook page.
Lake Life Editor David Wilcox can be reached at (315) 282-2245 or david.wilcox@lee.net. Follow him on Twitter .