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  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2008/10/31/_Man_Arrested_In_Santa_Cruz_With_Beer_Keg__Harmonica__Wet_Suit..._'

    "Man Arrested In Santa Cruz With Beer Keg, Harmonica, Wet Suit..."

    Posted: October 31st, 2008, 1:02am CET by Alan McLeod

    "...and hallucinogenic mushrooms."

    That's a headline in The Mercury News of San Jose today. When I go hunting Goggle, once in every while, for beer news to comment upon there are always masses of these sad stories about beer and violence to get through about, say, man beats man with beer or, you know, man beats beer with man or, heck, even beer beats man with man. They are unendingly dreary, always say pretty much the same thing and undermine the work everyone does to raise the perspective folk have about beer.

    But the fine work of Marshall Cartwright, 33, reported this week in The Mercury News really stands apart from the crowd. What a genius. Especially given he was "claiming to be a covert military operative from Australia" even while he was "urinating in the bushes" when he was not sell the beer in the keg by handing around a Mason jar...11:45 a.m. last Monday. Excellent work Marshall Cartwright, 33. Brilliant. You have reached the apex of the beer pig pantheon. We salute you!

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2008/10/29/Winter_And_Xmas_Brews__Brrr__Widmer_Bros.__Oregon'

    Winter And Xmas Brews: Brrr, Widmer Bros., Oregon

    Posted: October 29th, 2008, 11:34pm CET by Alan McLeod

    The good folks at Widmer Brothers sent me a few of their new seasonal brew, Brrr. That was awfully nice of them and a habit more of you should consider adopting - especially nice as this will only be available in 17 US cities over just the next two months.

    A big fruity nose on the first schnozzle: zippy citrus hops over figs and dates. Very appetizing aroma which reminded me of something I like and that something was a little like a Ithaca Beer Co Flower Power IPA. Could it be? Would it be? Who knows? Be patient. The brew pours a bright chestnut under a rich cream head. The press release calls it a "moderately strong dark red ale." Hmm. Maybe it's more Ithaca's Cascazilla I am thinking off. That's it! On the sip, this is a very nice beer: plenty of big US hops with even a bit of a hop acid burn but framed by dark malty tones of caramel, dried fig and baked apple. A bigger brew at "7.15%," the hopping really cuts what otherwise could be a cloying malty blob. Even with the creamy mouth feel, the hopping does not jar. A long herbal hoppy finish.

    Solid BAer respect.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2008/10/28/Beer_Science__Beer_Which_Emits_Light.'

    Beer Science: Beer Which Emits Light.

    Posted: October 28th, 2008, 1:39am CET by Alan McLeod

    The BBC has an interesting story today about the lengths to which macro-brewers have gone to figure out how to attract customers:

    Green beer. Blue beer. Beer with the frothy 'head' in the middle of the glass, rather than at the top. Beer which emits light..."We've done lots of things which are technically very possible," Mr Axcell says.

    So sayeth Barry Axcell, chief brewer at SABMiller. And so might he so sayeth as beer that emits light, you could be thinking, is possibly the greatest...yet surely the dumbest...use of science and money you have ever heard about. Mock not, says I. While I may not know if the real but unspoken problem problem is that it makes itself skunky but we have to trust that SABMiller does not undertake these experiments for their own giggles...as Mr. Axcell himself further indicates:

    "The British brewing industry has declined and you could argue that was partly due to its failure to innovate," says Mr Axcell. "Beer comes with a lot of heritage and tradition so to innovate successfully, you need a functional beer with a functional benefit - one that has got to deliver something for the customer.

    Deliver something...like glow in the dark...beer. Yet, aka MacroBrewCo does not even seem to have been the originator of the glow in the dark bevvie. Apparently, there was a little stir about the idea back in around the time of the new millenium. And, it seems, that the patent-holding¹ company in Arizona is continuing the exploration, you know, for that nightlight in a glass, as illustrated so...glowingly. It was even featured at the Institute of Food Technologists trade show in 1998, for heaven's sake. If tobacco can glow as above why not beer?

    Understand me. I mock not science. I seek to praise it. It is clearly SABMiller that apparently stands between me and that fine rich Trappist dubbel that glows gently from its core like the last embers of a Yule log through the miracle of jellyfish luciferase. Come the revolution, all beer shall glow. Oh, yes - one fine day it shall glow.

    ¹US5876995 in case you were wondering.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2008/10/27/Does_Beer_Glass_Size_Really_Matter_'

    Does Beer Glass Size Really Matter?

    Posted: October 27th, 2008, 2:45am CET by Alan McLeod

    Years ago in Stirling Scotland I likely got my only true pint of beer. The fluid crested over the glass holding it through the miracle of surface tension and the bartender told me to lean over and take a first draw off the top to avoid losing too much. That was a fine pint. Every other of the 63,574 glasses of beer I've had, well, I assume they are pretty much near enough and don't really worry that much.

    But there are those who have questions. NPR ran a news story last week about a movement in Portland Oregon to standardize glasses in response to "falsies" or "cheaters," the latter being my word for the drug store reading glasses I now seem to wear. "Falsies" appear to be slightly related to the Aussie question of what is a "pot" and what is a "schooner" as both they relate to uncertainty as to the size of a measure. As the Wall Street Journal explained last June, "falsies" are 14 ounce glasses that look like 16 ounce ones. So, unlike CAMRA's campaign for the full pint and against short pouring, a "falsie" is full but not perhaps the measure as expected. For some, falsies are very bad indeed.

    Associated with this is an overabundance of beer sizes which have left some in the UK concerned over the proposed two-thirds pints glass. As the Times of London reported this weekend:

    ...a two-thirds pint could become a standard measure in bars and restaurants next year under proposals announced yesterday by the National Weights and Measures Laboratory...The concept of a "twother" for the sale of draught beer and cider is included in a shake up of weights and measures out for consultation until the new year. Other proposals are to allow pubs, supermarkets and wine merchants to sell small measures of wine less than 75ml for tastings and samplings, and to ban 250ml servings of wine by setting 175ml as the maximum serving.

    Again, for many, a two-thirds pint will be a very bad thing indeed, too. There is huge attachment to the measure of the pint in the UK to the point that even the 2007 exchange of the crown for a EU symbol on each glass indicating legal measurement caused consternation - not to mention discussion in Parliament.

    I think my lack of concern with falsies and full pints is that I am Canadian. We live in a mixed up world where some measures are the English imperial one, some are US-based and some more are metric. As a result, I tend to think of whatever is in front of me as the proper measure of itself. Am I a soft mark? I don't think so. See, the first thing is I am so grateful to actually find a glass of beer in Canada worth pondering that I seldom ponder its true length. Then, I have no sense that we have standard price of beer as each pub, tavern or bar I have ever graced sets prices that seem to have more to do with the class of establishment rather than the quality of beer in the glass. Finally, the glassware you will be served can be anything from eight to twenty ounces if you ask, as most Canadians do, for "a beer" - the range being illustrated so very poorly up there to the left from this 2004 post of mine.

    Maybe you have different thoughts? Maybe this is a cultural thing? Maybe it's just me but I sort of value the session out by other things than a 4% +/- variance on glass fills.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2008/10/25/Stan_Proposes_A_Beery_Conference_And_I_Agree'

    Stan Proposes A Beery Conference And I Agree

    Posted: October 25th, 2008, 5:31pm CEST by Alan McLeod

    This is a good idea and, frankly, would be the second annual as I held the first annual in my basement this summer with four attendees. I countered in his comments with a few ideas of how such a thing could work:

    • Do not hold it around one event in one venue. Too compressed. Too manic. Not family friendly.
    • Tell people to get to a particular beery city / region with their families during a given week/long weekend. Aim at booking houses through craigslist rather than hotel rooms.
    • Have a couple of fixed events for all: maybe booking a craft beer bar, putting a band and catered BBQ in a community hall and hold an afternoon of presentations from just the attendees.
    • Have sponsors cover costs of fixed events. Otherwise no real "fee" for attending other than covering own costs.
    • Go to the beach. Go to minor league baseball games where pre-arranged cask ale supply has been set up. Arrange backyard BBQs at houses people rent.
    • Otherwise, just hang out in various groups in a somewhat relaxed manner to discuss beer and beer blogging.

    I see it as something a little more like stacking the deck of a summer vacation with enhanced beery opportunities. Less pressure to pound the four ounce samples like at a regular beer fest and more time to get to know each other and the beers that one can find in a city. More time to mini-putt.

    I nominate Portland, Maine as the first site of this sort of holi-fest. I suspect Lew would have no issue with that choice.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2008/10/25/Who_Is_The_Best_Beer_Blogger___Ron_Is.'

    Who Is The Best Beer Blogger? Ron Is.

    Posted: October 25th, 2008, 5:58am CEST by Alan McLeod

    If we were not clear on this point as yet, our English expat pal in the Netherlands has made it abundantly clear in his last post wherein he sums up the 20th century. If I perhaps could claim to be The Jam - an accolade I would resist - he is no less than The Smiths. I bow deeply. We are honoured.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2008/10/25/Holland__Tripel__Koningshoeven__Berkel_Enschot'

    Holland: Tripel, Koningshoeven, Berkel-Enschot

    Posted: October 25th, 2008, 3:07am CEST by Alan McLeod

    I can't believe I have not written about Koningshoeven aka La Trappe. Like the great soda v. pop conundrum, this sixth monastic brewery has divided the planet according to how people describe it. Bah! What's that, you say? BAH, I say. Was not "La Trappe" created for those who could not pronounce Koningshoeven??? Can we live enslaved to such things? Never. Others will know better no doubt but I say "BAH!!!"

    I like this beer. Simply put, it is like a white bubblegummy triple that has met and made nice-nice with Young's Special London Ale, the beloved of Dave Line - the hero you have who you may well not know anything about. Apricot marmalade fruit over candi sugar with a hint of that crunchy autumn leave under foot hopping that the kids go made for. A slightly dry finish but, even at 8%, very moreish. Newly and briefly under 7 CND (aka under 6 USD this week) from the LCBO while supplies last.

    Less BAer love than I would expect.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2008/10/24/We_Used_To_Expect_People_To_Publicly_Pee_In_Comfort'

    We Used To Expect People To Publicly Pee In Comfort

    Posted: October 24th, 2008, 1:26am CEST by Alan McLeod

    Blogging upon other people's bloggy observations is one other the lowest forms of blogging. Yet, when someone like Pete Brown goes about actually going to real events and doing things like taking a cask of IPA to India by boat, well, that is really more like conveying actual news or...ummm...having a life. Fortunately Pete Brown, doesn't take having his life that seriously, meaning he can report on the state of the public convenience:

    ...the British Public Toilets Association (yes, there really is such a thing) reckons 45% of public conveniences have closed in the last couple of decades. They occupy prime real estate - one former public toilet was recently sold for £125,000 as a flat. A parliamentary enquiry just this week estimated that the number of public conveniences in the UK has fallen from 5,410 in 2000 to 4,423 this year.

    That is quite amazing. Blame George Michael all you want, but the growing lack of conveniences is more than inconvenient. There is a dehumanization to the lack of public planning for the need to pee. Simply an unkindness tied to the wrong response to questions of safety. And, in a real sense, it is an attack on the pub crawl, on the idea that I can have one more pint before making the hike home. Not to mention grannies and their cups of tea. In a way, it's even wrong to lump it in with "street furniture."

    When I was younger and traveled, I got a glimpse at the life with the concierge - whether the old Polish gal in black who inhabited the railway station closet or the dapper man who handed you warm towels when you were at the restaurant you couldn't really afford. Each dignified the event...even, I suppose, the one in that unisex restroom in a Brussels bar. For some reason I know the public washroom of Dad's hometown was nicknamed "The Crystal Palace" as it was made with that glass brick. It was well loved because it was well used by those in need at all times of the day. Now the only places these get built on by the highways. Because no one walks.

    When did we forget, like Winnipeg did, that people pee away from home? Is it when we stop walking down streets to go have a beer?

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2008/10/23/The_Pub_Game_Project__Pub_Conkers_'

    The Pub Game Project: Pub Conkers!

    Posted: October 23rd, 2008, 12:49am CEST by Alan McLeod

    I think I only know about conkers because I am the child of immigrants. When I was little, grandpa came over from Scotland and was quite pleased to see that the schoolyard had a chestnut tree. Away he went picking up the windfalls and - all personal ethics and the Conkers Association rules being apparently damned - he soaked them in vinegar and baked them in the oven. After stealing all my Dad's shoelaces, he drilled a neat hole in each horse chestnut and sent us off first to teach the game in the playground and then destroy hopes of all our elementary school classmates through unleashing the doctered nuts on the unsuspecting.

    Apparently, some dreams are harder to dash as this story shows:

    The Eagle pub in Askew Road, Shepherd's Bush, held the tournament on Sunday which was attended by around 20 people...General manager Linda Sjogren said: "People were cheering the contestants on, there was lots of enthusiasm. "One of our regulars had collected about 60 conkers from a secret location. We still have some left over."

    The winner got a free pint a week for a year. Note: 20 contestants. Good news that it does not take a large crowd to actually pull off something so pleasantly batty in any given pub. Good also to know that there is a World Conker's Championship held each fall in case your ambitions aim even a bit higher still.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2008/10/22/BMP_3.0__Beer_and_Music_Cross_Referenced_At_Last.fm'

    BMP 3.0: Beer and Music Cross-Referenced At Last.fm

    Posted: October 22nd, 2008, 1:55am CEST by Alan McLeod

    Here's an experiment. When I was at Zap Your Pram 2008 over the weekend, there was a very nice representative from Last.fm, the internet music social network thingie. I've been playing with it ever since, loading music into the library, figuring out which bands are like the bands I like and learning where exactly they are keeping all the good banjo music. The internet is full of traps.

    One of the worrisome things about the internet is how much of its promise has come to nothing. Most social networking, the darling of 2007, is already getting a bit stale - even if not to the degree that video blogging, the pet rock of the web, collapsed the year before. But there is something about Last.fm that is immediately compelling. Maybe it's the access to a huge library of free music I like. Maybe it's having a group that is actually about something more than just being in the group. Or maybe its because it is a heck of a lot like how at parties before the advent of CDs you always checked out the lp's in the milk crates to see how good the party was likely to be.

    And there was beer at those parties as I recall. So, I created a group - A Good Beer Blog's Hootenanny. I want to see how good craft beer intersects with good music. Join up if you like.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2008/10/21/Road_Stories__A_Tale_Of_Two_Liquor_Commissions'

    Road Stories: A Tale Of Two Liquor Commissions

    Posted: October 21st, 2008, 3:29am CEST by Alan McLeod

    So it was not quite the same trip I had imagined. Not only did I not get across the bridge at Sarnia last weekend but, as if this weekend, I officially encourage you to think very carefully next time you get that feeling that it would good to travel from Levis, Quebec to PEI. There are nicely improved highways in between those two points. New smooth highways uncluttered by cities, towns or evidence of human habitation of any kind. One has to leave the highway to find any sorts of un-tree-like entities. One learns to note when the gravel in the shoulder changes sources.

    Fortunately - at a couple of places - there are beer reasons to stop. Not fantastic ones but interesting enough ones to keep you from going mad in the north woods. Save that emotion for after you hit the moose, survive and then realize no one will be along to help you for days as everyone else decided to drive the shorter route through Maine. Have a look at the photo to the right. Click on it for more detail. See that 750 ml of Saison Dupont? $5.70! Notice the bottles of Orval? $3.50. Duchesse du Bourgogne? $3.55. Crazy prices are found at the SAQ in Riviere du Loup. No local micros, though, but plenty of goodness to take on the road to the un-conference I was attending.

    I didn't take any photos in the NB Alcool on Prospect Street in Fredericton, New Brunswick. No way. Men buying cases of Alpine beer shop there. Manly men who hunt the moose who hunt me as I drive through northern New Brunswick. But there was the best walk-in beer cooler I have ever seen there. Half a hockey rink in size. And plenty of good imports and Maritime micros like Garrison, Propeller, Picaroons and Pump House. I picked up a few there and carried on. I had an un-conference to attend.

    This may sound like not much but having driven that long long road for almost 20 years now, it's a move to good beer that I would have never expected. Discount priced saison? Well made local micros? Forget it. Time was car trunks were only filled with Brador coming back from Quebec. Times have changed. Times sure have changed.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2008/10/18/On_The_Road...If_You_Didn_t_Notice'

    On The Road...If You Didn't Notice

    Posted: October 18th, 2008, 2:03am CEST by Alan McLeod

    I am in PEI at a conference and typing this on a borrowed iPod. Saison Dupont 5.75 for 750 ml in Quebec. Nice.

    Err...iPhone...

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2008/10/15/Barley_Wine__Olde_Deuteronomy_2003__Alley_Kat__Alberta'

    Barley Wine: Olde Deuteronomy 2003, Alley Kat, Alberta

    Posted: October 15th, 2008, 3:44am CEST by Alan McLeod

    Election night here in Canada. So far most of the fun has been watching people get around the blackout law that bars transmission of election results until polls close across the whole country by posting from the UK or posting as rumours. The law is pre-Internet. It's actually pretty much pre-TV and pre-radio, too. Anyway, there has been much activity over at the other blog.

    So what does that have to do with this barley wine? Well, it comes from Alley Kat, Alberta's most famous craft brewery. Alberta is also the home of Canada's rural-based conservative movement and tonight and this election is all about them, whether they can lift themselves out of another minority Parliament or whether we go on in the endless round about of no party getting more than 33% of the vote. So even though I probably didn't vote for them, I am popping this one either in farewell or as a salute to our new rural overlords, same as the old rural overlords.

    Deep chestnut ale under a mocha head. Plenty of molasses, dried fig and date as well as a decent level of freshness for a beer five years in a twist off cap - the lightest of a pfft at the opening. Even at 10% it's a bit more like a take on Old Peculier than any other beer I have had. But a lime and apple sort of hoppiness, too, a bit like Ithaca But Brown ale.

    Plenty of BAer love. Will any politician in the land of Canuck do as well?

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2008/10/13/There_Is_A_Limit_To_What_I_Will_Do_For_Great_Beer'

    There Is A Limit To What I Will Do For Great Beer

    Posted: October 13th, 2008, 11:42pm CEST by Alan McLeod

    I had no idea such a limit existed. But there it was. Last Friday afternoon, I was heading to the Ontario-Michigan border with that plan to hit up nearby a shop or two for at least three cases of various craft beers when, whammo, traffic stopped. Almost two miles from the border, everything stood still. For ten minutes not a tap on the gas, not a hint that something was in motion up ahead. The border information radio station gave the wait as one hour. My quick math gave me a result of over twice that and about as much to return later after spending less than one hour in the USA.

    It didn't help that the van was making this squeeling noise like a bearing about to explode or that the news all day was about how the Canadian dollar had dropped about 4.5% against the greenback. So, after a quarter hour or so, I slipped down the side of the road and hit exit 2 turning north and then north-east along southern shore of Lake Huron back to where I started.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2008/10/09/Session_21_Announced__What_s_Your_Favorite_Flavour_'

    Session 21 Announced: What's Your Favorite Flavour?

    Posted: October 9th, 2008, 1:09am CEST by Alan McLeod

    I think that's it...no, it's this: what is your favorite beer and why? While I did like the music non-beer theme, I'd prefer something more of a beer theme for The Session. All these non-themes that use beer as illustration, like last month's about beer and memories, are really treating beer as a constant - a mechanism if you will - to help us describe the other variable element of the question. Beer should be more than mechanism, more than the straight guy in the comedy duo. But that's me. And I'm a bit grumpy.

    So, in November's session, we will explore the process of establishing a favorite. Sure, why not? There will be lots to learn about favoritism as there was about perception of memory last month for session #20 or a ways back for #15 and how it started for you. That's fine and you may love it. Me? I may still be just a bit grumpy.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2008/10/08/Belgium__Ultra_Amber__Brasserie_d_Ecaussinnes__D_Enghien'

    Belgium: Ultra Amber, Brasserie d'Ecaussinnes, D'Enghien

    Posted: October 8th, 2008, 3:01am CEST by Alan McLeod

    A small gift to myself from Tulley's last August. $3.25 from the discount rack. "Discount rack?!?" you say. Yes, discount rack. Don't you recall what your mother told you as she lent over you and cooled your brow with the wet wash cloth when you had that fever back in grade five? She said "remember: it's not off...it's Belgian." That's what you heard. You never understood at the time. You thought it was the fever. But now you know. Because it is true.

    Massive waves of yeast, rising bread and apple rise from the massive mouse head over clouded amber ale. Sweet and malty with a lager-ish roundness. Creaminess with the sweetness that is a bit like MacKintosh's McCreamy McCandy - slight butter, slight smoke - but a jag of alcohol which that 1960s Canadian tartaned schoolyard treat never boasted. Also very close to a higher test version of a 1995 Algonquin Hunt Club cream lager, according to herself who obsesses over that long lost Ontario microbrew. A worthwhile rich and sweeter take on a pale ale from Brasserie D'Ecaussinnes. Nutmeg in the finish.

    BAers vote with their first initial, not their second.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2008/10/07/Charleston_Business_Journal___Beer_News_Horn_O_Plenty'

    Charleston Business Journal - Beer News Horn O'Plenty

    Posted: October 7th, 2008, 3:23am CEST by Alan McLeod

    In amongst all the daily beer news items about this guy beating up that guy over a case of beer...or these guys passing a law that will never work to stop this guy beating up that guy over a case of beer...you find a gem like an article in the Charleston (Regional) Business Journal by Molly Parker (but not that Molly Parker, as illustrated) entitled "Debate Brewing Between Local Beer Brands, State Law" about the state of craft brewing in South Carolina.

    Why such praise for a rather humbly sourced piece? First, it neatly summarizes the three-tier system - something that confuses every non-American (not anti-, just non-) I have ever met. Then, it contextualizes that system into the current moment and the need for change to assist in the development of local craft brewing. Illustrating how specific beer-related legal reform makes for economic development is always a winner for me. Then the whole thing is interspersed with interviews with a range of craft brewers, providing the reader with a basic entry into the scene in the state.

    Good beer reporting...unless it is all rubbish. But that's always the case. Yet in this case, I don't get the sense as Molly Parker's bit carries the right sort of confidence. Plus she is not a dedicated beer writer as the news about her 2007 move to South Carolina from Peoria indicates. So, unless it is all a pack of lies, good work for a regional non-beer publication and good for Molly Parker...the other one.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2008/10/05/Jeffery_Amherst_s_Spuce_Beer_Circa_1759'

    Jeffery Amherst's Spuce Beer Circa 1759

    Posted: October 5th, 2008, 10:19pm CEST by Alan McLeod

    I am a bad home brewer. I have had supplies in for months to do a couple of all-grain batches but still they stiff wrapped and wrapped again in plastic in a cool, dark place. I did buy another mash pot yesterday but, given my failure to avoid napping and reading this afternoon, no beer again was made. Yet, beer knowledge expanded as I was reading The French and Indian War, a pretty good read by Walter R. Borneman, and came across this recipe for spruce beer from 1759, taken from an order by General Jeffery Amherst, to be supplied to the British troops moving to take the fort at Crown Point from the French:

    Take 7 Pounds of good spruce and boil it well till the bark peels off, then take the spruce out and put three Gallons of Molasses to the Liquor and and boil it again, scum it well as it boils, then take it out the kettle and put it into a cooler, boil the remained of the water sufficient for a Barrel of thirty Gallons, if the kettle is not large enough to boil it together, when milk warm in the Cooler put a pint of Yest into it and mix well. Then put it into a Barrel and let it work for two or three days, keep filling it up as it works out. When done working, bung it up with a Tent Peg in the Barrel to give it vent every now and then. It may be used in up to two or three days after. If wanted to be bottled it should stand a fortnight in the Cask. It will keep a great while.

    Yum. You see the key phrase, don't you: "till the bark peels off". The British army was using whole branches, not just needles and boughs. Again I say - yum. Google gives us that recipe, too, but give up has more on the brew - in the form of a digitized copy of the 1759 orderly book from Amherst's expedition north up Lake Champlain, setting out how the army brewed:

    Spruce Beer will be Brewed for the Health and Conveniency of the Troops, which will be ƒerved at prime Coƒt ; 5 Quarts of Mollaƒƒes will be put into every Barrel of Spruce Beer ; each Gallon coƒt nearly 3 Coppers. The Quarter-maƒters of the Regiments, Regulars and Provincials, are to give Notice to Lieut. Colo. Robiƒon of the Quantity each Corps are deƒirous to receive, for which they muƒt give Receipts and pay the Money before the Regiments marches. Each Regiment to ƒend a Man acquainted with Brewing, or that is beƒt capable of aƒƒifting the Brewers, to the Brewery to-morrow Morning at 6 o'clock, at the Rivulet on the Left of Montgomerys. Thoƒe Men are to Remain, and are to be paid at the Rate of 1 8 Pence Currency per Day. One Serjt. of the Regulars and one of the Provencials to ƒuper-intend the Brewery, who will be paid is 6d per Day. Spruce Beer will be deliverd to the Regiments on Thursday Evening or Friday morning.

    Sweet use of the long "s" HTML, eh what? Let me know if you can't see them and I will report back to The 1700s Typeface Open Source Beer Recipe Project.

    More? OK, Borneman points that "rum and other spirituous liquors" were prohibited under his command but that spruce beer provided some protection against scurvy among other benefits...aka "conveniency". Here is a 5 gallon clone of the beer for the inconvenienced homebrewer. But not me. I have those other beers I have yet to make lined up first.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2008/10/04/About_Oaked_Beer__Perseguidor_2006__Jolly_Pumpkin__Michigan'

    About Oaked Beer: Perseguidor 2006, Jolly Pumpkin, Michigan

    Posted: October 4th, 2008, 2:55pm CEST by Alan McLeod

    This beer crosses a lot of categories: oaked, aged, sour and from a state that looks like a mitten. I picked this 2006 edition of Perseguidor from Ron when I spent an hour with him a year ago, probably my beery highlight of 2007 now that I think of it.

    BAer's lavish love - though they lament that the brew is no longer made. Happily wrong, the good people at Beer News explain that Perseguidor is a period release of a blending essentially at Ron's whim. Going by the date, the version I have apparently is Batch 2, a blend of Oro de Calabaza and Bam Biere. That being the case, I should love this beer with a love no other can comprehend. Or at least I will feel bad after it's gone.

    Much darker than either Oro or Bam, it pours a lovely bright chestnut with a light beige cream rim and foam. On the first sip it is clear that this is actually Batch 1, a blend of La Roja and Bam Biere. I don't seem to have reviewed La Roja, though I still have a couple simplicitur and even as one small Grand Reserva in the stash. It is incredibly elegant - the lush richness of a Flemish brown given the planky structure of Bam, northwood cousin to sauvignon blanc - each characteristic softened by time. Perhaps the best smelling beer in the history of the nose. Bright with the sweet and spicy apple rice vinegar of the Flemish brown. There is a soft richness in the core despite the modest souring plus something like biting your cheek while eating a green apple.

    Wonderful. I thought I would save the bottle after I rinsed but the "2006" on the gold label and half the ink on the main label washed away. Be warned.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2008/10/03/Session_20__Beer_Memories_And_Me'

    Session 20: Beer Memories And Me

    Posted: October 3rd, 2008, 6:15pm CEST by Alan McLeod

    So, I suppose it is a little ironic that I forgot this edition of the Session until today. But, given that beer is more related to the erasing of memory than the fixing of it, maybe that is natural. Interestingly, there is one memory related story - possibly apochrophal - that experiences during alcohol consumption are more vividly recalled during subsequent alcohol consumption than in the intervening dry period. At least that's what a few med students I once knew said they were doing when they had a beer when studying and then another just before the exam.

    So, what is the difference between beer memories and favorite beers or pubs or beery events? I don't know. Is there a best cheese memory? I don't know that either. So let's review the actual topic again: "is there a beer that reminds you of a specific memory?" The answer is, of course, yes. The trouble really is that there isn't just one beer that reminds me of a specific memory. They all do. Think just of some of the early Maritime beers of my life: Keith's IPA reminds of the foul pong of the urinals at the Seahorse in Halifax, Schooner of my pals picking the old foil labels onto my carpet during a party. That is the point of branding - to make a cognitive connection...though not necessarily the ones the branders desire. Beyond brand, there is the more elemental reality of taste and how taste itself is tied to memory. Taste evokes. Instant coffee for me relocates me to an Annapolis Valley church hall in the 1970s before my father's services. In the same way, stale beer takes me to college jobs in bars and the pong of the carpets while the scent of Labatt Blue takes me to the backyard when I was a little kid, my Dad letting me stick my finger in his beer, the bitterness disgusting me. Mt. Hood hops trigger that memory, too, as well as, sometimes, a bit of the disgust. Another memory might not be about consumption but association with a brewery but there's none in my family or my pack of pals as far as I know. No one owned the village pub. No one delivered the casks. Now, Scots golf course maintenance and whisky brokering...that's a different matter.

    Beer and memory. It's a tricky one. I may have more on this later.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2008/10/02/Beer_Hunting_in_Michigan_and_Quebec'

    Beer Hunting in Michigan and Quebec

    Posted: October 2nd, 2008, 1:09am CEST by Alan McLeod

    I have a couple of big trips coming up in October. Circumstances place me to the west in London, Ontario relieved of duties before noon on a Friday which means I have an hour to head further west still to the border at Sarnia and the afternoon to shop in Michigan. Having been there before, I have a sense of what I am looking for: something wet hopped, a case of Two Hearted Ale...as well as a little Bud American Ale...just to see. I don't think I'll make it as far as Jolly Pumpkin but Ron has given me the name of some of his most north-easterly clients so with any luck I will land some anyway.

    The next weekend, however, sends me far east through largely uncharted territory as I head to a small IT/brainiac conference called Zap Your Pram in PEI. I will try to stop in a few government stores out east but on the way back on Sunday, I hope to hit a beer store or two in Quebec City like Le Monde des Bieres or Dépanneur de la Rive. I want to get my hands on some Dieu du Ciel for sure but, as John Rubin mentions in today's Toronto Star, there are plenty of Quebec-made brews we never hear about in English-speaking Canada. The same is true of any regional brews due to our wacko inter-provincial trade restrictions but Quebecers, arguably, have a taste for a broader range of flavours than the rest of we Canucks and it shows in their brews. So maybe I'll grab something from Microbrasserie Charlevoix or Hopfenstark, both unknowns to me but well regarded by the BAers.

    Any hints before I undertake the 4,000 km two-part tour?