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  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2012/02/04/Session_60__The_64_Ounce_Jug_Is_Considered'

    Session 60: The 64 Ounce Jug Is Considered

    Posted: February 4th, 2012, 7:58pm CET by Alan McLeod

    The 64 ounce beer jug - or growler - is sufficiently interesting to the guys as Washington Beer Blog that they made it the topic of this month's edition of The Session:

    These days people take growlers for granted. In my neck of the woods, growlers are a relatively new phenomenon. I don’t recall exactly when they appeared on the local beer scene but it could not have been more than eight or ten years ago. Maybe they existed in obscurity before. My memory fails me. Today growlers are everywhere. I think. Growlers are very common around the Pacific Northwest, anyway. I cannot speak to their popularity elsewhere. I’d love to know.

    Unfortunately, by "everywhere" they mean large parts of the US. Growlers are only available at some breweries in my part of Canada. I have to drive an hour and a quarter to find the nearest growler fill. In Quebec, they are actually found pre-filled on the shelf in some retail shops, too. I have seen similar things, rarely, in the odd NY beer store instead of the normal tap fill but more and more they are showing up in grocery stores and even gas stations over there. It is a prudent sustainably green way to buy good beer you may want to have in a few days or so at a decent price. Once upon a time, they were galvanized steel pails served out a side window. But people can recycle them on you.

    I actually discussed the growler as the fourth unacknowledged serving unit for beer back in Session 48. I was a year ahead of time. I like them a lot. Just wish I have access to them that is provided in a free society.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2012/02/02/Are_There_Different_Schools_Of_Beer_Thought_'

    Are There Different Schools Of Beer Thought?

    Posted: February 2nd, 2012, 1:40pm CET by Alan McLeod

    Stan asked me to elaborate on something:

    Could you elaborate on what you mean by 'beer thinking'?

    Hmm... I think there is beer thinking. If there is anything, there is a lot of under-thinking about beer thinking. If I were honest with you, there is a lot of under-thinking about over-thinking, too. Not sure if there is over-thinking about under-thinking but that could be, too. And if there is beer thinking there must be schools of thought. Can we describe them?

    ♦ The School of Aesthetics: As a pleasure trade, beer is concerned with sensory experience and - as with any ideas of beauty, art and enjoyment - the sensory-emotional values of the individual. In a way, all efforts to elaborate the subjective experience of the aesthetic undermine its purity. Boak and Bailey observed in a tweet this morning: "we're going to run out of language for talking about beer soon..." But as we know, by any other name, a beer is a beer is a beer. The aesthete knows that there is no higher thought than moving into a less conscious experience... maybe I could put that in a better way... a less dictated experience with their perception of pleasure. Yet less of that can be more of something else - the drunk, the addled.

    ♦ The School of Empiricism: These place the emphasis on observational evidence. While still involved in what we may experience, objective is added to the mix. In this school we find the historians, the data miners, the mash bill reviewers, the home brewing replicators. Just as the aesthete is the neighbour of the short term drunk and the long term addled, the empiricist can lead us astray through the musty corridors of the library. They forget sometimes that the well stocked beer shelf in a store or a pub is the only library you really need. They also lead to judging. Where the aesthete might describe, empiricists judge. The county fair jam and jelly contest is a very fine thing and a blue ribbon a treat - but remember: judge not lest ye be judged.

    ♦ The School of Ancient Wisdom: These accept received wisdom or, in another way, believers that others - their betters - were and are wiser. When you read enough beer books about the same few notions, it does become pretty evident that not thinking can in fact occur. I blame Jackson who did a very fine thing in layering classification upon us but then did not enforce enough that it was only one mode, one approach. As a result we are left with broadly practiced rote based lessons. They are related to conservative pessimistic approaches like skepticism as it presents a doubtful outlook, doubtful that there is anything new to be said. It also gives rise to experts to tell you, for a fee, that you do not know what is right. They even tell you that something is off when it's simply not to their taste. Never mind that. You simply need to be told.

    Ultimately, while each may have a place, each school distracts us from the good, that simple state of the moderate engagement with meaningful pleasure. When combined, they are disaster. Imagine a library where the best books were removed after a few weeks and taken out of circulation. Aestheticism meets empiricism. That is what we face here in Ontario with the restricted and regulated government store that stocks it shelves with temporary listings of good beer, our better's ideas of what the experts tell us to enjoy when and where they determine. And imagine a store that sells paperbacks for fifty bucks because there are only a few copies printed. The wise meets the empirical. That's what is being foisted upon us by short run swanked up brews which seem to have as part of their experimental goals a study of the best way to get wallets opened wider. But surely we have to forgive them. They know not what they do. Maybe. It is always truly wise to recall the first lesson of Thales.

    Are there more schools? Many more no doubt and likely splintering schismists amongst these schools above each trying to set in stone a better more complex rule to define what for most really does not need proscription. They do as much harm as good. Each aggrandizes an aspect what is essentially a simple thing - the enjoyment of a malt mildly intoxicating beverage that has been enjoyed for thousands of years quite nicely, thank you.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2012/02/01/The_Oldest_Beer_Joke_In_History..._But_Wuzzit_Mean_'

    The Oldest Beer Joke In History... But Wuzzit Mean?

    Posted: February 1st, 2012, 1:31pm CET by Alan McLeod

    So they finally got to the bottom of a box of Iraqi cuneiform tablets dug up in 1976 and found some written by some guy trying to be funny as reported in the New York Daily News:

    This one could also benefit from cranking up the laugh track:

    “In your mouth and your teeth, constantly stared at you, the measuring vessel of your lord. What is it?

    Beer.”

    So there you have it: an ancient beer joke. (At least, a riddle referring to its taste, the authors say.) Perhaps something has been lost in the translation through all those many centuries. And since they were meant as riddles designed to communicate truths about life - "wisdom literature," as the authors call it -- perhaps gut-splitting hilarity was not the point.

    Well, how many riddles today really bust a gut. Few. What I find more interesting are the underlying premises. The person has a lord. The person constantly sees beer. Perhaps he is saying that the measure of a lord's virtue is his generosity with the beer.

    After clicking through various news articles of increasing seriousness, I actually arrived at the scholarly article upon which the story is based. Go to page 117. I don't know why the speculation is that this is the work of a student as there are two references to the impotency of a soldier as well as the ethical status of leaders - plus some sex and a bit of beer. Its a view from down there somewhere and it's a bit telling. Any other ideas? I know from the emails that you've been clamoring for a chance to play Mesopotamian cuneiform scholar so live it up.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2012/01/31/...Or__On_The_Other_Hand__Should_Incomes_Be_Declared_'

    ...Or, On The Other Hand, Should Incomes Be Declared?

    Posted: January 31st, 2012, 12:55am CET by Alan McLeod

    The response to the post about the ethics of running a series of posts for a fee has been interesting - and, shockingly, far more civil that then outburst of Engerlander finger pointy hand baggery over at Taking the Beard Out of Beer today. It's as if they don't know that being in a beer community means you just don't say certain things? It starts out so innocently:

    But when I got to the BrewDog page I was so incensed by their comments I actually chucked the book down in disgust. I don't think I need to go into why BrewDog do what they do, I think we're all familiar with their shock tactic methods by now, but it's one thing to thumb your nose at authority and it's another to tell outright lies. The comment, photographed right, is simply outrageous, the UK brewing industry closed? Yeah, ok lads...

    Whaaattt?!?!? "Lies"??!??! "Outrage"??!??!?! Oh, misery. Oh, calamity. What has happened to our happy house where we all agree, we all get along?

    Frankly, what annoys me the most is knowing that all the people in the conversation or at least most of them make money from the beer trade one way or another. It sure would help me a hell of a lot if I could get a sort of guide to the various interests at play that are not being admitted, the cheques that are cashed as we follow along with the allegations and counter charges. Perhaps someone can prepare a fully annotated version with a flow chart.

    God forbid that people should have different experiences. When folk in the future suggest the best beer thinking comes from "pros" I will have to pull out this wee chestnut for review.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2012/01/30/What_Is_Local_Beer_From_A_Southern_Ontario_View_'

    What Is Local Beer From A Southern Ontario View?

    Posted: January 30th, 2012, 3:21am CET by Alan McLeod

    What is local when it comes to beer or anything else in southern Ontario? Today there is someone who need not be mentioned drearily tweeting a series of xenophobic exhortations for we Ontarians to drink "local" beer. It reminds me of how the naivety of my former co-residents of Prince Edward Island were characterized by Halifax, Nova Scotian news columnist: PEI was too insular to be xenophobic. The Ontario comment is a bit different but still naive in its own way as it makes no effort to define "local" by any other standard other than political jurisdiction. Because we live in the province of Ontario, we should support Ontario stuff. Even if it is from very far away. And, presumably, even if it is bad or over priced.

    Have a quick look at the map above. That is my quick calculation of the distance (in red) from the site of eastern Ontario's Beau's Brewing in VanKleek Hill to the border crossing between Windsor and Detroit, Michigan. It's a 758 km drive. Probably over 760 km now that I think of it as Beau's is on the east side of town. Taking that distance as the radius for a yellow circle, we reach the Gulf of St. Lawrence to the east of New Brunswick, south to the bottom of Delaware, north to within view of Hudson Bay and west to Michigan's Upper Peninsula. This is great news for me as my "local" now include many of the vibrant scenes within the north-eastern chunk of North American - aka the land of diacetyl acceptance, perhaps greater New Yorkshire of which my Easlakian home is but a sub-region.

    Isn't this a rational point of view? If I am being asked to support someone I have never met to the west why not one I have never met to the south. Anything else is jingoism. Embarrassing jingoism at that. My "local" is all that until I get a better definition that relates to the beer and not the available funding marketing grants application policy or the irrational wholesale distribution regulations.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2012/01/29/England__Fuller_s_Vintage_Ale_2006_v_2011__London'

    England: Fuller's Vintage Ale 2006 v 2011, London

    Posted: January 29th, 2012, 2:33pm CET by Alan McLeod

    In December 2010, I decided that I had to get at the task of drinking the Fuller's Vintage Ales that I had been hoarding in the stash. I figured I needed to compare beers that were brewed five years apart and posted the '05 v. '10 results. Now, it's time for the second edition comparing 2006 to their 2011. First, one thing to note is that I am using 200 ml German glasses for this experiment. See, the thing is, this was the week that the pint was dissed to a lower point than I have ever seen it dissed. My choice of glassware reflects that brave new world where reasonable measures of beer are a thing of the past. Still, I am sure these tiny tiny Teutonics will not let down this litre of greatness as they are wonderful wee things in themselves.

    I reviewed the 2006 back in the day. It has clearly improved according to that description... or maybe my powers of description have. It now gives off an aroma of fresh bright orange marmalade on malt bread. Oddly, the scent is much stronger than the 2011 which gives off some booze and a bit of beef broth with not a lot more... or at least not nearly as much.

    In the mouth, again there is no question that the 2006 is a bigger more complex beer at this point in its life. It's got the malty smoked thing I noticed in 2006 and I get the green fig as well. But the texture is no longer what I likely meant when I wrote grain. It's more like baseball glove leather now. Quite sweet as well. But well cut by what I had called black tea hops. They are now melded much more neatly together to give a sort of rose water effect. The 2011, by comparison, tastes of beer. There is a fresh acidity but the malt is a bit undeveloped. I had a 2006 Thomas Hardy Ale yesterday and it informs that idea. That pleasant little variety of acids that are in both '06s of the last 24 hours sit dormant in the 2011's pear juicy sweet ball of pale malt. The '11's box and insert card tells me that the malt is organic but not the variety. In 2006, the malt was Optic which the OCB tells me is the most widely planted variety in England.

    First 400 ml down. Unlike the 2005 v 2010 comparison, I would not suggest the younger beer is cloying. It has a rustic hopping that is a bit twiggy and a bit menthol. Goldings, organic First Gold and Sovereign hops were used according to the box. They give a bit of a licorice effect at this point which may unpack into marmalade with time. I will let you know in 2016. The 2006, by contrast, relies on Fuggles and Super Styrian hopping. The OCB tells me that the Super Styrian - as opposed to the pending Super Dooper Styrian - is itself a form of Fuggles. From my lost homebrewing days, my world of English beer is divided into three: Goldings, Fuggles and Northern Brewer. I think 2/3s of this are demonstrated before me. The older beer leans to the hedge. The younger is more floral. Quite content to be the Mayor of Simpleton in such matters, it's a distinction that works for me.

    The head of the 2006 is worth comment - fine, densely packed off white bubbles giving a very appealing visual creaminess and a lovely maker of rich lacing. Otherwise the two beer appear to be quite similar. The elder is a bit clouded but I don't care about the sorts of things. Each a very attractive deep orange amber ale.

    700 ml gone and I am just going to enjoy the rest.. This is as high a point in my beer experience as any - and one that only cost me about 15 bucks and just half a decade. I am little proud of me. I was very sensible to start this series, to start saving these beers. The process may well see me out now that I think of it. There are far worse markers of another year's passing.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2012/01/28/What_If_I_Posted_A_Series_Of_Posts_For_A_Fee_'

    What If I Posted A Series Of Posts For A Fee?

    Posted: January 28th, 2012, 6:38pm CET by Alan McLeod

    I have been quite impressed with the idea Evan had to post an essay on Amazon and ask a very modest fee for payment. I have also loved and supported Lew's idea for the TV series American Beer Blogger funded through Kickstarter. They've got me thinking. The price point and revenue streams for writing about beer are minefields - ethical and otherwise. General search engine optimization ads on the blog are in decay due to aggregators like Google Reader [Ed.: waving hello to the 15,938 GR followers!] taking activity away. And direct support from the beer trade for all beer writing just isn't what it used to be - if it ever was. So, I am wonder what the response would be if I posted a series of posts on a certain topic I have in mind and asked for a fee. The plan would be to place a brief summary or introduction on the blog and link to the longer text of each essay which folk could follow if interested through a micro-payment process. Would the following elements of that sort of idea be interesting to you or a turn off?

    ♦ The price would be low, say 49 cents if that price point is available.
    ♦ The posts would be longer than usual around here and each would be on elements on single even greater theme.
    ♦ The theme would be a proposal for a rethinking of the elements of the consumer's relationship with beer.
    ♦ Through this exercise I would be preparing an system of thinking about beer that I may present through next autumn's Beau's Oktoberfest where I will be assisting with the preparation and presentation of their whole seminar series.

    The point of this would be giving myself the opportunity and structure to work on a more detailed and lengthy bit of research with a sufficient if modest revenue stream to pay for the related expenses such as travel, research time and maybe beer that needs to spent.

    My question is this: if I do this would it be incredibly irritating, of no interest or something you might be willing to participate in? Be honest. Tell me if you think I don't have what it takes. Let me know if it would drive you from following the blog and why. Let me know if you even like it. All thoughts and feedback most welcome.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2012/01/28/Some_Days_There_Just_Isn_t_A_Beery_Meme_Even_To_Steal'

    Some Days There Just Isn't A Beery Meme Even To Steal

    Posted: January 28th, 2012, 1:18am CET by Alan McLeod

    Me-me's. That is the whole stock in trade of blogging when you think of it. A story to nick and build upon with a hope that someone builds upon it further, mentioning your name or at least offering a link. Not today. I blame the freezing rain in the middle of the night. It sounded like someone with a garden hose full of jello spraying the bedroom window: flurdidblutblubfluuuurfutblutffluuuur.... You get the idea. Absolutely exhausted. No point in writing a beer review. "Tastes like beer" to quote James.

    I have never really understood why beer blogging is quiet on Fridays but there is no doubt about it. Perhaps people are off Twittering their night out expectations and experiences. Twitter sort of acts as blogging's cheat in that way. "No, no... don't mind me..." says the blog, "I'll be fine... I'll make my own fun... you go tweet..." If I were to share any experience of the last two days it would be that the two available Oz and James Drink... DVDs that seem to be available to this continent, Britain and France, are as good a pop discussion of beverages as I've ever experienced. People go on a bit about why there is no beery TV but it might be because beery TV makes no sense unless contextualized in other drinks as well as the places they come from. Helps immensely that there is no sense that the BevCo PR suits and the well placed cheque are behind the scenes.

    But that is it. That is all I got. Oh - that and Knut has hit his first millennium. If I were to write a history of beer blogging and consider the role of those who led the way, Knut of Norway would be among those at the top of the list. When many were unaware of how pervasive this would become, when the few writing were writing reviews - Knut was thinking about what beer meant to Knut. While not his first, this 2007 guest post from five years ago is one of my favorites. I like the way he takes weird photos like this one from 2005 or the one above from New York in 2008. Part of that great international beer blogging legacy.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2012/01/26/Booklet_Review___Why_Beer_Matters__By_Evan_Rail'

    Booklet Review: "Why Beer Matters" By Evan Rail

    Posted: January 26th, 2012, 1:34am CET by Alan McLeod

    I got a review copy of Evan Rail's essay "Why Beer Matters" via email today. It's published for the Kindle and available at Amazon.com for an embarrassingly low price. Buy it. Why? Good question. Ever since his coming out party chez ici, he has been one of my favorite beer bloggers, a steady source of interesting writing via his gig with The New York Times as well as a guide to pals visiting Prague. Oh, and he wrote a book, too. An important book.

    But why must you buy this essay? Well, unlike me you may be able to get the &*$*(^%^ Kindle work and actually be needing content. Beyond that, you might want good beer writing that takes a fresh perspective. Frankly, we have more than enough "Guides to the Styles" and "298846 Beers To Try Before Find Another Hobby" books. What we do not have are many new points of view. Evan offers that. He takes the proposition set out in the title and expounds for 20-ish pages on the matteringness of beer. Beer engages with people, it can be replicated over the ages, it runs with the seasons and sits in a place. It's a travel piece but not through geography, instead it echoes his own path with writing and thinking about beer. How beer rivals wine, how it is an emerging pleasure, how it is of the people are the stuff of Evans wonderings.

    Personal essays are one of the finest forms of writing there are. I mentioned that when I reviewed one of Michael Jackson's books back in 2008. I mention it again when I suggest you might want to read this work Evan's. Well worthy.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2012/01/25/_Trucks_Were_Backing_Up_To_Get_The_Stuff_In_'

    "Trucks Were Backing Up To Get The Stuff In"

    Posted: January 25th, 2012, 3:04am CET by Alan McLeod

    Good article at OpenFile Halifax today touching on a few points of my old home town of Halifax's drinking history. Most neato of all is the click-able photo above of the 1948 version of the Sea Horse Tavern. The name of the place has continued in the underground bar that was my home away from home in undergrad days. The article has this great description of opening day for the Sea Horse:

    In September of 1948, the Sea Horse Tavern, operated by the Carleton hotel, was the first tavern to open since Halifax’s 1916 prohibition, charging 25 cents for a pint of Maritime-brewed bottled beer and 30 cents for a pint of Central Canadian beer, the maximum price set by the province. By 10:20 am, 51 people had filed in to drink. “When the fridge doors were opened, they stayed open. Trucks were backing up to get the stuff in. The beer had no time to get cool, we were dragging the crates out this side so fast,” said ‘Yank’ Landry, Sea Horse manager, to the Mail-Star.

    First of a three part series, the article also mentions that the town had issued 30 tavern licenses within the first 8 months of British settlement in 1749 - when the first wave of population numbered only 2,500.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2012/01/25/Totally_Different_To_Drinking_In_The_Garage_At_Your_Home'

    Totally Different To Drinking In The Garage At Your Home

    Posted: January 25th, 2012, 2:27am CET by Alan McLeod

    I don't think I have ever seen the basic economics of running a bar actually hit a newspaper as a story. But here it is in New Zealand:

    Wages, insurance, rent, rates, taxes, repairs and maintenance, cleaners, fixtures and fittings, heat, light and power, telephone, entertainment and security costs all need to be taken into account. "It's not a garage selling twist tops, we sell quality products. You have got to provide a convivial atmosphere and inviting environment. You have got to make it a place where people want to come," Mr Burleigh said. "Drinking at Peggy Gordon's is totally different to drinking in the garage at your home." Mr van Praagh said the hospitality industry was not a cash cow. "At the end of the day we are here to make a living but as you can see from the number of bars that shut down in town, it is not that easy," Mr van Praagh said.

    I know NZ is something of an oddly different place but - heavens to Betsy - what would Mitt think about all this having to explain capitalism? The concerns arose out of a public debate on minimum pricing policy, more about how cheap supermarket beer is down there and just exactly who was "usually responsible for the majority of the trouble caused in town later at night."

    Still, sad to see that Grumpy Mole went out of business.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2012/01/24/Often_The_Messages_About_Good_Beer_Just_Don_t_Matter'

    Often The Messages About Good Beer Just Don't Matter

    Posted: January 24th, 2012, 1:31am CET by Alan McLeod

    Stan posted this four and a half minute video for Deschutes beer and I was surprised to find that I had an entirely different response to the thing than he did. I found it oddly creepy while he admitted he was "a sucker for these sorts of things." The strange thing I thought was how - for one of the first times that I can remember - I was maybe getting turned off about a beer I really liked. A brewery I liked. So, I thought I should think about that a bit more.

    There is a good comparator. Stone. See, Jeff said certain things about Greg from Stone and Greg responded. In that response Greg from Stone set out all the things I dislike about his approach to thinking about beer - the boring narcissism, the ever present first person pronouns "I, me, mine". But he does not shake my interest in buying his beer because for the most part it is very good beer at a very good price. I can avoid Greg and the dumb grade 8 back of the glass gargoyle branding thing. It is good for me and Stone that things work out this way. I get to take what I like and pay for the pleasure.

    My take on the Deschutes video is like that. Like Greg from Stone, it says a lot of things that may be good and reasonable things but does so in a way that makes me uncomfortable. Even though the vid's tone is entirely unlike a loud diatribe or self back slapping session it still leads me to think thoughts like this:

    ♦ There is something creepy in the voyeuristic decision to have the girl strip off her shirt and turn back for good measure. Or are we to think that sexism and beer can't touch craft breweries.
    ♦ There is something odd about the need to grab her off the street and the choice to include the banjo. I own two banjos but appreciate the have that creepy thing associated with them. Your average baritone ukelele or maybe a mandolin would have done the trick.
    ♦ There are no other people other than far way on that bridge by the pond. Is it intentionally surreal? Or is the message that good Deschutes beer best fits a post apocalyptic landscape. Did he see someone in the gas station and what did he do when he did? And what is the message that she reads at the bottom of a page. He wrote at the top. Is there some suggestion of misunderstanding?
    ♦ Building on that, there is a tone that is like something out of a movie by Bruce MacDonald or Don McKeller. Maybe it's that the bit of the US being filmed aligns with southern Canada, the setting looks less like wilderness to me and more like the landscape of Road Kill, the moment a bit like Last Night. I keep thinking she is going to off him. Solve her little problem once and for all. The message just fits into her master plan, creates opportunity.

    So, I am thinking it is a Canadian thing maybe. Road trip movies often don't work out all that well up here. There's danger. There's bears in the woods, not just make believe empty campsites with no one out there out to the horizon. But, like Greg of Stone going on and on, it doesn't matter. The beer is still tasty and reasonably priced. Wish they were both in my town and not just something I can find on the road. If I really have to go on the road.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2012/01/22/With_Friends_Like_This__Who_Needs_That_Beer_'

    With Friends Like This, Who Needs That Beer?

    Posted: January 22nd, 2012, 5:09pm CET by Alan McLeod

    A bit of odd news out of Brazil as published in The Sydney Morning Herald as that nation prepares to host the FIFA World Cup in 2014:

    ''Alcoholic drinks are part of the FIFA World Cup, so we're going to have them. Excuse me if I sound a bit arrogant, but that's something we won't negotiate,'' Valcke said on Thursday at the end of a visit to Brazil to meet the organising committee. He added that FIFA had repeatedly made it clear it wanted authorisation for beer sales in the stadiums, and stressed that Brazil was warned of that when it was chosen to host the 2014 World Cup. FIFA has an agreement with its sponsor, the US-based Anheuser-Busch brand Budweiser, and prohibiting beer sales would cut into the football organisation's revenues from the games. The sale of alcoholic drinks in sports arenas has been banned in Brazil since 2003, but a bill now making its way through Congress would create an exception, allowing beer to be sold in plastic cups at World Cup matches.

    I know we are all supposed to be all "hooray for booze in every context" when we beer blog. The pressure to conform is heavy - as you no doubt have noted. But isn't there something quite disturbing about beer being foisted - nay, forced - upon a people who have decided that beer in a sporting event is not appropriate? It would be comforting I suppose to pretend that FIFA cares about the thirst of dipsomaniac soccer fans but of course they are going to get a cut of stadium sales but not sales in private establishments before or after the matches. Having attended enough league matches in Scotland in the 70s and 80s when the ban on booze was skirted by those later arrested fans who duct taping bottles of cheap sherry to their legs under wide leg jeans (quite the thing for a teen to witness) I am aware of the reasons for keeping booze out of the stadiums.

    So FIFA is lining up on the side of lining its own pockets at the risk of public safety. Odd to see the makers of Bud still called "US-based" however. Surely, that Brazilian based brewer is lobbying its own as hard as FIFA. Rioters are, after all, good paying clients.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2012/01/21/In_Search_Of_The_World_s_Most_Averagest_Hip_Beer'

    In Search Of The World's Most Averagest Hip Beer

    Posted: January 21st, 2012, 6:08pm CET by Alan McLeod

    Just when you think collaborations make muddled beer... just when you couldn't wait for beer by committee to be the next big thing... we give you statistically averaged beer recipe formulation:

    “We’re asking them as a group to help us design a beer,’’ Koch explained Friday. Through a special application on Facebook, Sam Adams fans will collectively produce a recipe. “The parameters are things like the color, the clarity, the mouth feel, the yeast, the malt, the hops, so there's almost 2,000 different outcomes. Imagine what a really great beer would taste like, and then slide each of those six scales to design the perfect beer, and we'll take the total of all those different beers and then we're going to brew it.’’

    Yum. I am pretty sure that even in my darkest moments I haven't ever imagined this new odd PR trick as a way to truly master the making of dull beer. Taking social media add the power of averaging and, voila, dullness in a glass. And roll it out at SXSW just to make the thin veneer of hipster-ism seamless.

    Neato! Crowd sourcing!!! The wide-leg jeans of this decade. Thanks for bringing it to brewing, Sam Adams. Can we stop associating this brewer with craft now?

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2012/01/19/I_Think_I_Learned_That_Beer_Has_Arc_And_Width'

    I Think I Learned That Beer Has Arc And Width

    Posted: January 19th, 2012, 1:36am CET by Alan McLeod

    It started innocently enough. Boak and Bailey repeated approvingly my comment that "surfing along with the flavours or things that cannot be controlled is the hallmark of an artisan." I had been thinking of Jeff's transcription of his interview with Jean Van Roy when I commented about hop oil being a cousin to Velveeta cheese. Makes sense, no?

    What ensured was an interesting and odd line of tweets. And things took off in an interesting direction. I was quite surprised by the idealism that good beer can be pure and perfect. I always thought good things express many things including the work of time itself as well as the inevitability of human foible. Jeff shared an observation from John Keeling of Fuller's, that sometimes the relationship you have with a beer over time is like when friends get haircuts - "you recognize the person, but he's not identical." I like it. I believe good things display aspects of their goodness in different ways over time. No point in time is better as long as the goodness still is there.

    But this means that there is an arc over time. Good beer taste one way young and another old. Both have their charms. And it means as the arc passes, there is a also width to the range of variables which may be displayed at any point in time as well as at the same point. All real food is like this. For me, Saison Dupont is a perfect example. Every time it seems different but still itself. Like someone you know with new stories to tell. Sure, I have changed and the context, too, but it's not just me. The beer that has morphed.

    When industrial brewers - or, for that matter, any brewers who believes that beer should only taste as they conceive - demand our obedience we are being asked to believe. To believe there was a mythical big bang of flavour when it was truer and more perfect is to believe that you are not a participant in the process.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2012/01/17/What_Is_The_Value_Of_Value_With_Drinks_'

    What Is The Value Of Value With Drinks?

    Posted: January 17th, 2012, 4:32am CET by Alan McLeod

    Value. Money. Opportunity. Knowledge. I got thinking about this when I read this from the beer columnist for the Star-Ledger about the wine columnist for the Star-Ledger:

    I love reading John Foy's wine column in the Star-Ledger. His descriptions of the wines are quite evocative:

    The 2004 and 2006 show the same pedigree of bright red color, and a plethora of aromas ranging from raspberry, cherry, cinnamon, white pepper, roses and black raisins. Both are medium bodied with delicious fruit emitting raspberry, cranberry and bitter cherry flavors with harmonious tannins. There is an undercurrent of vanilla in the aroma and flavor from the oak barrels that is pleasing because it is not obvious.

    By the time I finish reading those descriptions, I'm ready to get out a corkscrew, a loaf of French bread and some brie. But then I read the price: 63 bucks. Yikes! It's back to beer for me.

    Really? The article goes on to talk about the lack of objective truth about wine. What is it we value about thinking about drinks? Are the drinks tastier? Saturday afternoon, I finally took the advice on the back of the bottle and just poured ginger ale into my Pimms rather than making the full punch. I needed no Pimms pundit to tell me that. The bottle told me. There is, in fact, no result at all when you place pimmspundit.com into Google. Some guy called Pimm had the blog. Shame. Opportunity awaits to corner the market.

    Or maybe its indirect value. Maybe it's that the language and the thoughts allow you to be or do something or hang out with those who are or do? I dunno. I have always suspected that there is value in increasing the value of beer to those who write about beer because it's always good to be the smart person in the room when it comes to things that cost more than other things. Show me the person who made it by being the expert on how kids play with sticks. Kids play with sticks. Sticks are free. Limited guru opportunity. Like Pimms in a way. Take stick. Throw or drag. Take Pimms. Add ginger ale or make punch.

    The article implies the direction towards less is better. It seems to tie over-thinking and over-pricing. Could that be true?

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2012/01/16/What_Are_The_Best_Rules_For_Aging_Good_Beer_'

    What Are The Best Rules For Aging Good Beer?

    Posted: January 16th, 2012, 12:08am CET by Alan McLeod

    I have been happily aging beer for years. The oldest beer I have is 18 years old. I have also been happily reading rules about aging beer for years. But it was only when reading this article in the Poughkeepsie Journal, which for the most part is pretty good, that I realized I don't really follow the supposed rules and have been happily doing so for years. Let's look at a few rules:

    Corked bottles need laying on their sides: I have caged cork bottles in the stash that are four and five years old and they all stand upright. In Let Me Tell You About Beer from last year, Melissa Cole suggests "cork-sealed bottles need to be laid down so the cork stays moist and maintains the seal." My feeling on the cork is that it is more of a source of risk of off flavours over time than lack of beer is a risk to the cork. Plus, unlike most wines, corks used in beer - like champagnes - are larger than the opening, are caged and subject to back pressure. These conditions keep these bottle sealed more than the wetness of the cork. I have never experienced the suggested problem.

    Dark coloured beer ages better than light ones: Never had any experience of a badly aged strong pale ale like a tripel or one of those nutty strong US craft beer anniversary ales. The article in the Poughkeepsie Journal states dark beers "will mellow in intensity" but pale strong beers do exactly the same thing under generally cool and dark conditions. Don't limit your experiments, that's my opinion.

    Beer has to be stored in a limited temperature range: In 2009's The Naked Pint from 2009, Perozzi and Beaune recommend investing in a dedicated wine fridge at the cost of $300 to $2,000 because beer should be aged between 50°F and 60°F. My house has a cold room under south-east facing steps. It has air circulation from the outside. It's about 7°F outside right now. I bet the stash experiences 15°F to 75°F over the course of a year. But it does so in a very slow cycle because the beer sits five feet underground. They are also kept boxed and piled to create a thermal mass that would further slow down temperature changes. While protecting the beer, this may actually also result in speed aging. Remember - you want the beer to undergo alteration over time. Why wait by putting the beer in cryogenic hibernation at huge expense?

    Don't age beer under a certain strength: Randy Mosher in Tasting Beer also from 2009 states conclusively "...beers with under 6 to 7 percent alcohol are never meant to age." Nothing in life is that certain. My philosophy is that beers at that level and less can shift pleasingly in flavour over time. It's just that they will do it faster. Where I am quite comfortable leaving a 10% beer for years, I'd comfortably leave certain lover strength beers like porters in storage to see if they pick up some tangs. And what about those beers that are spoiled from day one? Old gueuze and other lambics can easily be far closer to 5% than 10%. Again, try it out. See what happens.

    That's my experience. Your results may differ and you may have something to add. My idea is that for the most part beer is pretty cheap stuff. Putting away a few wines like I do (in the same space) leads to a small collection with a couple of thousand bucks of investment. Beer? You can have a 200 bottle stash with maybe a third dedicated to long term aging for maybe half that cost. So take a chance. See what happens.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2012/01/14/Quebec__Dum_Duminator__Brasseurs_Du_Temps__Gatineau'

    Quebec: Dum Duminator, Brasseurs Du Temps, Gatineau

    Posted: January 14th, 2012, 2:15am CET by Alan McLeod

    So, this is finally winter. Last night I had to buy more flashlights than ever before. Tonight, three massive jugs of alt snow and ice melty stuff. Think there was a polar bear on the label. A growley one. I need a beer to match.

    Brasseurs du Temp is right across the river from Canada's capital in Ottawa. Or its part of it. Never understood our capital. Wow. The effect of the wheat at this concentration is like taking the grassiness from sauvignon blanc wine, ditching 90% of the fruity notes, adding some fig and a bit of date, throwing in a bitter barky twiggy thing. There are spices but they are like spices from a land you have never been. Cedar perhaps? Something like an evil changling of the love child of cinnamon and apple wood. Earthy with cloves. And old roses. I once had a massive rose bush that was about 8 feet high and 15 feet across. When they were just past there best, they gave of a musk like a great party that was well after midnight. There's a bit of that in here, too. Yet it is fresh and, for the style and strength, a lightness.

    Gorgeous. BAers missed the point. Sometimes a beer doesn't taste like the beers you have already have had.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2012/01/13/When_Do_Good_Beer_And_Public_Money_Mix_'

    When Do Good Beer And Public Money Mix?

    Posted: January 13th, 2012, 1:50pm CET by Alan McLeod

    I like beer as much as the next guy. Probably more. But I am not sure why one of Ontario's, frankly, less interesting brewers deserved $1,000,000 in tax support annually:

    ...until a few years ago, few Ontario consumers knew or understood the concept of craft beer. All that changed in part due to an $8 million provincial program that Ontario’s smallest brewers learned this week will not be renewed, another victim of the government’s sweeping deficit-slaying measures... The move will have the biggest impact on Brick Brewing Co. Ltd., which disclosed in a statement Wednesday that the program would not be renewed. The Waterloo-based brewer, known for its discount Laker and premium Waterloo brands, received up to $1 million a year under the four-year program. The publicly traded company said the loss of the program would have a material impact on its financial performance.

    Full disclosure. I get income from advertising, including that little Ontario Craft Brewers crest to the left. I expect the money for that comes from the other fund, the 1.2 million marketing program. I think I have received 0.1% of that. Spreading the message through all media broadly seems to be a good thing to me but you can judge that for yourself. While you are at it, consider also how other brewers, other Ontarians might take the news that 1/8th of a fund of that scale went to one out of fifty brewers. One whose stocks you can buy on the stock market. The concerning thing is that the firm's financial indicate the subsidy represents a significant portion of profitability.

    It will be interesting to see now what the lack of this part of their revenue will mean for corporate stability. Either way, there will be lessons to be learned.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2012/01/12/Oh__To_Be_In_Milwaukee_In_A_Beer_Garden_There'

    Oh, To Be In Milwaukee In A Beer Garden There

    Posted: January 12th, 2012, 3:11am CET by Alan McLeod

    What an advanced form of civilization they must have in Milwaukee:

    The county would likely get a percentage of sales from each beer garden. The county's request for proposals suggests a minimum of 15%. "I'm not saying I can pull it off, but I'm putting it before the public," Black said Wednesday. Local breweries and restaurants were contacted to gauge the interest and park advocacy groups were advised of the idea. Formal proposals for a beer garden are due Jan. 20. Local historian John Gurda has agreed to serve as an adviser to the Parks Department on the beer garden idea, Black said. A 2009 article by Gurda described how the upper Milwaukee River once served as a "nearly continuous waterpark," especially the area between North Ave. and Locust St. on the city's east side.

    A government program. To introduce beer into city parks. To help pay for services and increase public use of parks. Brilliant. I am actually without smart remark. What is not to love about Wisconsin?

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2012/01/11/Time_For_A_New_Dialogue_About_US_Good_Beer'

    Time For A New Dialogue About US Good Beer

    Posted: January 11th, 2012, 2:05am CET by Alan McLeod

    Interesting intervention in a rather over the top bitching session over at the Beer Advocate pointing out the disfunctionality of a large part of the discourse. In response to some wildly weirdly accusations about which breweries in the US are "over rated", Sam Calagione of Dogfish Head in response went off:

    It's pretty depressing to frequently visit this site and see the most negative threads among the most popular. This didn't happen much ten years ago when craft beer had something like a 3 percent market share. Flash forward to today, and true indie craft beer now has a still-tiny but growing marketshare of just over 5 percent. Yet so many folks that post here still spend their time knocking down breweries that dare to grow. It's like that old joke: "Nobody eats at that restaurant anymore, it's too crowded.” Except the "restaurants" that people shit on here aren't exactly juggernauts. In fact, aside from Boston Beer, none of them have anything even close to half of one percent marketshare. The more that retailers, distributors, and large industrial brewers consolidate the more fragile the current growth momentum of the craft segment becomes. The more often the Beer Advocate community becomes a soap box for outing breweries for daring to grow beyond its insider ranks the more it will be marginalized in the movement to support, promote, and protect independent American craft breweries...

    It is a weird response. It could have been just "screw you, I do what I want." It could have been about how the BAers had become jaded. Both of which are pretty much true. But no. No, we get handed that old saw about how we are all in one boat together and how Team Craft Beer has to pull all in the same direction. See, we need to support "breweries that dare to grow" because, like the flower, they are fragile. It is a call to not be a consumer. It is a call to be something between a co-conspirator and a patsy. Never mind, as Jay points out, there are a an ever expanding huge number of craft breweries in the US. It sounds like we are asked to pay, accept and put up with a craft movement well into its third or fourth decade. But then look at the response. "Sorry!!" "Didn't mean you!!" "Were would we be without you?" "You are the wind beneath my wings." It's the Stockholm Syndrome, good beer version. Would someone respond in the same way if the head brewer of, say, 1900 of the 1952 craft breweries had responded? Not likely. It takes celebrity to get a response like that. Excellent.

    There has to be a better way. The part of the good beer trade that pays for everything, the consumer, has to be treated better than this. And the consumer has, in turn, to learn to be more intelligent and well spoken if they are to be taken seriously. The current dialogue this thread exemplifies does not really provide as much as it could or should. Saying that "Bells, Founders, FFF, Surly, RR, DFH, Bruery, Avery, Cigar City, Mikkeller are all overrated" is just weak minded. As Calagione goes on to point out, much to his credit, each of these breweries make a range of beer some of which are to many people's taste. And, to add to that idea, for the most part they are well priced for what they offer.

    But some are not. And that is the point of "over rating" a brewery. It is not enough to slag the complaint makers, however thick. Over priced, over packaged and overly precious beers deserve being called over rated. I don't care if you have passion, try really really hard or dare to grow. It's up to me - and each of you - to determine if a beer is a bust or not. If it is worth your money. You want to pay for daring and the duds that that entails, feel free. Me, I like good beer at an honest price.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2012/01/10/New_York__Will_Hydro_Fracking_Force_Ommagang_Out_'

    New York: Will Hydro Fracking Force Ommagang Out?

    Posted: January 10th, 2012, 1:51am CET by Alan McLeod

    I was really bummed about the prospect of this threat to one of my favorite breweries coming to pass:

    A well-known brewery in the Cooperstown area says that fracking may force it to relocate or fold. Brewery Ommegang lays out its case in a friend of the court brief, which it submitted in support of a Town of Middlefield zoning law. That law bans heavy industry, including gas and oil drilling, according to the Oneonta Daily Star. Approximately 50 percent of the land next to brewery property has been leased by drilling companies. The property owner, Cooperstown Holstein, is suing to overturn the Middlefield ordinance and has asked a judge to reject the brief. Middlefield is located in prime Marcellus Shale country.

    Last November, the story same out that Ommegang was seriously concerned that the practice of hydro fracking was a risk to their water supply. There isn't anything on the brewery's website as the news there seems not to have been updated since 2008. But for me, it's up there with the chance that the natural gas exploration technique could trigger earthquakes.

    Ommegang is participating in public outreach on the issue including a community forum this Saturday. They are also actively involved in the political debate. Which makes me like them all the more as they are doing more than issuing a threat. I have written a lot about how peace is good for good beer and a precondition for brewing the best stuff. Maybe we need to say the same about a healthy environment.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2012/01/07/Tasting__Could_The_Holiday_Effect_Be_With_Us_Daily_'

    Tasting: Could The Holiday Effect Be With Us Daily?

    Posted: January 7th, 2012, 3:56pm CET by Alan McLeod

    You know what I mean by the holiday effect, right? The idea that the beer on the beach looking at the Gulf of Mexico or the Mediterranean taste great there but sucks when you try one after getting back home? Well, I whipped off a comment over at Boak and Bailey's just now that got me thinking about how we may actually each be on our own holiday all the time:

    I am more and more convinced that we do not have a good handle on taste. I have pals who I will have over to try good beer who say “I never tasted that until you described it and then I do.” I think this has as much to do with suggestion as acuity. Apparently there is a valid phenomenon anyone can experience walking down a street. You see across the block and down the street people walking towards you. You can’t make out the face but your brain will fill in the detail with available faces from your memory. So you see old friends as they looked way back then until you get closer when you admit its a stranger. I am wondering more and more these days how much of the range of tastes I am experiencing in beer “X” are based, in the same way, on the tastes I have experienced in the past.

    Further, I then worry that there is a disconnect between taste of beer and beer production intentions. When I read at Ron‘s as well as Jeff of Beervana about how there is not the separation, the malty sweetness of Scots ales that we have been led to believe. There is no such thing as the peaty note. Yet since 1977 I have had the Sweetheart Stouts, the Traquair Ales, the Caledonian /80′s. the McEwan’s export and others and there is is. I’ve brewed it myself and there is it. It’s not the same.

    I now wonder if the subtleties of taste perhaps less reflected on the brewer’s grain bill than other elements – plus suggestion and expectation – are what really frame what we sense in the mouth far more than what the brewer might be trying to achieve on paper and in the tun.

    I don't know if that makes sense but it would align with my understanding of the qualify of evidence based on human observation as well as the anecdotal state of beer descriptors written by we the million monkeys. I have never been a big fan of tastings, judging or correctness when it comes to beer. But I am wondering more and more about how autonomous we each are when it comes to the theatre of the mouth. We may well each be within much the same range when perceiving taste but could it be that that is as close as we get?

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2012/01/07/Session_59__When_I_Don_t_Drink_Beer_I_Like_A_Glass_Of...'

    Session 59: When I Don't Drink Beer I Like A Glass Of...

    Posted: January 7th, 2012, 1:24am CET by Alan McLeod

    I was tempted to break the streak and not get involved with the question posed this month which, as far as I can tell, boils down to "...let’s talk about what we drink when not drinking beer." Brewed For Thought asked and - after I go over the openendedness of it all - thought a bit more about it. Sorta.

    What do I drink? Coffee every day but only first thing. Not enough water. Not enough tea. Used to. Summer sees a jug of unsweetened green tea holding its place in the fridge. I like juice. I especially like lime juice. Errr... do you see my point? This is hardly thrilling tales. Oh, you want to know about booze? I've written about sherry and certainly port. A jug of Pimms is swell when the unsweetened ice tea is not doing the trick. Cucumber spears, baby. I'd drink more perry if I could get my hands on it. I prefer bourbon to bourbon barreled beer for the most part - usually in a Manhattan, a bit of angostura with a dash of sweet vermouth. Are you enjoying this so far? Good scotch and vodka are former favorites one is now too difficult to enjoy and, after working in Eastern Europe, I gave up vodka the best part of 20 years now. Gin and tonic? Now that can be a well placed decision. Once in a while. And table wine... though I mainly buy that for others.

    So, there you go. The obligatory post. I am sure I must have written duller. Just can't think of when. Oh, maybe when I did it in May 2010 when I couldn't think of anything else. Writer's block. You know what that is like.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2012/01/06/California__Olivia_Dubbel__Sierra_Nevada_Brewing__Chico'

    California: Olivia Dubbel, Sierra Nevada Brewing, Chico

    Posted: January 6th, 2012, 2:33am CET by Alan McLeod

    As you know, "collaboration" is always a dangerous word to read on any beer bottle. Often an experiment and holiday for others but at your expense. Unfortunately for my prejudices, I quite like dubbels and there are apparently honest to goodness Cistercian monks involved so I will open my mind.

    But first, this post is brought to you by my electrician who installed a switch in the stash room yesterday. I've actually broken a on-off pull chain and then destroyed a jury-rigged switch with all these bottle photos over the years. It's a nice switch. Switch 3G. Functional. Unassuming. And reasonably priced. The same goes for this dubbel. It pours a pleasant chestnut with a light mocha froth and rim. On the sniff there's nuts, brown sugar and a nice fruity almost grape scent. A very pleasant sip. Spiced burlappiness soaked in a little treacle. The label alleges clove and black pepper which I might buy. Not a very interesting spice combo if you think of it. 10,000 years of global cuisines have rejected it. The malty bits are more interesting: date, fig, a little citrus thing that might be lime (or maybe yellow plum) and also brown bread. Perfectly fine.

    The Ovila line of beers has its own unnecessarily fussy website. Don't hold it against them. They know not what they do. And the BAers say... HEY, they switched to number. This is an "86" whatever the hell that means. Useless.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2012/01/05/How_Many_Things_Are_Wrong_About_This_Story_'

    How Many Things Are Wrong About This Story?

    Posted: January 5th, 2012, 1:19am CET by Alan McLeod

    Start counting:

    ...inquiries by the Labour MP Tom Watson have revealed attempts by Portland Communications, which is run by Tony Blair's former adviser Tim Allan, to improve the brand's online reputation on behalf of its client, the brewer AB InBev. Under the user name Portlander10 it removed reference to Stella Artois from the Wikipedia page entitled "Wife beater" and replaced it with a generic reference to lager or beer. Portland also tried to remove the reference to wife beater on the Wikipedia page for Stella Artois. But other users spotted the edit and reversed it.

    Both the brand and the nickname, I suppose. But editing Wikipedia to boost your brand... and worse the idea of paying a consultant to edit Wikipedia for you. Then there is paying a consultant to edit Wikipedia to boost your brand and your consultant editing it from the consultancy's own IP address as well. Perhaps, too, is the setting up of a brand victim strategy. We should feel badly for the maker due to the slurs being foisted upon their macro gak.

    Or was it just to have people like me mention the event. Like me. Well played, Portlander10. But it's still a face full of bland.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2012/01/04/A_Good_Beer_Blog_s_Guide_To_Good_Beer_Manners'

    A Good Beer Blog's Guide To Good Beer Manners

    Posted: January 4th, 2012, 2:05am CET by Alan McLeod

    At the outset, let me say one thing. A discussion of manners that crosses international boundaries is a mine field. There is no reason that rules in Prague help with situations in California or have any meaning in Leeds. Yet, fools go where angels fear to tread so let's get into it. The Pub Curmudgeon posted the results of a poll he posted... the results of which he then took issue with:

    Out of 80 poll respondents, 43 wouldn’t be prepared to let the likes of Carling, John Smith’s or Guinness pass their lips if caught at a party or function where there was no “decent” beer available. Sorry folks, but whatever the motivation, that comes across as a pretty snobby attitude to me. Scant sign of the “all beer is good” inclusiveness there.

    There is something of a double negative at play so I have to make sure this is right but my read of that is if you are at a house or an establishment that does not have a class of beer that you consider worth your while, the small majority of those polled would refuse to have what was on offer. Comments at twenty-six and counting ensued as well as a range of Twitter activity largely in line with the polling results. Me? I was raised to eat and drink what was put before me, that it was not good manners to not clean my plate and that, you know, handsome is as handsome does. There were so many food fables in my upbringing that they could accommodate every situation and point of view. Even with that confusion, the discourse reminds me of a number of helpful hints:

    ♦ Fundamental to good food and drinks manners is that you do not turn up your nose. If you are presented with a range that is not up to your standards, you still participate. If there is Guinness, of course you accept it. You hold it. You place it one a table near you. You take the odd drink. It becomes you buffer guarding you against another of its kind. You will live. Eat your greens.
    ♦ Next, you do not show up those helping. In the recently published Let me Tell You About Beer, well reviewed at Simon's, I was faced with the shocking comment on page 32: "[a]ny pub that baulks at giving tasters of the draught beer is not to be trusted." Oh my. Faced with a range of unknown taps in a bar, good manners roll the dice, guess a likely candidate, take the glass and only then perhaps ask for samples once you have engaged in the drinking contract with the establishment. Holding up the staff or other drinkers places everyone in a special level of purgatory. Get on with it.
    ♦ Don't flaunt. In a new favorite The Art of Living According to Joe Beef, the great Montreal restauranteurs give a great recommendation about their highest priced wines. They would "rather see you for a great meal and a decent bottle." While it is fun to go to a place like Portland, Maine's Novare Res and empty the wallet... please take a friend and treat. Treating is the opposite of flaunting. If you need to air your views of the drinks, earn your keep, share the wealth - or shut it or leave.

    For me the bottom line is that unless your uncle owns the place - and probably especially if he does - you are a guest in any public house at any price point. You join in the spirit of the place or you leave. Handled badly, your beer knowledge and your beer money may be the vacuum that hoovers up all joy around you. All great bores are the same in this respect. Others I respect disagree. You may be among them. That is fine and it is your right. But let me point out one thing I saw in that poll that is being missed: "...you are at a party..." There is nothing worse than an ill mannered ungrateful guest. And when you are not at your own home, to one degree or another, you are a guest.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2012/01/01/Beer_Cocktails__A_Glass_Of_Port_And_One_Of_Stout'

    Beer Cocktails: A Glass Of Port And One Of Stout

    Posted: January 1st, 2012, 11:26pm CET by Alan McLeod

    I have had my doubts about beer cocktails ever since I heard the term. I don't trust that the attempt to create a new niche - and then, of course, the jostling to become guru of that niche - bodes well for actual experience being foisted upon us all. Plus, I am of an age that does not find me in bars watching however much I like them. I have to rely on my own wits. Any that usually keeps me from experimenting too much.

    Yet, there is something about port and stout that I like. The "ye olde" nature of it perhaps? I have certainly had a love of ports as well as Spanish sherries, Hungarian tokays and other "sticky" wines that actually predates my love of good beer. These are the drinks of childhood holidays, ex-pats comforting themselves with rich tastes of trade and empire. I came across the concept five years ago and have been tinkering with blends since at least 2008 and, while I approve, I have not found myself converted.

    Until today. I realized my problem might be the requirement of blending in the glass. Sure, you might say, that is what a "cocktail" is but, if we are honest, is not the shot and chaser a cocktail, too? And, frankly, is it not even more guru-tastic to use more than one piece of glassware to create the effect? Hands up everyone who agrees. There. It is settled.

    Today, I poured a glass of Feist Colheita 1998 port and a pint of Grand River's Russian Gun Imperial Stout. Both share a rich dryness when tasted in succession that I think would blend well in the same glass. But they also have so many complimentary tastes when tasted separately which are drowned when put together. The lingering dry cocoa licorice of the strong stout is washed by the heady tannin berry of the port. Both have a hint of chalkiness, too. Each are fine drinks in their own right. Together, a partnership.

    So, first big news of 2012? It's OK to use two glasses. Good old double fisting is now surely guru approved. Second big news? If you have a stash it's now time to get the cabinet, too. Your own little gin palace tucked in a corner of the dining room.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2011/12/31/My_Most_Interesting_Discovered_Drinky_Thing_Of_2011'

    My Most Interesting Discovered Drinky Thing Of 2011

    Posted: December 31st, 2011, 4:31pm CET by Alan McLeod

    This has been a year that I have thought about history a bit more than others. Canadian history for the most part. We make great mistakes in considering our own time on this land. We dismiss the First Nations. We pretend that Canada began when the current constitution was signed in 1867. But Canada has been populated for thousands of years and Europeans have been nibbling at the edges for the best part of a millennium. Vikings lived in northern Newfoundland back then. In 1674, the Hudson's Bay Company was importing malt and hops into the Arctic. But this year I came across another couple of fact that I found most interesting in this report. It's in the bibliography:

    ROSS, L. (1980) - 16th-Century Spanish Basque Coopering Technology: A Report of the Staved Containers Found in 1978-1979 on the Wreck of the Whaling Galleon San Juan, Sunk in Red Bay, Labrador, 1565. Manuscript Report Series.Ottawa. 408.

    See that? 1565. And the other thing? Staved containers. I have found West Country seasonal fishermen recorded as importing malt as part of their seasonal businesses packing salt cod for the Iberian market in the 1630s. How far before that did the practice occur? Peter E. Pope in his book Fish into Wine: The Newfoundland Plantation in the Seventeenth Century explains that there was a regular practice of travel each spring from Elizabethan England to what is now eastern Canada for this fishing trade. It is inconceivable that these men in the 1500s did not ship malt, too. That they did not pack drinks in casks for the voyage here and back, too.

    But where are the records? Where are the records for Albany ale for that matter like Taylor's brewing books? Or early Ontario beer? That's the thing. The records. In overseeing the OCB wiki, it has already become a little bit of a jostle over which record is the one to be trusted. Yet there is the tantalizing possibility that in the later half of the 1500s on cool spring days on the Newfoundland shore, men made beer for themselves many decades before the first beer was thought made in this country. There is a phrase for those whose families went on in places like Ferryland to shift to year round residence: masterless men. Don't you think they might have made themselves a little beer?

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2011/12/29/My_New_Year_s_Week_Reflections_Upon_How_2011_Was_Great'

    My New Year's Week Reflections Upon How 2011 Was Great

    Posted: December 29th, 2011, 7:31pm CET by Alan McLeod

    Pos-i-tiv-i-tay. That is really what I am known for, right? The cheery voice for good beer and, let's be honest, the good life. It's a bit like that 1980-90s TV program "Lifestyles of the Rich and Famous" around here... except for all the riches and, you know, the fame. But that is neither here nor there - because of what 2011 gave that part of my happy life that connects with beer and brewing:

    ♦ I have met more young brewers than before. Whether it is because I am approaching some sort of elder statesman status in beer blogging, in addition to being at events I can even think of at least four young brewers who went out of their way to get in touch and stop by my town to say hello for the first time and share a beer. Their excitement for brewing feeds mine. Their interest in my writing for what it is worth, well, is one of the best returns on investment I have known.
    ♦ It has been an extraordinary year for beer book publications. The Oxford Companion to Beer has proven to be a great gift to us all. It has done more to spread the word and opened more doors to thinking about beer than anything since, if I do say so, the beginning of beer blogging. And I am still not sure it was even the best book of 2011.
    ♦ I finally settled on a set of "go to" beers that I am comfortable buying without a secret fear that I am missing something in the craft seasonal or anniversary beer that I passed by. Hanssens gueuze, Saison Dupont, Sixpoint Bengali Tiger, Narragansett Porter, Charlevoix Dubbel are all beers I buy again and again. I am sure there are more. They teach me more each time I have one or share them.
    ♦ Speaking of sharing, I gave away more beer than ever. People talk about building community or spreading the word - but for me there is no better thing to do with good beer than to just give it away. I think I gave away at least 40 bottles or cans worth, if I am crassly counting on my fingers, over $300 in the few weeks before Christmas. Try it. It works.
    ♦ Finally, participatory serious thought about beer has propelled me into three separate initiatives. Again, we have had the annual Christmas photo contest and never was it so smooth and friendly an event - with many shockingly good entries. In addition, I was asked to help with the seminar series for the next Beaus Oktoberfest and my mind is a whirl of ideas about topics and methods of presenting information and discussion. Would a worldwide video panel of talking heads really work? And, of course, the OCB wiki has been an absolute treat. Watching old email pals and new voices fill this odd thing I created with gems of nerdy beer thoughts of all sorts has been a revelation. Rather than being as some fools thought a condemnation of The Oxford Companion to Beer, it is a celebration and an affirmation that there is, simply put, a wealth of knowledge about this stuff.

    There is more. Simon as perhaps the new Stonch in particularly cheers us all. All the regulars in the comments have again propped me up and given me insights as well, if things pan out, maybe even opportunities. Running into other beer writers in my few trips out of the basement - guys like Tory... err... Troy, Jordan and even Mr. B - has been just fun.

    2011? It's been a very good year. What was great for you?

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2011/12/28/My_New_Year_s_Week_List_Of_Beery_Confessions'

    My New Year's Week List Of Beery Confessions

    Posted: December 28th, 2011, 8:14pm CET by Alan McLeod

    Do I dare? Simon posted his list just now but I am starting to think that Simon is a far braver beer blogger than I will ever be. Sure you might say that I run the wiki thing but I did it out of guilt for a slightly mean spirited post and thought it would disprove my knee jerk reaction to one page of The Oxford Companion To Beer. Surprise.

    So, following Simon's lead, what would my list of "forgive me, Father, for I have sinned in thinking my evil dark thoughts" look like:

    ♦ those who do not call it black bitter, the only sensible name proposed for the stuff;
    ♦ self-re-tweeters who bleg "please RT" as well... except maybe where a kitten dies if you don't;
    ♦ brewers who add the $1.57 or so it costs to put the beer in swing top or caged cork so that they can pocket a "swank tax" of another $1.57 of your money;
    ♦ bloggers who actually post every one of those PR emails that everyone gets but no one else posts because we all know that everyone gets them and/or no one cares;
    ♦ CAMRA fanatics both pro and con;
    ♦ Users the word "haters" instead of thought in response;
    ♦ The very suggestion that we do not like beer in significant part because of the cheery buzz;
    Anyone who suggests what should not be written and who should not write about beer;
    ♦ The use of utter false phoney baloney history to add another "swank tax"; and
    ♦ beer gurus, beer experts, beer celebrities and, worst of all, self-appointed celebrity beer expert gurus.

    I still think that Simon's list is way better. But that was cathartic even if largely hypocritical. Far better than a best of 2011 list. Though I might do that tomorrow.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2011/12/27/My_New_Year_s_Week_Wish_List_For_Things_Beery'

    My New Year's Week Wish List For Things Beery

    Posted: December 27th, 2011, 5:03am CET by Alan McLeod

    Had a good couple of hours today talking beer with Jordan who was in town visiting family. I am starting to think that I live in a town where people's people live. When I lived in Truro, NS a pal from neighbouring Pictou, NS said Truro was where grandparents lived. [I got my own people to move here, too, now that I think of it.] Anyway, he and his were a treat to meet and we talk a lot of things that could be and some that shouldn't. Which sort of echoed in my head later in the day when I read Ding's Christmas wish list this evening as part of my Yuletide beer blog catch up. What would my own wish list for 2012 look like?

    1. I wish Canadian brewers had more... daring, insight, common sense and inventiveness. It is sad that the stash is filled with northeastern US craft beer that's cheaper and better.

    2. That being said, I still wish Wegman's would open a mega store at the very southern most footing of the Thousand Island Bridge so that I could pop over every Saturday and not every third or fourth. That extra two and a half hours on the round trip would be great.

    3. Like Ding, I wish "I could find a bar that PERMANENTLY has at least one cask of well kept, low-hopped, sub 4% beer pouring." Jordan and I talked particularly about how this is still one of the big gaps in the market.

    4. I want more people to ask why. About everything they are told about beer. Especially from self-appointed gurus and celebrities.

    5. I wish the next big thing was saison - except not the ones that remind me of "good canned fruit salad". Tonight, I want more Saison Dupont and dates. Who knew?

    6. I wish that the construct of the beer discourse would shift. I wish for heated debate. I wish for what Mr. B called "the accolades and the criticism and the controversy."

    7. I want to drink a 1780s beer from John Stuart's tankard in my backyard.

    8. I want the buying power of the drinker to have more say.

    That is only eight. I am sure there are more. I might add some later and so might you. Enjoy your Boxing Day Tuesday if you get one. It's the holiday you get when Christmas is Sunday and Boxing Day is Monday so you are due another holiday that stands for not so much but, like Easter Monday, is a great time to not be at work.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2011/12/26/Boxing_Day_Guilt__Confessions_And_Reflection'

    Boxing Day Guilt, Confessions And Reflection

    Posted: December 26th, 2011, 5:39pm CET by Alan McLeod

    I am exhausted. Too tired from too much rich food and drink. Slugging East India sherry as you chew shortbread seems such a good idea at the time. Surprised someone didn't pass me a straw given my monopolization of the bottle. I am going to eat only sardines and oatmeal while sipping green tea from now on. Good, glad that's settled.

    I had one of the few true revelations of 2011 late yesterday afternoon as I settled in with the DVD set of Oz and James Drink to Britain. After the first two episodes I was blown away by how simply, humorously and intelligently they explained so many aspects of British beer and brewing. You know how you read those unending complete guides to beer understanding that come out every 4 months which include some fun catch phrase over and over like "relax - have a beer" or "don't forget beer is supposed to be fun"? And then you realize that the book is neither relaxing or fun due to the cacophony of misorganized data as well as the authors' screamingly irritating self-promotion? You know that feeling? Well, Oz and James have found a way to completely avoid it. By being rude and silly. Great concept. Completely and legitimately connected to booze, too.

    But rather than write about it (ie dancing about architecture) at this time I will only encourage you all to pick up a copy. Boxing Day sales, that sort of thing. I will leave more insights, if I have any, in the comments. You can as well. See, that's how the internet works.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2011/12/24/A_Merry_Christmas_Eve_Strikes_Good_Beer_Blog_HQ'

    A Merry Christmas Eve Strikes Good Beer Blog HQ

    Posted: December 24th, 2011, 8:43pm CET by Alan McLeod

    I love when Christmas Eve is Saturday. It creates a whole gentle extra day of laying around, wrapping gifts, watching the Jets and Giants, sipping beer, eating cheese, sampling squares, nibbling on cold beef, consuming tidbits and generally chewing and not shifting. I have chatted on IM with the newly crowned cham-peen of the sub-continent. Stan has sent merry wishes and had same returned. Ron has told me what he was tippling and I wondered back whether we were going to have a drinkalongathon. If you have not already, read Martyn on the meaning of beef at this time of year.

    It is a happy day. I adjudicated a difference of opinion on The Oxford Companion to Beer wiki. And it's St. Bernardus Christmas Ale in the mid-afternoon today. They should make a Christmas Eve Ale, too. Imagine the marketing possibilities. Tomorrow, I just bet the kids get me beer books. I win that bet because I have already bought them and, later tonight, will wrap them with a tag that says from them to me.

    Happy Christmas Eve. Let tomorrow take care of tomorrow.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2011/12/23/Icelandic_Beers_Sales_Include_Shrubs_And_Sheep_Herds'

    Icelandic Beers Sales Include Shrubs And Sheep Herds

    Posted: December 23rd, 2011, 2:21am CET by Alan McLeod

    Sheep herds? There must be. Yes, I say - yes! And likely a few gulls, too, with this much being sold:

    The Icelandic love of specially-made Christmas beers knows no bounds this year…that is until all of it has been sold. Nearly 500,000 litres of Christmas beer have been sold in Iceland so far this year — and that does not include sales of ‘normal’, standard beers which are available year-round. The most popular Christmas beer is once again Danish; but its Icelandic competitors are close behind. Already by yesterday 473,000 litres had been sold since Christmas beers became available in the middle of November.

    Do you see what I mean? I mean, Iceland has only 320,000 people and Christmas beer was only released in mid-November. So, that is a lot of beer per person - man, woman and child - over the last five weeks or so. If this chart has any meaning, I don't see any difference in strength for these beers. We read it's a bit darker, has more taste. What the hell does that mean? Jolabjör seems to have a cultural place that might be not quite explicable. This blog seems to suggest it's a "cross between mulled wine and a barley wine... a sweet and spicy beer with a rather large body" but also, disconcertingly, requiring "typical goat taste."

    Good luck to them. Good Yule. Enjoy the goat taste.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2011/12/22/So..._Where_Was_I__Oh__Yes__Beer_And_Me.'

    So... Where Was I? Oh, Yes! Beer And Me.

    Posted: December 22nd, 2011, 2:47am CET by Alan McLeod

    When I began blogging almost nine years ago I remember being asked what blogging was. I replied I was writing a magazine about me. And I suppose that is what I have been doing. Here there have been 2,516 posts and over there another 5,377. Most astoundingly to me are the 38,973 collective comments - beyond the filtered spam - that have been left by folks like you. I suppose I have read them all. I don't recall.

    The end of the annual Christmas beery photo contest serves as something of a conclusion of the bloggy season in a way. It's good to reflect. To slow down for Yule and also think about the beer and blog connection. In one real sense, I have put my dedication to the fluid on display. Perhaps even my weakness to its call. I am not one to blindly boost good beer, after all, so much as to admit its grip - or, perhaps, only its deep abiding attraction. I don't really care about my right to good beer, the role of those slagged as neo-prohibitionists or even matters of snobby status. I don't think I have really discovered any truths. I don't want a job. I really just like the beer and like the regular discipline of writing about it.

    So, away we go with the seasons. As we again turn slowly into the light of the sun as winter solstice passes with this longest night of the year, I will have beer and keep writing about it. I will enjoy it and I will think about it. I hope you do, too.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2011/12/20/Day_23_8__And__So__We_Have_A_Grand_Champion_Photo'

    Day 23+8: And, So, We Have A Grand Champion Photo

    Posted: December 20th, 2011, 1:40am CET by Alan McLeod

    This year's photo contest has been a real treat. A great response from prize donors as well as a great response from you the readers. We had 39 entrants email photos in time and then three more try to get their pictures in after the deadline. We have awarded 22 prizes in all and now have just one left. Again here is what the winner of winners wins.

    Oxford Companion to Beer, Oxford University Press.
    ♦ A subscription to TAPS The Beer Magazine as well as 2 TAPS glasses, a CBA glass and a TAPS t-shirt.
    ♦ A subscription to All About Beer magazine - as well as a high likelihood of the photo being featured in an edition later in 2012.
    ♦ A beery bar towel from Shipyard Brewing of Portland, Maine.
    ♦ Adrian Tierney-Jones and CAMRA have offered two copies of Great British Pubs.
    Beer and Economics, Oxford University Press.

    In addition, they join the ranks of these five great winners to date.

    YearPhotographArtist
    2006 Dave Selden of Portland, Oregon
    2007 John Lewington of England
    2008 Matt Wiater of Portland Oregon
    2009 Kim Reed of Rochester, New York
    2010 Brian Stechschulte of San Francisco, California

    So, who gets to join this august crew, this merry band of grand champions? Well, let's have a look at these four runner ups. Note one thing: these have not been awarded awards but that is to build what we folk in internet productions - aka les productions des internets - call "building the dramatic effect"! Had I merely dropped in a few prize winners, what is there for you to speculate about by email, MSM, Facebook and Twitter behind my back? Nuttin, that's what. So here are the four runners up:

    Do you see my problems? I really like the one to the left, John Lewington's photo of the sinister black eye watching the urban English street outside the pub - but he's won it all before. I can't do that so soon in to the inevitable decades of the Xmas photo contest... can I? And two photos to the right of that Jeff Alworth has an amazing photo of the Cantillon koelschip. I like this shot a lot as we have had a number of entries from Cantillon but I like how this photograph is so three dimensional, how it shows the space well and also how it describes the process of opening the windows to let in the wild yeast. But Jeff is from Portland, Oregon and I will be damned if I am going to award 50% of all grand prizes to the same town over the course of more than half a decade... I won't have it. Frankly, this was the winner until I put that table together up there and remembered where Dave and Matt were from. Blame them, Jeff.

    What to do? Between Jeff and John sits a fabulous lucky shot from Adrian Tierney-Jones from the moving brewing line from Jenlain of France. It dates from 2005 and Adrian told me he was being shown round the brewery by Raymond Duyck’s father who had been so instrumental in getting the brewery recognized in the 1970s. But Adrian has published what I am considering possibly the best beer book in a very good year for beer books. Fame, praise and wealth are sure to follow. He won't give a rat's ass about winning this come mid-February. Can that be the fate of this grand contest?

    Finally, to the right, we have a gorgeous silhouette of a man and his beer in, I am pretty sure, Germany submitted by Boak and Bailey. Older gents in bars having a quiet beer and a smoke has been a surprising theme over the years. I always assumed they were dirty smelly drinks but when a keen eye gets involved they look like angel. Lars in Norway has submitted another couple of real gems in the genre. But hasn't it been done? I am just not sure. So, I need a few more moments to think about it all. Maybe I should pick on of these after all. Maybe I should pick that sweet shot that has grown on me since 2008. I need a moment more... I need a beer...

    [More below.]

    So, I lied. Not so much lied as realized I don't care. The third winner from Portland Oregon is Jeff Alworth of Beervana for this photo below:

    What do I like about it? Well, I am not one to fawn over Cantillon. I have like a few just fine but, five years later, this one still burns. No, it's not the beer and its not the celebrity brewery - it's what is going on. Look at the photo. There is steam in the air. Look at the condensation on the window pane. And there is yeast. There's yeast gathering on Jeff's for heaven's sake. But there is also light and shadow. Like to the left. Light from those vents in view. And most of all light falling down upon the koelschip. There is the dark of the wood and the light of the painted brick as well. Dynamic microbes abounding in a scene where the only thing not doing its job might be the newest. I like it.

    So there you go. Another Oregon winner. Sue me.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2011/12/19/Day_23_7__Which_Means_The_Contest_Ended_Last_Weekend'

    Day 23+7: Which Means The Contest Ended Last Weekend

    Posted: December 19th, 2011, 1:57am CET by Alan McLeod

    I feel a bit bad as three good beer boys and girls have entered photos for the contest but days after it has closed. I hope I was not unclear in some way. But I have to be firm and, really, it was in the rules - photos had to be in a week ago. So... sorry.

    I don't feel really really bad, however, as I was overnight in central New York on a Yuletide treat buying expedition. Found the best hotel yet, ate a big steak, had a martini in the bar to celebrate the Orange winning and confirmed, once again, that Wegmans is a great place to buy beer. $9.49 for a cube of Sixpoint? A special on Saint Bernardus Christmas Ale? No wonder no one is opening up a CNY specialty beer shop to match the sort of outlets found in Ithaca, Rochester, Albany and now Watertown. But you can get a growler fill at a gas station, now. See that up there? Them's proof of craft as normal, them are.

    But, as a result, I have left the photo evaluation computer program running a bit longer than expected - but as the working of the algorithms and matrices are straining the capacity of governors and coal scuttles I think it is all for the best. Want to do a proper job picking the champion of champions, right? Tomorrow. Tomorrow for sure. I love you, tomorrow. You're always a day away.

    Did I mention I have to find a tree still?

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2011/12/17/Day_23_5__Another_Eleven_Beer_Photo_Prizes_Announced'

    Day 23+5: Another Eleven Beer Photo Prizes Announced

    Posted: December 17th, 2011, 2:30am CET by Alan McLeod

    So here we are. The second wave of prizes. Eleven in total today making for 22 all together. Just the Grand Champion to go and I am going to need a couple of days to think about it. There is a photo I have in my mind but I need to consider the options. It is a little unusual but because it tells an important story - and does so from an uncommon perspective - I am leaning in that direction. I suppose I could receive some lobbying from you lot over the weekend, too. Feel free to let me know what you think of the choices so far and your idea of the best of the entries.

    PictureArtist / ReasonsPrize / Mailer
    Jeph Stahl of Grimsby, Ontario
    for the best "we got beer" entry ever.
    Super Dooper Ontario-only
    Prize Pack from
    Roland and Russell
    Steve Palmer, CEO and Brewer
    at Beermont, Vermont because
    of how the sunset colours
    infuse the beer.
    Grand Teton Brewing
    prize pack from Idaho

    Robert Gale of Wales
    wins with a tie between
    two picture - one with a harp
    and one with calm
    in the middle of a rush.
    Brew Like A Monk
    by Stan Hieronymous
    Jeff Wayne of Tampa, Florida
    for what Gary said.
    All About Beer
    magazine subscription
    Matt Wiater
    Portland Oregon
    for the glistening stainless.
    A bottle of Westy 12
    Jeff Alworth of Beervana
    Lars Marius Garshol of Oslo, Norway
    for the use of grey and how the suit
    matches the street, not the pub.
    Subscription
    TAPS The Beer Magazine
    Steve of Houston, Texas and All Good Beer for the thickness of foam and
    hairiness of arms.
    Subscription
    TAPS The Beer Magazine
    Maximiliano Bahnson of Prague for
    the beer soaked planking.
    Great British Pubs
    Adrian Tierney-Jones and CAMRA

    Boak and Bailey of Cornwall England
    for pandering to my kölschkranz needs.
    Creemore Springs Brewery
    prize pack
    Marco Redbaz of Milan, Italy
    for more thickness of foam.
    Prague: A Pisshead's Pub Guide
    by Maximiliano Bahnson
    Fabio Freire, a Brazilian in
    NYC who runs Bierboxx.com
    for the moment and glimpsed beer.
    Oxford Companion
    to Beer
    , OUP

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2011/12/16/Day_23_4__Ten_Prizes_Awarded_And_Four_Innis___Gunn'

    Day 23+4: Ten Prizes Awarded And Four Innis + Gunn

    Posted: December 16th, 2011, 3:37am CET by Alan McLeod

    Prizes. Better start picking some prizes. But there are samples building up, too. Better opens some samples. Good thing I have tomorrow off.

    First the beer. I have reviewed at least three Innis + Gunn beers and I have a sense what to expect: rounded, juicy, well balanced and tasty malt without a little acid or something yeasty to make it twing. Easy. Is that a prejudice? Could be. It's well represented here in Ontario but there is a bit of a price tag. Is that, too, a prejudice? Mr. B has recently noted unexpected things. Let's see what is going on.

    Original: at three bucks for a small bottle, this brew has flickers of peach and walnut in a pretty smooth caramel sip. Vanilla in the nose and in the mouth is there... and there and there, too... but this is that white ice cream covered with other tasty things. Accessible and moreish at 6.6%.
    Winter Beer 2011: available in the holiday pack, I haven't a separate price per bottle. A similar quiet scent. There is cola, rum, cardamon and nutmeg in a subdued rounded malty brew. I think I like the Original better. I don't get the orange zest as mentioned on the label. There is a little burnt note where that might sit. 7.4%.
    Spiced Rum Finish: I am not sure if this beer is the same as rum cask. Maybe not. A rather elaborate portfolio. Again, a subdued sniff that asks for a quaff of moreish soft water maltiness. More huskiness if that is an available adjective with these beers. Spices are better integrated. Cinnamon and maybe white pepper at 6.9%. There is a dryness competing with the light sweetness that is the signature of the line. I like it. It is still a bit toffee-ish but nicely cut with the dry spice.
    Highland Cask: This is the beer himself liked. Again, the nose has to go a long way into the glass to get aroma. In the mouth, more vanilla and caramel with a bit of a bumped up volume. I opened these beer in the right order. There is another sort of dry that is less cutting, sort of a brushy woodland floor thing. There is caramel but it is neither burnt or cloyingly flaccid. I like the "stewed fruit" description. There might be a bit of mushroom or even oolong. It is still within the brewery's blanket of comfort zone but I like what is happening. A nickle under five bucks at 6.9%. Worth it.

    What have we learned? This line of beers have been around a long time now and maybe it's time to admit that they are not resting on their idea of a sweet round filtered cask beer but are dedicated to tasty roundness that is accessible and interesting. I am as guilty as the next person in thinking these are brand before brew. I pass them. But I like these explorations of malt. I like these beers. Have a try.

    Contest awards in a minute... OK, let's see on the second attempt if I can still create a table in HTML-like code.

    Picture Artist / Reasons Prize / Mailer
    Ed Carson of Pennsylvania
    for capturing his wait
    for Lew and that prize
    at the Gray Lodge.
    Shipyard Brewing
    Portland, Maine
    Joe Stange
    Costa Rica
    for a seasonal
    remembrance of
    beer nog.
    All About Beer
    magazine subscription
    The Beer Nut of Ireland
    for besting Degas.
    An evening hosting
    Ron Pattinson
    Peter Collins
    Cambridge Ontario
    for capturing glow.
    Subscription
    TAPS The Beer Magazine
    Tom Cizauskas for capturing ye
    olde pub in a modern setting.
    Martyn Cornell
    Amber Gold + Black
    Alistair Reece of Virginia
    for the reminder of beer
    just past... and the light.
    Narragansett Brewing
    prize pack
    Dan James of PEI
    for that purple.
    Subscription
    TAPS The Beer Magazine
    Mark Michalski of Somewhere, USA
    for the simple truth about
    cheap beer and crab.
    33 Journal 6 Book Set
    Jerry Davison of Illinois
    for that shade of green.
    Shipyard Brewing
    Portland, Maine
    Michael Bank of Vermont
    for the magic of a
    kölschkranz in motion.
    Beer and Economics
    Oxford University Press

    Did that work? It worked? More prizes tomorrow.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2011/12/15/Outdoor_Skating_Causes_Haligonians_To_Lose_Control'

    Outdoor Skating Causes Haligonians To Lose Control

    Posted: December 15th, 2011, 1:37pm CET by Alan McLeod

    I had no idea that residents of my former home town of Halifax, Nova Scotia have such a problem with the drink... and ice skating:

    Selling beer at the oval was not part of the sponsorship deal or any of the discussions leading up to it, Mayor Peter Kelly said Wednesday. “I wouldn’t think (we) would ever want it to be part of the discussion,” the mayor said. “It certainly was not part of the sponsorship agreement approved by council ... and I don’t believe council would consider going there.” Although the BMO Centre in Bedford serves beer, Coun. Linda Mosher (Purcells Cove-Armdale) said she thinks the two venues cater to different crowds and different events. Grabbing a beer during a hockey game is socially acceptable, she said. But when you’re skating? Not so much. “You don’t want to get people skating half-cut,” Coun. Jerry Blumenthal (Halifax North End) said.

    "Half-cut" is such a good old Halifax phrase for being smashed. One is never, as far as I recall, cut. And I am never sure what receives the cutting. But, in any event, it is a dangerous state of affairs and one that can, apparently, be triggered by outdoor skating in a way that people who skate indoors can never fully appreciate. Is it the view of the arc of the sky that sends east coast folk into that maddened state that they can never stop at one... or maybe two?

    My recollections of the port town - that centuries old North Atlantic navy town - was that there was no need of an excuse and no obstacle that could not be circumvented to get to one's beer. But maybe outdoor ice skating is it, that socially unacceptable behaviour that must exclude beer for Nova Scotians. I knew there had to be one thing hypothetically, theoretically. Never really expected to actually scientifically identify it.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2011/12/14/Lord_Goog_Has_Another_New_Way_To_Suck_My_Time_Away'

    Lord Goog Has Another New Way To Suck My Time Away

    Posted: December 14th, 2011, 11:34pm CET by Alan McLeod

    Just a note. I am watching you. I may be the last to know but Google Analytic's beta real time display has enthralled me. I am in its thrall, its slave. The image above does not do this justice. It moves. I can watch you go on the site, what you are looking at, where you are from, how long you are there and a whack of other stuff all in dancing graphs, maps and pie charts. And it moves. I am its thrall.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2011/12/14/Day_23_2__Thirty_Nine_Contestants_Twenty_One_Prizes'

    Day 23+2: Thirty-Nine Contestants Twenty-One Prizes

    Posted: December 14th, 2011, 2:51am CET by Alan McLeod

    I wish I was more diligent. Every year I think I am getting close to a prize for every winner but, again this year, the answer is no. Sadly. But the prizes are sweet. Look at what the winner of winners wins.

    Oxford Companion to Beer, Oxford University Press.
    ♦ A subscription to TAPS The Beer Magazine as well as 2 TAPS glasses, a CBA glass and a TAPS t-shirt.
    ♦ A subscription to All About Beer magazine - as well as a high likelihood of the photo being featured in an edition later in 2012.
    ♦ A beer mat from Shipyard Brewing of Portland, Maine.
    ♦ Adrian Tierney-Jones and CAMRA have offered two copies of Great British Pubs.
    Beer and Economics, Oxford University Press.

    Wow. That's the el supremo winner's catch and I have to say I would love getting that. Each prize will be sent directly to the winner from the donor after winners in touch with the donors by email. It will take a little time and has to wait a bit yet as there are still TWENTY more to declare over the next few days. Bear with me as the judging begins.

    And, OK, I am going to add one more. A prize from my own collection. The bad photo of the year award. I will come from me and it goes to a very special person, the person who I was happiest to see enter - Roshan Gopal Krishnan of Cochin, Kerala, India. Occasionally I award a prize for one just plain ugly photo - in 2009 it was awarded for a photo of a pile of dirt. I can't find it in the archives but that was just plain bad. No, there it is, submitted by Bill of Oregon in 2009. What a horrid thing. Roshan's photos are not of that dirt pile quality but - as he admitted, I will have you know - they are humble. Plus they break the rules. He sent nine... but who cares. He took a photo of food. Yik - but who cares. They are out of focus and they have absolutely no sense of anything. Yet... they come from Kerala, that land of magic. So, congratulations. Send me your address. Happy tropical Yule.

    More results soon.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2011/12/13/Shipping_Beer_May_Save_US_Constitutional_Provision_'

    Shipping Beer May Save US Constitutional Provision!

    Posted: December 13th, 2011, 1:50pm CET by Alan McLeod

    Change is tough. The toothbrush that is always and ratty blue suddenly is new and green. Throws me off. So much more disruptive is the shock of the new information and communications technologies. And no one knows that better than the US Postal Service - but a bipartisan set of US Senators are to the rescue:

    We also need to give the Postal Service tools to offer new products and services — such as shipping beer and wine, as competitors FedEx and UPS do. This also would let the Postal Service turn a perceived liability — a nationwide retail, transportation and delivery network — into an asset that can bring in new revenue. We are not crying “wolf.” If nothing is done, the Postal Service will not be able to make payroll next summer — stopping mail delivery in its tracks and wreaking havoc on our already fragile economy. To prevent this, we must pass a comprehensive reform bill. If we don’t, the Postal Service, which is enshrined in our Constitution, will fail — ending an American institution that has served us well since the beginning of our Republic.

    All hail beer the conquering hero!!! But how much additional shipping will have to take place to beat back the shortfall? The service needs to cut $20 billion in expenses by 2015. That is a lot of beer. But if beer can save a matter that is enshrined in the Constitution surely the originalists amongst the beer nerds community will get behind this, maybe only drink beer delivered by post as a matter of national pride during this technological transformation. Surely that would be the patriotic thing to do.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2011/12/13/Day__23_1__Those_Photos_Caught_In_The_Spam_Filter'

    Day 23+1: Those Photos Caught In The Spam Filter

    Posted: December 13th, 2011, 2:21am CET by Alan McLeod

    I suppose I should check under the sofa, in the mail box and out in the garden, too. One really never knows where one will find photos does one. Robert Gale sent in these eight entries on Saturday but I missed seeing them as Lord Goog thought he knew better where they ought to go. He lives in Torfaen, Wales and is one half of beerlens.com along with Kim Reed, our 2009 grand winner. Robert himself won a prize in 2009 and again in 2010. He's probably won more. I should have phoned him over in Wales and asked why he hadn't submitted. I should have known something was up.


    And, look, he's provide detail on each picture so I really should provide that to you, too. But it's not all in order. So you'll have to figure it out for yourself, what picture goes with which description. If your are as thick as me you'll be looking for the harpist on Mr. Ranier. Heck, I just realized I called this the 2012 contest in the title of yesterday's post. I kept doing that all month but I have no idea why.


    Taphouse Grill, Seattle: In the UK we are lucky to see 10 beers on tap at the same time and the most you will ever find permanently on tap is around 40 so imagine how overwhelmed I felt when visiting the Taphouse Grill with its 160 permanent taps!

    House of Trembling Madness: The small but busy bar at the fabulously named House of Trembling Madness in historic York, England. The pub is situated inside an old medieval hall that dates from 1180.

    Mt Rainier, WA: On a recent trip to Mt Rainier I noticed that the restaurant sold cans of Rainier beer. I couldn't miss out on an opportunity to take a shot of the beer in front of the mountain.

    Glass of Hops: This glass full of hops was found at the excellent Full Sail Brewing Co. in Hood River, OR. They smelled amazing!

    Matt Brynildson, Firestone Walker: I spotted Matt at London's The Rake pub during the Great British Beer Festival 2011. Matt was in the UK to brew Red Nectar Ale with the Shepherd Neame brewery. In keeping with tradition, Matt was asked to sign the wall at the Rake.

    Bunch of Grapes, Pontypridd, Wales: It's not everyday you see someone turn up to the pub with their harp but this group of musicians are regulars at the Bunch of Grapes pub in Pontypridd, south Wales.

    The Old Joint Stock, Birmingham, England: The grand interior of the Old Joint Stock in central Birmingham. The pub is owned by Fullers who have a tradition of converting old banks into pubs. This particular pub was built in 1864 as the Birmingham Joint Stock Bank. Today it is an excellent pub that also has it's own theatre!

    The Harp, London: A warm summer evening at The Harp pub in Covent Garden, London. Well known for its good selection of ales, you can just make out the huge collection of pump clips that decorate the bar.

    There. Connect the dots. See if you can get them all. And that makes the contest now truly over.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2011/12/12/Day_23__The_Final_Xmas_Photo_Contest_Entries_For_2012'

    Day 23: The Final Xmas Photo Contest Entries For 2012

    Posted: December 12th, 2011, 2:43am CET by Alan McLeod

    There you go. Another year's worth of entries for the Xmas Beer Blog Photo Contest 2012. By my court there are 211 entries this year, up over 10% from last year. Stats. That's the true meaning of Christmas... and Hogmanay for that matter. Let's see who sent what, shall we?

    My pal Dan James of Prince Edward Island - and man about the globe right now - sent in two photos, one above of a beer shelf in Indonesia and the other below to the left of a Tiger beer by a Malaysian beach. Another pal Mark Pacilio of Sackets Harbor New York sent in the two photos to the right of that mug of Tiger. They were the taken at another exotic location, the 1888 Tavern at the Saranac Brewery formerly West End Brewery known as Utica Club. Ah, Utica Club...

    Tom Cizauskas of Yours For Good Fermentables sent in these eight shots. I like the shouldering the firkin one. Its of Drew Barton, brewer for French Broad Brewing in Asheville, North Carolina. He's pouring the final contents from a firkin (10.8 gallon cask) of his Wee Heavy ale.


    Simon Johnson, the Reluctant Scooper, forwarded these eight pictures. I am not sure of the cultural importance of "lots of GBBF brewers, writers, publicans, waifs and strays wearing the Ginger Merkin" but I am sure there is plenty.


    Chris Barrett in Scotland sent along one entry, to the left below of the best cask choice in Aberlour during the Spirit of Speyside festival on an April evening. Sarah Petersen, an American living in Toronto sent in the two two to the right of Chris's, leveraging her chances heavily on the beer and baby category. Note: that is a beer fest tasting glass. Christopher Paulin of Toronto sent a picture of his cat in a box.

    Russ Burdick of Markham Ontario sent in this set of eight. I like that view from the dock. It'll be a few months yet in Canada before we see that again.


    Finally, Steve of Houston Texas and proprietor of All Good Beer sends in these rather wintery shots from a place I would not have expected to get them from. But he is an expat Canuck so one does what one must:


    There. That's quite the load. Let the judging begin.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2011/12/11/Day_23__Kristen_England_Supports_Properly_Priced_Beer'

    Day 23: Kristen England Supports Properly Priced Beer

    Posted: December 11th, 2011, 2:32pm CET by Alan McLeod

    Ron has posted a great interview with Minnesota brewer Kristen England brought to us by Northern Brewer, the US home brew supply shop. I don't normally like web video due to production values (or surprisingly squeaky voices) but this is a straight one camera interview that does not pretend to be anything it isn't. And they use good microphones. And they recorded it in the home brewing room I lust for.

    Plus, there is a great observation at around 27 minutes in about beer being priced by the gravity units. Somewhere around here I made the point, years ago, that lower priced session beers would gain traction when brewers priced them according price inputs. I recall receiving a scolding. It was at a time when craft brewers could say things like they had to train drinkers to pay more. Such silliness.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2011/12/10/Day_22__As_We_Wait_For_Late_Entries__Pause_For_A_Shotz'

    Day 22: As We Wait For Late Entries, Pause For A Shotz

    Posted: December 10th, 2011, 8:53pm CET by Alan McLeod

    Could you do this on TV now? A comedy about brewery workers? Probably not. By the way, I sing a song like that to myself as I am beer shopping. Every time. Don't you?

    Under 24 hours to get your photos in. Tom Cizauskas of Yours For Good Fermentables did as did Simon Johnson, the Reluctant Scooper. Here are the prizes. What have you got to lose?

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2011/12/10/Day_21__It_s_Beginning_To_Look_A_Lot_Like_A_Finish_Line'

    Day 21: It's Beginning To Look A Lot Like A Finish Line

    Posted: December 10th, 2011, 1:33am CET by Alan McLeod

    Seem you just get started and before you know it... it's the time we have to say... man, the 2012 Xmas, Yule, Kwanzaa, Hogmanay and Hanukkah Christmas photo contest has flown by. The entries have to be in by Sunday at noon eastern standard time but so far we are close to where we were last year - 171 pictures of beer love compared to last year's final total of 186. That is good. And the prizes bulge. That is good, too.

    Up there is another entry by John Lewington of England. he says:

    This is a picture of another London pub that I thought may be of interest. Over here in the UK we have an organisation called CAMRA... This photo is a different take on that name. It's not a lamp above the door but one of the 1000s of security cameras that now watch our every move. Boy! I am glad in live in the countryside where I take enjoy my beer without being spied upon.

    I think I would find that a bit less than comfortable, too.

    Sounds like we have some word of mouth going on. Gary Simmons of Kitchener Ontario has sent in this one photo to the left. He says "I don't take many beer photos, but I shot this one this past summer." He learned about the contest from fellow entrant and fellow photographer and pal Peter Collins.

    Steve Palmer, CEO and Brewer at Beermont, Vermont - just a few hours drive to my east, has sent in these three entries. The middle one is a glass of Jack D'or before a Catamount sunset.

    Jeff Wayne of Tampa Florida has sent in these eight photographs including one of Dublin's Temple Bar as well as one from a trip to the Brick Store Pub in Decatur, GA:


    Adrian Tierney-Jones, he of one of my favorite beer books of the year, Great British Pubs, has sent in three photos below. Two entries but three photos. Hmm... He wrote to explain:

    I’d like to enter the second pic to your comp — it’s from the Star in Bath and if you look closely at the beer you will see the whole world reflected in it, well the wolrd in which I live within my head. [H]ere’s another pic I have always loved but it dates from 2005 when I last visited Jenlain, so it’s not an entry it’s just one of those lucky shots, which reminds me I need to get back to northern France next year (travel jourmalism is so handy in getting to beer places).

    I am not sure why the Jenlain shot is not an entry so I am posting it as a provisional entry until I clue into what he's saying. He added, however, that the photo of London Pride reminds ATJ of a Beefeater at the Tower of London. And it does:

    And finally, Brian Stechschulte, the writer and photographer behind AllOverBeer.com has sent in these eight entries. Titles include "Ken and Fritz" and "Toronado Barleywine Festival." Brian was last year's grand winner and also suffered the annoyance many of us have felt from time to time when DRAFT magazine poached his winning photo giving some half-assed excuse that it had a right to his art. Hands of this year, DRAFT jerks:


    There you go. You are caught up to date. Two days left. Let's get some more beer pR0n in in the inbox, please.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2011/12/08/Day_19__More_Photos__Too__Including_One_From_Martyn'

    Day 19: More Photos, Too, Including One From Martyn

    Posted: December 8th, 2011, 1:45am CET by Alan McLeod

    I lost Martyn's submission of a photo in late November. It's not like I have staff running this thing. Wouldn't that be great? Staff who hits up prize givers all year. Staff to re-size these photos?

    Enough daydreaming. Martyn's offering is called "The Traveller's Relief" and was taken at Istanbul Airport on December 23 last year during he calls a nightmare-like 36-hour journey home from the Middle East. I've been chatting about beer on the internet with Martyn for over eight years.

    Although I am sure it's not been that long, The Beer Nut of Ireland feels like a fellow traveler of as long a spell. His eight entries are below with titles like "Happy hour at U Slovanské Lipy, Prague" or "Thornbridge Dom at the taps at the Borefts Beer Festival in the Netherlands" or "Yours truly, confounded by a blind tasting in the Bull & Castle, Dublin":

    [Notice also the full facial photo. Is that a first?]


    A newcomer to the photo contest is Fabio Freire, a Brazilian living in New York who runs Bierboxx.com, a São Paulo based beer web store and bar.. I think. Here are his entries including "A Lunatic Left a Westy Unattended" and "Fermentation Tanks, Plzensky Prazdroj":


    That's enough for now. Send in more entries and I will see if I can squeeze a few more prizes out of the industry. Maybe the Portman Group has hoodies. Probably have three arms.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2011/12/08/Day_19__Oxford_University_Press_Books_Added_To_Prizes'

    Day 19: Oxford University Press Books Added To Prizes

    Posted: December 8th, 2011, 12:35am CET by Alan McLeod

    See those books up there? Oxford University Press has confirmed two copies of each that enter into the prize pool for all you good little beer photo nerds. To the left is The Oxford Companion To Beer, review here and considered in greater and greater depth here. To the right is The Economics of Beer, reviewed here. Both are important cornerstones of any beer library and get added to an already great set of prizes:

    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.

    I also have a large sized Narragansett porter brown t-shirt that came in the mail today. It's crazy. A cavalcade of prizes. All that is missing are envelopes stuffed with cash. And, just to be clear, I am willing to entertain offers of gift pledges of large envelopes stuffed with cash.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2011/12/07/Day_18__Dear_Lord___Save_Us_From_The_Portman_Group'

    Day 18: Dear Lord - Save Us From The Portman Group

    Posted: December 7th, 2011, 2:59am CET by Alan McLeod

    Hear our prayer. Remember the money lenders and the false prophets? They are back, Lord. The shadowy Portman Group is back. A trade industry organization representing macro brewers pretending they are an independent consumer-protection organization. Lord, hear our prayers.

    It's been over three years since these imposing imposters pretended to have authority and used their market share to crush the small and interesting. Hardknott Brewery is the focus now. A tiny brewery lacking in their resources - mammon, coins of silver, call it what you will. The sort of victim a thick bully especially likes. Fortunately, Hardknott is both hard and knotted firm. He will have none of it. Can't say that for the pathetic apologists in the comments. Look at this: "...campaign for a change within the trade rather than going for cheap publicity stunts"!?!? And this: "...the people there are excellent and far from to-ing and a-froing you'll get the right advice back quick smart. Use em - it's why their there!" Shocked. If this were an attack on Parliament, we would shout "I SEE STRANGERS"!!! If this were Norway, plucky Norway, we would hear accusations of "collaborationist"!!! Those responses read like they were written by someone who dreams of a future as a tenuously employed regional newspaper beer column scribe.

    And why? All over calling a drink a "tonic" as if someone else owned the word. FIGHT!!!

    In other news, more photos for the Xmas photo contest 2012 pour in. Up top is an action photo. Taken this very week which is particularly exciting. An image of Ron Pattinson at the library table researching... the researchers apparently. Ron caught a glimpse of his own dark soul as he coveted the cameras of others. Below we have the submissions of a fan favorite, Lars Marius Garshol of Oslo, Norway. A strong selection this year as every year from Lars.


    Next up is Jeff Alworth, fresh back from a tour of Europe, he of Beervana has sent in these images from Rodenbach, Orval, Fuller's, the GABF, Boon, Caledonian, Cantillon and Casks of Old Brewery Bitter... in reverse order.


    Matt Wiater of Portland Oregon wins the "Matt Can't Count" Award for 2012 because he has sent in other 6 entries. But they are good. I like the Decshutes Brewery Black Butte XXIII labels. I like the BridgePort Brewing Bottling Line. So, I am posting them.


    Stan Hieronymus, he of Appellation Beer, has sent in these four photos. I know which one I like. Looks like a vineyard. Smells like a hop yard.

    I might post some more. But that's a start. We are up to around 130 entries for this year with days and days to go. Remember: FIGHT!!! But send in photo contest entries, too.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2011/12/06/How_To_Write_A_Good_Review_Of_A_Very_Bad_Thing'

    How To Write A Good Review Of A Very Bad Thing

    Posted: December 6th, 2011, 1:48am CET by Alan McLeod

    Mr. B noted it the other day. We are indeed "seeing the maturing of the craft brewing industry and those who follow it." And by mature we mean critical. Problem is this - if we have been too nice, too obliging, too lacking of the critical eye - how do we go about being, you know, mature? Here is a great example of what might be the way forward:

    Our dinners were wheeled out from the kitchen on a plastic service cart. The prime rib really needed help. It was a relatively thin, visibly overcooked piece of meat that didn’t have much flavor at all. It sat there on the plate bone-dry, not a speck of juice coming out of it. We were never asked for a doneness, so assumed what we got —well done — was how it was being served that night. Some au jus would have helped — even a can of Campbell’s beef broth warmed up would have worked. Green beans came with it, right out of a #10 can. I thought I was back in summer camp eating over a campfire. Except these beans weren’t even hot.

    That is a passage from "Pulled in by prime rib at the Gouverneur Elks Lodge", a restaurant review by Walter Siebel from a recent edition of the Watertown Daily Times, the venerable newspaper published in neighbouring upstate New York. Walter does a few things in that article about a thoroughly horrible dining experience that I think are instructive. He implies things. The only people in the place when he arrives are drinking in the bar. He mentions only seeing teen wait staff. He also does not say how bad it was. He only describes it: "[i]t looked like a russet but had the taste of a Yukon gold"; "[a] wedge of lemon would have really come in handy"; "the cream curdled as soon as it hit the coffee." He is not unkind. There is no need to be. He only needs to recount particulars accurately and one can clearly see where the unkindness is to be found.

    We do see bits of it in beer writing now. B+B's glee at finding "people behind the bar who talk to you like human beings whether you’re a regular or not." Simon's day in Sheffield. AJT's "six men stabbing away at a big platter of pork in the centre of their table". Little precious in any of that. Little that might be taken to supporting mongering calls for ultra-premium beer with an ultra price or prop up a names, whether a brand or a scribe, whose best is far past.

    Beer drinkers observing and reporting on the experience before them. That's the stuff. The sort of stuff that allows me to trust if what lay before them was crap that they would tell me and not concern themselves otherwise. What with worrying about a future cold shoulder from a brewer or the loss of a chance of a printed column these things can bear upon other things. Like good honest writing. But when boosterism, fears and ambitions are ignored we get a result of perhaps even more value then when merely describing the good, the great and the wonderful.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2011/12/04/Day_15__More_Photos_To_Consider_And_Still_A_Week_To_Go'

    Day 15: More Photos To Consider And Still A Week To Go

    Posted: December 4th, 2011, 2:10am CET by Alan McLeod

    Time flies. Except when you have pneumonia. Joe Stange in Costa Rica has it, too, so he has sent in one entry this year as well as a prize that will be added to the list. He writes about the picture over here at his blog Thirsty Pilgrim, of an egg nog he concocted in the southern US heat to make a Yuletide deadline. Perennial entrant Ed Carson of Pennsylvania has also sent in a single shot this year, the one to the left. He calls it "Waiting for Lew" and I think I know why. Last year, Ed won Lew Bryson's latest book, the fourth edition of Pennsylvania Breweries, which I understand was delivered at a bar. The very bar on the very afternoon photographed by Ed, submitted for this year's contest.

    Michael Bank of Vermont has sent in these eight photos... including another about Cologne. I may have to have a category of prizes just for the waiters of that fine city:


    Marco Redbaz of Milan in Italy has forwarded these shots. I see the one I am leaning towards:


    Alistair Reece, a mad expat Scot who lives in Virginia, USA and is better known as Velky Al send in these for your consideration:


    Mark Michalski of... somewhere in the American Mid-west sent in these and I am jealous of that case in the back of the car.


    There. Caught up. More entries needed, however. Keep sending them. I have a few more prize givers to hit up. Let's see what we can come up with.

  • 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...

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2011/11/30/History__Heritage_and_Plain_Old_Marketing_Actually_Differ'

    History, Heritage and Plain Old Marketing Actually Differ

    Posted: November 30th, 2011, 2:09pm CET by Alan McLeod

    I think this is one of the more naive articles I have ever read about beer:

    “The story is critical because it’s what differentiates a beer from any other beer,” Calagione told me. Still, he added, “just because you hear of some creepy group of Norwegians that 300 years ago put the blood of virgins into beer doesn’t mean you should replicate it. You have to have a story, but can you have a story and also make a world-class beer?”... In a way that other drinks often don’t, these beers explicitly convey the distinctive tastes of distinctive pasts. “I can write stuff and bang on about, ‘Oh, the beers were very different back then,’ but people don’t listen very well,” says Pattinson, who is now trying to bring back Scottish India pale ales. “If you give them a bottle of something to drink, they’ll understand.”

    Spot the difference? Chalk and cheese. "Story" can mean many many things but it is rarely used in relation to beer to mean something that is actually true. How many "modern interpretations" have anything to do with sitting about the big mid-eastern clay pot and sucking through a straw? How many celebrate American colonial corn beer? Damn few. Yet we seldom see anyone really asking whether what is being foisted is authentic.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2011/11/29/An_Update_On_The_OCB_And_The_Commentary_Wiki'

    An Update On The OCB And The Commentary Wiki

    Posted: November 29th, 2011, 2:52am CET by Alan McLeod

    So, the forecast for the last four weeks over at the wiki that was set out in my Halloween post "And Quiet Flows the OCBeerCommentary Wiki" came to pass. This is going to be a longish process. But it advances. I just finished loading the Index of Articles by Author to the point Stan managed to get to, which was mid-"J". I have gotten it to "L" and hope to fit in the rest before Christmas so we can cross reference commentary to the indexing. Oh, think of the data mining possibilities. Any volunteers want to load a letter or two? If you have email and a copy of the OCB, please let me know.

    The biggest news related to The Oxford Companion to Beer is that it is hitting the top 50 on Amazon.com. It is sitting at #44 right now but has been as high as #15 that I have seen. This is good for beer. Don't be confused like the deeply afflicted Protz. The wiki displays the parasitic nature of the beer nerd in nicest sort way. The OCB is the Wildebeest while we are the Oxpecker. And it's only $26 bucks right now. Buy it. Right now.

    And what have we found? Well, a month ago, Clay Risen in The Atlantic saw only 40 entries and considered the commentary mainly about interpretation. While he was fairly incorrect on the last point, we are now up to 62 entries and many have multiple comments and corrections. Just look at the entries for "ale", "ale house" and "ale pole." More interesting to me, however, is that some of the entries are mainly elaborations of the topic, building upon what is there. So, we can now see that Canada's brewing experience was years and perhaps decades older. We can see that the US state of New York had a rich post-Prohibition hop growing experience. Neato.

    62 entries? That's 5.63% of the book. By Christmas, maybe it's 9% or 12%. Who knows? What is good is how information gets fine tuned through the wiki - not the scorecard. Join up. If you have a copy now or get one for Christmas, let me know if you'd like to add any thoughts by emailing me at beerblog@gmail.com.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2011/11/29/An_Update_On_The_OCB_And_The_Commentary_Wiki'

    An Update On The OCB And The Commentary Wiki

    Posted: November 29th, 2011, 2:52am CET by Alan McLeod

    So, the forecast for the last four weeks over at the wiki that was set out in my Halloween post "And Quiet Flows the OCBeerCommentary Wiki" came to pass. This is going to be a longish process. But it advances. I just finished loading the Index of Articles by Author to the point Stan managed to get to, which was mid-"J". I have gotten it to "L" and hope to fit in the rest before Christmas so we can cross reference commentary to the indexing. Oh, think of the data mining possibilities. Any volunteers want to load a letter or two? If you have email and a copy of the OCB, please let me know.

    The biggest news related to The Oxford Companion to Beer is that it is hitting the top 50 on Amazon.com. It is sitting at #44 right now but has been as high as #15 that I have seen. This is good for beer. Don't be confused like the deeply afflicted Protz. The wiki displays the parasitic nature of the beer nerd in nicest sort way. The OCB is the Wildebeest while we are the Oxpecker. And it's only $26 bucks right now. Buy it. Right now.

    And what have we found? Well, a month ago, Clay Risen in The Atlantic saw only 40 entries and considered the commentary mainly about interpretation. While he was fairly incorrect on the last point, we are now up to 62 entries and many have multiple comments and corrections. Just look at the entries for "ale", "ale house" and "ale pole." More interesting to me, however, is that some of the entries are mainly elaborations of the topic, building upon what is there. So, we can now see that Canada's brewing experience was years and perhaps decades older. We can see that the US state of New York had a rich post-Prohibition hop growing experience. Neato.

    62 entries? That's 5.63% of the book. By Christmas, maybe it's 9% or 12%. Who knows? What is good is how information gets fine tuned through the wiki - not the scorecard. Join up. If you have a copy now or get one for Christmas, let me know if you'd like to add any thoughts by emailing me at beerblog@gmail.com.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2011/11/27/Day_Nine__Now_That_US_Thanks_Are_Done___It_s_True_Yule_'

    Day Nine: Now That US Thanks Are Done - It's True Yule!

    Posted: November 27th, 2011, 6:31pm CET by Alan McLeod

    When does Yuletide begin? The first snow? The first child's question about Santa? Or is it the photo contest? Who knows. In any event, we are well and truly underway and have more announcements of prizes:

    New 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
    New Adrian Tierney-Jones and CAMRA have offered two copies of Great British Pubs.
    New 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.
    Roland and Russell, Ontario fine beer, spirits and wine importer.
    TAPS The Beer Magazine, one of our finest supporters year after year.
    Ron Pattinson, author and YouTube phenom.

    More photos. John Lewington is first up. The picture up there is his take on a medieval morality play entitled "strong lager" - or "how I ended up sleeping on a bench in public during the middle of the day."

    Peter Collins of Wesmore Digital in Cambridge Ontario has sent in these eight images for your consideration:


    Sean Inman of Beer Search Party in, I think, LA Cali sent in this view to the right of a Christmas message hidden in plain view. And Kristin Mayo of North Carolina has provided this reflective view to the left.

    There. We are caught up for now. I still have more prize giving prospects to hit up and we need more entries, too. Send your eight best pictures to me at beerblog@gmail.com. The more of you, of course, the merrier.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2011/11/26/Oregon__Sanctuary__Full_Sail_Brewing__Port_Hood'

    Oregon: Sanctuary, Full Sail Brewing, Port Hood

    Posted: November 26th, 2011, 2:58am CET by Alan McLeod

    A beer. Imagine writing about a beer on a beer blog. It's about time. I am finally past a bug and waves of ramifications that have basically hammered me since early October. No more. As Phoenix rises so do I turn to beer for purposes other than medicinal.

    A tan head resolves to froth and rim over light orange chestnut beer. A sniff or two gives that nutmeggy, malty aroma the cool kids are all talking about. In the mouth, burlap and 16th century nut and bark spices with sweet grainy pumpernickel. Not all that far off a pumpkin beer in a way. That way being no pumpkin. A slightly lighter take on a dubbel, it is quite tasty with an attractive bright acidity. Bought just across the big river, I may well see if there are more if we go shopping tomorrow for good Vermont cheddar at eight bucks a kilo. Viva! Viva good Vermont cheddar at eight bucks a kilo!!!

    The BAers are slightly less enthusiastic. At under five bucks a bomber, I am quite pleased with the value. Govern yourselves accordingly.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2011/11/25/Can_A__Style__Ever_Be_More_Than_A_Helpful_Generality_'

    Can A "Style" Ever Be More Than A Helpful Generality?

    Posted: November 25th, 2011, 1:45am CET by Alan McLeod

    Levels of abstraction. That is what this style stuff is about. Not about what it is but how it can be grouped. I think. Two articles got me thinking about this today. In The New York Times, Eric Asimov talked about "sour" beer and got into a range of beers that I would never consider to fall under that adjective. And the great ATJ discussed the challenges posed by grappling with the idea of Abbey beer.

    So I get back to the original question: what is an Abbey Ale? Is there such a thing? Trappist is an appellation — it covers dubbel and tripel and very strong dark beer. Abbey? It seems to be 5-6% (but then looking back at my notes I find Silly Brewery making a 9.5% one), sweetish, gold in colour with reddish hints, but then it could be a brighter gold or a darker gold. In one French brewery I was given one with rice in the mix, which gave it an almost ethereal lightness of touch, which didn’t work for me. So is it a marketing device? On the label the picture of a fat cheery monk or a sombre looking abbey and the promise of heaven in a bottle seems to be a popular device. Marketing then. That’s the way my thoughts are going.

    One thing pops into my mind when I read that passage. And it is not intended to give the dim and greasy hope. But is it so bad to consider that marketing might have some actual work to do? Maybe the idea that you can find valid maltiness with a pinch of thoughtful Belgian yeasty spice is enough to be Abbey. Can't we gather around that cause?

    Yet Eric Asimov's inclusion of Goose Island Sofie and Ithaca White Gold as sour? That goes further, doesn't it? Does marketing need to make sour out of, you know, tang? I had that great CNY beer last year and mentioned "I had one the other night that had spent a long time in the stash and was gorgeous, showing lots of tangy beer gone bad quality." Is tangy beer gone bad sour or is it something else? And is Sofie sour? Really? Stan wrote a great post this summer about the weird things we love in weird beer. But does that make for sour?

    I've undertaken my sour beer studies and included a lot of things... but now I wished I called it "Acids I Drink" or some thing like that. Tangs, sours, twings and twangs? They all have their own worthy place. But by bundling them under "sour" are we not treating them like we treat Abbey beers, labeling them with a euphemism? And if we do - but do so to aid in understanding by adding an abstraction... is that so wrong?

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2011/11/24/Day_Five__More_Entries_More_Prizes_And_That_Green_Sign'

    Day Five: More Entries More Prizes And That Green Sign

    Posted: November 24th, 2011, 2:08am CET by Alan McLeod

    I will inundate you for a bit here. The prizes and entries do flow in and I have to get them out of the inbox and into the... hmm... what would Protz call it... the information super highways. Plenty to do. No time to doddle bothering with that sort of thing. First, here is the updated prize giver list:

    New Grand Teton Brewing of Idaho, a much welcomed newcomer to the contest.
    New All About Beer magazine, a great supporter of this here thing.
    New Narragansett Brewing, home of, yes, my favorite porter and another much welcomed newcomer to the contest.
    Roland and Russell, Ontario fine beer, spirits and wine importer.
    TAPS The Beer Magazine, one of our finest supporters year after year.
    Ron Pattinson, author and YouTube phenom.
    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.

    There will be more. There are two major publishers considering their options. Yes, there are. OK, go on. Go about your business.

    Entries! Bart Riccardi of Tampa Bay, Florida, who name provides an alarmingly good opportunity to roll ones r's has given us these entries:


    And way up there is what I like to call a strategic move. It appears that John Lewington of England is sending in a photo a day at a time to coax me into highlighting his entries. The bastard. If they were not so good I would not buy it. Not at all. He tells us it's not "strictly a beer photo but if you close your eyes, you can almost smell the fumes of real London ale and vinegar, we put put on our chips here in England, emanating from the doorway of this wonderful pub." That is just cheating. Because you can. You can smell that smell. Cheater pant John.

    Green sign? Is it for running towards when you really have to pee or run under if you are a CAMRA organizer and see a keg or bottle of beer? Not sure.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2011/11/23/Day_Four__The_First_Photo_Contest_Entries_Roar_In'

    Day Four: The First Photo Contest Entries Roar In

    Posted: November 23rd, 2011, 1:34am CET by Alan McLeod

    It is fun when I get to see these entries for the first time every autumn. The first blizzard of the season is just missing us to the south tonight but it is starting to feel Christmas around here. Think I will mull me a little something as I consider what we have received in the inbox. First, above is an entry from 2007 Grand International Winner, John Lewington of England. Is that green sign over the door directing me where to go if I really need to pee?

    Fellow Engerlanders Boak and Bailey - of the surprisingly well named Boak and Bailey's Beer Blog - have sent in these eight entries. I like like the train compartment shot. I should have a category for beer and trains, too:


    Max Bahnson of Pivní Filosof out of Prague is one of that happy happy tribe, those who submit entries as well as prizes. He sent in this set of six photos for your consideration:


    Regular participant Patrick Hirlehey of Ontario sent in these entries with titles like "Baby Vomit Supreme," "Tempest, Saaz, Spice," and "OMG WTF DDH IPA LOL" - which code I am somewhat pleased to say I can read... but only because he told me what it meant


    There you go. The first wave of entries. If no one else joins in, well, these guys get all the prizes. Do you want that? No you do not. Send in your own pics to beerblog@gmail.com. Do it.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2011/11/22/Your_Late_November_Monday_Night_Beer_Round_Up'

    Your Late November Monday Night Beer Round Up

    Posted: November 22nd, 2011, 2:35am CET by Alan McLeod

    While this contest gets some traction, there are other things worth thinking about. Well, other things that are about beer. Plus, I want to do more fancy bullet pointy lists on this blog. Fancy lists are a clear sign of quality. You agree, right?

    Θ Is it just me or is it great that the Charlevoix Downtown Development Authority of that Michigan town is declaring their economic need for a microbrewery? Has anyone told them about that brewery in Quebec called Charlevoix that makes those beers I like? Two words: branch plant.

    Θ I am really impressed with Greg Clow announcing that his brew newswire about the brewing industry is branching out into a dinner series. What I like about it is that Greg is acting as impresario, the orchestrator who neither brews nor cooks, neither retails nor wholesales. He's been blogging the TO beer scene since 2006 and has logged more photos of plates of food with a drink next to it on Twitter than any other Canadian. Should be good.

    Θ I find this rather extended article on the branding of booze for women really quite odd. It's like an anti-binge, anti-sexy beer ad theory. Why use women to sell booze to men when you can use women to sell booze to women! Your thoughts may differ.

    Θ And finally, let's talk about Lew. Lew announced he is seeking funding through Kickstarter for a TV show to be called American Beer Blogger. He is exactly the right guy to do this and is going through it in entirely the right way. Pledge. Pledge a lot. Make it happen.

    There. As you have read that even more gifts have been pledged for the beer blog Yule, Xmas, Kwanzaa and Hanukkah 2011 photo contest. More picture have come in, too. Enter. Offer a gift. But most of all, pledge a chunk of change to Lew's great idea.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2011/11/20/Day_Two__The_Prizes_And_Entries_Start_To_Come_In'

    Day Two: The Prizes And Entries Start To Come In

    Posted: November 20th, 2011, 6:01pm CET by Alan McLeod

    I always wonder if anyone might participate in this contest. I get slightly anxious 'round about early October. But it begins. Entries arrived by email this very morn. I have yet to truly begun hitting people up for prizes but so far we have the following fine folk pledging:

    Roland and Russell, Ontario fine beer, spirits and wine importer.
    TAPS The Beer Magazine.
    Ron Pattinson, author and YouTube phenom.
    Creemore Springs Brewery.
    Maximiliano Bahnson, author of Prague: A Pisshead's Pub Guide
    Update David Selden, 33 books.

    Have I left you out? Put a note in the comments or by email to beerblog@gmail.com if you are able to give a prize from your brewery, of your book or in some other wee giftie in reasonable form. Direct prizes only, please. Gift certificates from beer stores are well loved. But the pumping of a website's URL in exchange for the false promise of getting something from a friend? That is so 2007. Not doing that again. And why should we with such great legitimate sponsors as these and those who have supported in the past?

    And let me know if there is anything in particular you would like me to seek out for you. Creativity is rewarded. Seek and ye shall find. Doesn't hurt to ask.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2011/11/18/Ready__Set__Go___2011_s_Yuletide_Photo_Contest_Is_On___'

    Ready, Set, Go! 2011's Yuletide Photo Contest Is On!!!

    Posted: November 18th, 2011, 1:22pm CET by Alan McLeod

    Stan announced it, too. Send your entries to beerblog@gmail.com. Some rules here. More later if required. Up there is one of Andrew Mason of Illinois's entries from 2007. You can do that. Couldn't you? Could you? Have you?

    What prizes do you want? Many confirmed already but many more to be sought out.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2011/11/18/Table_Ring_Anger_And_Forgetting_About_The_Fun'

    Table Ring Anger And Forgetting About The Fun

    Posted: November 18th, 2011, 1:46am CET by Alan McLeod

    I am not a professional beer writer and this column is a good example of why. Pete Brown achieves a balance in this column that I don't think I could in my writing - but it is a challenging one.... which is why it is a very good read:

    ...I think this proves that you can perhaps take beer too seriously. Yes, there are times when I want to scream with rage at the way beer is disrespected, commoditised, trivialised and patronized. But I’ll admit there are also times when I want to say, ‘Guys, get a grip – it’s only beer.’ At the top of my beer blog I have the strapline, ‘Treating beer with the respect and irreverence it deserves since 2003’. I believe both are equally important...

    Know what he is talking about? Go have a read. What I like is how he takes two forms of respect related to beer and balances each against the other and against balance, too. I like it structurally but his point is also worth considering. So far over 5% of entries in the OCB have received reasonably interesting annotation of some sort - few of which have to do with the grinding of axes. After just a month or so. What if it gets to 17% or 23%? I don't think it means that much except for my original point that the Oxford Companion to Beer and thinking about beer deserves taking on. Because respecting beer includes respecting thinking about beer and facts about beer.

    But - like Pete says - not to the point we forget it is fun. And it is fun to think about beer, too.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2011/11/17/Book_Review__The_Economics_Of_Beer___Swinnen__ed.'

    Book Review: The Economics Of Beer - Swinnen, ed.

    Posted: November 17th, 2011, 12:23am CET by Alan McLeod

    I bought this because Simon told me to. Simon said.

    This book is a series of essays related to the 2009 conference of The Beeronomics Society. It says on its back cover that it "is the first economic analysis of the beer market and brewing industry" but that is just silly puffery. There have been loads of economic analysis of the beer market and brewing industry. Frankly we have been weighed down by them. Don't make me review Tremblay and Trembaly again. Do you remember those graphs and tables?

    This book is a lot like one of my favorite sets of essays, the papers from the "Cooperstown Symposium on Baseball and American Culture." It is also a lot like Beer and Philosophy, a set of essays which included one from me on the underlying philosophy of beer regulation in Canada. What they all have in common is that they are a collection of papers tackling aspects of a general topic from various points of view. In the TEOB you will find 18 papers from the 2009 conference organized under the four topics of history, consumption, industrial organization and the new beer markets. With any luck, as with the annual baseball conference but unlike Beer and Philosophy, the followup second conference of The Beeronomics Society will issue another volume of essays reflective of the topics covered in September 2011.

    So is it worth getting? For a book nerd like me, sure. I was a little uneasy with the superficiality of the first essay "A Brief Economic History of Beer" given it covered so much of time and culture so quickly. However, when I saw that there was an essay by Richard Unger, everyone's favorite beery medievalist and Renaissance man, I was won over. And the essay "Recent Economic Developments in the Import and Craft Segments of the US Brewing Industry" by the manical graph-huggers¹ T+T may serve as something of an update of their 2005 book. Best of all, each submission comes with its own bibliography alerting folk like me to other papers and texts that might be out there just waiting to be added to the book shelf.

    Published, too, by Oxford University Press, this book is another sign that we fans of beer and brewing live in lucky times. If I have more intelligent comment after reading a bit more, I will add it in the comments. But at this point this, too, looks like a good buy for the serious beer nerd.

    ¹ There are seven graphs and four table in just 18 pages!!!

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2011/11/15/Beer_Shopping_Ethics___How_Many_Do_You_Buy_'

    Beer Shopping Ethics - How Many Do You Buy?

    Posted: November 15th, 2011, 12:49am CET by Alan McLeod

    Finally! An ethical question that is not about the ethics of beer writing. I ask because, as I mentioned, Fuller's XX Strong Ale came to town on Saturday. Bought three, had two, gave away one. Then I noticed I was out. So I went back today. I had noticed 17 bottles were listed on the LCBO web site as still being on the one shelf at the one store in the region likely to get them. There were 12 when I got to the store. Might never see this one single run beer with limited supplies making it to North America. I took six.

    Was this piggish of me? I have no intention of sharing or even having them soon. Pure rat packery. Mine. Mine. Mine. Christmas is coming and if Santa disappoints I really might have to step in on my own behalf. I am happy. But was I wrong?

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2011/11/14/It_s_The_Week_The_2011_Xmas_Photo_Contest_Began'

    It's The Week The 2011 Xmas Photo Contest Began

    Posted: November 14th, 2011, 1:33am CET by Alan McLeod

    Do you have the Xmas beer pr0n photo fever yet? It is coming. Indeed, it is nigh. Right about now nigh in fact. A few prize packs have been pledged so far but we will hunt high and low for more. These are the rules. Because you can't have a good contest without strictly enforced arbitrary rules.

    • We have now long forgotten the bad old days of unlimited photos per entrant. In 2008, we had over 500 entries. That was nuts. Children cried again from the lack of a parent's attention. In 2009, with the five photo max rule, we got it down to down to a sensible 185. So, like last year, I am limiting it but like last year I am upping it to eight photos per person. I want to see if that makes a difference.
    • First rule as always: no photos of dishes of food with a beer next to it. They never win and they kinda make other people feel queasy. Your food is no better looking than your dog. Sorry to break the news.
    • More photos of beer and snow as well as beer and babies. Photos of beer and snow look great. Beer in nature generally looks good. But beer and snow is a winner. Snow in Italy? Even better. Beer and babies can either look good or look weird. Stay away from weird, please.
    • Again, pictures of beer and your pals all liquored up? More like the plate of food than snow. Not usually good. But you never know.
    • There is a prize for the crappiest photo. It is a crappy prize.
    • The contest opens on Friday, 18 November at noon eastern standard time, North America and goes to... what... Sunday December 11 at noon. More than three weeks. Over three weeks of art and prizes.

    So, we will do our job beating the bushes for an international selection of prizes that will surprise and delight. I am the sole arbitrator of victory and the prizes get delivered directly from the giver... unless you have to go get the prize. Make sense? Let's hope we see some photos as great as the 2009 winner by Kim Reed of Rochester, New York.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2011/11/12/A_Few_Saturday_Afternoon_Stories_You_Need_To_Know...'

    A Few Saturday Afternoon Stories You Need To Know...

    Posted: November 12th, 2011, 8:16pm CET by Alan McLeod

    ... or not. Saturday afternoon is the Dark Ages of the internet, after all. But here are some stories about things beery that could colour how you look at the world this weekend. How could I not share?

    • Brian Stechschulte of San Fran has confirmed on Twitter that DRAFT magazine has agreed to pay for the photo of his which they poached and published. You will recall that BeerAdvocate nicked on of my shots but discussions that followed never included the weird wacko assertions from DRAFT that they had a right to lift and pocket the copyrighted works of others.

    Boston Beer has decided to use the hammer of the law against another brewer 1/20th of its size. Next time you hear their TV ads squeek on and on about the magical craft of brewing ask yourself why he also does not know about the corresponding code. Handle this in the locker room, Jim. It's not like you are actually going to have a trial, are you?

    • In happier news, I am drinking my first Fuller's Past Masters XX Strong Ale as I type. While 49 weeks from release to the shelves of the world's biggest booze buyer is a great example of my LCBO love / hate. Most importantly, a big +1 to Ron who helped recreate this 1891 brew. It's got a gorgeous aroma of malt marmalade that explodes in the mouth on the first sip. Fabulous value at $3.75 for a 7.9% classic. And it does make you wonder what the hell a "XXXX" would have meant to the drinker of over 100 years ago.

    • And even more interesting than that is what I am reading about in Fish into Wine: The Newfoundland Plantation in the Seventeenth Century. It is clear from the book that there was brewing in the early Newfoundland plantations of the early 1600s but also that there was a thriving drinks trade to the workers on this shore. These first "masterless men" lived without direct oversight in a massively lucrative trade that needed their existence. But before the plantations, there were generations of West Country English fishermen back into the mid-1500s who arrived in May and left in September, ships arriving throughout their annual stay to pick up salt cod to deliver to southern Europe. These men must have brewed ale as part of their daily routine. Just a guess so far but they must have packed a barrel or two of malt to get them through the summer.

    There. The good, the bad and the ugly of today's news in beer. You decide which is which.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2011/11/12/Alberta__Loaded_Goat__Alley_Kat_Brewing__Edmonton'

    Alberta: Loaded Goat, Alley Kat Brewing, Edmonton

    Posted: November 12th, 2011, 1:42am CET by Alan McLeod

    There are not many things fun about getting pneumonia but gifties left at the door are among them. This was delivered last week as a gifting on from someone who brought it from Alberta. It was a special release from last spring but at 7.3% it should still be a fairly safe bet.

    Caramel coloured with a thin white foam and rim, it gives off a nutty sweet aroma. There is an acidic twing to the smell that is either a bit of concerning age or welcome vinousness. I never know what is right, especially with bock. I know that you should be getting a cherry note in doppelbocks - or at least I look for one - but Horst tells me at page 558 that it should be lighter than that. In the mouth, there are very nice nutty brown bread malts, swell sherry notes, maybe a little earthy apple, more twiggy than steely hops and a nod to smoke. Sweet and rich but not overly heavy. It's a fine drink but not sure how much if any of that tang was caused by the extra six months. On the other hand, who cares?

    Great respect from the BAers.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2011/11/11/Book_Review__Great_British_Pubs__Adrian_Tierney_Jones'

    Book Review: Great British Pubs, Adrian Tierney-Jones

    Posted: November 11th, 2011, 3:17am CET by Alan McLeod

    I have to say that this book is a bit of a shock. I never knew you could mix so much porn with this degree of authoritative statement. How does one react? I have learned things I will share... yet I have wallowed in the depths of my deepest private imagination. AJT is good. He's like a pusher. He's feeding me what I want in the way that I want it - and not necessarily in a way that suits my best interests. As I was reading this just now I was imagining how we might place the kids - the five kids - and just take off for a week to cross an ocean to hang out, you know, in British pubs.

    What else can I say? The book is a collection of, say, six to 14 pubs arranged in "best of" themes. Best of heritage pubs. Best of seaside pubs. 22 or so categories. Reasonable layout and mapping as we saw with the Edinburgh guide. And then those descriptions. These pubs are either simply compelling in their own right or AJT makes them so in the brief entry that accompanies each entry. Consider the entry for The Bell at page 118 in Saffron Walden in Essex, included in the best just off the motorway category. The Elizabethan property includes several acres of walking space. That makes me want to go there - even if I am not on a long highway drive passing by. And what about The King's Head in Laxfield, visited by our pal Paul back in 2007. Paul gave us a great picture in words and photos of the place including the open room in the back where you get the beer instead of anything like a bar. Adrian tells us what it is like to walk through the place looking for the beer room. Gorgeous. And there are so many more descriptions of the sorts of bars you want to sit in, soak in. Be in. There's even Jeff and The Gunmakers there on page 69 (dude!) I miss Stonch. Have I mentioned that?

    Summing up? Bought this myself. Not a review copy. It's the Christmas pressie you want. Big time. Buy it.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2011/11/09/I_Think_I_Asked_Joe__How_Do_We_Value_Beer_Pr0n__'

    I Think I Asked Joe "How Do We Value Beer Pr0n?"

    Posted: November 9th, 2011, 5:47pm CET by Alan McLeod

    Joe had a good post this week about Chuck Cook self-publishing some information and photos he had gathered about Brasserie Dupont - and then putting being a click-through payment button offering access for $4.99. It is at the upper right at Chuck's blog if you want to go check it out. Joe suggested "[o]f course, you could always download the material and start emailing it around and sharing it on the Internet for free. If you're a douchebag." For me, this smacked of something I could not put my finger on. I had some odd reactions to this which I thought deserved a reasonably reasonable exploration:

    → I am all for making a buck off beer information. I run ads all over this site and they bring in money. Not enough frankly. Not because these post are dribbles of pure gold but because I can. I am offered the ads and do not go out and search for them. I trust they are worth what I am offered.

    → On the one hand, I had a photo ripped off by BeerAdvocate - not even a very good one, just a rare-ish bottle. I was still ticked and am ticked when I see DRAFT magazine doing the same recently.

    → On the other, I think I have noticed in the past that Chuck sometimes uses watermarks on his images which, if my recollection is true, bugs the hell out of me. But I don't know why. I am not a open source "free beer" phony baloney, was quoted about that - and went on and on. Yet there is something in any topical writing that is about sharing amongst the hopefully widening circle - something beer writing is laden with. A watermark hisses with "my pretty, my pretty".

    → When I see someone calling themselves "the world's top beer writer", a "leading exponent". "one of the world's foremost authorities" or otherwise draw their own conclusions about their place it gives me a fur ball that I just can't gak up. Note: Chuck does not do this on his site. He only notes his actual experience and does not award himself any gold star in summation.

    What is wrong with me? I have moaned about there not being money in beer writing for years... best part of a decade if I checked. Maybe if the article were put up to auction and its value assessed would the marketplace of ideas be at play. Maybe if there was a process of reporting back, evidence that (as I wish) he gets 2,000 downloads and makes a pretty penny. But just placing a tag on something and for that tag to instantly become the ethical standard? I just don't get that.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2011/11/08/That_Odd_Tension__Wishing_To_Find_Any_Answer_But_Beer'

    That Odd Tension: Wishing To Find Any Answer But Beer

    Posted: November 8th, 2011, 2:56am CET by Alan McLeod

    That's footnote 27 at page 134 of New Sweden in America which is exhibiting something between a quibble and a theme. It's actually in a chapter in that book, "Lenape Maize Sales to the Swedish Colonists: Cultural Stability during the Early Colonial Period" by Marshall Joseph Becker in which there is a lot of very interesting stuff. For example, in 1654, there was an effort to expand trade products with the Lenape, the local nation, from mainly corn to hops as well. Like the colony, it was a flop but who knew the colonial Swedes were gathering hops in the mid-17th century Delaware. There's more. In another document, the same Becker shows that New Sweden's outpost at Tinicum Island had a brewhouse: warning pgf and elsewhere we read that

    Swedish women in Delaware made beer not only from pompions (pumpkins) and corn but persimmons and watermelons.

    So, with all that evidence that there was plenty of beer and brewing in colonial New Sweden during its existence from 1638 to 1660 why is there a suspicion that the brew kettle was being used for something other than producing beer? I haven't cataloged it but, just like a Shakespeare play presented in Victorian accent, there seems to be a tension over time, in this case a presumption that beer was not as pervasive in northern western culture prior to a certain point in industrialization as we also seem to know it was. It may be that we don't want to know or that we can't take on just how much was drunk by how many. The more I read about these earlier points, however, the more I think I should be surprised to find a sober official, a dry town.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2011/11/07/Toronto_s_York_Brewery_And_Playter_s_Tavern_1801_05'

    Toronto's York Brewery And Playter's Tavern 1801-05

    Posted: November 7th, 2011, 2:15am CET by Alan McLeod

    I have been playing around with some passages on Toronto in the first years of the 19th century. Here is what I started with:

    ⇒ "A recent Fact will corroborate what I have said; A Brewer from Kingston removed to York lately and, on application to the Governor, obtained one of the King's vessels to transport wheat and other Grain from Kingston and the Bay of Quintie, before beer coud be made - and almost all the Pork, Beer, Butter, Flour, Hams, Mutton, which are used at York are brought by water, from Kingston, Niagara, the Genesee Counttry, &c &c. - In short the Town is supported by the money which the Gentlemen who have Salaries from Government expend in Buildings & other Improvements; and that source begins to fail.": Letter, Rev John Stuart to the Bishop of Nova Scotia, Kingston, September 14, 1801.

    ⇒ "Even in 1815, after the establishment of two neighbourhood breweries, Commissariat General Robinson was obliged to buy 8,347 gallons of beer and liquors from Kingston for the men at the cost of L8,800": Bowering, page 9.

    ⇒ "York Brewery, southeast corner of Duchess and Sherbourne (Caroline) Streets, 1800-1805. Just when the first commercial brewery in York, and who the brewmaster was may never be known... This brewery may have been operated by Robert Henderson in a notice of sale dated 1809, Henderson advertised a milling plant, brewhouse, working tubs, coolers, two kilns for drying malt, two good wells or water, a stable," two stills, a townhouse, slaughterhouse and three acres of land": Bowering, page 91.

    ⇒ "1805 - Upper Canada - Robert Henderson establishes York's (Toronto's) first brewery. It closed 12 years later and the facility was leased by different brewers until 1853": Sneath, page 329.

    So you see there is some question as to when a brewery was first built in Toronto - or what was then York... but then I also remembered In Mixed Company by Roberts and how there was a chapter about an early tavern keeper who kept a diary. Turns out it was written in 1802-02 and turns out she gives the address for the tavern - the corner of King and Caroline Streets. Which made me look up above again and see that Bowering gave an address as well.

    Over time Duchess is now Richmond and Caroline did become Sherbourne but that is enough to dip into the City of Toronto's historical maps and atlases online collection and - voila. We have the information above. Which also means we can figure out where these spots are today which you will see if you click on that little thumbnail.

    Roberts explains that the Toronto of Playter's diary and the founding of its first brewery had 75 to 100 homes and about 320 inhabitants in town, about 420 in the surrounding country as well as about 240 in the military garrison to the west. Both establishments sit in what is even then called Old Town. It's the administrative capital of the new colony of Upper Canada. Roberts also indicates that drinking in Playter's included rum, "sling" and punch as well as whiskey, brandy and wine. No beer is mentioned that I see.

    I would love to have a read of the diary but, if we think of that letter from Rev. Stuart above, we might quess that early York is something of a Brasilia, a constructed government town. The kind of place that you had wine over beer. Not Stuart's sort of place. No, he was a beer man. One of the founders of my town, his beer tankard is now owned by the people of Canada. He may well have had many an ale from Albany in it. He was a personal pal of Sir William Johnson, both backwoods leaders in central New York before the Revolution, home of our loyalists, beer drinkers there and in what becomes Ontario a decade before the colonial softie government officials show up in York.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2011/11/05/Session_57__Of_Vom_And_Corn__More_And_Waugh'

    Session 57: Of Vom And Corn, More And Waugh

    Posted: November 5th, 2011, 8:00pm CET by Alan McLeod

    Steve Lamond has stepped up to host this month's edition of The Session and posed the following to us all under the title "Beery Confessions: Guilty Secrets/Guilty Pleasure Beer":

    I'd like to know your beery guilty secrets. Did you have a particularly embarrassing first beer (in the same way that some people purchase an atrocious song as their first record) or perhaps there's still a beer you return to even though you know you shouldn't? Or maybe you don't subscribe to the baloney about feeling guilty about beers and drink anything anyway? You're also welcome to write about bad drinking experiences you've had as a result of your own indulgence or times when you've been completely wrong about a beer but not yet confessed to anyone that you've changed your mind.

    Beer guilt. A friend describes that as part of the hangover, the wriggling creeping feeling on your skin that smacks of wasted money, regret for words said which should never have been said, embarrassment at suggestions which would have been better left in the imagination. Not that I know any of that. I have very fond recollections of the timely, well-placed vom - like that of the pal who seemed to make the event seem charming, saying things like "excuse me for one minute" as he unloaded right there in the line up to get in some club well after midnight, not a speck hitting dress or shoe. The moment still reminds me of that great thought of Sir Thomas More in his 1516 book Utopia at page 113 of this edition:

    The pleasure of the bodye they devide into ii. partes. The first is when delectation is sensibly felt and perceaved. Whiche many times chaunceth by the renewing and refreshing of those partes, whiche oure naturall heate drieth up. This commeth by meate and drynke. And sometymes whyles those thynges be expulsed, and voyded, wherof is in the body ouer great abundaunce. This pleasure is felt, when we do our natural easement, or when we be doyng the acte of generation, or when the ytchinge of any part is eased with rubbyng or scratchynge...

    But there are higher pleasures and higher orders of guilt that are laid upon them. Without defining all the hierarchies involved, suffice it to say that one such pleasure of mine is beer made with corn. I might be lonely in this love but, with respect, I find the defamation of one plant over another in the minds of beer nerds more than odd. I find it close minded. Fortunately, there are a few great brewers who, like me, stand up for corn. Whether it's Spotted Cow by Wisconcin's New Glarus or Utica Club by New York's F.X. Matt, corn can be made a pleasure through skill. Yet, read the reviews. You know they are out there. "Boiled corn" is down there is "cardboard" at the depths of descriptors. Should I feel guilt for this? I will not.

    Think about it. We can be "should nots" we beer fans. Believing that there are reasons to never try something, that such pleasures are below us. Isn't it better to sometimes have the regret of "shouldn't have"? Better to have taken on the Utica Club in fine style and then learn, perhaps, regret. Too low you will say to yourself... but remember this. Remember how Evelyn Waugh describes the end to an upper class drinking session in 1923 at Oxford near the beginning of Brideshead Revisited:

    It was not unusual for dinner parties to end in that way; there was in fact a recognized tariff on such occasions for the comfort of the scout; we were all learning, by trial and error, to carry our wine. There was also a kind of insane and endearing orderliness about Sebastian’s choice, in his extremity, of an open window. But, when all is said, it remained an unpropitious meeting. His friends bore him to the gate and, in a few minutes, his host, an amiable Etonian of my year, returned to apologize. He, too, was tipsy and his explanations were repetitive and, towards the end, tearful. “The wines were too various,” he said; “it was neither the quality nor the quantity that was at fault. It was the mixture. Grasp that and you have the root of the matter. To understand all is to forgive all.”

    Which is the higher and which the lower? That is my question to you.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2011/11/03/Was_This_The_Earliest_Brewing_In_English_Canada_'

    Was This The Earliest Brewing In English Canada?

    Posted: November 3rd, 2011, 8:35pm CET by Alan McLeod

    Sneath, Pashley and Rubin all mention the 1600s brewers of New France - Hebert (1617), Ambroise (1646) and Talon (1670). But I just came across this reference in a footnote in the Minutes of the Hudson's Bay Company, 1671-1674, published by Toronto's Champlain Society in 1942, describing payments being made on 16 February 1674 for goods supplied to the ships of the Hudson Bay company:

    John Raymond, "By Severall quantities of Ship Beere at 40s p. Tonn Strong beere at 12s, 9d a barrell & Harbor Beere at 6s 6d p. barrell with Malt & Hopps dd. Capt. Gillam, Morris and Cole", £ 79.

    A few months later, a committee of the Hudson Bay Company on 6 July 1674 directed payment to the same John Raymond £ 30 on account of ""Beer and Malt. dd. on board the Prince Rupert." These items appear among a long list of payments for other necessary goods for taking aboard the ships Prince Rupert, Messenger and Employ. You will see in footnote 2 to this post on a blog by Norma Hall subtitled "Northern Arc: the Significance of Seafaring to Western Canadian History" that these three ships were sailing between England and Hudson Bay in the first half of the 1670s. The Prince Rupert and Messenger, at least, over wintered.

    There are loads of interesting questions and observations from these passages from the Minutes of the Hudson's Bay Company, 1671-1674 including why are they shipping malt and hops separate from barrels of beer. If these ships overwintered and carried malt and hops it is pretty obvious that they must have been brewing. We know the British brewed on ships in the Arctic in 1852 so why not in 1674? But also - what is "harbor beer"? It costs about half of "strong beer" and we know from Gate's work on Kingston that in 1825 "small or ship beer" was being sold in Kingston. But most of all the question is this - was this the first brewing of beer in English Canada? Or did other earlier over wintering ships brew, too?

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2011/11/03/Book_Review__The_Art_And_Mystery_Of_Brewing_in_Ontario'

    Book Review: The Art And Mystery Of Brewing in Ontario

    Posted: November 3rd, 2011, 3:49pm CET by Alan McLeod

    While I stand by my statement:

    "...brewing history can be a tool or route to understanding for some but is ultimately unimportant if you do not need to tap into it..."

    ... I have to admit that I do like dabbling in it - as long as I stay within the reach of my own capabilities. I especially like dabbling in it care of a stack of bedside books when I am, like today, on the third day of the treatment for a blip of pneumonia. And good thing, too, as it's not like the weeks of cough medications leading to this stage have left me longing for a tart gueuze. But, while we are at it, would it kill big pharmacy to make a expectorant that tastes like an imperial stout?

    Anyway, one of the books recently added to the pile is 1988's The Art And Mystery Of Brewing in Ontario by Ian Bowering. We suffer in Canada from a lack of understanding of ourselves and no where more than here in Ontario. Atlantic Canadians, Quebeckers and Western Canadians all are rightly proud of themselves even if it is largely based on how they have each been screwed in their own special way by that place to stand, place to grow, Ontar-i-ar-i-ar-i-o.

    Bowering's book helps with Ontario's blandness. It sits in an important place with others on brewing in Canada and does one thing particularly well. It lists the breweries by town. Simple thing but it shows that brewing advanced across the province as the population advanced westerly from the early 1790s or before in eastern Kingston to the late 1890s in Rat Portage, over 2,000 km to the NW. It also shows that brewing was going on at a far larger scale, unexpected industrialization with far greater distribution earlier on than some might suggest. Brains Brewery in rural 1834 was producing 100 barrels a week. Lager was being made in Kitchener well before 1850 and even wee Huether Crystal Springs in little Neustadt delivered in a 70 km radius a few year later.

    Information will advance and it is evident more information has come to light when we compare the listings for Kingston and compare them to the brand new book The Breweries of Kingston and The St. Lawrence Valley by Steve Gates which follows a similar structure. But as one wag recently stated:

    ...that there are others out there who will identify errata and offer corrections is something which will ultimately contribute to the further development and maturation of this particular field of study.

    I might add that it is the only way it will further develop and mature. And not only through peer review and correction but building on the shoulders of others who have gone before. So Gates cites Bowering, Sneath cites Bowering, Mr. B cites Bowering, Pashley cites Mr. B and Sneath. It's the way things work, the way we build the collective body of knowledge - if, that is, we are actually interested in presenting what actually was.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2011/11/02/Black_Sheep_Brewery_And_The_Two_Fat_Ladies'

    Black Sheep Brewery And The Two Fat Ladies

    Posted: November 2nd, 2011, 2:33am CET by Alan McLeod

    I have a soft spot for Yorkshire's Black Sheep Brewery as it is one of the brands imported from time to time by the LCBO for over a decade. It's dependable, tasty ale. Good to hear, then, that they are moving ahead with getting ahead:

    The company is also trialling Black Sheep in a can in Tesco stores to appeal to new customers. “It offers people opportunities to drink Black Sheep in different scenarios, such as outdoors and parties,” Mr Theakston said. He told the Yorkshire Post that he was looking to push exports in North America, Canada and Scandinavia over the next year. The company already exports all over the world but in small quantities. “The domestic market is tough so export is an exciting possibility moving forward,” he said.

    I hope we see those tins over here, too, as there is nothing the LCBO like more than a wall cooler of 500 ml cans. Not sure, however, how the Two Fat Ladies would take to a can. I have the complete DVD set as well as a couple of the books as they are the best source for practical Edwardian great house retro cooking. Kind of thing Great-Grannie, she who ran a great house before WWI, would have specialized in. Even if the ladies come across more like her daughter, my great aunt Madge, who was a tough head nurse in the front line of the North Africa campaign against Rommel. If you wait until the end of the clip above, right after the making of the deviled kidneys, you will see a few shots at the brewery in 1997 where they took their dishes to serve the brewers. More from the first half of the episode as well.

    Guilty pleasures? Hardly. Two Fat Ladies? Black Sheep? That's just common sense. But those other sorts, those sins of commission are what's up on Friday night as Steve steps in for Pete to host the 57th episode of The Session on the topic of your guilty pleasure beers.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2011/11/01/And_Quiet_Flows_the_OCBeerCommentary_Wiki'

    And Quiet Flows the OCBeerCommentary Wiki

    Posted: November 1st, 2011, 3:15am CET by Alan McLeod

    Well, I didn't expect to be called out - or, rather, have my suspicions confirmed - by the east coast media establishment. I did say that I expect this to be a slow project from day one. Nonetheless, Clay Risen's observations at The Atlantic today on the state of beer writing are well worth reading, including these:

    Newcomers to wine can follow a reliable guide like Asimov or the Wall Street Journal's Lettie Teague; good luck finding their equivalents (i.e., deeply knowledgeable but layman-accessible) in the world of beer...

    Such absences would matter more if the book pretended to objective universality; as a companion guided by Oliver's subjective perspective, their absences are points for debate...

    The Wiki has only about 40 entries, and most of them deal with matters of interpretation. In a book that may have upwards of 100,000 factual statements in it, the presence of a few dozen errors, while regrettable, is pretty impressive...

    It's a shame that would-be critics have spent their entire time fact-checking the precise rules of the Royal Court's brewing guidelines under Henry VIII (subject of one catch), because they've overlooked the achievement of the book as a whole -- though, given their vehemence, it's a good bet they weren't going to give it a chance in any case. Thoroughly illustrated and beautifully typeset, the book is precisely what a companion should be: an engaging, subjective, erudite guide to the interested novice and, at the same time, a quick reference for the initiated...

    Secret: one of my reasons for setting up the wiki was the suspicion that my concern with the date that lager beer was introduced to Canada was a blip. Fortunately, the wiki is intended - can only be intended - to give the book more than a chance. It's a way of examining the text but it will take a lot of time. Feel for poor Stan who almost lost his marbles just working his way to the entry for "Thomas Jefferson" in order to start filling in the Index to Entries by Author. I have started to load his efforts... but that will take time, too. Might get done by Christmas.

    This pace in turn is giving me more patience with the book. Oxford University Press chose my "throwing the book against the wall" sentence for their marketing but I might have been too rash. Garrett indicated in an email when we discussed the wiki that there was a chance for small corrections or additions between printings and that the wiki might be useful for that. I hope it is. Criticism can be useful. Even for those books in those subject areas of the library or the shop... or Amazon, I suppose... where not enough, as Risen suggests, has yet been written.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2011/10/31/Stockpole_Adds_OH_To_NY__PA__MI__DE__MD__VA..._And_DC'

    Stockpole Adds OH To NY, PA, MI, DE, MD, VA... And DC

    Posted: October 31st, 2011, 1:46am CET by Alan McLeod

    With all the talk about recently released beer books your are forgiven when you forget there are even newer beer books out there. I ordered my copy of ATJ's new book CAMRA's Great British Pubs from Amazon.co.uk the other day. I see that there is a new book on Burton upon Trent by Protz, too. But for me, the big news is a little book I had not heard about before today, Ohio Breweries.

    Why? Well, the book is by my calculation the fifth in an incredibly slowly released series in which Lew Bryson has written three books - with the one on Pennsylvania hitting its fourth edition. I reviewed their sibling, Michigan Breweries, back in 2007. I love how these books mix travel information with beer nerd data. When I first started exploring nearby northern New York, it was Lew's book that alerted me to local delicacies like white hots, salt potatoes, frozen custard and garbage plates. The Michigan guide was on the dashboard when I made my first Mid-west beer run two years ago. Published by Stackpole Books, with any luck my level of knowledge about good Ohio brew as well as Buckeye roadside snack shacks will go from not that much to plenty.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2011/10/29/And__Lo__A_Prophet_Proclaimed__Remember_Knaust__'

    And, Lo, A Prophet Proclaimed "Remember Knaust!"

    Posted: October 29th, 2011, 1:49am CEST by Alan McLeod

    It is important to remember the unimportance of beer or rather its place as an aspect of pop culture that both pervades and yet lays below the surface. Jay reminds today us of both ends of that continuum. So, in another way, does Simon. Stan takes it one step further and tells the tale of Heinrich Knaust, the scholar whose name was sullied over 400 years ago due to his dabbling in beer:

    Back when you could crack wise when discussing The Oxford Companion to Beer I casually mentioned that it would be nice to find the tasting notes written more than 400 years ago by Heinrich Knaust. His book — Fünff Bucher, von der Göttlichen und Edleen Gabe, der Philosphischen, hochtewren and wunderbaren Kunt Bier zu brawen, first published in 1573 — brought together much of what was understood about brewing at the time. According to Richard Unger in Beer in the Middle Ages he described about 150 beers from Germany in detail.

    That book, more commonly known by the convenient acronym FBvdGuEGdPhawKBzb, apparently ruined his reputation, as Stan describes.

    I have had an odd two weeks. Since creating the OCB wiki, I have had front row seats to a large number of the cleverest beer writers in the English language rip at each other's reputation, much of which can be found in these articles and the comments made in response to them. But also in direct emails. I have found the discourse to be many things - salaciously humourous, shockingly sad and strangely pointless. But in the end, I think the tone is dangerously short sighted. Not just because we all know my Grannie rightly believed "handsome is as handsome does" but also because we are forgetting Knaust's Fate. Only a fool forgets the fate of Knaust. Remember, all ye who would write of beer. Remember.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2011/10/28/Thinking_About_The_Yuletide_Photo_Contest_2011'

    Thinking About The Yuletide Photo Contest 2011

    Posted: October 28th, 2011, 1:49am CEST by Alan McLeod

    Next week is November. Baseball will be over and somewhere it is snowing already. Somewhere like Albany, NY judging from Craig's Facebook post just now. Photo contest time. This will be the sixth annual photo contest. The winner in 2006 received this response in the comments:

    Sorry, perhaps the story tells a photo (though not one that would be known with a description), but aesthetically it is a terrible photo. Directly centered, lack of points of interest, and nothing worth viewing outside the middle 10%. Honestly, I'd pick almost any other photo in the contest over this one. Ask yourself: if you were blindly viewing this photo, and asked to decide what kind of contest it was an entry to, would you ever in your right mind pick beer? No way.

    See, every season and every topic has its own special dork that it attracts to take his shot to kick you in the nuts. Why do I mention this? Because I don't care. We are under eight weeks to Yule and GODDAMMIT I am going to be HAPPY. See that photo up there? One of three UK prize winners from 2008. It was from James Sakal of Colchester in Essex. Entitled "The Last Drag" it was taken at the Hand in Hand, Brighton, days before the UK smoking ban came into force. Gorgeous. That made me happy. Look at the foreground. Never really noticed that before.

    Nothing makes me happier than the annual Yuletide, Christmas, Hanukkah, New Year's, Kwanzaa and whatever else you got photo contest. Search through the entries over the years here. We must be almost at 1,000 entries. Rules will be posted later but remember this. I don't care if you don't agree with the photos I pick. I just care that the maximum little beer bloggers get the most presents in their stockings each and every year. Tell me what prizes you want and I will see if someone will pick it out for you.

    Suck on that, Mr. Directly Centered. Dork.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2011/10/27/Stuff_Delivered_By_Mail__By_Email__By_Courier_And_By_Hand'

    Stuff Delivered By Mail, By Email, By Courier And By Hand

    Posted: October 27th, 2011, 1:44am CEST by Alan McLeod

    It's been mad. Mad as in nutty crazy, not angry. Well, a bit of anger. And saucy retorts. How did it come to be that mild mannered beer fans had all this pent up emotion. I had no idea. Me, I'm not so much like that. Evan has it right. I'm just all about the whimsy. But its been busy and, you know, idle hands are the Devil's playground. The statement from Garrett Oliver received 4,348 page views on this blog and another 1270 views over at the wiki. Posted it 48 hours ago. Nut. Tay.

    But other things have happened. I've been diving into the brand new book The Breweries of Kingston and The St. Lawrence Valley by Steve Gates and also got a copy of The Art and Mystery of Brewing In Ontario by Ian Bowering from 1988. That image up there is an 1865 map I used for something or other at work a while back and indicates the location of the Grand Trunk Brewery on King Street here in Kingston at the foot of what is now called Lower University Ave. Steve indicated in the book that he had had some difficulty in identifying the exact site of this brewery that operated from 1857 to 1908. I am now interested in finding out more about another brewer they mention, Job Rogers who brewed right in the downtown in the 1830s and 1840s, keeping pigs in and around the brewery and stinking out the town. And what Barnabas Bidwell drank and where he drank it.

    Plus, there have been things in the mail or otherwise delivered. Beau's of the beer fest earlier this month sent out a special Halloween release, a double bottle set called "Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde". I am sure the beer is swell but I am most interested in the inclusion of a 7 inch vinyl EP with four songs. Did I say vinyl. I meant bubblegum pink vinyl. As someone who once owned Devo's first LP on marbled vinyl, these things mean something. Beer have also arrived from Nickle Brook (try the imperial stout), Innis and Gunn - and word is that Narragansett porter is in the mail. Point: send beer... why wouldn't you?

    What else? Oh, I finally caught up with an LCBO sold bottle of Les Trois Mousquetaires Porter Baltique and see, like the bottle I bought in Quebec, it says it is 10% - unlike the LCBO's website which still inexplicably lists it at 8.3%.

    So, all in all, a busy time in the land of the beer nerd. A busy time.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2011/10/25/Garrett_Oliver_on_The_Oxford_Companion_to_Beer'

    Garrett Oliver on The Oxford Companion to Beer

    Posted: October 25th, 2011, 12:25am CEST by Alan McLeod

    A few days after starting the OCBeerCommentary wiki, Garrett Oliver - editor, brewer and ambassador for good beer - emailed me and asked if I would like to have a question and answer session for my blog. The result is the response which you will find below under the extended text link. It includes five questions from me as well as other observations. I was going to say something about the experience of reading through what he wrote. But then I picked up a copy of a brand new self-published book called The Breweries of Kingston and The St. Lawrence Valley by Steve Gates. Steve can be found in the comments around our Ontario history posts. Like Garrett, I have never met Steve - even though Steve lives in my town - but I hope to meet both of them someday soon. Steve put himself out there by putting the book on the shelf and he described his aim when publishing his book this way:

    This book represents my attempt to capably and accurately detail the brewers and their breweries that existed from the early 19th century to Prohibition. The area of examination will include the four layers of counties facing either the St. Lawrence River or the eastern end of Lake Ontario from the communities of Napanee to Cornwall. This is not the definitive study of this subject but instead I hope it to be the start point for others to take up the torch.

    What a gracious thing to say when you realize Steve has worked for years putting together the material that makes up his book. When I wrote Garrett back after he first emailed me after he came across the wiki, I wrote back that I thought his book was a gift and hoped the wiki would enrich it though the comments, additions and edits of readers. After I sent it I thought I sounded like I was sucking up. See, I have written as much as would fit in many books but have never published a book with its own two covers. But I would hope if I did that it would be a starting point for others.

    You can find Garrett's statement at the wiki as well as below this link.

    ++++++++++

    The Oxford Companion to Beer

    First, a statement. As I mentioned in the preface to “The Oxford Companion to Beer” (OCB), no work of this scale can be, has ever been, or will ever be published without errata, and I look forward to working with the beer community to strengthen this work and other works over time. In the meantime, a book of this size, scope and reach can be and should be debated and questioned. The OCB has been met with overwhelmingly positive reviews from the press, and the comments from beer enthusiasts, homebrewers, professional brewers and brewing professors have been very kind indeed.

    However, last week I was pointed to a blog post in which the blogger Martyn Cornell suggested that the OCB was a “dreadful disaster”, owing to “errors” which he claims to have found in various entries as he scanned through them on Amazon. He says that I and my 166 colleagues simply “made things up”. In this post, Mr. Cornell, in essence, refers to me as a dupe, a cretin and a liar, piloting a project populated by lazy idiots. All this about a person whom he has not met or had so much as a conversation with, and about a book that he has not actually seen. In my 22 years in brewing, this most convivial of professions, it is the most intemperate and inconsiderate thing I have ever seen a member of the beer community say about any of his peers. I do not agree with or believe everything I read in Mr. Cornell’s books either, but it would never have occurred to me to vilify him in public.

    No one who reads his post will be surprised that I take extreme exception to it. In deference to Mr. McLeod’s decency and courteousness, I will not be bothering to play that out fully here. I will, however, point out that many of Mr. Cornell’s historical “facts” are incorrect, speciously derived, or under scholarly dispute. He says, for example, “the Angles, Saxons and Jutes arrived in Britain in the 5th century AD, not the fourth.” Actually, the vast majority of scholars, up until this day, note numerous incursions by Anglo-Saxons well before the 5th century AD.

    Regarding the subject “Bottles”, Mr. Cornell rails about a comment that the UK pint bottle is still on shelves, however just yesterday one of the UK’s top beer writers wrote me to say that “I see them (pint bottles) every time I go to the supermarket, which would suggest they're still 'popular'.”

    In another bit, he says “This is, again, just made up. In fact there’s very little or no evidence of cider-making in pre-Anglo-Saxon Britain, (“cider” itself was a word introduced by the Normans) and evidence for mead-making is mostly or all post-Roman.” Not only is his outlook on this question a minority view among historians, but we all are perfectly aware that people everywhere on earth have fermented pretty much whatever is at hand into alcoholic drinks, from honey, to dates, to apples, to palm sap, milk, and even drinks containing blood. Saying that “evidence for mead-making is mostly or all post-Roman”, even if that statement could be determined to be correct, is rather like saying “there is no direct evidence that Neolithic peoples breathed oxygen.” “Foaming at the mouth” – these his own words – he even goes on to complain about the use of the word “unlikely” to describe the rise of India pale ale, saying that such use is “unsubstantiated and unexplained assertion-making.” No doubt Mr. Cornell, having been there personally in the late 1700s, found the rise of IPA to be very likely indeed. In fact, by now I feel certain that he predicted it himself in the broadsheets.

    And it goes on, reminding me of nothing so much as McCarthy’s House Committee on UnAmerican Activities. I refer interested parties to the list of contributors, who have not even listed nearly the entireties of their bona fides in their small OCB biographies. Please do read it. As you will see below, “The Oxford Companion to Beer” is a peer-reviewed work, and 166 learned people from 24 countries expended many, many thousands of hours, for virtually no remuneration, to bring it about. I can assure you that neither I nor any of the OCB contributors have “made anything up”. All the negative comments I have seen so far are about historical matters. Well, even though Mr. Cornell has surely done yeoman’s work digging up old brewing records, the reading of a historical record and the interpretation of it are two different things.

    History, far from being pure science, is a thing in constant motion, with much or it arguable or interpretable in various ways. People still argue about the precise make-up of George Washington’s false teeth, and he was the founding president of the United States, spoke before thousands and sat for portraits barely more than two centuries ago. I feel very confident that the OCB’s percentage of errata, though it must surely be more than zero, is probably as good as that of The British Museum, and no one is speaking of tearing that down. No one is more interested in the factual accuracy of the OCB than I am. However, it is famously said that “the perfect is the enemy of the good”. Well, I have not, in my time on this earth, seen perfect yet. I do not expect to, either, and any wise person will approach attempts at perfection with at least an ounce of humility. Beer is a human thing, and one does well to remember that. We have made, I think, a very good start, and no one, least of all me, has claimed that the work is or will be finished any time soon. As you will see below, many of the entries in “The Oxford Companion to Wine” have undergone substantial revisions between the three editions. This is entirely normal. All I ask, if anyone here is moved to acquire a copy of the OCB, is to actually sit down with it for a few hours, browse through the 1,110+ subjects (not just the ones that you have specifically had big arguments about), and then come back here and tell us what you think. We will be very happy to hear from you.

    1. I understand that The Oxford Companion to Beer was a project that you spent four years working on. Can you provide some insight into the origins and development of the book, including the process of gathering 166 people involved with the world of beer?

    In late 2006, I received an email from Benjamin Keene, who was then an editor in the Reference Division of the American office of Oxford University Press. He said that the time has come for an “Oxford Companion to Beer”, and asked whether I would be interested in originating the book as editor-in-chief. I told him that I was flattered by the question, but I said “no way”. I have a copy of “The Oxford Companion to Wine”, and basically thought “no one in their right mind would take on something like this.” I did, however, end up going out for a pint with Ben Keene. He convinced me that there was much missing from the public literature of beer. And as I looked around, I found that it was true. There was nothing to be read on professional dry-hopping, for example. I had lots of technical brewing books, but they covered dry-hopping in a sentence or two. Almost nothing on bottle-conditioning. Or barrel aging. Very little, except for one recent book, on recent developments in wild and sour beers. There was not even so much about the actual production techniques for mass-market beers, although technical journals have covered certain aspects very well over the decades. There was not enough, at least in English, about the rest of the world outside the U.S. and certain parts of Europe. So eventually Ben convinced me that the book needed doing, and that I should take it on. I formally signed on as editor-in-chief in August of 2007. It is not an overstatement to say that the prospect of taking on the OCB was terrifying, and for good reason.

    The start of the project was the assembly of the “headword list”. This is the list of subjects that will appear in the book in alphabetical order, rather like an encyclopedia. I put together a list of several hundred headwords. After I ran out of things I could think up on my own, I combed the indexes of many dozens of books, looking for subjects that the OCB should cover. Once I had a large, credible list, I posted the first of many requests on the Brewers Association daily Forum, asking for help in assembling a more complete headword list. The Forum is read by over 1,000 people in the brewing industry and some journalists, amateur brewers, industry affiliates, and writers, not only in the U.S. but in other countries as well.

    I got a very vigorous response from the community. Probably 100 people offered to help, and I sent them my original headword list. They added their own headwords to it in another color or font so that I could easily tell what had been added. Sometimes, as expected (and hoped), there would be a term with which I was entirely unfamiliar (stuykmanden, for example). I’d do a little research and decide whether the term seemed to merit inclusion. One by one, I went through everyone’s lists and incorporated terms that I though would interest people. When the first round was done, we had about 1,000 headwords and were ready for the second phase.

    The second phase was the assignment of word-lengths to each of the 1,000 headwords. Without assigned word-lengths, the writers could have no idea how to approach their subjects, and Oxford University Press (OUP) would have no idea how large a book they were planning to produce. Of course, assigning a pre-determined length to a subject you haven’t even begun to explore is a very difficult task, especially when there are so many of them. Fortunately, OUP had a system for this, wherein each entry was set at one of five lengths – 250 words, 500 words, 1,000 words, 2500 words, etc. If this seems random, it is not – it actually does make sense; you cannot have an infinite number of different lengths for the assignments. However, later on, when we approached writers, we made it known that the word lengths were targets, not edicts, and we would make room for any crucial information.

    From here, we assembled an Advisory Board. They would receive all entries first, before the editor-in-chief (EIC). The Advisory Board is a group of peer reviewers who are tasked with reading through the entries, looking for inconsistencies, errors of fact, incompleteness, or other problems. Only after passing review by the Advisory Board would EIC begin work on the entries. I was asked to assign each entry to one of the members of the Advisory Board, based in many cases on their particular area of expertise. When entries came in to OUP, members of the Advisory Board would sometimes send entries back to writers, asking them to do further work. Even when entries were passed to EIC, they would often come with notes from the Advisory board member attached regarding something that needed curing. The Advisory Board was:

    Dr. Charles Bamforth, who needs little introduction. He is, among other things, the Anheuser-Busch endowed professor of Brewing Science at U.C. Davis, and has spent his career in brewing research, brewery quality control, and many other pursuits, and is the author of several books.

    Dr. George Philliskirk, before becoming the Co-Director of the Beer Academy, was head of the Technical Department for Carlsberg UK. He is a past Chairman of the Board of Examiners of the Institute of Brewing and an external examiner for the Brewing degrees at Heriot-Watt University.

    Dr. Patrick Hayes is professor of Crop and Soil Science at Oregon State University in Covallis, which is in one of the centers of American hop farming, but also focuses on grain science. Most entries involving agronomy went through him.

    Dr. Keith Villa is Master Brewer of MillerCoors, inventor of their Blue Moon brand among many others, a well-experienced judge of international competitions and a graduate of the brewing school at the Catholic University of Leuven. His career has focused on brewing innovations.

    Dr. Wolfgang Stempfl is CEO of Doemens Academy of Germany, which also needs no introduction to those assembled here.

    Dr. Val Peacock, before becoming president of Hop Solutions, was well-known within brewing circles as Anheuser-Busch’s Manager of Hop Technology. He is one of the most experienced hop researchers in the world-wide brewing industry. While he is not technically listed on the Advisory Board, he went through every hop entry and helped organize, verify and catalogue a huge amount of hop information.

    EIC makes all assignments of entries. In some cases I reached out to people who I knew to have specific knowledge of a subject. So Vinnie Cilurzo was asked to write about “sour beers” and “oak”, Pete Brown to write about India Pale Ale, Steve Parkes of American Brewers Guild to write some technical brewing entries, Chad Yakobson (whose Masters-degree work on brett is a sight to behold) wrote about Brettanomyces, etc. Some people suggested I reached out to specific other experts, and then we would check out their bona fides and reach out to them as well. Others wrote and offered to help. I put out the word through various forums, and I think I can say that there are very few people who write about beer who would say that they didn’t know we were looking for writers on a wide range of subjects. Eventually, the vast majority of subjects were assigned and people got to work. All contributors were sent a set of guidelines as to what was expected, what the scope and writing style was, what sorts of sources would be accepted as references, etc.

    Aside from writing my own entries, my job as EIC was to make sure that each entry was properly written, in what might loosely be termed the “Oxford style” (though without squelching the individual voices of the contributors). EIC also assures that entries contain the information that they need to have, that this information has been properly researched, and that the information is not unduly parochial. Almost anyone who wrote a piece for the OCB got questions back from me, was asked for additional information, and had some changes made to their copy, etc. Some pieces were able to go through with very little work – we had some great writers. Many others needed substantial additional work, from simple editing to complete re-writes.

    This is not unusual, but I had no real idea how much work this would involve. Many very bright people, who have lots of excellent information to impart, are not natural writers. Some may not speak English as their first languages. However, if you want the best possible range of information, you cannot rely entirely on people who write all the time, nor solely upon English-speakers. In some cases, I added an international perspective – for example, someone in Germany writing about “dunkel” might not be aware how prevalent the style is among craft brewers in South America. As a result of all these roles, I had some part in virtually every entry. In any event, if you do not like the writing style of the OCB, the full blame falls upon me. If you do like it, then credit may well lie with the original writer, or with some combination. However, in every instance, writers signed off on final edits after they came back from OUP’s copy-editing and before they went off for typesetting. If a writer objected to the editing or thought something was wrong, it went back through the process until the matter was resolved. In a very small number of cases, an entry was rejected and later written by someone else.

    In some cases, I would send certain pieces, especially my own, to other writers whose knowledge I respected. So, for example, I sent my own pieces on “barrel-aging” and “bottle-conditioning” to Vinnie Cilurzo and Will Meyer for vetting, not only of the info present, but also so they could check them for completeness. Sometimes I would send pieces out to independent experts. For example, before finishing my editing on the piece “beechwood chips”, I sent it out to two former employees of Anheuser-Busch so that they could confirm that this was indeed correct information from top to bottom. Oxford editors also combed through everything, looking for problems, inconsistencies, plagiarisms, and all sorts of other possible difficulties that occur with all projects of this scale.

    In the last few months of the project, Horst Dornbusch joined the OCB as associate editor. He has been a Fulbright scholar, a brewer, a brewing consultant, a writer, a translator, and spent 10 years in magazine editing. His main job was to “rough cut” some of the remaining entries, some of which did not arrive in wonderful condition. After his work, he would pass them to me (with all of his changes visible), and I would work them into final form.

    Before we move on, let me emphasize that this is a very hard style of writing to master. It is meant to appeal to a wide range of possible readers, from the casual enthusiast to the beverage professional, to the technical brewer. And it is intended to be interesting and engaging, not to simply be a dry textbook. That is one reason the book series is called “Companion”. In the preface to “The Oxford Companion to Wine”, Jancis Robinson writes that the book is meant to be “a comprehensive work, with attitude, aimed at curious, intelligent wine drinkers and wine students who want to understand more of the background to the delicious liquid they find in their glasses and bottles.” Well put, and though I would obviously change “wine” to “beer” and add a few more areas of possible readers, that was very much the goal of the OCB.

    A final thing here – I have read posts by some writers, who were among the very few who rejected assignments, who have said that they were annoyed at the tiny remuneration offered to them by OUP. One very prominent beer writer said to me, right to my face, “I wouldn’t take a sh*t for that kind of money.” Okay, well, fortunately, I had not asked him to. His own book will be out soon, and I hope it provides him the money he requires.

    Of course, there is nothing I can do about the pay. Everyone here should realize that (1) academic presses never pay much – in fact, they often don’t even pay advances, and (2) OUP is a not-for-profit organization. Much of any surplus that may be generated by book sales goes back into education, including scholarships, other books and educational material, and the subsidization of massive works such as the Oxford English Dictionary. No one is getting rich here – everyone, myself included, has made far below minimum wage, and all the OCB writers I spoke to said that they did this partially to give something back to the brewing community. The fact that so many were willing to do so says something about that community. I understand that not everyone can afford to do this work, but I’m grateful to those who did.

    2. The OCB comes to us eight years after the publication in 2003 of your marvelous book, The Brewmaster's Table. The two books are very different. It might be said that The Brewmaster's Table is an exercise in expressing the subjective experience of beer from the perspective of eloquent and comprehensive passion that might even butt up against the obsessive. The OCB, by comparison, is almost by definition objective in its approach. Is there something about beer that favours one route to good beer over the other or are they two necessary paths to full appreciation?

    Thanks for the kind words. “The Brewmaster’s Table” (BT) won the International Association of Culinary Professionals Book Award in 2004 and was a finalist for the James Beard Award. Having never won any prize for anything but making beer, that was very gratifying. And I think that people did react to BT exactly as I meant them to. It was a very subjective work, and a work of passion. That was a book that was burning a hole in my pocket – I had something to say, and I needed to say it. The fact that so many people have enjoyed it and have made some use of it is wonderful. These days I’m meeting young brewers who tell me that BT was their inspiration to get into homebrewing and then professional brewing. That’s very cool, though it makes me feel rather old!

    The OCB is entirely different. While I did not entirely put a lid on my opinions (note Robinson’s “with attitude”, above) or those of others, this was meant to be a largely objective work. This meant that I needed to turn off my “partisan craft brewer brain” and put myself in a different mental space. It also meant, and I am very grateful for this, that writers and advisors who came from the mass-market brewers needed to trust that I was not here to sack them or their products. I know that they have read “The Brewmaster’s Table” and many of them were not thrilled with my characterizations of mass-market beer. It was a mark of true character on their part that so many people from the world of mass-market brewing were willing to trust me and pitch in on the OCB, and I worked hard to try and earn that trust.

    After all, if you come to this book and look up “light beer”, it would be incorrect for me to say to you “well, you shouldn’t want light beer.” That wasn’t the question that was asked. OCB is there to answer the question, and such a piece will have been written by someone who knows precisely how light beer is made, where it comes from, its development over the years, and its societal context. So in a certain way, I had to become a different person, beer-wise, to do this work. And other people had to forget certain things about me.

    In the end, I think and hope that craft brewers and mass-market brewers will be equally happy with the OCB. As for the bits of opinion, I quote again from the OCW, which says that it is “laced with the editorial opinion which is such a crucial ingredient of all Oxford Companions across a range of equally worthy subjects.” And so it is with the OCB.

    To answer your question, I think both the subjective and objective roads to beer appreciation are valid, and there are probably one or two other roads besides those. If Michael Jackson taught us all anything, it was that good beer should engage both halves of your mind. And both BT and OCB have subjective and objective aspects, but the balance is very different between them.

    3. Was there anything in the difference between being primarily the writer of The Brewmaster's Table compared to the editor of the OCB that taught you something new about the pleasures of beer?

    It made me realize how much there was to know and to think about. It showed me how much I already knew, which felt good (keeping up with Charlie Bamforth, for example, is not for the faint-hearted), but also opened up whole other worlds of thinking. I also learned a lot about the beer histories of other countries and how their path through the world of beer is the same as ours, different than ours, and entwined with ours. I tried hard not only to avoid thinking only as a craft brewer, but also to avoid thinking only as an American, only as a professional brewer, only as a beer geek. I tried to understand the point of view of a beverage manager for a restaurant, for example, and what he or she needs to know in order to bring beer alive for the restaurant’s guests. I hope that we did it – I think we did.

    4. The discussion of beer both on-line and in the traditional media has changed significantly since 2003. While beer forums existed, blogs were in their infancy and there were few beer columns in newspapers. How has the reception of the OCB differed from The Brewmaster's Table? Is there a greater noise to signal ratio or has the discourse truly advanced with the volume of discussion?

    The noise to signal ratio has increased drastically. Sometimes it seems that there is almost nothing but noise. That said, at the same time, there is also much more real information available. Not only are there actually many more good writers, but facilities such as Google Books, whatever one may think of them, would allow me to look at some book from 1820 that’s sitting in a small library in Scotland and read the scanned book. And, in many cases, the book had only been scanned in months or weeks before I looked at it. There is so much more info that’s coming available, and that’s very exciting. Which is why, as I’ve mentioned above, the OCB had crowd-sourced elements to it. There is virtually no one who writes about beer that did not know that the OCB was underway, so people reached out to me from around the world.

    It is worth noting, I think, that in the preface of the 3rd addition of “The Oxford Companion to Wine”, EIC Jancis Robinson writes “These are new entries [referring to the more than 300 new subjects in the 3rd edition], but of the old ones roughly three-quarters have been changed in some way, and a good 40% of the total, about 1,600 entries in all, have been revised quite radically.” She goes on to say that the world of wine is a rapidly moving target requiring frequent revision and updating. 40% revised quite radically? Yes, actually, of course they have been. That’s because the first OCW was excellent yet imperfect. The important part is that OUP and Jancis have continued to do the work.

    Those who are wary of this first edition of OCB might take note of this. We worked exceedingly hard, but there is no way that I or any other EIC could possibly hope to personally verify ever single asserted fact in a book containing this much information. That said, I am certain that the first OCW was an extremely valuable resource, and I feel confident that this first edition of the OCB is as well – and we now have the benefit of better, faster checking of information than we once did. In the future, the best comprehensive works will involve a lot of crowd-sourced elements and expanded digital sourcing capabilities combined with solid editing work.

    5. What would you wish for the commentary wiki on the OCB and other forms of on-line response? How can they best serve your intention for the book as a centrepiece for the continuing elaboration of the meaning of beer and the passion people have for beer?

    That’s a good question and will require further thought. I would love to see a wiki like this somehow connected to formal Oxford research teams. Perhaps some of the larger breweries and mid-sized breweries could even help fund such things. The wine world has plenty of people paid to do pure research into elements of flavor, history, etc. We have no idea how far behind we are in the world of beer. Mondavi has teams – teams - of people who study nothing but wine and food interactions. Think of that. I’ve met these people and they’re doing fascinating work. Can we do that? If not, why not?

    A few quick things as I close:

    People wonder how the featured breweries – and there are not very many - were chosen. I decided from the beginning that trying to cover thousands of breweries was not only impossible, but largely useless. There are plenty of other resources for that. So I stuck to breweries that I thought had a particular cultural relevance that went beyond their sheer size or popularity. I also paid attention to the many people who suggested headwords – certain breweries popped up over and over again, which struck me as a sign that they were touchstones of some sort for people. This is the reason for something of a bias in the direction of the older European breweries; they have been highly influential all over the world. For example, Brasserie Dupont is important not only because Saison Dupont is delicious, but also because Saison Dupont resides somewhere in the mind of almost every modern brewer who brews saison. The fact that they are tiny is not as relevant as the fact of their influence.

    Is the list subjective? Yes – how could it be otherwise? Is it random? No. Do I think that other breweries, possibly many, deserve inclusion? Yes, absolutely.

    BTW: “Leipsiger Gose” was written for the OCB, but came in too late to make it into typesetting. I’m sorry about that too, but it’s hard to have everything. Next edition.

    Also: It has been noted that there is no listing for the hop Centennial. I use Centennial myself, as do a great many brewers, especially in the U.S.. I hate to say it, but the omission was inadvertent. The omission got past me, our hop editing team, and the OUP editors. Centennial is actually referenced elsewhere, and how it skated past is a mystery we shall track down. In any event, an actual error – sorry for that.

    Some people have been a bit annoyed by what are called “blind references”. These are used when the editors feel that people will look for a subject under a different headword – it is meant to direct them. So “Calagione, Sam” has a “blind ref” to “Dogfish Head Craft Brewery.” Sam is one of the most famous brewers in the world, so some people will search for his name. Similarly “Magazines” has a blind ref to “Beer Writing”, and so on.

    Going back to “The Oxford Companion to Wine”, the second edition had 650 more entries than the first, and the third edition had more than 300 new entries, but had to cut some existing entries to make room. All these things evolve – this is the way it’s done. As I said, we’ve made a start, not a finish. I hope to help out, and I hope many others here will help too. And I also hope that we will sit down and drink fine beers together, leaving “foaming at the mouth” to unfortunate animals against which we will barricade the doors of the pub, leaving the rest of us to enjoy our conviviality in peace and fellowship. That, let’s not forget, is what beer is for. Thanks for listening.

    - Garrett Oliver

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2011/10/24/Why_Did_A_Brewer_In_Kingston_In_1815_Want_Rye_'

    Why Did A Brewer In Kingston In 1815 Want Rye?

    Posted: October 24th, 2011, 3:50am CEST by Alan McLeod

    The ad is from page 4 of the Kingston Gazette, 6 January 1816. You can see at the bottom that it was placed on 15 December 1815. So many questions. What were Messrs Robinson and Gillespie up to? Why is rye placed between barley and hops in the large font while oats sit down there with the peas? Also, is "strong beer" something separate, something identifiable to the Kingstonian a year after the war with America? You will recall that a few months later in April, Albany strong beer is for sale. It also comes just a month after Richard Smith's notice for plain "beer" - so was "strong beer" something they had the taste for still, almost 40 years after having to flee from their central NY homes at the beginning of the American Revolution? And why is it not "ale" when described in the Kingston papers?

    I just finished The Lion, the Eagle and Upper Canada by Jane Errington, a historian over at Royal Military College... they of the old school base ball. The book is well reviewed here but, short form, it's an interesting view of early Upper Canada (1790s to 1820s) based in large part by review of early newspapers. In it, Errington suggests something of a window between the end of the War of 1812 in 1815 and, a few years later, a clampdown in trade and other contacts with the US towards the end of the decade. But even with her level of detail about the community, trade and industry, there is not much about beer itself. Meaning I am left unsure if beer was being traded within months of the end of a war, perhaps as a stop gap until local product restarted... if it was interrupted by the war... which is another question.

    So, I was very happy to read in the comments that Steve Gates has published his history of brewing in the city and in the region. I couldn't get out of the door to go get a copy but will tomorrow. Hopefully it will shed some light on what Robinson and Gillespie were up to.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2011/10/24/Is_This_The_Gold_Standard_Of_Brewery_Tours_'

    Is This The Gold Standard Of Brewery Tours?

    Posted: October 24th, 2011, 1:18am CEST by Alan McLeod

    I have been on a lot of brewery tours. In Halifax in the early 1980s it was a euphemism for college kids being locked into a room at the brewery and given all the beer they could down in a Friday afternoon hour. More recently, it's the chance to hear craft brewers explain their processes. At one Japanese brewery, however, it's now a chance to test out their equipment and your own ideas:

    Soon they called our group, and we entered the brewing room. Our brewmaster sat us at a picnic table and brought us more beer. She asked us to taste all of their standard brews and choose one to use as a base for our own beer. We chose an amber ale and increased the alcohol content by adding more sugar, in the form of grain, for fermentation. We also increased the amount of hops added to bring up the bitterness and add more flavor. The whole process took about four hours and we did all the important things ourselves. We measured out the grain, milled it, threw it in a pot and boiled it. There were even tasks — as our brewmaster warned us — that, if done incorrectly, would allow bacteria to contaminate our beer.

    I like this concept - even if the cost of $235 for a delivery of 15 litres of beer seems a bit much. But for all I know that might be the cost of a donut and coffee there, too. The brewery in question is no dud - the Kiuchi Brewery in central Ibaraki Prefecture is the maker of the Hitachino Nest line of craft beer imported into North America like this stout and this wit I had a few years back.

    Could it happen here? I don't know. There are likely 15,387 regulations between here and there but what a great way to reach out to your customers and to let them know how your business works.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2011/10/22/New_York__Righteous_Ale__Sixpoint_Brewery__Brooklyn'

    New York: Righteous Ale, Sixpoint Brewery, Brooklyn

    Posted: October 22nd, 2011, 3:23am CEST by Alan McLeod

    I don't really go much for packaging or even branding when it comes to beer. All that tiny writing on Stone bottles from some PR hack telling me I am not worthy? Yawn. All the millions wasted on design that gets unnecessarily added to the cost of my beer? Spare me. Yet... yet, there is this cube of beer from Sixpoint. It's just four pint cans in a cardboard container but it's a cube. Perfect.

    Sixpoint has come to far northern New York and I was over there to pick some up today at Bear World. Ten bucks for two litres is a pretty good price. And Sixpoint makes beer that is far better than pretty good. This is my favorite, a strongish ale that balances a bit of rye into the grist more artfully than any other featuring that grain. It pours an orange-hued light cola under a froth and rim. Sweet and spice aroma. In the mouth, it's as pungent as a Belgian dubbel but one from a parallel universe where spice means something slightly different. Rich without being creamy, more sweetish seedy herbal dark Swedish rye bread than maltier pumpernickel. But not heavy like either of those. Anise, orange zest... maybe dry thyme. More cracker than bread crust. Love it.

    BAers know the love.

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    Certain Thing I Would Not Do For A Beer #13720

    Posted: October 21st, 2011, 2:13am CEST by Alan McLeod

    I would have not thought Pakistan was ripe to become a beer exporting nation until I read this article... though I am not sure I would show up at the brewery growler in hand:

    The brewery is next to the headquarters of the armed forces, which has helped to guarantee its security. "The best bars in the world are in the houses of Islamabad," said Major Rehman, who claimed his office at the brewery was the only place in Pakistan to serve draught lager. For Muslims, such drinking is technically illegal, although in practice no one has been lashed for drinking since the 1980s, under the regime of General Zia. "It's like ordering a pizza," an Islamabad resident said. "You pick up the phone and in 15 minutes the bootlegger is at your front door."

    That is the only time I had read the word "lashed" in relation to drinking when it actually meant, you know, lashed. Apparently Michael Palin of Monty Python survived on the output of the one brewery while filming in Pakistan. Braver than me.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2011/10/19/How_Many_Forms_Of_A_Beer_Leave_It_Still_One_Beer_'

    How Many Forms Of A Beer Leave It Still One Beer?

    Posted: October 19th, 2011, 1:09am CEST by Alan McLeod

    Josh Rubin wrote a great review of Les Trois Mousquetaires Porter Baltique in the Toronto Star today. It's a beer I love, having had my first in May 2010 after a beer run to La Belle Province. But I noticed something on the bottle that accompanied Josh' article. The bottle said "Automne 2010" and the strength was 9.2%. That's up there in the middle. Digging in the stash I pulled out one that I bought in Gatineau, Quebec a couple of weeks ago and, upper left, it just said 2011 with a strength of 10%. My photo, to the right, from the first bottle I had was "Automne 2010 2009" and the strength was 10%. Then I go to the website of province's government store, the LCBO and see that it is described as a 2011 - but the strength is only 8.3%. And it costs two bucks more than the one I got in Quebec... hmm...

    Don't get me wrong. Whatever it is, It's a hell of a beer and I will be buying more of the Ontario offering to join their Quebec cousins in the stash. It's a long winter in Canada. And I appreciate year to year vintage variation but there is something about this that seems a step more than that. Is there not a small chance that the LCBO lab police have intervened? They "conducted almost 368,000 tests on 15,700 different beverage alcohol samples prior to their sale in fiscal 2003-04" you know. Have the egg heads in white lab coats (sorry) determined that the beer is 20% inflated or is it a different batch?

    Better go get a photo of one that's actually on the shelf. See if the label says 8.3% like the website.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2011/10/18/Quebec__La_Vache_Folle___Double_IPA__Charlevoix'

    Quebec: La Vache Folle ? Double IPA, Charlevoix

    Posted: October 18th, 2011, 1:32am CEST by Alan McLeod

    Charlevoix is a favorite brewery of mine even if it was unknown to me just three years ago. I have loved their dubbel since April 2009. I picked up this one, along with some elk and wild boar sausage, at Broue Ha Ha a few weeks ago.

    I was a little intrigued by the "?" Double IPA idea, the mystery hop. And then I remembered that I am not good at picking out hops. Except Fuggles. Nail that one every time. The rest? Not so much. On the pour, orange beer under thick rocky light cream head. There is the aroma of marmalade withe milk chocolate of all things. And in the mouth there is more of that milky yum thing going on. With masses of orange ginger marmalade. Then it isn't and it moves to something more like honey and ginger and wild ditch weeds in June. Extremely interesting stuff.

    The BAers are a little unsure even if respectful.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2011/10/17/When_There_Is_Too_Much_Going_On_Even_For_A_Beer...'

    When There Is Too Much Going On Even For A Beer...

    Posted: October 17th, 2011, 3:02am CEST by Alan McLeod

    Between have a cold, having five kids and helping out with the fledgling North American Beer Writers Guild reincarnation... in addition to thinking about next year's Oktoberfest speakers series... in addition to the bright idea to start a web based concordance to The Oxford Companion to Beer, sometimes it get difficult to see where you get the chance to just have a beer. Weekend laundry marathons help a lot with that. Full Sail Imperial Porter went down nicely yesterday as did a Sixpoint Righteous Ale. I am over the river on Friday and plan to stock up with some more. Even if the Canadian dollar is seven cents below the heady days of April and July.

    Sadly, I will not get to the Cask Days festival to be held in Toronto. Jordan has the details. If the mini-version I saw two weeks ago in a freezing rain-soaked cow pasture was any hint, the urban version held inside a building should be great. By the way, has anyone given Ralph Morana, owner of Bar Volo, a prize for something yet? Maybe I should add that project to my little list as well as well. A Good Beer Blog's annual awards for people I appreciate awards. That should fit right in. Maybe then he'll open a branch of the operation in my town.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2011/10/15/A_Commentary_On_The_Oxford_Companion_To_Beer'

    A Commentary On The Oxford Companion To Beer

    Posted: October 15th, 2011, 1:21am CEST by Alan McLeod

    You may recall that I had a first look at The Oxford Companion to Beer a few weeks ago. Comments have flown here and elsewhere. I am convinced that the book will be a great focal point for discussion for years. I am also convinced that by definition is it not definitive. Why? Well, it is a collection of very short essays, that's why. Which also means there should be lively discussion building upon each essay as well as the cross-referencing between them.

    So, I have created a wiki called "OCBeerCommentary" in which I hope to create a commentary upon, a concordance of this great book. It is a group project hopefully but the rules are fairly strict or at least focused:

    The purpose of this wiki is to collectively make comments, add annotation, identify errata and suggest further sources to the text of The Oxford Companion to Beer. Members are asked to avoid comment about the authors, the structure of the text or other extraneous matters. This wiki is a not for profit project that reviews the text pursuant under the concept of "fair dealing for the purpose of criticism or review" under Canadian copyright law.

    The wiki is available to be read publicly but is only open for participation by approved members. There is not much in there yet so bear with us. Let me know in the comments if you are interested in adding errata, elaborations and commentary. Or email me at beerblog@gmail.com. There should be links to your existing blog posts, an interview your have come across or whatever else helps expand understanding of this work. I expect this to be a slow project but one that aggregates commentary to make it more readily accessible. Who know? Some comments might interest the editors enough for inclusion in the inevitable second edition.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2011/10/14/Quebec__Monseigneur_D%e2%80%99Esgly__M_Brass__%c3%8ele_d%e2%80%99Orl%c3%a9ans'

    Quebec: Monseigneur D’Esgly, M'Brass' Île d’Orléans

    Posted: October 14th, 2011, 2:06am CEST by Alan McLeod

    What would he thought of it all? Monseigneur D’Esgly, the first bishop after the conquest of New France. Strong, black ale. Fitting? Fitting enough for me. I needed something richly purifying after all that mixed ethical talk. Who knew Joe won't accept samples? Win leaves it to the informed reader. Stan says relationships that are built weigh more on the ethical scales. Who knows? All I know is that I need a little redemption.

    I had their double IPA last year but this is the one from the bottles brought back from Quebec that I recall liking the most. Black ale impervious to light held under a very dark espresso head. Licorice, pumpernickel and coffee on the sniff. In the mouth, creamy variation of all that plus mint hops that morph to a bit of eucalyptus halfway through. A small boom of dark rummy malt arises in the finish. Thick and lovely yet smooth. High respect from the BAers. Does the trick.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2011/10/13/Pete_Revives_The_Beer_Blogging_Ethics_Question'

    Pete Revives The Beer Blogging Ethics Question

    Posted: October 13th, 2011, 2:42pm CEST by Alan McLeod

    We did this one in 2008 but it is good to visit this question repeatedly. Me? I like cash. Because, apparently, the people who run pubs, make beer and publish beer periodicals like it as well. There is an odd assumption that bloggers (and drinkers) participate out of "passion" - a catch all word for sucker far too often.

    But there is a question in all of this. Go read Pete and tell us what you think... here or there.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2011/10/12/Are_Pumpkin_Ales_Really_All_That_Divisive_'

    Are Pumpkin Ales Really All That Divisive?

    Posted: October 12th, 2011, 2:48am CEST by Alan McLeod

    Interesting article at the web site... the web presence... of The Atlantic about pumpkin ales. I have thought about these beers for years now and have a few ideas of my own. But I still appreciate these thoughts:

    Some beer styles are loved, some are ardently despised, but none is more divisive than pumpkin ales. Those who love them wait all year for their seasonal release; others can't even broach the subject without foaming at the mouth. "I hate pumpkin beers," wrote my friend and Washington City Paper beer writer Orr Stuhl. "Even picking a 'favorite' -- say, Dogfish Head's -- is like picking a favorite airborne illness."

    Well, to be fair to Dogfish Head, hardly their oddest flavour. But I defend pumpkin beers. For what the represent - an indigenous North American style that has reasonably valid historic precedent - they are a hit. And the fact is they can be tasty. In the last few days, I have had a recent bottling from Ontario's Nicklebrook as well as New York's Sixpoint Autumnation. Very different beers which present that gourd the people like the most. Nicklebrook's was so authentically pie it is hard to imagine what to pair it with. Other than pie. Except it better be a pie as good as this beer. Sixpoint goes in a different direction, using the pumpkin as a flavour rather than an end result. It's like the gentler twin cousin of their Righteous Ale, the one who only shows up every fall.

    Seasonal beers are big news in the US - even if Canadian drinks writers had no idea 4 years ago. Rather than slag them, why not think about what would be the equivalent for every month of the year. How many more beers could taste like pie if we put our minds to it. Right now in the stash I have a pear beer from Quebec I am quite looking forward to drinking, one of my favorite flavours. Wouldn't it be nice if each September flooded us with complex, excellent and tasty pear beers?

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2011/10/10/In_Kingston_In_November_1815_There_Was_Beer_'

    In Kingston In November 1815 There Was Beer!

    Posted: October 10th, 2011, 3:56pm CEST by Alan McLeod

    Beer for sale! Hallallujah!! BEER FOR SALE!!!

    Remember what I suggested before? That where there is peace there is beer? Well, on 27 November 1815, my town of Kingston was just nine months past the ratification of the Treaty of Ghent and five past the Battle of Waterloo. The proposed terms of Napoleon's incarceration at St. Helena are announced in the same edition of the paper as was the reprimand of Major-General Proctor - the news oddly received care of an American paper... care of one from Montreal. Funny information and trade routes in those early post war days.

    Where did the malt come from? Sure, Kingston was a key outpost bastion in the Empire, the guardian of the Great Lakes, St. Lawrence and Rideau but, still, who grew the grain that made the malt that made the beer? Was it a local 1815 crop or was it shipped from Britain or America? Where was it brewed? Notice that Richard Smith only calls it "beer" where a few months later he calls what he is selling Albany strong beer. Also, I don't see another ad in the paper for beer. There are many fine things - fancy goods even. The front page of the 2 December 1815 issue includes notices offering Turkish opium, spices and sugars, China teas and and Port wine. The town had its need and apparently some issues for which it had supplies. But there was no other beer for sale.

    It makes one consider that this may have been the first or at least an early shipment to make it to the town after the war. There very likely were beers in taverns but not necessarily. More drinks can be made from spirits and if you are transporting them up a river filled with rapids between here and Montreal, there is more bucks in batteaux that way. We learn from Roberts that punches and cocktails was the fashion, too. Taverns were posh. Not sure. But what ever it was about, beer was for sale. And it was worth letting people know.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2011/10/08/Session_56__Thanks_To_The_Big_For_Being_Big..._Maybe'

    Session 56: Thanks To The Big For Being Big... Maybe

    Posted: October 8th, 2011, 4:40pm CEST by Alan McLeod

    Irish blog Tale of Ale posed the question for this month's edition of The Session:

    I decided that I wanted to do something out of character for many beer blogs on the internet. I wanted to say thank you to the large multinational brewers and show that we are not all against them.

    Seems like only yesterday that the topic for a month was regular beer (not to mention my take on Session 40) so I am feeling there is a bit of overlap happening. But then Craig goes and takes the opportunity to summarize his understanding of Albany ale... on the very day I made a local breakthrough, too. I do have a slight quibble in that I am pretty sure there was commercial brewing in Albany almost all the way back to the beginning of the Dutch presence in 1614 but what's a couple hundred years between friends?

    The point is, however, that the bigness of beer goes well back. Unger's work with records from the medieval Low Countries indicates that the state was "the big boy", controlling access to and the price of gruit, the common pre-hop bittering agent. That tradition moves to Albany almost 400 years ago where big moves through generations of the Gansevoort family, a name that lives on in the hotel business, who seem to have either gotten out of beer or at least begun diversification around 1800, to the early 1800s when brewers like Taylor make brewing big and teach America how to make brewing big. Then (as Maureen describes) lager happens, big moves west with the nation and gets bigger... and that's all she wrote about Albany ale. By 1899, it is just a fond distant memory of a 96 year old man.

    Which leads us to what I have dubbed "American beer" and the question of what we have to thank the big international breweries who make the sugar water that tastes something like beer that makes up something like 95% of all beer consumed. I suppose we can thank them for making something so dull that home brewers, then micro brewers, then craft brewers and now post-craft brewers have been driven to make something else. Thanks for the science and technology invented to ensure the the sugar water that tastes something like beer always tastes the same so that good beer can also be made reliably. Thanks for being that bad example for everyone who prefers the good one.