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  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2011/12/02/Session_58__Beers_Of_Christmas_Past__Present_and_Future'

    Session 58: Beers Of Christmas Past, Present and Future

    Posted: December 2nd, 2011, 9:29pm CET by Alan McLeod

    It's session day again. The first Friday of every month for a whopping 58 months now beer bloggers around the world have written on the same topic. This month's edition was chosen by Beersay:

    “A Christmas Carol“. The idea for me was based loosely around the visits of three ghosts to Ebenezer Scrooge, but relayed in a post about the beers of Christmas past, present and future. What did you drink during Christmas holidays of old, have you plans for anything exciting this year and is there something you’d really like to do one day, perhaps when the kids have flown the nest? Do you have your own interpretation, was Scrooge perhaps a beer geek? Or maybe it’s all one day. What will you drink Christmas morning, Christmas afternoon and what will you top off the holiday with that evening?

    A great topic. One in which you can move your elbows about. It inspires me to think about where the blog has been, is and will be. I now have 23 posts under one of those categories to the lower left of winter and Christmas beer. Have I actually made sense of what that heading means?

    Christmas past. Going back to the beginning, in 2004 and again in 2005 I wrote post about collections of strong, winter and Christmas beers. Highlights seem to have been Harvey's Elizabethan Ale and La Choulette De Noël. Can you believe Rouge Santa's Private Reserve Ale was $3.79 USD for a 22 oz bomber? Beers past were pretty damn good as far as I can tell. But was I? Not so sure about this sentence: "[a]ll I get is one recessed biscuity note which sits oddly, leaving an impression of a big bitter arugula salad with one animal cracker crumbled on top." Not so bad. A little sarcastic yet accurate referencing non-beer words to describe beer flavours. Yet a little precious, no? And did I drink all that to write that on post on those Yuletide evenings? Intemperance abounded at Christmas past.

    Christmas present A very fine Christmas present is the state of the Christmas present this year. If I lost you with that punnery, I will let you know that the photo above was taken today. When I asked for a sample of Narragansett's porter, I got two. When I shamelessly asked for a few more, I got twelve. This beer is incredibly good. Mr. B stated on Facebook recently:

    It occurs to me that if I could get a regular supply of the Narragansett Brewing Company Porter, it would become a staple in my beer fridge this winter. The slightly jarring burnt note I found in the finish last year seems entirely absent in this year's version.

    I couldn't agree more. I love this stuff. I do. I loooooooove it. Which means I should be concerned that it has brought out Scrooge like feelings within me this Yuletide. These are mine. Understand. Me. Me. Me. I am not sure if you can covet your own stuff but these twelve cans of porter are making me sense it might be possible.

    Christmas future. What would I wish for myself, for you all? Well, the Christmas photo contest closes on Sunday 10 December which means in the near future more little beer nerds will get more little beer presents under the tree and in their stockings? I wish there were more for you, more entries and more prizes. My Christmas future would have a prize for all. What else would my Christmas future have? A case of La Choulette De Noël perhaps? Or maybe another 250,000 words on the Oxford Companion to Beer wiki proving both that it is a great foundation for any exploration of beer but also that there is so much more to be explored and yet to be discovered. I would wish for that. I would also wish for Albany ale. The real stuff that 96 year old Charles H. Haswell in 1899 looked back upon in his youth and thought was a mighty good drink. We are working on it but it already may be having an effect, hunting out as much of the actual as you can. If I am coveting more this year, I also see in my future less and less patience for questionable claims to authenticity. If you are going to hold yourself out as something, please do the prep that such claims require.

    There you have it. Insobriety, covetousness and impatience. Past, present and future. Exactly what Christmas brings out in all of us.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2011/12/02/Day_13__The_Day_The_Beer_Photos_Attacked'

    Day 13: The Day The Beer Photos Attacked

    Posted: December 2nd, 2011, 2:14am CET by Alan McLeod

    OK. Some catching up to do with the entries for the Xmas New Year Hanukkah Hogmanay 2011 Photo Contest. Up there is a photo of the world's greatest beer fridge or at least the best I have seen. It's by Jerry Davison of Oregon who writes:

    My wife and I were in Portland... and I stopped in to a charming “speakeasy” called Saraveza on the way back to our hotel from a charming brewpub. Being from the Midwest (Central Illinois), I was immediately charmed by their Packer motif throughout the bar. Check them out on Facebook (Sara Veza). I wish they were around the corner. So many beers, so little time!

    Excellent. I want. Excellent photo even if it was so huge in terms of megabytes that my 2004 Dell just about fainted. Remember. Keep the entries below 500 K, please. And, before we go on further, a reminder and update of the prizes:

    New Shipyard Brewing of Portland, Maine who have supported this contest for years.
    Roland and Russell, Ontario fine beer, spirits and wine importer who help make this part of Canada as much the beer center that it is becoming.
    TAPS The Beer Magazine, one of our finest supporters year after year and strong supporters of the Canadian craft beer movement.
    Ron Pattinson, author and YouTube phenom.
    ♦ Jeff Alworth of Beervana, who is madly researching in Europe for his book The Beer Bible just picked up a Westy glass as well as a bottle of 12 for some lucky beer nerd who gets to choose either the vessel for every or the brew for one day.¹
    Adrian Tierney-Jones and CAMRA have offered two copies of Great British Pubs.
    ♦ Martyn Cornell, the Zythophile himself, has pledged a copy of his book Amber Gold and Black.
    Creemore Springs Brewery - whose prizes I covet. Are they the most generous?
    Maximiliano Bahnson, author of Prague: A Pisshead's Pub Guide and a guy I want to have a beer with.
    David Selden, 33 books the guide to taking your own drinking life seriously.
    Grand Teton Brewing of Idaho, a much welcomed newcomer to the contest.
    All About Beer magazine, a great supporter of this here thing.
    Narragansett Brewing, home of, yes, my favorite porter and another much welcomed newcomer to the contest.

    OK, so we are up to date with the gifties. Now, what pictures have people taken to deserve the attention of Santa's beery elves this year?

    Matt Wiater of Portland Oregon sent in these five entries including one of a gigantic congratulatory beer from Hopworks Urban Brewery owner Christian Ettinger for Ben Love as he left the head brewer position at HUB to open up Gigantic Brewery in Portland. Matt was our 2008 contest winner:

    Roshan Gopal Krishnan of Cochin, Kerala, India sent in these fuzzy shots but I have to say that I never thought the Christmas contest would reach out so far. What holiday is celebrated in Kerala this time of year? He makes no claim to art: "Nothing fancy here. I'm not much of a photographer and my instrument is a humble 2mp camera on my Blackberry. Plus lighting in bars & pubs in my area are usually bad." Yet there is a lunar landing 1971 quality that I like... sorta.


    Jeph Stahl of Grimsby, Ontario - a prize winner in at least 2010 - sent in these eight entries. I may have to add a category for small children face planting the hops. And, I do believe, the first Sousaphone appearance:


    Tom Morgan of Dayton Ohio sends in these eight entries> he runs a beer blog called "What We're Drinking" which I initially read as "What were we drinking?!?!?"


    I am going to leave it for now. There are still a few more entries - and one even came in as I typed this out, but I am spent. So many photos. So many photos...