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A Good Beer Blog (24 unread)

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2010/02/27/Breaking_Down_Walls_Between_Producers_And_Customers'

    Breaking Down Walls Between Producers And Customers

    Posted: February 27th, 2010, 11:58pm CET by Alan McLeod

    Jack Curtin dropped an idea into the discourse today that I think is really worth exploring:

    One of the secret strengths of craft’s little corner of the beer world has always been the breaking down of the walls between producers and customers. Add in the even stronger bond between brewers and homebrewers are you have one of the primary factors in allowing crafts to continue to thrive and grow even in a terrible economy, second only to consumer perception of quality and value for their hard-earned dollars.

    There is a lot packed into that short paragraph. Three ideas really and the fourth of their ranking. He got thinking this way in response to an article in The New York Times this weekend about the ways craft brewers are reaching out to their customers. Let's have a look at Jack's ideas and flesh them out a bit.

    • The walls between producers and customers: this is an important idea but I think one that is frankly overplayed by the craft brewing trade including commentators. Most consumers will never meet or certainly not have the kind of relationship that is shared between people who work in the beer trade at all levels. That is why I like to say love the beer not the brewer. We can like the brewer just fine but have to be wary of ideas like "supporting" a "craft beer community" as opposed to being watchful for respect of beer lovers in the marketplace. Similarly, we have to be careful in response to claims that brewers are celebrities or even rock stars. Worse, we have claims that beer knowledge is specialist knowledge that requires only "real" writers doing the describing. These things put distance between the consumer and producer and even confuse the marketplace though fostering snobbery.
    • The bond between brewers and homebrewers: when I started my interest in good beer, it was through homebrewing. I was in London in the mid-80s and brought back a few books, a few collapsible plastic kegs and some other stuff. The best writing about beer at that time seemed to be all about home brewing. When I started blogging about beer back in 2003 I could find very few other bloggers who weren't focusing on making it themselves. Craft brew and home brew were connected though people trying to replicate the good beers they were finding in the shops. I don't know if that is so much the case anymore. I have a sense that the next wave of craft beer drinkers may never have met a home brewer.
    • Consumer perception of quality and value: what product shouldn't be judge as a matter of quality and value? Claims that value is not a vital principle to a beer fan sound to me like claims to a captured market. Sure there are real beer hounds who will spend stupid amounts to travel to the one pure source of that one unattainable beer but no one is building an industry to serve that luxury hobbyist. It's really about getting the six park into a million grocery carts.
    • The relative place of these three principles: You can see where I am going. For me the last idea is the most critical aspect about where the good beer market is right now. In the states, more and more good beer is getting into grocery stores. In the UK, more and more cask ale is being sold in pubs. Widespread access to and enjoyment of good beer at a good price is the golden goose. Without that event of a value-based consumer choice, good beer will be stuck speaking to the converted, to the same faces seem at beer fests, to the same names on the bylines.

    Maybe there really isn't an enemy of good beer - other than perhaps complacency - as long as we trust it is a product that has the quality and value that sells itself. This is an organic process that builds slowly overtime. And it's a process that has been proven over the last 20 years of market growth. If placing more people in breweries to teach them about how it is made is what we need to do now, well, that certainly says we are past the time when home brewing was the way to good beer. But it's not about breaking down the walls between the producer and consumer so much as teaching the consumer about the product and production of good beer.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2010/02/27/The_Women_Every_Real_Canadian_Male_Has_A_Crush_On...'

    The Women Every Real Canadian Male Has A Crush On...

    Posted: February 27th, 2010, 1:53am CET by Alan McLeod

    Truth be told, every Canadian male has a deep and abiding crush on every member of the woman's hockey team and photos of them drinking beer just feed the flame. We have commercials where the players kick doltish men like us all on the ice. They sell us social networking tech. While we have to work on their taste in beer, these are the sweethearts of the nation. Goalie gear, baby. Oh baby.

    Did Richard Lautens of the Toronto Star get the best picture of the moment?

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2010/02/26/An_Olympics_And_Beer_Story_That_Makes_Some_Sense'

    An Olympics And Beer Story That Makes Some Sense

    Posted: February 26th, 2010, 2:12pm CET by Alan McLeod

    I still wonder what the average Latvian thinks about all this but at least this story makes a little more sense than needing to shut public booze sales and politicians drunk driving. Yet the International Olympic Committee is not amused:

    Nearly an hour after the Canadians won their third consecutive Olympic gold medal with a 2-0 win over the Americans, the players came back out on the ice in the near-empty arena, smoking cigars and swigging champagne and beer. (Rebecca Johnston even tried to drive the zamboni.) "I don't think it's a good promotion of sport values," Gilbert Felli, the IOC's executive director of the Olympics, told the Associated Press after learning about the celebration. "If they celebrate in the changing room, that's one thing, but not in public. We will investigate what happened."

    Gold. Literally. What's that IOC? Leave it in the locker room? Hide your beer drinking?? What a joke. Remember, these are Canadian hockey players and remember what the Russian goalie said when the mens team gave them the boot the other night: "They came like gorillas coming out of a cage."

    Yet is that what we are? Is that what the world sees? Are we really the wild men and women of the north, clubbing and hammering poor Russians and American athletes as mere foreplay for a good beer? Sadly, no one appears to have taught the women's hockey team on the ways of good beer. Does she really need to be sucking down a Molbat macro-blurt?

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2010/02/25/Question__What_Beer_For_Canada_Against_Russia_'

    Question: What Beer For Canada Against Russia?

    Posted: February 25th, 2010, 12:14am CET by Alan McLeod

    There are few phrases more evocative for a Canadian of my early middle age than "Canada Russia".

    When I was nine I heard the final game of the 1972 series broadcast from Moscow on the car radio sitting in a parking lot in Middleton, NS. We won. We were not always successful in the international head to head tournaments after that and into the '80s but we quickly came to love or at least fear the Soviet National anthem. We loved or at least feared Vladislav Tretiak and Valeri Kharlamov. To fill the emotional need, there were any number of tours across the country where Canucks and Ruskies beat their heads against each other.

    In 1984, I saw a touring Soviet national team play in Halifax against Canada's Olympic training team. The evil team had eight guys called Sergei which the announcer at the rink pronounced as "Sir-jay-ee." We cheered when the Canadians rushed toward their end. When they let loose slap shots from beyond half we winced silent winces expecting the goalie or the boards behind the net to crack from the awful force of a Marxist-Leninist totalitarian Moscow Red Army player's sheer power.

    In the 1987 Canada Cup, Mario and Wayne destroyed them in a game so exciting that I had to turn off the TV and only knew Canada won when the wintery neighbourhood erupted out there, outside the windows of the house, car horns blaring to the horizon. Then there was Gorby, then there were Russian players in the NHL, then the bear seemed to fade a bit. Then they got good again. I have no idea what will happen tonight but over half all Canadians will watch the TV tonight to watch a quarter-final game. Because it is Canada against Russia.

    What beer to have?

    Later: Turns out the beer is Unibroue's Edition 2005, a 10% Extra Strong Ale on Lees under an old school "U with grain" logo. And Canada scored its first goal between the pop of the cork and my first sip. It pours a dark brown with a thin white rim. Dark plum and dark chocolate on the nose. Gorgeous in the mouth. A mild menthol effect fades into plum and cola, ginger and nutmeg, apple butter and tobacco. A little oily but not too heavy. Plenty of BAer love.

    Two nuttin' for Canada 12 minutes into the first period. Excellent. Three nuttin' a minute later. Oh my. Oh my oh my oh my.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2010/02/24/Further_Olympic_Related_Drinking_Problems'

    Further Olympic Related Drinking Problems

    Posted: February 24th, 2010, 3:59am CET by Alan McLeod

    It is inevitable, I suppose, that folks get all whipped up and excited when the big event comes to their town but this is getting a little weird:

    A B.C. government MLA is facing drunk-driving charges after an evening of Olympic-related events. In statement issued Tuesday afternoon, North Vancouver-Seymour MLA Jane Thornthwaite apologized for her behaviour... The B.C. Liberal MLA, who has three children, was driving home at about 1 a.m. on Tuesday when she was stopped at a North Vancouver RCMP road check. A spokesman for the RCMP said a 51-year-old female driver came to their attention – he would not confirm it was Ms. Thorthwaite – and the driver provided a breath sample that indicated her blood alcohol level was over the legal limit of .08 per cent.

    I am not so much interested in the gotcha of the story so much as how, when combined with the instantly beloved beer drinking gold medal winner and the crowded streets out of control, it does paint a picture of what a pervasive and intimate - yet hazardous - role drinking has within Canadian culture. It's hard to place. We are comfortable pushing the pounding back, don't navel gaze too much about it. We even make it a point of pride in any number of contexts. What must it look like to others?

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2010/02/23/Craft_Brewers_Break_Ranks_And_Use_Rice'

    Craft Brewers Break Ranks And Use Rice

    Posted: February 23rd, 2010, 12:24am CET by Alan McLeod

    One of the silliest things I have ever come across in all these years of yapping about good beer was last year's infomercial made by US craft brewers titled "I am a Craft Brewer." It included many mutual back pats and self-pinned blue ribbon statements including the pledges that they do not put corn in their beer, they do not put rice in their beer. One year later, such "honouring and holding true to their craft" - as the infomercial claimed - is seemingly not so important to New Jersey's Flying Fish Brewing as they have decided to put rice in their beer... or at least one, their not yet released Exit 16 Wild Rice Double IPA:

    Although no longer home to forests of giant cedars and salt hay marshes teeming with aquatic life, the Meadowlands is still an amazingly diverse ecosystem providing vital animal and plant habitat. In a nod to a once common food plant here, we’ve brewed this beer with wild rice. We also used brown and white rice, as well as two malts. Rice helps the beer ferment dry to better showcase the five different hops we’ve added. Lots and lots of them. We then dry-hopped this Double IPA with even more-generous additions of Chinook and Citra hops to create a nose that hints at tangerine, mango, papaya and pine.

    Wow! Sounds really interesting. Who knew that rice would help showcase the hops in a craft beer? Who knew that trying three different rices would be interesting? Maybe someone who actually tried?

    Look, there is no reason to get all freaked out finger pointy, screaming hypocrisy or go over the top some other way. We just need to thank our stars that human invention knows no such bounds. And, like Wisconsin's New Glarus and its corn beer Spotted Cow, good rice beer has already been done before as Michigan's Kuhnhenn Brewing Company has made a Double Rice IPA (DRIPA) according to the BAers.

    Promising never to make beer with corn or rice? It's like promising to never make beer in casks or to only make beer in casks. Make beer from turnips for all I care. As long as you make it tasty and sell it to me at a fair price, what does it matter to me?

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2010/02/22/Olympic_Celebrations_One_Big_Binge_o_rama'

    Olympic Celebrations One Big Binge-o-rama

    Posted: February 22nd, 2010, 3:05am CET by Alan McLeod

    Call the Neo-probes! Athletic competitions now proven to lead to binge drinking as Vancouver struggles to keep up with drunk jet setting gangs of cow bell ringers and fans of third-rate curlering nations. Jet setting Olympic public boozing is apparently something we are very good at in Canada:

    “Due to an unprecedented number of intoxicated people, we must do what we can to ensure the Games are safe for everyone,” said a spokesman for the province’s liquor licensing branch Sunday. “We’re taking a measured approach that still allows people to have fun and feel confident that they will be safe while doing so,” he said... Vancouver Police said they are prepared to ask for more early-closing orders to tackle public drinking, drunkenness and disorder on city streets, after being granted similar orders for Saturday and Sunday. Police spokesman Const. Lindsey Houghton said there was a noticeable spike in people bringing booze into the downtown core on the weekend.

    And it's not just the crowds in the streets who are booze fueled. We Canadians proudly celebrated the gold medal celebrations by our own Jon Montgomery, the fastest guy to go head first down an ice chute on a sled: "I don’t subscribe to necessarily all the things typical athletes do, and for me a pint now and then is a good thing,” he said... “I go out to parties with him, and he finishes the party,” said teammate Mike Douglas. He finishes the party. That's why we love him. He walked around chugging from a pitcher of beer after the victory pretty much like he did, above, at the Skeleton World Championships in Feb. 2008. And during an interview, a fan tossed Montgomery a mickey of rye, which he stuck in his back pocket. That's why we love him. He is us.

    We are such bad examples for ourselves.

    Update: Huffington Post has the photos and a video:

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2010/02/21/A_Good_Goat_Cheese_Likes_A_Belgian_Pale_Ale'

    A Good Goat Cheese Likes A Belgian Pale Ale

    Posted: February 21st, 2010, 3:18am CET by Alan McLeod

    Years ago, when I was thinking about extra part time jobs I might take on, I had this idea that I could set up an ice cream van that dispensed soft serve goats milk cheese. The brand was going to be "I Can't Believe This Came Out Of A Goat!" It never happened.

    This evening I was reminded of the idea when I pulled a chunk of bouc émissaire, a young raw goat milk cheese by Fromagerie Chaput of Quebec. Tangy creamy goodness with just that hint of goat. Goatiness is a bit of a twist for the English-speaking palate even if it makes great strawberry softie swirl. But it's just fine with spicy Belgian pale ale like Zot or the Het Anker Margriet I picked up at the LCBO today, on sale for an insanely cheap $1.80 a bottle. Tang on tang. I imagine a tripel or saison would do the trick as well. Or not. Style goes only so far to explain actual taste.

    Is this pairing? I suppose. But if it was pairing it would be monogamous and that would be the end of the explorations. And, worse, it might even be an arranged marriage where I tell you that it's the best thing going so you better take my word for it. Rubbish. You might hate this combo. Go find your own damn goat cheese.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2010/02/20/If_You_Are_Gonna_Sin__Please_Really_Really_Sin'

    If You Are Gonna Sin, Please Really Really Sin

    Posted: February 20th, 2010, 2:50am CET by Alan McLeod

    Maybe one day I will ask a bartender for a gin with a shot of whiskey as well as a splash of rum. But if I am ever in Nebraska I now know I don't dare add a dribble of beer to that cocktail:

    A Prohibition-era law still on the books makes Nebraska the only U.S. state to ban bars from serving drinks that mix beer and liquor, and some lawmakers are trying to make the restriction history, ABC News reported Feb. 17. The law prohibits bars from serving drinks like boilermakers and Irish Car Bombs -- the latter a shot of Bailey's Irish Cream and whiskey dropped into a glass of stout.

    Now, it's been a long time since I had a boilermaker, a high school staple, but it's like all the anti-neo-prohibitionist / neo-prohibitionist talk out of the UK - what the heck were these guys thinking? It's wrong to dilute the strength? Boggles the mind. Maybe it's all this Olympic chest thumping up here talking but, once again, it is so weird to read about a society where you may have the right to have a drink but you may have to fret about how you have it. We just make sure that our beer ads have no reference to actually drinking the stuff. Now that makes sense.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2010/02/19/Question__What_Claims_To_Fame_Can_t_Good_Beer_Make_'

    Question: What Claims To Fame Can't Good Beer Make?

    Posted: February 19th, 2010, 1:49am CET by Alan McLeod

    I think the forces of anti-neo-prohibition are at it again. I have never been sure who the anti-neo-prohibitionists are but that goes for neo-prohibitionists as well. They each stand for everything good as well as everything else and in the end look a lot like each other. Best of all, they aren't really a "they" at all. It's just folks thinking about something and needing to make a generalization about it in order to make sure that the equation "X=good" means "X=what I like already".

    You see it when someone can write: "... none of it will work because the ‘misuse’ of alcohol isn’t nearly as bad as the government or the corporate do-gooders would have us believe" without the slightest evidence to back it up other than following it with reference to "the puritanical anti-drinking movement." Safe to say, when you see this sort of thing you are dealing with the closed mind of the anti-neo-prohibitionists... or neo-prohibitionists depending on the brand of outlandishness foisted upon your eyes.

    You also see it in other ways. Self congratulations. Chest thumping king of the hillery. First prize giving. Now, I like Jeff Alworth as much as the next guy but he is getting a lot of responses to his suggestion that in his home state of Oregon "we are abandoning the larger quantities of cheap beer for the smaller quantities of good beer" and, as a result, has determined that craft beer has become "competing cultural model for alcohol consumption that encourages healthy behavior." Well, just as we understand that there are actual social issues in the UK related to alcohol use (even if cask ale isn't to blame) we also realize people are cutting back and shifting drinking compared to past decades for any number of reasons which are related much to the shift caused by Jane Fonda's exercise VHS tapes as well as the breakdown of family life being based on post-work male bonding in bars in favour of driving children around in mini-vans to their incessant activities (though craft beer may add a 1% shift plus or minus.)

    One of the oddest first prizes you see fans of craft beer giving each other is the "I drink less because I drink craft beer" blue ribbons. My experience of craft beer drinkers has been somewhat less purifying than that - though, to be very fair, witnessing the huge amount of pleasure that Stan got from a very small portions of very good beer was a revelation. Frankly, I think a fair measure of craft beer consumption is pretty much the same as non-craft beer consumption. Some have a little and some have a lot. In Pete's words it's about "managing their arc of inebriation in a way with which they feel comfortable" - aka the buzz even if a tasty buzz.

    So, given all that tell me this: do you really drink less? Do you drink less because you are older? Because society has shifted? Because craft beer is a drink for people over 30? And if you don't drink less than you did when you were in undergrad... what the hell is wrong with you?

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2010/02/18/Wisconsin__Stone_Soup__New_Glarus__New_Glarus'

    Wisconsin: Stone Soup, New Glarus, New Glarus

    Posted: February 18th, 2010, 5:59am CET by Alan McLeod

    A Belgian pale ale from the USA's Upper Midwest. This one smells good. Either that or I smell really bad. I've just finished two 16 hour days so it is not beyond the realm of possibility. But I've been in a jacket and tie the whole time. So it's likely the beer or the guy next to me was inordinately polite.

    Medium pale golden ale under a thin rim of white. Apple and pear on the nose with a little nutmeg. More in the mouth framed in a sweetish effervescent rich ale. Plenty of bready yeastiness. Dryish ending with black tea and twiggy hops and that lingering spice. A reasonable session beer at 5.3%. Part of a New Glarus mixed 12 pack that made the trip from near Lake Superior to the east end of Lake Ontario. A respectable level of BAer respect but probably not enough.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2010/02/16/Fully_Expect_48%_Beerish_Stuff_Has_Been_Made'

    Fully Expect 48% Beerish Stuff Has Been Made

    Posted: February 16th, 2010, 1:51pm CET by Alan McLeod

    And it sits in a bottle waiting for the appropriate marketing moment for a price of 127 dollars. Between you and me, I don't really care that it is all about marketing but I also do not care to try this or any other loony strength beer. Drinking it isn't the point. Consider this statement:

    "Beer has a terrible reputation in Britain, it's ignorant to assume that a beer can't be enjoyed responsibly like a nice dram or a glass of fine wine. A beer like Sink the Bismarck should be enjoyed in spirit sized measures. It is important that you be careful with this beer and show it the same amount of sceptical, tentative respect you would show an international chess superstar, clown or gypsy."

    If it weren't for peeking at the use of "sceptical" I would have spat my coffee on my keyboard when I hit the word "enjoyed." Given that we are about ten weeks past 32%, and about as many days past 40% there can't be a heck of a lot of thought going into the recipe. Or the aging. It's all just a variation on Garrett Oliver's comment about the idiocy of the world's saltiest food. Gak even if gak with a ideological point.

    Makes me yearn for beechwood aging all of a sudden. A technique with a purpose related to flavour even if you don't like the flavour.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2010/02/16/Dutch_News___The_Consumer_Is_Being_Taken_For_A_Ride_'

    Dutch News: "The Consumer Is Being Taken For A Ride"

    Posted: February 16th, 2010, 1:23am CET by Alan McLeod

    Back from a few days on the road and I am shocked - shocked!! - to find out there is an underworld of bootlegged beer out there. The news today comes from the Netherlands but this could be happening in your home town:

    People drinking a beer in Amsterdam have a big chance of it being an unbranded brew. Hospitality businesses are serving illegal beer en masse to get out of stranglehold contracts they complain they have to sign with the established brewers like Heineken... Many cafe and restaurant-holders quietly put unbranded barrels under their taps, because they can save 25 to 50 euros on purchasing and the customers do not taste the difference, Amsterdam newspaper Het Parool reports. The unbranded beers come from brewers with overcapacity in Germany, Belgium and the Netherlands. Insiders in the drinks trade believe that 60 percent of the established hospitality businesses take this route.

    Hmmm: "because they can save 25 to 50 euros on purchasing and the customers do not taste the difference." Isn't that odd. In what other product category could a merry oligopolist demand "stranglehold contracts" when the consumer can't perceive a distinction between the oligopolistic version from a discount one? And then there is that idea in the story's headline: "Most Heineken Beer in Amsterdam is Fake." Can a beer actually be fake? Sure the branding may be stolen and now doubt an example of widespread commercial fraud - a zwendel even - but does that make the beer in your glass fake beer? If you can't tell the difference? Isn't it really just switched? Or is there something so elemental in Heineken or other macro-brews that can be falsified in such an elemental way?

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2010/02/13/Really__Is_It_Really_That_Unbelievable_'

    Really? Is It Really That Unbelievable?

    Posted: February 13th, 2010, 2:49pm CET by Alan McLeod

    I have to admit that I never had any plan to attend the Vancouver Olympics given that they are thousands of miles from my part of Canada and, this weekend at least, I am in a region so vastly different from there - if only because there is snow on the ground and freezing temperatures. But if I were there "unbelievable" is not the word that would come to mind:

    "It's unbelievable," said Sukh Mattu, who waited for a table at four downtown establishments before giving up at each. "There are lineups everywhere and everything's overpriced. There should be more beer gardens." Many venues are being criticized for their inflated prices. Irish House is charging $9 for a plastic cup of Guinness, for example, while German Fan Fest is charging $8.25 for a beer. Brandi's Show Lounge is charging $10.25 for a pale ale during their special "Olympic hours."

    Are we bad hosts? That is the sort of thing that creeps up the nape of one's neck when you hear allegations of gouging. But - really - beer gardens in Canada in February? Don't you go to events like the Olympics assuming that this is not a bargain hunting expedition? Wouldn't you even pay more at a major league sporting event for any given regular season game? Look, I am not trying to defend the Olympics. There's a wee bit too much of the old goose step in its legacy for that. But moaning about being dinged during this sort of gathering is a bit naive.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2010/02/12/I_Have_Never_Really_Bothered_With_The_Pour'

    I Have Never Really Bothered With The Pour

    Posted: February 12th, 2010, 2:46am CET by Alan McLeod

    There are many things that can get attached to an idea or experience. I presume the more precious or particular the key advice, the more likely you are dealing with a barnacle that needs scraping off the hull of your given ship of life.. or a consultant hunting for someone to bill. Like this mystic wisdom about pouring your beer:

    There’s more to pouring a beer than you may think. Pouring a beer improperly can pollute wonderful aromas, cause an improper release of CO2, and hinder the flavors of the beer. If you want your beer to fulfill its potential, consider this advice...You want to cock the glass a certain way depending on the style of beer. If the beer is highly carbonated, tilt the glass at a 45 degree angle and start pouring down the side. Wait until a third of the pour you want is in the glass, then tilt the glass upright and pour in the center. If the beer is lower in carbonation, start pouring downwards into the center of the glass earlier. A head the width of two fingers is a good rule of thumb for what you are looking for, Deman says.

    I have never been particularly anal about how to pour a beer but even I would not look for a two inch head on a low carbonation style like mild. You'd drive the life out of it. But no doubt I've been a lifetime beer polluter and had no idea. Better rule of thumb: do what you like when you pour your beer and it probably works for you.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2010/02/11/Ohio__Edmund_Fitzgerald_Porter__Great_Lakes__Cleveland'

    Ohio: Edmund Fitzgerald Porter, Great Lakes, Cleveland

    Posted: February 11th, 2010, 4:00am CET by Alan McLeod

    What is it about Canadian craft brewers? American's have a brewery called Great Lakes on the south shore of Lake Erie so we need one on the north shore of Lake Ontario. We have a New Brunswick brewery that just happens to come up with styles and names for beers that have been used for years next door in Maine. Vermonters make a beer called Number 9 so, wouldn't you know it, one pops up recently in Ontario. Most oddly there are Hoptical Illusions south and, later, north. And, now, we even are claimed to have taken the "R" from Racer 5 and stuck it on a line called Red Racer.

    I don't blame the beers - any of them. The beers are innocent in such matters. And in some cases tasty as with Ohio's Edmund Fitzgerald Porter. Cocoa, coffee and date aromas with a strong yogurty tang wafting waftingly off a dark mahogany ale with a thin tan rim. In the mouth, cocoa and date and nut maltiness meets black tea and weed hoppiness all mixed together with a swirl of that chalky or even yogurty yeast. A lovely, complex beer that came in a mixed 12 pack bought at a CNY Wegmans for under 16 bucks. Crazy value. BAers have it bad for this one.

    Remember - don't blame the beers. These branding consultants know not what they do.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2010/02/10/Have_The_Olympics_Turned_Me_Off_Beer_Evangelizing_'

    Have The Olympics Turned Me Off Beer Evangelizing?

    Posted: February 10th, 2010, 1:45am CET by Alan McLeod

    While I think Pete makes a very good point about most people really not caring much about the quality or even qualities of what they drink, the news out of Vancouver has me wondering about whether I might ever go out to drink with Canadians ever again:

    If there ever was a reason for Vancouverites to celebrate, the 2010 Winter Olympics are it. If you're like most of us, you'll be watching the gold medal hockey games in someone's living room with a bunch of friends. But if you have to get out of the house, may we suggest a few other party spots?

    A list then is provided of which party spots to hit and what to do: drink, drink ice-cold Heineken, drink lots of Molson Canadian, drink beer and wine and drink at Club Bud. Fabulous. But is it to be derided? Pete puts it very well when he says most do not "appreciate the flavour, but to look and feel good while they're drinking it, and to manage their arc of inebriation in a way with which they feel comfortable."

    I like that - the comfort of the arch of one's inebriation. But it raises questions. Why should I care to evangelize to the already comfortable let alone celebrate with them? What is in that weary fight for me? Why would I take on that task with any more glee than taking on trying to convert Olympians to Northamptonshire skittles? Sure, we all know the lugers would likely get skittles right away but it's not like the skiers would. You can't imagine lugers settling for the comfort of the arch of their inebriation even if the hoards of waxed plankers clearly would. I think the analogy holds and even illuminates.

    If that is the case, are the Olympics the macro beer of sports, really not worth the evangelical touch or even celebration? And, if so, what's sport is the match for good beer? Is it really skittles or is it more like lawn billiards? Maybe it depends on the beer. Saison? Definitely lawn billiards.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2010/02/09/Healthy_Hop_Bombs_For_Big_Bone_Wannabees_'

    Healthy Hop Bombs For Big Bone Wannabees?

    Posted: February 9th, 2010, 1:47am CET by Alan McLeod

    I suppose everything will be... then won't be... good for you - and then they will be good for you later. So, I was not too excited by the news that beer seems to be an excellent source of dietary silicon by contributing to bone mineral density... until I noticed this tid bit:

    "We have examined a wide range of beer styles for their silicon content and have also studied the impact of raw materials and the brewing process on the quantities of silicon that enter wort and beer," Bamforth said. Wort is liquid extracted from the mashing process during the brewing of beer. The researchers tested 100 commercial beers and found that their silicon content ranged from 6.4 to 56.5 milligrams per liter. "Beers containing high levels of malted barley and hops are richest in silicon," Bamforth said. "Wheat contains less silicon than barley because it is the husk of the barley that is rich in this element.

    Bamforth? That's Dr. Charles Bamforth to you, the Anheuser-Busch Endowed Professor at U.C. Davis. We are told "endowment is to provide a permanent source of funding for teaching and research in malting and brewing sciences" so it is both reasonable and yet still a little bit cozy, no? I mean has there been a comparison study been done showing the relative merit of soy milk, green tea or sugary orange soda pop as a source of silicon? Could it be that all that beer we are drinking is denying humanity is the opportunity to get more silicon elsewhere? It that what's going on?

    Maybe if you worry about your silicon levels, that is. Most really only worry about their ability to just get their hands on good beer. But look again at that quote above: beers containing high levels of malted barley and hops are richest in silicon. Sounds like a double imperial India pale ale to me. Just what so many beer nerds are looking for anyway. And not exactly what Anheuser-Busch is (or, rather, was) selling. Think on that next time you reach for Old Min-wax or Satan's Own Skull Cracker. You are just exercising your right to silicon enhancement. That's all.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2010/02/06/How_Do_We_Now_Place_The_Work_Of_Michael_Jackson_'

    How Do We Now Place The Work Of Michael Jackson?

    Posted: February 6th, 2010, 6:26pm CET by Alan McLeod

    I have no real skin in this question. Never met the man but at the same time have plenty of his books. Professionally with my LLB / LLM [Ed.: not as impressive as might seem to suggest] and academically with my BA in English [Ed.: now, bow ye down before me] I am used to the idea that there are many points of view about a person's writing that should be taken into account. Today, two writers made reference to Michael Jackson and it got me thinking. First, Ron Pattinson wrote:

    Old new styles. I could also call them forgotten styles. Or the styles Michael Jackson missed. Burton, AK, Double Brown. Beers that not only were around for decades in the past, but have clung on as tattered remnants to this day. Vital links in the evolutionary chain of styles whose place in history has been forgotten and ignored. It's all Michael Jackson's fault. Or rather the laziness of his successors. They didn't bother looking themselves and adopted wholesale his analysis of British beer styles. Time for this historic wrong to be righted. But not in this post.

    A few hours later, as the rosy fingers of the dawn reached across the Atlantic [Ed.: what an amazing thing a "B" grade BA in English is] Jack Curtain wrote:

    A new film about the life of Michael Jackson will debut at the Great American Beer Festival this year. That’s a pretty major event in the beer world which has apparently slipped right under the radar, or at leas my radar, because the first I’ve heard of it just now was at the KalamaBrew website, which they in turn got from beernews.org. It seems only fair to let those guys get the site hits they deserve, so use the links to read the details... Lord, how much we lost that August day in 2007.

    At some point we have to be ready to discuss the great departed man as we have to assess all things in this mortal coil. For me, Jackson is not great because of his lists of great beers and books and books and books of tasting notes. He was not even at his greatest for his work opening up the world of Belgian beers to an English speaking audience. He is most worthy to me for none other than his least influential, first book The English Pub from 1976. It is sort of the Neanderthal of his works, a genetic dead end as he did not continue to focus on the idea of beer and culture after this book. While Richard Boston did concern himself with the role of beer in culture before Jackson, others later took up the question... but only after at least a 25 year gap. And that topic is prone again to be lost in a sea of dodgy food and beer "pairing" books and the unending volume after volume of dreary whopped together "527 Beers You Have To Have Before Next Tuesday" books. I would prefer that we pick up his first thread, frankly, and think about what beer means to the consumer as much or more than what it means to the brewer.

    With a focus on his work rather than himself - admittedly perhaps an impossible problem of long division - where do you place his writings and ideas? Was he vital in that he raised the public profile of good beer more than anyone else? Or is he a nerd's nerd, the finest sort of friend or icon of an era now passing?

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2010/02/06/Session_36__How_Cask_Ale_Did_Not_Change_My_Life'

    Session 36: How Cask Ale Did Not Change My Life

    Posted: February 6th, 2010, 1:27am CET by Alan McLeod

    Tom Cizauskas of Yours For Good Fermentables is running this month's edition of The Session. He is doing such a good job he has posted somewhere between four and 27 different posts on the subject just on his own site. His question for this month is broad, very open ended:

    I'd like to return to essays on a beer style, or more precisely, a beer procedure: Cask-conditioned ale. Cask-conditioned ale —or "real ale" as it is called, somewhat boastfully, by the Campaign For Real Ale (CAMRA), a beer consumer advocacy group in the UK— is defined by that organization as "beer brewed from traditional ingredients, matured by secondary fermentation in the container from which it is dispensed, and served without the use of extraneous carbon dioxide." Viewers of this blog have read my opinions on cask-conditioned ale, and probably once too often. So, let's hear yours, and not only yours. Why not invite brewers and drinkers and bemused casked-spectators to contribute essays for the Session?

    That is a good question. A great question and more importantly a very beer centric question. There have been too many first Fridays of the month where I have had to scratch my head and ask "why the heck was this topic chosen?" or "why the heck have we drifted so far from beer?" So, thanks Tom. Thanks for bringing it all back home.

    One problem. No access to cask ale. I think there is one hand pump in my town and it's not serving my favorite beer at the place. I grew up in another city where I probably had plenty of pints of hand pulled cask ale but I can't tell you if it really was. How am I supposed to remember? I mean it was twenty years ago.

    But there once was a cask. It was a 25 litre heavy plastic cask made in the UK. A cask that I filled with a beer I brewed on 5 January 2002 and drained with two pals on 8 February - a 3.9% all Goldings pale ale. I still have my home brewing log though the plastic cask is long gone, left with an Anglican priest pal of mine. Looks like I used about 3 ounces of hops in about 22 litres including a half ounce dry hop. The whole thing was drained on a gravity drop in one evening without any back pressure at all. Note on 9 February: "finished entire cask with Fritz and Crawford - very nice and not burdensome the next day." Neither was the priest, by the way. Shocking that I did not write down anything about the pear fruit in the malt from the Maris Otter just the fact that I didn't have a split skull. Priorities.

    I dimly recall that there was a trip everyone else took to the in-laws. I dimly recall that more than Fritz and Crawford were suppose to come over. Other than that I don't really even dimly recall. That was a lot of good tasting cask beer. Oh, to be 38 again.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2010/02/04/New_York__Hop_Warrior__Rooster_Fish__Watkins_Glen'

    New York: Hop Warrior, Rooster Fish, Watkins Glen

    Posted: February 4th, 2010, 11:49pm CET by Alan McLeod

    An Imperial India Pale Ale from central New York. I didn't look closely when I bought this bomber for $8.99 at Party Source on the last trip south to the land of the salt potato. So, it is a happy me that gets a first try at a new to me CNY brewery and happy to say it's pretty fine.

    I don't crave hop bombs so I was happy to see this was 8% and not 11% or 13%. It has a lovely malt bed upon which to lay down and think about things as you work through the bottle - plenty of pale malt bread crust and graininess with a wee bit of yellow plum and apple. But it is the way the hops roll out over the malt that we are looking for in an IIPA. We ask ourselves what the hops are up to. Not much bitterness in the back, not hacking gag, meaning the finish is malty at the back of the throat. It is all up front in two distinct ways: moderate astringent min-wax hot hopping at the arc of the mouth's roof as well as a gentler weedier hoppiness around the cheeks. It makes for a very well structured experience this fine orange amber ale under thin white foam and froth. The aroma is like a candy store that crashed into a florist but not overly so.

    One lone and erroneous BAer gave a "C" review as of the date of this review. He's entitled to his opinion and we have to respect his understanding of his own palate. Then we have to agree he is just plain wrong.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2010/02/04/Where_Are_The_Paragons_Of_The_New_Cocktailians_'

    Where Are The Paragons Of The New Cocktailians?

    Posted: February 4th, 2010, 5:56am CET by Alan McLeod

    I don't often repost from the sister station but a 16 hour work day drives a guy to it. And besides, while I like a drink as much as the next guy... am I a Cocktailian? I am not sure I could even communicate with a Cocktailian if I met one in the street or, better, in a cool darkened subterranean public space. Yet all is not well in the Land of Cocktailia:

    ...no Pegu imbiber is known to have keeled over from bacterial assault by the cocktail, which has been served there for the last four years. And the drink has drawn neither prior official rebuke nor customer complaint. Nevertheless, on that fateful evening, an inspector from the New York City Department of Health cited Pegu Club, at 77 West Houston Street in SoHo, for serving the MarTEAni without telling the customer who ordered it that it contained raw egg. The notice said it was a serious infraction that required a court appearance. Raw eggs are among the ingredients most fervently embraced by cocktail revivalists who have sought out new techniques and circled back to classic recipes. And the MarTEAni is a signature drink at a bar that is seen as a paragon of the new cocktailians.

    Sam and Ella. The bacteria twins. They sound so cheery when given their real names. Yet they bring the plague. There were 167,319 cases (or "extrapolated incidence") of their mischief in Canada during an unspecified period according to this unreliable source which does give one brief pause. Yet we learn from an actual Phd writing on this unreliable source that "Alcohol with a meal can lower the risk of food poisoning" and on this unreliable source we learn that a "Spanish study of an outbreak of acute salmonella gastric infection among people at a banquet found that “the protective effect of alcohol was strongest for subjects who had drunk more than 40 grams of alcohol..."

    It is not illegal to eat a raw egg. It is not even wrong. Think about it - it's a well known fact that plucky lads in schoolboy adventure stories suck on gulls eggs to stay fit as a fiddle while lost on wild sea coasts waiting for rescue. Would we not all be comforted were the meal accompanied by a reasonable measure of gin?

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2010/02/02/Bloggers_Bust__Very_Special_Beer__Thieves'

    Bloggers Bust "Very Special Beer" Thieves

    Posted: February 2nd, 2010, 4:35am CET by Alan McLeod

    Very Special Beer crime. We know its out there. We had faith that there are VSB Units out there in the police departments of the land. Until today - when it became abundantly clear who is really watching out for those of us who would enjoy that very special beer:

    Two Madbury teenagers charged with stealing from parked cars and vandalizing Water Country will also be charged with a felony alleging the theft of beer from a home, said police Capt. Mike Schwartz. The police captain credited neighborhood bloggers for spreading the word that police wanted to identify the owner of some "very special beer" stolen from a residential garage. In particular, he thanked Pat Remick of the Woodlands Neighborhood Blog, which is posted on www.seacoastonline.com.

    Bloggers, baby. That is what holds society from going right over the edge into the pits of social disorder. Bloggers who take their cues from old Scooby Doo episodes, that is. I bet it was Old Man Smithers. And he would have gotten away with it but for those interfering kids.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2010/02/01/Your_Vital_Japanese_Third_Category_Beer_Update'

    Your Vital Japanese Third-Category Beer Update

    Posted: February 1st, 2010, 1:54am CET by Alan McLeod

    We've discussed the beer-like substances of Japan before even though I have never had one. A story in today's' edition of the UK's Independent newspaper provides both an introduction and an update:

    Japanese brewers are launching a range of new beers that tap into a growing taste for "third-category" beers, which are conveniently cheaper than conventional beers because they get around government tax laws by containing no malt. Kirin plans to launch a new brew, called 1000, that uses hard water and contains elevated amounts of calcium and magnesium to give it a distinctive flavor. Asahi Breweries is to release Strong Off, which has a relatively high alcohol content of 7 percent and 60 percent less carbohydrates, whilst Suntory is using seven different types of hops into its new Relax beer-like drink.

    Mmmm... It's not like the drink they would be drinking in Blade Runner - it is the official sub-species drink of the replicants. Now representing 30% of the "beer and beer-like" segment of the Japanese beverage market, third-category beer is not going away and does remind me of the questions Tom has posed in relation to US craft beer's fixation on corn and rice as solely evil substances. Yet, if it were sold here even in bright shining cooler as shown above, I imagine I would never drink it even if I am not entirely against soy peptides as a rule.