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A Good Beer Blog

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2010/09/03/Pennsylvania__Flying_Mouflan__Troegs__Harrisburg'

    Pennsylvania, Flying Mouflan, Troegs, Harrisburg

    Posted: September 3rd, 2010, 2:37am CEST by Alan McLeod

    Bought this at Kappy's last week for $6.99 for the bomber. There was some statement that this beer blew away last year's Nugget Nectar in terms of hops and lavished the discerning palate with a face filling bunch of other flavours. I was sold at the $6.99 myself given the sad lack of Troegs beer in my life.

    Pretty nice stuff. It pours a swell chestnut with a mocha froth and rim. The aroma is booze, date and brown bread. A pretty thick beer on the swally with a lot of pine and white grapefruit hops going shoulder to shoulder with date, cocoa, milk chocolate, hazelnut. The brewer's notes recommend the very four months this bottle waited from production to pour. Probably could be classified as a Dauphin County Brown Double IPA. That's it. A DCBDIPA. Maybe the best I have ever had.

    BAers have the love.

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

    Why Do Names For This New Beer Style Kinda Suck?

    Posted: September 2nd, 2010, 2:58am CEST by Alan McLeod

    Forget the question of whether styles are real and essential. Forget the question of whether beer styles have been accurately described and traced historically. The real issue is that the names of beer styles are a mess and cause consumer confusion. Andy raises the question of the name of one black hoppy brew and seeks resolution for this very good reason:

    Well, I believe that styles are important, if for no other reason than consumers can have some reasonable understanding of what they might be getting when they select a certain beer. It is in the hopes of creating some logical détente that I humbly offer the following suggestions for resolving this seemingly intractable debate.

    He then goes on to ask us to choose from a number of choices that have been bouncing around beer nerd circles like Black IPA, India Black Ale, and Cascadian Dark Ale. There is only one problem. They all suck as names. Let's be clear. They aren't related to India and they aren't pale, as Andy notes, but also no one outside of the Pacific NW actually knows what "Cascadian" really means. Plus, while the picture of me from 1992 shows I have a great long love of the Vermont Pub and Brewery and the work of the late Greg Noonan, the idea of calling it "Noonan Black Ale" suffers from the same problem, needing to know some sort of back story. Also, there is a minor sort of beer - perhaps not a style at all - that you see from time to time called Dark Ale. What's it taste like? Dark? That's like something tasting ice cold.

    We can do better. We can make sense. If the point of the name of the style is to inform let's get to the point. The beer is black and it is bitter. Keep it simple. So call it Black Bitter. I might even try the stuff if it was called a name as swell as that.¹

    ¹Plus it already comes with its own 70s rock tune for the ad campaign. Just have to change the words a bit: "Whoa-oh Black Bitter! Bam-a-lam!!!" And, yes, I want credit.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2010/09/01/Albany_Ale__When_Did_They_Stop_Using_Wheat_Malt_'

    Albany Ale: When Did They Stop Using Wheat Malt?

    Posted: September 1st, 2010, 3:48am CEST by Alan McLeod

    I came across this reference to the malting of wheat in a 1869 series of essays and reports called The Annals of Albany. Apparently one Peter Kalm, a professor from a Swedish university, visited North America from 1748 to 1750 making some sort of economic and natural resources survey. He made these notes on 15 June 1749:

    They sow wheat in the neighborhood of Albany, with great advantage. From one bushel they get twelve sometimes : if the soil be good, they get twenty bushels. If their crop amounts only to ten bushels from one, they think it very trifling. The inhabitants of the country round Albany are Dutch and Germans. The Germans live in several great villages, and sow great quantities of wheat, which is brought to Albany : and from thence they send many yachts laden with flour to New York. The wheat flour from Albany is reckoned the best in all North America, except that from Sopus or Kingston, a place between Albany and New York. All the bread in Albany is made of wheat. At New York they pay the Albany flour with several shillings more per hundred weight, than that from other places. Rye is likewise sown here, but not so generally as wheat. They do not sow much barley here, because they do not reckon the profits very great. Wheat is so plentiful that they make malt of it. In the neighborhood of New York, I saw great fields sown with barley. They do not sow more oats than are necessary for their horses.

    This passage was referenced in an earlier quotation I included in an Albany ale post back in April and cropped in June but it has me thinking. If they aren't even growing barley and are malting wheat in 1749, then it is likely the strong ale that Sir William Johnson of the Mohawk Valley, west of Albany, was drinking from 1750 maybe to his death in 1774 was a wheat beer. But by 1835, the brewers of the area responding to a set of questions posed by the New York State Senate all respond by saying that they use pure ingredients including barley malt. I don't catch any reference to wheat malt. The use of barley by this point is corroborated by this quotation from 1827.

    So - am I slowly, clumsily chasing two Albany Ales? A strong wheat ale made by the Dutch up to the latter 1700s and then a strong barley ale in the early 1800s?

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2010/08/31/Question__What_Is_Your_Best_Beer_Giveaway_'

    Question: What Is Your Best Beer Giveaway?

    Posted: August 31st, 2010, 1:52pm CEST by Alan McLeod

    I am curious about something. I don't know that I am personally all that evangelical about beer. When I have the beer I like and the people I like together it is as much about exploring or, rather, explaining my good beer obsession as it is about recruiting new members. Nope, the day I actually believe in that beer community thing is the day I find myself preparing pamphlets for a meeting: "maybe you might like to come to our rally? Here. Have some literature."

    But I do give things away. I don't seem to be able to keep a copy of Hops and Glory, for example. I think that Pete's book justifies a lot for me and neatly converts what otherwise can be considered my wee problem into something interesting, even brainy. Other than books, I seem to push Beau's Lug Tread and Pretty Things Jack D'or on people new to good beer and dubbels on the next steppers. Notice the spicy yeast, I say. The bread crustiness in the malt.

    Do you do this? Why and how? What is your favorite small gift or sharing beer? What makes it work for you?

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2010/08/31/Why_Is_The_Beer_News_So_Dull_Tonight_'

    Why Is The Beer News So Dull Tonight?

    Posted: August 31st, 2010, 3:45am CEST by Alan McLeod

    Some days the only beer news is stuff that you really don't care a bit about. Today is that sort of day. Consider these gems:

    Maybe there'll be a day soon when I will have something more than bullet points to post. Then again - maybe bullet points are the future of beer blogging.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2010/08/30/Back_From_The_Road_And_Did_I_Really_Learn_Anything_'

    Back From The Road And Did I Really Learn Anything?

    Posted: August 30th, 2010, 4:31am CEST by Alan McLeod

    I don't know if you can draw conclusions from a trip just a couple of hours and laundry loads after hitting the driveway. Especially when you haven't even pulled out the digital camera to pretty up the post or to see if there are are any ideas in the images. So far these come to what I might still call a mind even after nine days and 2500 km:

    • Kids continue to be a great reason why I don't have to pay duties on the excess beers being hauled back into Canada. Who would figure that many bottles worth that much could be described as "oh, and I have some beer, too" when asked at the border?
    • Spending some more time in Albany to research the pre-lager ale thing would be quite fine.
    • Wegmans grocery chain continues to make astounding moves into being as good as any good beer store in central New York. Huge selection. They even had Pinkus hefe. Nutty.
    • I bought a 24 dollar beer. I can't believe that I did but it is true. Won't tell you what or where but we can all blame my loading of a counter when you have 8 minutes to buy a mixed case or two.
    • Beer is a good ice breaking gift but no one really wants to talk that much about it. I don't think I go on but in most situations good beer to guys with kids hanging off them is pretty much like good jam to a kid who likes toast. Tasty or not tasty is all that matters.
    • 24 hours later, Aventinus is still striking me as great with a good steak.
    • I wonder whether the Sam Adams glass is the Segway of good beer? Works perfectly well but, upon reflection, no one seems to be following the example.

    Nothing too profound. I was, after all, not really a beer trip - though I found myself taking photos of brew pubs I didn't even enter. I will have to think a little more about what that might mean.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2010/08/29/New_York__A_Restaurant_In_Albany_With_A_Beer_List'

    New York: A Restaurant In Albany With A Beer List

    Posted: August 29th, 2010, 4:33am CEST by Alan McLeod

    OK, sure there are 700 wines at the subtitled restaurant dp, An American Brasserie - but they have Blue Point Lager, Dogfish 60 and Ommegang's Hennepin and others on tap as well as ten or twelve well selected bottles. The stash in the back of van might be better today at the end of our trip but I had an Aventinus with my NY strip loin. How many places can I do that?

    Why were we there? Well, I got tired of hitting the highway hotels on my family trips and picked the moderately priced Hampton Inn in downtown Albany. How downtown? It sits behind the 1640s First Church of Albany. Is there an older continuous congregation in North America? A Catholic institution in Quebec perhaps? Is this now a Good Ecclesiastical Blog? No.

    Anyway, the food was great and, after a surprisingly active drive through highway 2 across northern Massachusetts, taking on hairpins and deep gorges, it hit the spot. The kids were well mannered and the staff were good enough to jack up the background jazz a tad and give us a buffer of three tables or so. We do have a loud little one after all. Owner Yono Purnomo took time to say hello and was interested in the beery feedback.

    This is the sort of thing we need to encourage. Not an island but a tide. A little good beer everywhere rather than a lot of good beer in a few places. After driving down the cliff east of North Adams, good beer and fine food was just the thing. Does it matter that they didn't have twice the taps or four times the bottles?

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2010/08/27/Why_Can_t_The_Young_Just_Drink_Beer_Like_They_Oughta_'

    Why Can't The Young Just Drink Beer Like They Oughta?

    Posted: August 27th, 2010, 12:04am CEST by Alan McLeod

    An odd beer story out of Canada's province with the best track record for coming up with odd beer stories. Apparently, the young are just not drinking enough macro-bleck:

    Joel Levesque, Moosehead's vice-president, said the demographic that drinks the most beer, New Brunswickers aged 19 to 25, is shrinking and despite sunny weather, summer sales are down. He said that had sparked a fierce competition among the big brewers. "You entice people to take your brand by offering something that they can't get from their brand regularly, for example a T-shirt in the box or in this case, it's $5 coupons," he said. Levesque said there would be more discounts as major labels try to clear shelves by Labour Day.

    Interesting to note that the province's craft brewers have no such worries - not competition at all as they are selling every drop they brew. And the government booze monopoly notes that there has been no overall drop in beer sales this summer. So, does this mean that people there are content to use their market power to force decision making in the brew economy? In that respect, demanding discount coupons for industrial beer or supporting craft brewers in this sense is a similar consumer response. And remember, too, that this is a border province where people are happy to slip over to Maine or Quebec for a better beer selection.

    Isn't it the new generation of drinkers just following its own sense of good taste and good value? Wouldn't it be nice it was actually an example of the consumer getting its way even in a monopolist overly regulated marketplace?

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2010/08/26/New_Hampshire__The_Portsmouth_Brewery__Portsmouth'

    New Hampshire: The Portsmouth Brewery, Portsmouth

    Posted: August 26th, 2010, 2:55am CEST by Alan McLeod

    Happy to have gotten the chance to have supper at The Portsmouth Brewery this evening here where Maine meets New Hampshire on the Atlantic shore. It's still cloudy and damp but at least the sheets of rain from earlier in the week are gone. Piling into a pub was just the thing.

    I got the hefeweizen and a milk stout was ordered across the table. The hefe was rich and pineappled and the milk stout creamy chocolate. I had wanted to extend my relationship with the stout but the growler wasn't available. First, I was told oddly that milk stout can't handle being in a growler due to its low carbonation level. I gave my assurance that I was familiar with the style and a growler would be fine taking their caution into account. Then, coming back from checking, I was told there just weren't any growlers anyway. That made more sense.

    We had their pulled pork, a veggie burger as well as chowders and a hummus dip. All were tasty and the service was friendly and fast. Best of all, the place was full of families like us with young kids and no one batted an eye. Prices were good with meals coming in at under ten bucks and the pints costing $4.50. I am consoling myself with the Red Sox and a Port Brewing Wipe Out IPA that I picked up the other day but a growler of the milk stout would have been pretty swell back here at the hotel.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2010/08/25/What_Beer_Goes_With_Non_Stop_Rain_'

    What Beer Goes With Non-Stop Rain?

    Posted: August 25th, 2010, 3:21pm CEST by Alan McLeod

    There are summer beers for cooling you off in the sunshine. There are Octoberfest beers. There are imperial stouts for sipping as the winter weather howls beyond the doors. But what beer to have when the holiday is awash with rain?

    I had a Mayflower porter last night which made a reasonable claim to filling that gap. No sour tang that I noticed but plenty of those dusty roasty things going on in the glass. Bought a six for $8.99 at Murphy's in Falmouth - an extraordinarily good value - and purchased within 35 miles of where it was made giving me that wholesome new age feeling of goodness that complying with 100 mile consumption edicts provide.

    The BAers give it the love it deserves... but aren't porters a bit September? I know that' next week but you want to be certain about these things, right?

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2010/08/23/Massachusetts__Kappy_s_Liquors__East_Falmouth'

    Massachusetts: Kappy's Liquors, East Falmouth

    Posted: August 23rd, 2010, 3:07pm CEST by Alan McLeod

    Not a full report yet but stopped at Kappy's in East Falmouth, Cape Cod yesterday to have a look. It gets good word of mouth on the review websites like RateBeer and certain deserves the attention. I had to ask at a grocery store about the rules for beer buying in Massachusetts. Unlike New York, you can buy beer in the same place you can buy wine and spirits. Unlike Maine, there is no alcohol in corner stores, grocery stores or gas stations.

    I picked up a bottle of Pretty Things Beer + Ale Project's American Darling Batch Two, June 2010 for $7.99. The beer comes with a sub-title "Good Time Lager". I like how Pretty Things gives you lots to read and consider on their labels. A beer with a name that long deserves italics. At 7%, one of the better strong pale lagers I have had from a US craft brewer, it finishes with a big malty yeast rich statement... a statement that says "I am big and malty and yeasty rich." BAer's love it. I may have to have another while here given that this is local if by local we mean made in state.

    I also picked up a Port Brewing Wipe Out IPA, again at 7%, for $5.99 which makes me wonder where there is a margin for profit after cross continent transport from California. A finely balanced hoppy... statement that again earns BAer love.

    Directions here.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2010/08/22/New_York__Sometimes_You_Want_To_Bring_Wine'

    New York: Sometimes You Want To Bring Wine

    Posted: August 22nd, 2010, 12:56am CEST by Alan McLeod

    Fifteen or more years ago, Ontario's wine, spirits and imported beer monopoly carried a few bottles of Millbrook for one brief shining season and it has been something of a holy grail - or maybe a lost Atlantis - for us ever since looking back on those pre-kid, pre-mortgage days. Reasonably priced regional quality red wines that needed no excuse or explanation. So it was with glee that I realized that I could manufacture a route to Cape Cod that passed near the winery. We were in and out quickly having neither tour nor tasting. Kids will not put up with that sort of thing when there is a hotel pool on offer. They join the sack of goodies for sharing along with a growler of Ontario craft beer as well as one of our Rieslings and an ice wine. In the future, cars will come with wee wine and beer cellars for such moments.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2010/08/21/Finally___Beer_s__Man_Bites_Dog__Story_'

    Finally - Beer's "Man Bites Dog" Story!

    Posted: August 21st, 2010, 3:07am CEST by Alan McLeod

    It can get a bit dreary going through the Google news items every few days looking for a story that catches the eye. There are two classes of "beer news" that depress. First, the over regulation by a small committee of a simple consumable in a small town. Second, the petty crime that involves beer. Whether they are thefts, underage parties or beatings they make for grim reading - but today beer got one back on the hooligan and the thug:

    A shopkeeper from Greater Manchester fought off armed raiders - by hurling cans of beer at them. Three masked men, armed with a gun, entered an off-licence in Lord Street, Radcliffe, at 1230 BST on Thursday. They threatened the 53-year-old shopkeeper with the gun but he threw the cans at them, a Greater Manchester Police spokesman said... Det Con Peter Graham, of Greater Manchester Police, said: "What this man did was courageous - in sharp contrast to the cowardly actions of the robbers themselves. "With no thought to his own safety he fought them off and they fled with their tails between their legs.

    Fabulous! A small victory for the righteous place of beer in a civilized world. We need fewer stories like this but, of course, a few stories like this as well.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2010/08/19/Is_Giving_Up_Imported_Beer_A_Good_Thing_'

    Is Giving Up Imported Beer A Good Thing?

    Posted: August 19th, 2010, 2:15pm CEST by Alan McLeod

    My old desk top Dell gave up yesterday. I am a couple of days away from a vacation and I feel like doing much the same. But what about giving up imported beer not for the cause of slackerdom but for a higher cause?

    A majority of Canadians would give up imported beer or wine to reduce shipping and lessen the environmental impact of imported products, according to an Ipsos Reid poll conducted for Postmedia News. About 67 per cent of Canadians polled said they'd relinquish imported beer -- what, no Heineken? -- and 56 per cent said they'd forgo foreign wine. "That's just a testament to the good beer that we produce in Canada, and increasingly, the good wine as well," said Sean Simpson, a senior research manager at Ipsos Reid.

    While I am not the first in line for right-wing libertarian economic opinions, it seems to me to be reasonable to want to avoid the extra costs of travel, and not just the extra cash. But wouldn't it be nice if the reasons for forgoing the foreign were also based on the taste of what was in the glass? I can't imagine I am the only one who has been disappointed with the too well traveled ale. And I am not talking only of the extreme case of the beaten up beer. I recently have had a couple of beer from The Bruery from California which, though reasonably priced, I suspect had just gotten beyond their natural sphere of... influence? Maybe sphere of persuasion. I am left with a poor impression of the brewery but have to remember that the would not likely taste as they did closer to their home. And how much more the case for the green bottled, mass produced stuff.

    So while it is swell to be green in an abstract sense, isn't it just as valid or even more so to pass on bottles that have been trucked a thousand miles or more because a more local one should always be fresher?

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2010/08/18/Albany_Ale__What_Hops_Would_They_Have_Used_'

    Albany Ale: What Hops Would They Have Used?

    Posted: August 18th, 2010, 1:49am CEST by Alan McLeod

    Remember Albany ale? Last spring, I found a number of references to beer being shipped around the eastern seaboard from Newfoundland to New Orleans as well as references to it being sold in Texas and even California. Not sure what it was but there was plenty of evidence that it was something.

    The other day I found something particularly helpful. In 1835, the Senate of the State of New York received the Report of the Select Committee... on the Memorial of Sundry Inhabitants of the City of Albany, in Regard to the Manufacture of Beer. Forty pages long, the Report consists of answers by brewers given in response to six questions posed by Senators intended to discover whether the brewers of Albany were brewing impure beer. Question 3 gets to the point:

    3. Have coculus indicus, nux vomica, opium, laurel leaves, copperas, alum, sulphuric acid, salt of steel, aloes, capsicum, sulphate of iron, or copperas, or any other deleterious or poisonous drug or compound, or any or either of them, or any extract or essential property thereof, been, at any time, or in any quantity, directly or indirectly infused, mixed, put or used in beer, ale or porter, either when being manufactured or when preparing for market? If aye, at what time, in what quantities, and by whom?

    Yikes. Yiks, too. Happy to report, however, the answers were a complete and fairly convincing denial of all charges, charges no doubt trumped up by some downstate faction. But in giving that answer, the brewers, brewery owners and staff give a lot of information about what was going on with brewing in and around the Hudson Valley at that time. I will return to this text on other topics but today, I want to look at what they say about hops and where that can lead us. Here are some of the comments:

    • James D. Gardner of Vassar and Co., Poughkeepsie stated: "I do not know the cause of that flavor, which gives to some beer the taste of aloes, unless it is owing to the use of strong hops which may have become damaged by packing, before sufficiently cured, or to unskilfulness in the operator, or to both combined."
    • James Wallace of the firm of J+U Wallace, Troy, NY reported: "There is a great variety in the flavor of hops: some have a strong, others a more delicate flavor, which readily accounts for the different flavors perceptible in the ales of the same establishment."
    • Thomas Read of Thom. Read and Co., Troy NY confirms he used 2.5 to 5 pounds of hops to a barrel and that they looked for the palest bales of hops to use in their pale ale.
    What does that tell us? Well, no one describes varieties of hops even if they come in different colours, different degrees of curing and damage as well as different degrees of delicacy. We can fall into a trap thinking people in the past were not as perceptive as we are. Well, it is clear the brewers are looking for differences in hop characteristics with a professional eye but do not see varieties or breeds of hops as something available to them.

    What were these hops? It is reasonable to suggest they were New York state hops. In Volume 50 of the American Journal of Pharmacy from 1877, there is an useful article setting out the importance of hop industry in central NY in the mid-1800s. In 1860, it states, each of four countries of central NY including Otsego produced more hops than all hops produced in the USA outside of New York state. Two varieties are mentioned by the pharmacists: "large and small cluster." In another report, this time the 1860 Report of New York State Cheese Manufacturers' Association, a trip to Otsego County is describe in which the hop plantings in every village are estimated. We are told at page 150 that at Richfield, about 75 miles west of Albany two varieties were grown:

    Messrs. Allen & Hinds, the leading hop merchants of' the town, informed us that the past winter had been unfavorable to hop plantations in this section, and many yards had been badly winter-killed, more especially the older yards. There had been greater losses from this cause than in any previous year, but a considerable number of new plantations had been set, and it was believed the new yards would more than supply the place of those winter-killed. Two varieties of the hop are generally cultivated in town, the Pompey and Cluster. The Golding hop of England had been tried but did not succeed well, being liable to rust . The Pompey is a large coarse variety, a vigorous grower, but inferior to the Cluster in strength and flavor, and does not keep its color so well as the latter variety.

    While there is still a village of Pompey and even a modern day effort in the re-establishment of the central NY of the hop industry there, we are unfamiliar with that strain. We do know about Cluster, however. Cluster is still with us, often described as an old American cultivar which is, notably, a hybrid of Dutch strains and wild indigenous ones. Hmm... where did the Dutch meet the wild in the US? The Albany area, of course.

    There is more to know about Cluster and the need to more closely locate it in the early 1800s in an Albany brewer's log book but for now suffice it to say that when the brewers of Albany ale were talking about hops they were likely talking about the finest hops available locally, Cluster.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2010/08/17/How_To_Improve_The_View_Of_Craft_Beer__3741'

    How To Improve The View Of Craft Beer #3741

    Posted: August 17th, 2010, 2:55am CEST by Alan McLeod

    Apparently, if there is a "we" acting on some sort of grand plan, the plan needs to address the workplace and workplace ethics:

    It doesn’t even matter is the boss or manager has chosen a glass of Merlot or beer, then offered it to the job-seeker or that the job-seeker shows no effect of alcohol. The negative association is so strong that, despite evidence to the contrary, there is a perception of impaired reasoning. “Prospective job candidates largely fail to anticipate the imbibing-idiot bias,” writes Rick from the University of Michigan and Schweitzer from the University of Pennsylvania. “Candidates in informal interview settings follow the boss’s lead, even when the boss chooses to consume alcohol. Our demonstration of a robust imbibing-idiot bias suggests that this form of mimicry is a mistake.” Why a mistake? “Consuming, or merely holding, an alcoholic beverage reduced perceived intelligence [even] in the absence of any actual reduction in cognitive performance,” they say.

    "Imbibing-idiot bias"? How odd. Personally, I find T-totalers a bit weak in the rafters if you get my drift. But it is not really about who is wise and who is not. It is about who has control and what delusions they are acting under.

    So, if I was a clever beer advocacy conspirator, I would get beer into the hands of the bosses (or, rather, if we are honest... middle management) to make sure that even if they were imbibing then they need to be viewing craft beer appreciation as an exception to the imbibing-idiot bias. How? A complex and overwhelming volume of knowledge making the middle manager uncomfortable, giving a clear impression that the job prospect has one up. We need scripts, people. Web pages filled with scripts for the job seeking beer fan. And then, sooner or later, we become the hiring classes. It could happen.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2010/08/16/Book_Review__Great_American_Craft_Beer__Andy_Crouch'

    Book Review: Great American Craft Beer, Andy Crouch

    Posted: August 16th, 2010, 3:09am CEST by Alan McLeod

    One of the most important things I ever learned in life was the importance of an index. Why? Well, if you are overwhelmed by information as I was in law school I learned that reading the index for each course's material (because that is what we called it: "material") was what was in the course and what was not. Andy (who I call "Andy" even though we have never met due to our rich, rewarding but inherently thin relationship in the nature of all internet relationships) flagged this about this his second book with his thoughtful post "Great American Craft Beer: What’s Included, What’s Not…" This is not a book about every US craft beer. It does not describe every beer bar. It is an effort to exemplify where US craft beer is now.

    Which beings me to a quibble. I wish it was called "Great American Craft Beer 2010" as I would like this to be an annual book. "WHAT!!!" says Andy. Exactly. A superhuman effort would be required to make such a book an annual - but it is odd that no such thing exists for a country as rich and diverse as the USA. It also contains no profiles of brewers, no real history of beer in the land and no maps. The first 45 pages include a number of brief essays on the background of beer and at the end there is a bit about enjoying beer but it is the 200 pages in the middle that are the meat of the book - reviews of specific beers.

    One might say that this is the section that will go stale the fastest but it takes a picture of where we are all now. And by "we" I mean anyone who has an interest in US craft beer at this time when there are so many false pretenders, established giants, tiny interesting voices and weird experimenters out there on the beer store shelves. This is a golden era and this book captures it. From beers as pervasive as Magic Hat #9 to rarities like Three Floyds Dark Lord of which Andy writes:

    At the far horizon of the Imperial Stout Spectrum lurks a beer whose flavor and motor oil consistency have made it perhaps the most geeked out craft beer on the planet. Three Floyds sells much coveted bottles of its near-mythical Imperial Stout on one day per year, appropriately called Dark Lord Day.

    Note: that is about half the whole entry. Andy's writing is economical, vivid and accurate. You will see that throughout the book. We can only hope that it is at least a first edition if not an annual affair.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2010/08/14/More_Travel_Advice_Needed___Any_Perry_Or_Cider_'

    More Travel Advice Needed - Any Perry Or Cider?

    Posted: August 14th, 2010, 7:57pm CEST by Alan McLeod

    The advice so far has been great. Now we are working on the route - it looks like we are heading from Binghamton NY to Cape Cod through Connecticut and Rhode Island. Looking for real makers of apple cider or pear perry. Pete got me thinking. Any ideas?

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2010/08/13/Beau_s_Thursday_Night_Tasting_In_the_Backyard'

    Beau's Thursday Night Tasting In the Backyard

    Posted: August 13th, 2010, 4:23am CEST by Alan McLeod

    A fun way to spend the evening. Beau's had their quarterly business meetings in town and they all came over for a few hours of opening bottles - including the father, son and a sizable host. We nine started well with two saisons and biere de garde: Hennepin, Jack D'or and 3 Monts. Batch 10 from Pretty Things was much better than the more recent bacth 13. Lesson: let it sit.

    Things got a little wobbly with three Quebec takes on Belgian white beer. We thought RJ's Coup de Grisou was fine and a good value beer. And Barbier from L'Ilse D'Orleans was not well understood given its level of rich maltiness. But Blanche from Charlevoix was a revelation in nasal interaction with beer. Freesia. Fabulous.

    Three more bottles were opened. Trade Winds Tripel from the Bruery was a bit muddled with a nice aroma. Too much of the malt ball for the style or maybe just our level of interest given the other choices. Next, the Poperings Hommel Ale, as always, was amazing. The greatest pale ale in the history of the planet? Could be.

    Then the taxi was called for the eight to be off. It was time. The mosquitoes had begun to bite. Just time to open a quart of Drie Fontienen's Oude Gueze, one of the few beer that could follow a Poperings. Like any divider of people, some were not with it. They got the first taxi. The rest of use stood on the driveway, waiting on the warm quiet summer night sipping. Then the taxi and then they were off and away.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2010/08/11/Dear_Craft_Brewers__Get_A_Canning_Line'

    Dear Craft Brewers: Get A Canning Line

    Posted: August 11th, 2010, 2:10pm CEST by Alan McLeod

    Dear Rob Tod. I have realized that I don't think I really care about that corked 750 ml bottle after all:

    We have been doing cork-finished beers for a number of years and early on we wanted to come out with a lower-alcohol, pretty full-flavored but around 4.5%- to 5%-alcohol beer. It was called the Allagash Special. That was in a cork-finished 750 mL bottle and it didn’t sell in that package. It cost us a lot to make it and cost us a lot to package in that bottle, so we had to charge a lot for it. We got beat up for it and people didn’t buy it. I think people want higher alcohol with the bigger, cork-finished special releases. I’ll welcome it when the consumer will buy those lower alcohol, fuller-flavored beers in that package. I think it will be great.

    Why in "that package"? Look, I don't want to suggest Rob is the moving force behind corked bottles but he does give a very good quote. And he takes a question well. I was fortunate enough to catch a moment him when I popped into the Allagash retail shop last summer when I mentioned my unhappy reaction to one of the annual editions of Victor. He was patient and listened, not indicating at all that he was staring at a sunburnt Canadian beer blogger somewhat smelling of fried clams and ice cream with a child tugging at his arm who really didn't make that much sense. It was, rather, Ron Jefferies who, when he was kind enough to give me the best part of an hour at the end of a Friday, I asked about the price implications of the corked bottle. I was shocked.

    So, in telling you about the only two times I have ever talked to actual US craft brewers my point is this: the bottle may well add two bucks to the price of a beer. If the point of a session is to comfortably have more than one (or even more) why do I want to see so many dollars dedicated to filling the recycling bin? If Knut of Norway can have a cheap and cheery Rodenbach from a can, what beer shouldn't be packaged in that consumer friendly format? Even if not in a can, if you want to to sell your session beers please make them reasonably affordable to buy. Like a bottle of Allagash White or Jolly Pumpkin Bam. h/t Lew.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2010/08/11/Is_A_Beer_Price_Crisis_Coming__Will_You_Notice_'

    Is A Beer Price Crisis Coming? Will You Notice?

    Posted: August 11th, 2010, 1:10am CEST by Alan McLeod

    Bad news with the impending Russian crop failure:

    It is the latest high cost of living to hit families that are reeling from the recession. Prices have already more than doubled in the past two decades, with the average cost of a pint of lager climbing from £1.08 in 1989 to £2.81 in 2009, the British Beer & Pub Association said...The price of a loaf of bread is set to increase by 10p to 129p, which would be a record, after Russia suffers from its hottest summer in a century, wiping out much of the world’s wheat harvest. There are also fears that rising prices on the wholesale energy market will push up gas prices for households, after a small supplier put up its prices by 23 per cent last week.

    Holy sign of the endtimes, Batman! While the tax issue is UK specific given their years of wanton public sector spending, something smug Canada gave up in the early 90s, that all seems pretty bad. And it may be - but have a look at the Canadian Wheat Board 2-row barley prices for the last couple of years. Prices are basically down 37% from their highs in the late winter of 2008. The market was "bleak" last year. A glut was caused. Canny Scots didn't even plant the stuff this year. And now there may be not enough to go around. Prices this week so far seem to have dropped - but who the heck can read a chart like that? Australians call even Russia's move to ban exports "The Great Grain Robbery"!

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2010/08/09/Summer_RI__MA__CT_Travel_Advice_Needed'

    Summer RI, MA, CT Travel Advice Needed

    Posted: August 9th, 2010, 3:21am CEST by Alan McLeod

    We have a ten day stretch coming up hanging out with family at Cape Cod. This means snack shacks, maybe a brewpub or two and definitely beer shopping. But this is largely unknown territory for us. We are northern New England travelers. A few years ago we tried to find Connecticut for a few days and had a horrible time of it, finding little accessible to the visitor. Surely, it was us and not the entire state. So, I need your help - where to go in Massachusetts, Rhode Island and Connecticut that is:

    • family friendly,
    • includes great fried clams or hot dogs or ice cream,
    • offers me a decent chance at a great craft beer, and / or
    • will fill my trunk full of good beer to fill the stash for a long Canadian winter's sipping?

    This is vital information so please do feel free to go on and on and on. I am not sure Google maps understands my needs but I am hoping you do.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2010/08/08/Hey__I_Can_Moderate_All_Comments_'

    Hey, I Can Moderate All Comments!

    Posted: August 8th, 2010, 12:10am CEST by Alan McLeod

    You all should be jealous.

    If I haven't told you all recently, I am eternally grateful to my former employers and clients at silverorange for letting me use and play with their technology and, I hope, act as a testing platform. Who zat? Well, I am proud to have been their lawyer over a decade ago now when they were in high school. Among many other things, they are part of that group that supports Mozilla and played a big role in the creation of the iconic Firefox logo... which I suppose is another way of saying icon.

    One of those other things they have done is create the greatest blogging system ever, the same system that this blog runs on. And I just discovered the moderate all comments button. As well as the top banner ad function. Anyone want to pay for a top banner ad? [I think if I click on this function over here my computer servers ice tea.]

    Anyway, comments are now being set as moderated for the default because I have attracted the attention of 3 smelly loser 23 year olds in Romania who are spamming the site with manually placed Viagra links. The system automatically stopped 69 comments today but two did get through. As soon as they pack it in, comments will go back to the free for all that you have come to expect.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2010/08/07/Session_42__That_Special_Beer_Or_Place_Theme'

    Session 42: That Special Beer Or Place Theme

    Posted: August 7th, 2010, 2:07am CEST by Alan McLeod

    It had to happen, right? You have 42 themes and there has to be overlap. At least it's overlap and not those non-beer related subjects of a couple of years ago. So, session 4 was about a special place for me - even if for most it was about a local brew. Session 21 was about that special beer in which I came to this cunning conclusion:

    Favorites? I don't have time for no stinking favorites. There's too much out there to worry about favorites.

    Add in Session 20's beer and a special memory and you may be seeing my point.

    So what to make of this question? Try Session 9 for a start. Then Session 5. Then, well, try the others.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2010/08/06/Quebec__Joseph_Bellarmin__M_Brasserie_De_L_Ile_D_Orleans'

    Quebec: Joseph Bellarmin, M'Brasserie De L'Ile D'Orleans

    Posted: August 6th, 2010, 2:59am CEST by Alan McLeod

    I like the style of this brewery's labels and brew branding. They all have a folk arty drawing off of a local character from the past. My French is so poor that I can't tell the tale of Joe - but I do note "Houblonée a Froid" in that green circle, cold hopped. You can't really see it in the picture provided care of my dying camera. It's starting to look like art, isn't it? It's not another dead digital camera to join the pile. It's the art camera.

    This DIPA pours a deep orange amber with slow moving carbonation hinting at thickness. The head is rich creamy foam and froth. Heat, sweet herb and bready malt on the nose. In the mouth a bit of a surprise. Big but not huge. Sweet creamy with heat, grapefruit pith sweet malt and some very singular herbal notes. A bit burn at the end. Quite nutty with star anise as well. More of a semi-sub-DIPA than an IIPA. You know know what I mean?

    It gets some curious looks from RateBeerians perhaps from its sub-imperial reality but great respect from the BAers. Its a seasonal special for autumn but I am not sure that it's the autumn of 2009 or 2010. If it is a year old, it has held up very well even if that hint of star anise is not going to be everyone's favorite thing.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2010/08/06/Oh__To_Be_In_Moscow...'

    Oh, To Be In Moscow...

    Posted: August 6th, 2010, 1:53am CEST by Alan McLeod

    ...now that the heat wave's in full bloom:

    I walked outside this morning to find a gang of bare-chested fellows, with shaved heads, sweaty snouts, and stretchmarked potbellies, sitting on the guardrail near our doorway, guzzling beer and smoking, and for good measure, belching and swearing about the heat. Any walk around town reveals similar scenes: men have at times dispensed with much of their clothing, and carrying a beer (plus lit cigarette) is now de rigueur. This is legal: there's no law banning open containers of alcohol in Russia. Except that in Russia, beer hardly qualifies as alcohol. (Unless possibly it's that 12-proof brew marked krepkoye.) Beer is more like a training beverage. But vodka is considered alcohol, and thus possesses, many would point out, curative properties for whatever ails you. So fighting noxious heat with medicinal doses of vodka makes perfect sense. And I don't mean some dainty cocktail, like, say, a vodka collins. The idea of mixing vodka with anything except more vodka is an abomination. Why dilute the healing fun?

    I don't have any real point to saving the quotation from Jeffrey Tayler's article in The Atlantic other than to note what an excellent piece of drinks writing the article represents, including its harsh observation of the stupid waste that can accompany empty boozing. In Moscow - now.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2010/08/05/California__Black_Orchard__The_Bruery__Placentia'

    California: Black Orchard, The Bruery, Placentia

    Posted: August 5th, 2010, 1:56am CEST by Alan McLeod

    A discontinued beer. Great. It's not even listed by the brewery. Never made their blog...oh, yes it did. Still, its departed. Yet there it is, cooling is the cistern. I picked this up in Ithaca because I had never seen on of their brews this far east and was please to see the price below ten bucks. No soak.

    Well, that might explain it. Fountain! Lips clamped over the 750 ml bottle mouth, we do a dance until more toweling and the glass is found. Yet spurting into my gob, there is a very pleasant dry cocoa note. Once the glass is found, it pours a very deep dark black with only a thin off white rim. Not a lot of aroma - burnt cream spice. In the mouth, a little sour, cocoa, burnt toast and, as the BAers note, orange juice. Light and watery fresh orange juice. Not thin. A bit of an odd combination as it is like the end of breakfast - juice and toast scrapings. What schwarzbier is to a certain type of lager maybe this is to a Belgian wit. That might be it.

    So, something of an experiment but not one without its charms and uses.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2010/08/04/Beer_Most_Slimming_When_Not_Consumed_'

    Beer Most Slimming When Not Consumed!

    Posted: August 4th, 2010, 3:33am CEST by Alan McLeod

    This has to be up there with the "open source beer" clap trap... or maybe the "women better tasters" silliness. It seems the more people need to make a buck the greater the need to foist a 90% rubbishy idea on people. And this one is pure fool's gold:

    CAMRA, the Campaign for Real Ale, and the Beer Academy, have today come together to highlight to UK consumers that beer, when drunk in moderation, can help you lose weight, cut alcohol consumption, and more generally, help supplement a healthy lifestyle. New research released during CAMRA's Great British Beer Festival at Earls Court, London (August 3-7) where over 500 British real ales are currently being showcased, shows that 34% of men and 29% of women incorrectly believe that beer contains more calories than other alcoholic drinks.

    There is a huge concern with the effect of beer on health. The most read post on this blog is about the calories in big bomb beers. Drinking a bomber of high alcohol beer is like chugging a mug of cake icing. Yet CAMRA knows better. It takes the lowest level of alcohol content it could suggest with a straight face (3.8%) and places it in the half pint serving so loved by Enid Sharples. Who else in their right mind stops at one half pint of a 3.8% beer? No one.

    Let's be clear. This is up there with a Bud Lite Lime Draft commercial as far as truth in advertising goes. One just has to consider the heft of those lined up at the opening of the Great British Beer Festival this morning. Curved yet not swerved. If I were to give up beer and, you know, do something with my life I would likely drop 10% of my body weight without a thought. And that would stay off diabetes, relieve stress on the joints and do any number of other good things. Same for many a beer writer and many a beer nerd. As a great mind once sang, my hips don't lie. Those thin people you see drinking a lot of beer? They do insane things like smoke or jog extra to make up for it.

    Beer is many good things but it is not all good things. Making up hooey-kablooey dingbattery like this serves no one that matters. Not the drinkers, some of whom may take the wooden nickel and put off the visit to the weight scale for another month. Or the brewers who have to fight off the stigma of being associated with transparency. Or the health professionals trying to prove that a moderate amount of drink is not a sign of the Devil. Like all such foolishness, it will make for a few passing columns in trade papers (and a few thin pay packets for the columnists) but that's about it.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2010/08/02/The_Best_Way_To_Teach_Folk_About_Good_Beer_'

    The Best Way To Teach Folk About Good Beer?

    Posted: August 2nd, 2010, 6:34pm CEST by Alan McLeod

    The backyard BBQ. It has to be. Likely because of Pete's daydreaming about his English garden, I got the urge to have a smoky BBQ yesterday. Well, it was the day before really as I had to put the ribs into an overnight soak of Sierra Nevada pale ale, a bunch of ends of BBQ sauce bottles from Dinosaur and Beale Street, onions, lemons and grapefruit juice.

    The blue box tells the tale. I picked up the Sierra Nevada when we were over in upstate NY Saturday - after sticking my nose in Maggies on the River, a newish Watertown NY beer bar with 32 taps.¹ The Sierra Nevada went for 18 bucks a 12 pack at the grocery.² Also picked up some Hennepin as well as a six of Goose Island 312. All well made, good value but approachable craft beers. Throw in some other odds and ends from the stash like travel beer from Ithaca and Quebec, samples of Granville Island's excellent Robson Street Hefeweizen and before you know it, people are sucking on ribs, chowing down on pulled pork coleslaw sandwiches, dipping everything in mop sauce and washing everything down with tasty ales. At the end when everyone is in a good frame of mind, break out some big bombs as sippers. Last night we had Southern Tier Oat, an 11% wall of dark malty goodness. All was very well.

    Lesson? You want the people you know to like craft beer? Give it away with a plate of BBQ. They'll get the point every time.

    ¹ [Ed.: Pretty respectable beer list.]
    ²[Ed.: The same beer I once saw in a Canadian beer bar for $7.99 a bottle!]

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2010/07/31/New_York__Zuur__Ommegang__Cooperstown'

    New York: Zuur, Ommegang, Cooperstown

    Posted: July 31st, 2010, 2:29am CEST by Alan McLeod

    I know I should have gone to the brewery. I know. I know I know. But I was on holiday and sick and I needed to save it up for the Baseball Hall of Fame because it's the year another sweet Expo enters and, well, I liked the Expos. I got the hat, OK? Let it go. Jeesh.

    Zurr doesn't even seem listed on the site for Ommegang anymore. 6% Flemish Oud Brown Ale with cherries added. The cherries do seem a wee bit of a cheat as this all seems a little tiny (tiny) bit easy yet to have a competent Goudenband clone on the loose in North America is, you know, really good. It pours active lightly reddened light chestnut with a well held beige head. Cherry vinegar on the nose. With the cherry there is balsamic, drying oak and nod to vanilla in all there in a bright acidic sip.

    Solid BAer respect.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2010/07/30/Where_Are_The_Beer_Nerds_Heading_Online_'

    Where Are The Beer Nerds Heading Online?

    Posted: July 30th, 2010, 4:14am CEST by Alan McLeod

    I like to check in on the stats once in a while to see if I can see any trends. I've been at this blogging thing for almost seven and a half years now and you would thing some of the numbers would make sense. They seldom do.

    • Contests are good for traffic, holidays are not. You are all reading this at work, aren't you? Cheater pants! Everyone of you.
    • A lot of people really want to know who many calories there are in beer.
    • Months later, I think the demise of RSBS did have a real effect on people coming here - at least directly. Other aggregators has more than taken up more than the slack but no universal beer related aggregator has really replaced it. I still feel less in the know.
    • I get the 6th most visits from India compared to any other country over the last year. Yet where are the comments? Work conditions must be tough there.

    That is all I can come up with. I still think there are twelve of you out there. Other than that, it is a mug's game. Except if you are monetizing. Monetize and the pieces all fall into place.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2010/07/29/Assassination_By_Beer_In_Afghanistan'

    Assassination By Beer In Afghanistan

    Posted: July 29th, 2010, 2:58am CEST by Alan McLeod

    The Christian Science Monitor has dug up an interesting beery angle from the whole Wikileaks controversy. Apparently, the documents which have been released include references to a pattern of the Taliban poisoning booze as a mean to assassinate key personnel. Like this:

    James Yeager, an American geologist who advised Afghanistan's Ministry of Mines, tells the Monitor he returned to his residence in Kabul to find it had been burgled. The intruder took money from a drawer and left behind a bottle of Corona beer. The Corona bottle sat on his counter for the next two weeks Yeager says, because Corona is one of his least favorite beers. He finally opened it during a going away party as the other drinks began to run low. “I pulled it out and when I popped it there was no fizz and the cap was loose,” says Yeager. “Because this one didn’t have fizz you wonder if it went rancid or not, and I just kind of sniffed it and I went ‘Oh, that doesn’t smell like beer.’ ” Yeager, a geochemist familiar with acids, realized it smelled like sulfuric acid – otherwise known as battery acid.

    What a rotten trick. What a rotten way to go. You know, it's a damn good thing the Taliban are not aware which government advisors have a taste for Cantillon Bruocsella 1900 Grand Cru. They'd be done for.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2010/07/28/_...The_Proposal_Would_Help_Tourism_To_The_Area_'

    "...The Proposal Would Help Tourism To The Area"

    Posted: July 28th, 2010, 1:46am CEST by Alan McLeod

    You know, we say a lot of good things about beer and pubs. We like to think good things, too. Think that our little hobby, our habit is not something that should be a bother to others. Sure there is plenty of evidence to the contrary but this one little tale of one little pub just sticks with me:

    My property shares a wall with the proposed beer garden. I have serious concerns about the impact it would have on my quality of life and on my property day and night, particularly at weekends when the Castle Bar's clientele is very young and rowdy. Due to the extremely close proximity of our properties, the external noise levels caused by talking/shouting/singing/arguing from increasingly intoxicated drinkers would be unbearable. Further to that, there would be the noise caused by music blaring out from the bar, and doors banging as people enter/leave the beer garden.

    In 2008, one review of the fine establishments of Banff in Scotland reported "the Castle for a fight, Aul Fife for no conversation and poor Karaoke." Wonderful. At the planning board meeting, the pub stated "the four-metre high walls around the garden would break much of the sound from customers" and "the proposal would help tourism to the area." Tourism. The sort of tourists you need to bus in and out.

    Funny no one pointed out that the 13 foot garden walls blocking the sound of tourists in fights are listed heritage 13 foot sound blocking walls.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2010/07/27/Book_Review__Tasting_Beer__Randy_Mosher'

    Book Review: Tasting Beer, Randy Mosher

    Posted: July 27th, 2010, 2:39am CEST by Alan McLeod

    Tasting Beer has been on the shelves for about a year and a half but I just threw a copy into a larger order from Amazon the other day. I like it fine but it is not the book I thought I was getting. I blame the internets as I didn't have that browsing moment leaning against a books shelf half thinking about the book, half thinking about a donut I had in 1986. I thought it was going to be a book primarily about tasting beer. Where did I get that idea from?

    Around half the book is beer history along with beer styles and examples available in the US. Useful information covered elsewhere... and, again, over there, too. Often. Pages 28 to 144 or so, however, do not show up elsewhere. Pages stuffed with information on the human sensory experience, details about that weird vocabulary Stan throws around with words like "caprylic" and "trichloroanisole" as well as neato graphs on the relativity of bitterness and gravity on one hand and pressure and temperature on the other. Good data born no doubt of Mr. Mosher's background in home brewing. Quality.

    One quibble of me is that I don't like the font or the layout. I don't like double columns in a book and I really don't like semi late 1800s "Golden Age" typography. It seems like the information on the page is harder to find than necessary. I wonder what it would look like with simpler fonts?

    But that is just a quibble. This is great text for the intermediate beer fan. I think it might actually be too much for the beginner - a curse, I realize, no publisher or author wants to read. Yes, it has the obligatory forward by Sam Calagione (imagine that !) but don't hold that against the author. Buy it.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2010/07/25/Hooray___I_Love_Being_Told_I_Am_Stupid___So_Should_You'

    Hooray - I Love Being Told I Am Stupid - So Should You

    Posted: July 25th, 2010, 3:37pm CEST by Alan McLeod

    Update: To be fair, when I heard about their tattoo promotion I immediately thought "damn, you have to be at the pub on opening night...."

    Am I supposed to cheer along with the giving of the finger to 99.998% of customers for the sake of marketing? Or is this supposed to be Dada beer? Who cares. All I know is I am far less inclined to buy any BrewDog beer. Why? Because of this short sentence:

    A response to the haters.

    "Haters"? Good Lord. Are you twelve? This has to be the stupidest new usage of a word that has been imposed upon the language and there is far too much use of it in craft beer circles. It denies the right to disagree. It tells us to stop thinking and start following. You call in to question my freedom from being your sycophant, I call into question your business model.

    Not that there is anything wrong with the beer. BrewDog is quite good at making beer. As good as a lot of other great brewers. What makes it different is how it seems to be that it is brewed by pushy dullards with an over active interest in getting our money while letting us know we don't "get it." No thanks me thinks. This brewery has gotten too boring.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2010/07/24/Florida__Saison_Athene__Saint_Somewhere__Tarpon_Springs'

    Florida: Saison Athene, Saint Somewhere, Tarpon Springs

    Posted: July 24th, 2010, 3:28am CEST by Alan McLeod

    I didn't expect this to be my first Floridian beer but I guess it is. Andy Crouch in his soon to be published (review copy delivered yesterday) Great American Craft Beer calls it both "a flavor parade of spice" and a "spice bazaar" which gives me some pause. Can I handle it?

    It opens with a pop as the 2009 dated cork flies and lets loose with an appled gently funky wave of aroma. Golden ale under white froth and foam. In the mouth... it is a spice parade. Lighter bodied and crisp with curried notes of, maybe, earthy cardamom, a little white pepper and heated raw ginger. The balancing malt is that wheat cream thing that Lew mocked me mercilessly over. Tangerine juicy mid-swallow but ends with a drying brett finish. More semi-sub-tropical Orval than Oro but a solid brew.

    Great BAer respect but not quite love. I don't know why.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2010/07/23/Shopping_At_Broue_Ha_Ha_In_Gatineau_Quebec'

    Shopping At Broue Ha Ha In Gatineau Quebec

    Posted: July 23rd, 2010, 1:34am CEST by Alan McLeod

    I regretted the drive only when the alarm went off this morning. Adding 425 km and five hours driving to the gap between supper and sleep was not maybe the most intelligent thing to do mid-week but I sure was pleased with what I found. Broue Ha Ha is the newest addition to the private beer shop scene for eastern Ontario - none of which actually exist in eastern Ontario. I got a bit lost finding the place as its about ten miles or so to the east of downtown Ottawa but on the way home realized it sits fairly handy to exit 141 on Autoroute 50. Won't make that mistake again.

    The shop sits in a new mini-mall in a residential area of town. The first thing you notice is the whole neat and tidy thing. Not quite used to the idea of such a snappy shop as craft beer places tend to be a bit of a friendly jumble. As you can see from the picture I nicked from Facebook, the small shop has a considered layout that features shelving according to styles rather than the usual geographical location of the brewers. Gilles, the owner, was tending to other shoppings in French but had no problem picking out my fundamental incapacity in that language and switched to English.

    I picked up a few new beers like the latest double IPA from Charlevoix as well as their blanche, one from Multi-Brasses of Tingwick and another from a brew pub from Shawinigan. The rest were favorites from Le Bilboquet and Les Trois Mousquetaires as well as a six of Coup de Grisou by Brasseurs RJ . Prices very competitive with Marche Omni at the western end of the City. I stopped there on the way home and found a few beer not by at Broue Ha Ha by Microbrasserie de L'Ile d"Orleans.

    Only open for a couple of months, one lone BAer gives high praise as do the three at RateBeer. More on Facebook.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2010/07/21/Oregon__Chatoe_Rogue_Single_Malt_Ale__Rogue__Newport'

    Oregon: Chatoe Rogue Single Malt Ale, Rogue, Newport

    Posted: July 21st, 2010, 4:17am CEST by Alan McLeod

    Ah, to be left with only the third best camera in the house. I hope the beer isn't third best. As you can guess, I doubt it will be. I like the idea of veracity and authenticity in ingredients. I prefer it to brewer as wizard or rock star or TV host. Hard to believe some might find brewer as TV to be a tad cheesy but there you have it. By contrast, in this case the brewery states "all Chatoe Rogue brews are all GYO Certified, First Growth, Appellation products made with hops and malt from our Department of Agriculture's Hopyard and Barley Bench." Wonderful idea.

    The beer pours a light yellow pine and generates a fine white lacy froth, foam and rim. Light floral aromas. Bright lemon grassy acidity followed by twiggy bittering moving towards a lime hoppiness. Lighter bodied than I might have expected but welcome at that minor girth. The malt is there in a supporting role, quietly biscuity. I really like this beer. Zesty.

    I find the BAers a little less excited than I am.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2010/07/20/Bootlegger_Sentenced_After_76_Year_Trade'

    Bootlegger Sentenced After 76 Year Trade

    Posted: July 20th, 2010, 3:08am CEST by Alan McLeod

    Good Lord. I have been writing this blog for a long time. It's over five and a half years since I wrote that post about the shutting down of the illegal bars in my old home in Canada's eastern province of Prince Edward Island. Well, apparently they didn't shut them all down as the sentencing of 85 year old Alexander (Slick) Rhynes today shows. I like his submissions to the court:

    Alexander (Slick) Rhynes told provincial court on Monday that he was "just trying to make an honest living." He was found guilty of possession of liquor for sale and selling liquor. Rhynes told the court he's been selling liquor out of his house since he was nine and he's not hurting anyone. He also said he buys liquor and beer from the liquor store and pays taxes on it, and that he also pays taxes on the income he makes.

    Therefore... Slick can make up his own laws, too! Slick seems to have forgotten the death of a man in a booze can like his which went unnoticed for sometime back in 2004. An honest living, indeed. The comments to the news item are priceless. I can't speak to the minimum fine imposed as I know the judge and like her a lot. Good hockey player. Got to watch those hockey playing judges. Just saying.

    Is this so wrong? What sentence would Slick have received in your jurisdiction?

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2010/07/19/Why_Is_It_So_Rare_That_We_Praise_The_Consumer_'

    Why Is It So Rare That We Praise The Consumer?

    Posted: July 19th, 2010, 1:51am CEST by Alan McLeod

    Consumption is a bad word even though we all do it and we all must do it. The free market is based on aggregation of single decisions into total consumer demand yet, in the world of good beer, these choices are little discussed. It is often discussed in supply side terms. I don't see it that way. I think this article in the Irish Independent.ie has it just about right:

    The country's real ale fans represent the perfect example of how greater consumer awareness can revitalise a struggling industry, say economists. Equally, the ever-growing number of microbreweries satisfying their demanding palates offers hope for the UK's small businesses. Experts at Nottingham University Business School came up with the findings after examining the history of brewing in England. They believe the industry's rebirth in the wake of the Campaign for Real Ale's founding in 1971 has implications for much of the UK economy.

    No clients? No brewery. No taste for new beer, no risk taking at the check out? No craft beer revolution. Which is why every time I hear about another allegedly rock star status brewer or one more "we are the leaders" craft brewing association video, I wonder why they forget the most important two words in the whole deal - thank you. I also wonder why good beer drinkers in North American can't get their purchasing power together and achieve the success in the marketplace that CAMRA has.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2010/07/18/Do_Olde_Geuze_And_Oysters_Go_Together_'

    Do Olde Geuze And Oysters Go Together?

    Posted: July 18th, 2010, 1:13am CEST by Alan McLeod

    I was out hunting for some Caribbean stout to go with the PEI oysters I picked up and the incredibly jambi Mike Mundell's shop this afternoon. Without success. What to do?

    I love oysters. I used to live in view of the Gulf of St. Lawrence on PEI's north shore and heading over to Carr's at Stanley Bridge for a half dozen Malpeques to suck back with my home brew. Despite the trade's odd view of what makes for a benefit, the oysters know not what is done in their name. Quietly in their rocky shells they ignore such things, preferring to be pretty damn tasty and - at a buck and change - a great value.

    So, instead of a strong sweet stout, I thought I would try them with a geuze, in the case a half bottle of Drie Fontienen's Oude Gueze, the beer I had last New Year's Eve. This one was bottled back on Friday, February 1, 2008 when I was having an Old Guardian for the twelfth edition of The Session. Let's see what happens in mid-summer two and a half years later..

    Wow. That is quite a combination. The barnyard funk of the geuze hits the oyster's wharfy skank head on in your mouth. One of my more intense taste experiences when I think of it - which is all I can do given it is happening in my mouth right now. All that is missing is an overly aged chunk of blue cheese to make this as overwhelming an experience as it could be. But the aftertaste is creamy, like two waves counteracting each other leading to calm. The oyster brings out the apple notes and places the acidity in context. I am happily reaching for the next meaty oyster.

    Success. Each assisted through the difficulties the other can pose. A vital combination.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2010/07/16/New_York__12__Ithaca_Beer_Co.__Ithaca'

    New York: 12, Ithaca Beer Co., Ithaca

    Posted: July 16th, 2010, 3:59am CEST by Alan McLeod

    Bought a couple of these at the brewery Tuesday for something between 7 or 9 bucks. I have a weakness for quads. Confessing. Even in a heat wave.

    It pours cola with a light mocha foam and rim. The nose is pumpernickel with a nice spicy thing down below, maybe cinnamon and nutmeg. In the mouth it's malty almost like a dopplebock with a cherry heart but there is also tobacco, the catch all "herbal notes" and maybe even cola - as well as a nice acidic bite weakening but not buckling the cloy. A black tea drying finish. The brewery points out how it has French Malts, German hops and Belgian yeasts - presumably in some sort of nod to the early days of WWI. I might have held out for the 17th anniversary ale but, whatever it is, I like it. It is a slightly lighter take on the style - which is saying a lot for a 10% bomb.

    Makes me want to eat beef with cherry sauce. I know that dish doesn't exist but that is what I want with this beer. BAers love it even if they confuse age with strength.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2010/07/14/Joe_Asks_Us_To_Consider_What_Makes_For_Success'

    Joe Asks Us To Consider What Makes For Success

    Posted: July 14th, 2010, 4:45pm CEST by Alan McLeod

    Update: Troy makes a very good point in reminding me to link to "Free Our Beer", Cass Enright's blog that delves into the backwardness of Ontario's system in far more detail than I would ever have the patience to present.

    Joe makes a very good point in his latest post "Twelve-Ounce Measures of Success in America":

    ...it occurs to me that neighborhood places like this are the real front lines of craft beer. Not the geekery, not the five-course beer dinners, and not the pricey rare releases. Those would be more like the captain's quarters where all the officers are chummy and there's a fellow in the corner playing violin. To carry the metaphor entirely too far. No, the trenches are in the dives, the airport bars, and the restaurants where the wife and kids want to eat...

    I entirely agree. I have been roaming central NY for a few days now and have been offered a choice of craft beers on tap in every restaurant where we have taken the kids. The grocery store shelves have a great selection at honest prices and, if you want to hunt them out, there are specialty beer stores with stunning shelvage stockery. Although it is just over the border, it is a long way from my home and native land of Ontario where craft brewers are still working hard to get taps in bars let alone family restaurants. We don't have a culture of criticism socially so few in the media speak out or look at the bigger picture to ask aloud why we alone are so weak that we need monopolistic retailing, too much sameness in our food and drink, why we pay so much when others don't.

    What really makes this stand out is that we are surrounded by Michigan, Quebec and New York - places with plenty of robust local pride and plenty of great adventurous good beer. I think the two are related. So, as Joe asks, where is the battle for better beer won or lost in your market? For me, it is lost at the border - the one I cross monthly to stock my stash with good beer not available. But it is also lost in the conversation where complacency and homers are happy enough with putting up with what you get. It is also lost in the breweries with every new launch of another boring amber ale.

    It also seems to be the same battle that would have to be fought if you were trying to sell seafood, real BBQ or organic food. How do they fight to win? Hard work for sure but also staking a claim to be different and better not to mention telling the story the product that is fun, tasty and / or wholesome as well as home grown. I wonder if my homeland can handle such ideas. When I look at the neighbours and their sense of cultural self, I wonder if Ontarians have it in them to take on the same idea, to ask the difficult question: "why don't we deserve our own best?"

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2010/07/13/It_Was_Like_An_Attack_Of_The_Geuze_I_Tell_Ya_'

    It Was Like An Attack Of The Geuze I Tell Ya!

    Posted: July 13th, 2010, 10:36pm CEST by Alan McLeod

    Panicked rushed beer shopping can be such a rush.

    I couldn't have been in Finger Lake Beverage for more than 20 minutes and the New York State treasury is $26.89 richer on its 8% sales tax because of it. It was like beer was going out of style... or maybe it was like available credit was going out of style. Or maybe it was madness. Geuze madness. I have no idea how much saison and geuze and lambic I bought but as those are styles practically verbotten to Canadians I was not going to pass up on on any that I could see.

    Prices remain very reasonable at Finger Lake Beverages, five year after I have started going there. Average price was 10 bucks for pretty fine and/or rare stuff in good condition. Most expensive bottle was a big 3 Fonteinen Oude Gueze for $18.99. I passed on the 750 ml of Schaarbeekse Kriek by them for $39.99 but only because for that price you can pick up a good selection of five half bottles of various Belgian sours. First beers by The Bruery I have seen this far east for an affordable $8.99 or so at 750 ml.

    Now I just gotta get it home. We've been on the road long enough that 48 single beer's worth is tax free but it's making sure that it stays reasonably cool on the way home. I wrap the boxes in blankets, keep the AC on high in the van and move them into the hotels. It's like having cats - except with good beer you really have a fondness for the objects of your care and attention.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2010/07/12/Teach_Your_Children_Well___BBQ_Version'

    Teach Your Children Well - BBQ Version

    Posted: July 12th, 2010, 3:58pm CEST by Alan McLeod

    Every holiday should include a lunch at Syracuse's Dinosaur BBQ. I had a Tres Hombre but as I I left meat (I'm embarrassed even thinking of it) I was not as hombre as I might have been. The beer is an Ape Hanger Ale that's made, I am pretty sure, by Middle Ages as a special house brew. It followed a Syracuse Pale ale that I had standing out in the street waiting for a table. You go to hell and/or prison in Canada for standing in the street having a beer waiting for your table. That was the best Mac and Cheese I ever had, by the way. The lad knew enough to not leave any.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2010/07/11/CNY_Beer_Shopping_Starts_Tomorrow___Suggestions_'

    CNY Beer Shopping Starts Tomorrow - Suggestions?

    Posted: July 11th, 2010, 2:43am CEST by Alan McLeod

    Crossing the border for a few days always brings with it the opportunity to buy an insane amount of beer with which to stock the stash. The stash is not exactly sad but it is not exactly bursting at the seams, either. It deserves better.

    It's been almost a year and a half since I hit the wonder that is Finger Lake Beverages and I am wondering what you would recommend. They have a great selection of Belgians, Germans and British imports as well as a whack of US craft beers but it's those special releases that are going around I will focus on. What has been good recently? What is worth passing up? We also should be stopping at Ommegang and maybe even a few craft beer joints along the way - but this is a family jaunt so it's not like I'm dragging my butt through the taverns until the wee hours. No, between stops for ice cream, baseball games and swimming holes this is about stuffing the stash. So, what does it need to be stuffed with?

    And think of me as I weep before the beer section at Wegmans... again.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2010/07/10/Make_Mine_A_Micro_Beer__Wouldja___'

    Make Mine A Micro-Beer, Wouldja!?!

    Posted: July 10th, 2010, 1:59am CEST by Alan McLeod

    The recent past is a funny thing. We never think to go find out what we were like 20 or 30 years ago and when we do it's oddly not just like, you know, us. Stan got me on this trail when he asked the simple question "Who first used the words craft beer?" Craft beer is actually a late comer to the phraseology after swell terms like designer beer, real beer, real ale, true beer and micro-brew. So I was really interested in finding this article in The New York Times from 1988 when I was a squeaky clean 24 year old so that I could remind myself what the thing we call "craft beer" now was all about:

    By definition, a micro-brewer is one who produces and sells no more than 15,000 barrels of beer a year - although most micros turn out far less than that. A subset of micro-brewing, the craft brewer, is defined as one producing fewer than 3,000 barrels a year. The smallest of the micros are the pub brewers - tavern keepers or restaurateurs who brew just enough for their customers, usually only a few hundred barrels a year. Micro-beer prices vary among brands, but tend to hover somewhere above the midscale Millers and Michelobs and below the upscale Amstels and Heinekens. Getting space on crowded liquor store shelves is always a challenge, but micro-brewers generally find acceptance at restaurants and bars close to home.

    That's the way it's worked out, right? Micro-brews still are small brewers with general acceptance at restaurants and bars near home. Amstel is still upscale. Maybe not, but I still think micro-brew is the best phrase around as it has that undeniable inability to be taken over by the PR suits who would have us believe that the "small" makers of millions or even hundreds of thousands of barrels of beer a year are. For me "small" has to have that characteristic of, for the lack of a better word, smallness that "micro" includes and "craft" just doesn't. I love how craft brewing is described as a subset of small more like a cottage level brewery. That term sorta flipped into a different dimension though the power of PR lobbying spin, no?

    Things were so much clearer in the 80s, weren't they. OK, not my skin but, you know, things generally.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2010/07/09/It_s_Not_Macro_Beer___It_s_Imitation_Beer_'

    It's Not Macro Beer - It's Imitation Beer!

    Posted: July 9th, 2010, 3:08am CEST by Alan McLeod

    In response to Mr. B's comment the other day, I bought a number of books about taste, smell and food including In Defense of Food: An Eater's Manifesto by Michael Pollan which I brought with me to read at the squirt softball game this evening. One can only watch so many walks, you know.

    Anyway, it is a fairly good read, trotting through slightly familiar territory but placing it all into a very useful argument pitting, in the bit I have read so far, the forces of food (yea!) against the forces of nutritionism (boo!). This bit early on particularly stuck out for me.

    The 1938 Food, Drug and Cosmetics Act imposed strict rules requiring that the word "imitation" appear on any food product that was, well, imitation. Read today, the official rationale behind the imitation rule seems at once commonsensical and quaint:" ....there are certain traditional foods that everyone knows, such as bread, milk and cheese, and that when consumer buy these foods, they should get the foods they are expecting... [and] if a food resembles a standard food but does not comply with the standard, that food must be labeled as an "imitation." Hard to argue with that...but the food industry did, strenuously for decades, and in 1973 it finally succeeded in getting the imitation rule tossed out, a little-noticed but momentous step that helped speed America down the path to nutritionism.

    You can see where we are going with this. When we think of moving from the real, to the embrace of additives and processes of consumables, beer made by the big brewers has to be one of the greatest success stories in servicing imitation in the guise of a traditional. So why don't we call it what it is - imitation beer.

    Put it this way - we can all agree that scale in itself is not definitive of what makes beer real or authentic. It is not the macro that makes for macro beer but the processes used by the macro. It's all that science tweaking a molecule here and a compound there to make what does not go into beer appear something like beer. So, just like we think of processed cheese food product or imitation cheery pie filling like substances, so too should we be talking about "imitation beer" for all that chemically gak that the scientists and industrialists put on the shelves. Your thought for the day.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2010/07/07/Scotland__Oak_Aged_2006__Innis___Gunn__Edinburgh'

    Scotland: Oak Aged 2006, Innis & Gunn, Edinburgh

    Posted: July 7th, 2010, 4:00am CEST by Alan McLeod

    I have had this in the stash for a while but there is plenty of BAer respect so I should be pleased with myself for being so full of self control. The key is, of course, loading the stash with so much that you forget what you have. And layers of heavy boxes. Place them in the way and, well, who really needs to get back there when there's this right here?

    Deep orange amber ale with a lacing rim and froth of white. On the nose, rummy. Rummy and yeasty and Christmas cake spicy. In the mouth, a tad winey and even a bit lighter than I might have wished but very nice. I get the whisky but it is a bit more rum at this point. Nutmeggy, too. Not nutmeggasaurous but Meg's nut is there. I notice that the base of the bottle is clear - it was filtered. Why filter something you are going to age? I am not suggesting there is cardboard or anything but there is a sense of something that has been stored. But it is nice enough. Needed a bit more zip to be... zippy - or has it just lived past its reasonably expected zippiness. Four years for a filtered beer is a bit much, no? Not sure.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2010/07/06/Supertasting__Gender_and_Better_Beer'

    Supertasting, Gender and Better Beer

    Posted: July 6th, 2010, 3:50am CEST by Alan McLeod

    An idea has been floating around that has me scratching my head a bit but also wondering what we mean by "better" sometimes. Today, Jeff Alworth wrote "Do Women Taste Better Than Men?" after reading Melissa Cole's link to an article in The Sun included in her post entitled "Women Better Beer Tasters". It got me wondering because I thought a bit of idea creep was going on.

    It appears pretty well established that there are non-tasters, moderate tasters and supertasters in both genders, with a rough 25-50-25 ratio across the population. Tasting perception changes with age. It is also affected by personality and dietary experience. It differs in gender with 35% of Caucasian women being supertasters compared to 15% of Caucasian men. And Caucasians have a lower percentage of supertasters than Asians, according to The Independent from the UK.

    There are plenty of variables on the go but at its most basic, supertasting is about intensity of perception. Here is a description of a supertasting woman's experience of beer:

    "I can't stand cake," says Michelle Triplett, a 31-year-old stay-at-home mom and supertaster from Olympia, Wash., who spoke, coincidentally, on her birthday. "It's too sweet for me. And when I drink beer, I gag. It's like drinking urine."

    Mmmm... urine. Is that better taste perception, simply greater sensitivity or a greater appreciation for beer? Depends on what you are looking for, I suppose. If you are looking for someone to detect an off putting bitterness as a means to diagnose brewing errors - like a canary in a coal mine - go for a supertaster. If you like your supertasters Caucasian, well, that means you are more likely looking for a female supertaster given they represent 70% of the category. It might not be the case with other ethnicities and, even with that, 65% of the Caucasian female population are not supertasters. They are just like 85% of the paler men. But if you are looking to find out what most people want, scientists looking into the perceptions of bitterness in beer sometimes aim at a moderate tasters as they can give a "better prediction than the overall data"... whatever that means.

    So, is intensity of perception all there is to tasting? Is a super taster going to tell you what DIPA or blackened imperial stout is more balanced? Maybe not. Maybe for that you want other skills, too - other tasters more representative of the general population or that part of your population that you are aiming to serve. Is that the idea creep? Is there a big difference between being a better taster of beer and the taste of better beer? Could be. One may involve what seems like a mouthful of piss. But that might be the thing we need experienced and reported upon along our way to a better tasting glass of beer.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2010/07/05/A_Perfect_Day_Makes_Me_Wonder_About_Perfect_Beer'

    A Perfect Day Makes Me Wonder About Perfect Beer

    Posted: July 5th, 2010, 4:04am CEST by Alan McLeod

    Had a glorious fourth across the border. Bought sauces you can't find over here. Saw an 1812 cannon firing demonstration. Ate a pizza at the best place in the world to have a good pizza at a good price while watching international container ship traffic. And I got a US haircut along with my son when the rest were doing whatever the rest do. It was a real bad haircut but man it was fast. Turns out the clients were mainly soldiers from the nearby base. There has to be some sort of time limit on getting your haircut for the army. Good and fast means the other quality you are going to get is short. Real short. As short as the ten year old's hair is now. He won't need a cut again until 2011.

    I wasn't planning on telling you about my haircut and the various variables that went into it until I read this article on barley research from an Australian trade paper with the headline "Barley Research One Step Closer To Perfect Beer":

    Wagga Wagga Agricultural Institute (WWAI) director, John Oliver, said the research had the potential to improve the availability of high-quality malting barley to brewers along the east coast of Australia. “The new generation barley also has improved disease resistance and tolerance to the acidic soils prevalent in NSW,” Mr Oliver said. “For improved malting the key is to have more of the starch in the plant broken down to sugars during the brewing process. “But there are also proteins in barley that lead to undesirable effects on the storage of beer such as a chill haze or excessive foaming when the beer is poured. “So making better malting barley is a process of trying to have more of the good attributes from the starches and enzymes and less effect from undesirable proteins.”

    I am not sure if I know enough to know if I agree. I am happy to be able to include "Wagga Wagga" in any article I write but there is something about the analysis that reminds me of my bad haircut. It sounds a lot like the conditions required to achieve a fast haircut when I read about controlling haze or foam after a point in storage. Maybe the real problem is excessive storage? And do we really want fewer unfermentables? You know what I call them? Flavour.

    In a world where I want more rustic husk-laden bread and cheese with more interesting bacterial dances as well as heritage lumpy tomatoes not to mention odd bits of BBQ pork that has wonderful residual globs of fat candying in new and exciting ways - don't I also want characteristically particular barley strains with more and more singular attributes leading to more and more diversity in my beer? Isn't that what I really want?

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2010/07/03/Session_41__What_About_The_Homebrewers_Anyway_'

    Session 41: What About The Homebrewers Anyway?

    Posted: July 3rd, 2010, 3:38pm CEST by Alan McLeod

    I have a hard time with this month's topic for The Session. Not because I have no experience with home brewing but because I assume everyone involved with beer has had a hand in it. It's like I assume everyone who went to college went to high school first.

    That being said, I am a bad brewer. I don't care about most anything when I brew except that the ingredients have to be good and every thing has to be insanely sterile. Other than that, I don't give a rat's ass about hitting the expected gravity, IBUs or BLTs. I like a surprise. Well, I like a good surprise. Like that one cask I made that was blessed by the angels and drained in one sitting.

    But it's rarely that good. I have one last bottle of anise pale ale from a batch that really sucked. And, for me, that is the real glory about home brewing. It is where I expect the future pro brewers who earn our hard currency to have made their mistakes. It is error's playground. It is where you dump the stuff out because you never should have made it, let alone served it to guests.

    Which is why when I find a brewery with lingering infections, with dulling water composition, with a habit of taking the easy path of massive hopping or adding more dark malts to cover up stuff, well, that is the brewery I figure is run by the guy whose pals didn't have the heart to tell him how his home brew sucked. I am not interested in paying for craft brewers' experiments even if they are called "extreme" or the hot new trend from Italy. Work that stuff out on your own time.

    So, back to the question, all craft beer should be inspired by home brew in that it should create the bench made for what is appropriate to sell. If your pal wouldn't drink it for free, why do you think I should pay for it?

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2010/07/01/Two_Strangford_Lough_Brewing_Beers..._From_Somewhere'

    Two Strangford Lough Brewing Beers... From Somewhere

    Posted: July 1st, 2010, 11:22pm CEST by Alan McLeod

    The six pack carrier says "Product of USA crafted from barley gown in St. Patrick's Co." I got three Legbiter Ales and three St. Patrick's Best Ales. Can't find the email that I got from the representative. There's nothing in the box but styrofoam popcorn. The waybill says they're from New Jersey. But there is a clue on the bottom of the six: "produced and bottled by Strangford Lough Brewing Company, Rochester, NY." I liked them fine. I will say that from the outset but this clip from the operation's home Northern Ireland website got me scratching my head:

    ....the directors of this Northern Irish brewery, Tony Davies and Bob Little had to create an entirely new method of ensuring the beer arrived fresher and more cost effectively than would have been possible by simply shipping the finished bottled product from Northern Ireland. The outcome was a very exciting new way of exporting the product from Ireland, not in bottles, but in a concentrated form. The concentrate is shipped to High Falls Brewing Company, where the SLBC master brewer, George Thompson is on hand to assist the High Falls Operating Company to finish brew the beer by adding the final ingredients brought from Ireland, fermenting and then bottling the beer before transporting it to the existing network of licensees for distribution.

    So... bulk wort with NI water is being shipped, sloshed about a cargo hold, diluted with NY water and then boiled with its hops - one supposes - after which it is finally fermented and bottled in Rochester at back from the brink High Falls brewery. That is one weird business strategy. But I liked the beer. I liked it fine. It had terrioirs. I poured one of the St. Patrick's Best Ales last night and thought how good it was for an beer with an uncertain source. Very nice lacing. It was also more-ish and rich, its body showing well above its weight for a 4.2% beer. A great session ale. I liked it. I am not sure which beer it is as the brewery makes one beer called St. Patrick's Best as well as another called St. Patrick's Ale. But I liked it.

    The Master Brewer used to run "George Thompson & Dobbin Ltd – an international design and build micro-brewery business offering turnkey brewing solutions." Yikes! Turnkey solutions always scare the bejaysus out of me. But I liked the beer. Have they actually figured something out? I have no idea. Not even sure if the BAers have rated them.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2010/06/30/Will_We_Know_It_When_Beer_Jumps_The_Shark_'

    Will We Know It When Beer Jumps The Shark?

    Posted: June 30th, 2010, 2:00pm CEST by Alan McLeod

    I love the "jump the shark" idea but only because I was a pre-teen when Happy Days and the Fonze was on TV. It combines my love of taking a adolescent view of things with my habit of taking a adolescent view of things. So it was with interest that I read this from Joe Stange this morning:

    It's all a bit... much. It's enough to make a yank want to duck into a cheap dive and quietly suck down shakers of Sierra Nevada. Because frankly I would be content to do so.

    My first reaction? If you have lost the overriding desire to duck into a cheap dive and quietly suck down shakers from time to time, well, I think you have lost something or never had it. For example, while I have a wee bit of curiosity about the experience of blind tastings, I seriously doubt its greater defining value. I do like Andy's view that it might be a perfectly acceptable parlour game. Same sometimes even goes for unblinded (sighted?) tasting and, certainly, swanky grog and grub nights, knees uncomfortably lodged beneath linen. Aren't they just variations on the theme of "trend"? The need to justify, to characterize so as to allow oneself the core experience? Are they that much different from the giggle right had at the expense of Stella Black? From the PR spin of the consultant's quack science or the justifying thrill of your hobby now coming to cable TV?

    Don't get me wrong. Good beer is good. Very good. But for me there is no better time than mustering gangs of good bottles and interested interesting folk and just pouring - even if only in the company of mere men. Heck, I just love giving away good beer to pals and workmates in order hear their reaction a few days later. The rest is fluff to one degree or another - the sideshow - the consultant's angle and hope of reward.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2010/06/30/Book_Review__500_Beers_By_Zak_Avery'

    Book Review: 500 Beers By Zak Avery

    Posted: June 30th, 2010, 3:30am CEST by Alan McLeod

    I don't know if this is the cool new blue cover or the boring old blue cover but it's quite blue. I did knew from the outset that the book was not written by a Canadian as then it would be titled "500 Beer" as the plural and the singular are written the same up here. But it written by Zak, he the freelance beer writer, specialist beer retailer and author of the entertaining beer blog "Are You Tasting the Pith?" Like his blog, it is a great book full of insight and personality - even if it has the blasphemous subtitle "the only beer compendium you'll ever need." I thought the whole idea was that we need magic books about 300, 500, 1000, a billion zillion best beer eh-vah. I only drink "best beer" myself so I want every book there is about all of them.

    76% of the book is filled with well organized brief beer reviews organized first by style and then, rather cleverly, according to its peers or at least beers that are in the neighbourhood. So, for example, three Bamburgian rauchbiers are reviewed along with Alaska Smoked Porter and Meantime Wintertime Winter Welcome. This invites the old double fisted, fill the table with bottles and glassware compare and contrast event.¹ The writing is equally satisfying. Solid and earthy. The hops in a Sixpoint Bengal IPA have a crunchy aroma. Duchesse de Bourgogne gives off the whiff of a pickle jar. Lots of good beer pr0n, too.

    Get your reading glasses as the small font can age you rapidly. Buy it.

    ¹For those unaware of such a thing, I describe the far superior social predecessor to the present faddish, expensive "tiny plates of swanky food and tiny glasses of beer" movement.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2010/06/28/Stuck_In_My_Own_Town_s_Mid_1800s_Beery_History'

    Stuck In My Own Town's Mid-1800s Beery History

    Posted: June 28th, 2010, 4:16am CEST by Alan McLeod

    I had intended to get into the 1900s but have gotten stuck in the newspapers out of my town from the nineteenth century. From its first days at the western edge of the British Empire, as this pretty poor image of an early 1800s map shows, Kingston had a Brewery Street. Its still there even if renamed Rideau. We still have some of our Victorian and maybe even Georgian brewing buildings, re-purposed for other things.

    Who wouldn't get interested with ads like the "ALE! ALE! ALE!" Kingston City Brewery ad from page 3 of the Kingston Daily News on 8 October 1863. Interesting to see that the copy editor had not that much imagination give the "Baths! Baths! Baths!" header for the next ad. The City Brewery was on the waterfront and I think is long gone but the shop the beer was being sold at 158 Princess Street may well still be there, it's just selling mens clothes now.

    Kingstonians were not only enjoying local brewed beers, however celebrated, in the early 1860s as the ad to the left from the same paper's 7 October 1862 issue shows. Mr. McRae of Brock Street had plenty of barrels of the empire's finest Guinness, Barclay Perkins as well as Allsopp beers to be had - along with a range of imported sherries, ports and brandies. The Morton's "Family Proof" Whisky he offered was locally made. Not sure that it was immune from family members absconding with it or if it had been, conversely, subject to the proof and acceptance by all family members. The Morton distillery and brewery buildings are also still with us and currently under redevelopment as an arts hub. The building which held MacRae's shop could well be there, too. Another Brock Street store, Cooke's which opened in 1865, still operates.

    The town seems to have had a fairly rich relationship with beer and other alcohol but it was not all fun and games as this 1867 article from The New York Times explains. The watchman Mr. Driscoll of what is likely the same Morton works was murdered the year before during a burglary. His Detroit murderer was sentenced to hang. They'll each both be still here, too - buried around here somewhere. The town is like that.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2010/06/27/For_All_The_Bad_News_About_Soccer_Fans...'

    For All The Bad News About Soccer Fans...

    Posted: June 27th, 2010, 2:17am CEST by Alan McLeod

    ...It ain't all that bad. Sometimes - and more often than we think - it is a far less incident provoking experience than the media would have you expect:

    Despite the long-standing rivalry between the teams, which meet in a last 16 clash at the Free State Stadium, everyone was basking in the glow of South Africa's feel-good World Cup and had traveler's tales to share. In the Reyneke Park camp site outside Bloemfontein, German and English flags hung from tents and camper vans. "They started drinking beer early but it's a nice atmosphere. All are well behaved, no trouble," site owner Les Reyneke said. The bar had stayed open until five o'clock that morning.

    No doubt they played Beethoven's pastoral symphony on a loop over the cheap tree-strung speakers until the dawn came up after the cool African night. Sound idyllic if you ask me.

    I remember being at a game in Kilmarnock back in the late 70s or early 80s when the fool ahead of us drank two bottles of Mateus that he had duct taped to his shins to get them through the gate, ran at half into the sideline mob in the cowshed enclosure to hurl old school pennies and darts (darts!) only to be later carted away in the second half by the police when he ran onto the pitch, like a streaker with his clothes on, when he needed to challenge the ref's call mid-field when nothing turned on the call.

    Rivalry between the teams? They bombed my Dad's town when he was a kid. Good to see soccer and beer making real friends in an South African camping park.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2010/06/26/Ontario__Dark_Ale__Muskoka_Cottage_Brewery__Bracebridge'

    Ontario: Dark Ale, Muskoka Cottage Brewery, Bracebridge

    Posted: June 26th, 2010, 2:03am CEST by Alan McLeod

    Just learned that my camera died. Also just learned what a crappy camera I bought my kid last birthday. No focus. No warm tones. The corner of the cold room looks like the corner of a cold room. Sad.

    Today for Ontario craft beer week, I went out to the LCBO and bought a few cans of beers that I hadn't tried before. Muskoka Dark Ale is one of them. Dark ales were Ontario's version of ambers in the States - an entry style that first generation craft brewers relied upon. Upper Canada Dark was a pitcher beer for me in the mid-90s pre-kid days in Ottawa Valley taverns. Easy and moreish. But, as Stan noted about ambers, they can suffer from sameness and the blahs. This one, however, is a great take on the idea. It's like Theakston Peculier light. Molasses on the nose and in the mouth except a bit of Frye's dry cocoa, too. HP sauce, even. Yogurty yeast but in a good way, more rich than sour. Nice dusty texture like the cocoa was sifted in at the end. Like it a lot. Some respect from the BAers.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2010/06/24/Who_Made_Ontario_s_First_Lager_And_Where_'

    Who Made Ontario's First Lager And Where?

    Posted: June 24th, 2010, 3:31am CEST by Alan McLeod

    In the 1868-69 edition of Sutherland's City of Hamilton and County of Wentworth Directory there is listed a little listing that says "Eckhardt, August, brewer, Hamilton Lager Beer Brewery..." This corresponds with Sneath's first listing for a lager brewery in 1868 which states:

    Edward Eckhardt opens the Hamilton Lager Brewery in Hamilton and it closed three years later.

    The name is right as Albert is confirmed as the brewer and Edward the proprietor in another section of the directory. So they must have started lager beer there. No one else is listed even if the Spring Brewery established in 1838, makers of "ale, porter, beer, etc., in great quantities, either in wood or bottle" are working on "an addition is now being made for an ice house." Except for one thing. In the same directory there are at least six listings under "lager beer saloon" with proprietors with the names Goering, Grell, Kerner, Mansfeld, Schaupp and Winckler. Maybe more. How could all those businesses get up and running selling lager beer in time to get printed in the directory in the same year that the brewery opens? Could it be that the saloons pre-dated this brewery? Oh, for a copy of the 1866-67 edition of Sutherland's City of Hamilton and County of Wentworth Directory!

    I dunno. I do know that the author of this travel piece about Kingston, Ontario published in The New York Times in 1890 states "in all my travels extending through hundreds of miles of Ontario, beginning at this place, [I] have seen the sign 'lager beer' displayed only once." Ontarians were long time pale ale and stout hold outs when their southern mid-Atlantic and mid-western US neighbours were following their immigrant Teutonic ways and breaking out the lager, much to the chagrin of 90 year old Charles H. Haswell in 1899, as is discussed in Maureen Ogle's book Ambitious Brew.

    There was another issue, of course, in that the rush of German immigrants was more of a late 1800s rather than mid-1800s event here. There needed to be cold. And the first refrigeration system in Canada is only turned on, according to Sneath, in 1886 in Montreal. So... we had ice houses... and folks doing what they could... figuring out the large investments required compared to the smaller population centres and... well, when you figure all that out... wouldn't you really like a nice old fashioned trusty Ontario stock ale?

    The King Brewery Pilsner clocks in at a sessionable 4.8%. It pours an actively carbonated burnished gold that supports a rich white froth and foam. On the nose, there is plenty of pale malt and graininess with Saaz hopping. In the mouth a jag of steely mentholated spicy herbal weedy hops but plenty of rich maltiness to back it up, more bread crust and biscuit that malteser. A complex beer with waves of flavours. Plenty of BAer respect.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2010/06/23/Ontario__Stock_Ale__Mill_Street_Brewery__Toronto'

    Ontario: Stock Ale, Mill Street Brewery, Toronto

    Posted: June 23rd, 2010, 2:19am CEST by Alan McLeod

    Where was I? The 1830s and 40s? About there. Local breweries popping up as settlers move west, filling up southern Ontario right up to the Lake Huron coast. Familar names start popping up. In 1835, James Morton is operating out of the old Molson brewery on the Kingston waterfront. John Sleeman starts up in 1836. In 1843, Thomas Carling builds a brewery in London, Ontario. And in 1847 John Labatt enters into a partnership with an existing brewer also in London and Quebec brewers Molson have another go, this time further west along the Lake Ontario shore at Port Hope. It lasts until 1868. Facts stolen from Sneath.

    A number of the brewers are also distillers, maltsters, flour millers and a bunch of other things. Which leads me to my first utterly unfounded theory of beer in Ontario. It is related to this beer. When I think of Canadian pale ale, this is the taste I associate with it. It's ale-y. A musty quality that tastes like the Legion Hall dance or a curling tournaments in 1956. Or 1907. Or 1877. It's heavy on the grain. Given the small scale farming economy of the first and second generations of most of southern Ontario to the west of Toronto through the mid-1800s, the same entrepreneurs were likely handling all sorts of grains and distilling some, brewing with others. They had to make products that both reflected and appealed to their clients and the environment. The had to go with a shot of whisky - whether it was made with barley or rye. In 1862 here in Kingston, Mr. Creighton of the Frontenac Brewery was selling stock ale and porter with the promise of a winter beer in the fall. Farther to the west in 1872, Labatt is selling only pale ale and stout in its local paper.

    The Mill Street Stock Ale pours the colour of a pine plank in a lumber yard and resolves to a thin rim and froth. But it's that smell - like a bag of wet grain. In the mouth there is a round ball of pale malt sweetness and, then, a heck of a lot of drying grain huskiness. The huskiness is joined by a measured but roughish sort of hop in the finish - more weedy than twiggy. I don't know how this compares to an 1862 Frontenac Stock but I can day dream about it. Worth more respect than the BAers give it.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2010/06/22/Beer_and_Ethics__Does_One_Tap_The_Saved_Keg_'

    Beer and Ethics: Does One Tap The Saved Keg?

    Posted: June 22nd, 2010, 2:08pm CEST by Alan McLeod

    This moment in the lives of a couple of small town Canadian firefighters has got me thinking:

    As the smouldering site was being demolished, some firefighters noticed the six kegs of beer and decided to save the valuable merchandise, Oliver Mayor Pat Hampson told The Province Monday night. But instead of turning the salvaged suds over to the police, the kegs were taken to the Oliver firehall for safekeeping. “The unfortunate part is the owners didn’t know [the kegs] had been removed,” said Hampson. “While they were at the firehall, somebody decided to open one up.” Hampson called the incident “very serious.” “Two firefighters were suspended as punishment for what we consider inappropriate actions,” said Hampson. “The police have completed their investigation,” he said, adding he is unaware whether any charges have been recommended. “There was no malice aforethought.”

    One former local fire chief noted that usually the valuables are turned over to the police in a situation like this. But was the beer valuable? Surely no one would consider reselling the beer that has been through a fire. There is now way it could have been sold after that point. But the keg that was tapped was clearly operable, reusable and not their property. Yet, look at the photo with the story - the place was a total write off. These two firemen just risked their lives for the community good and only wanted a little beer.

    The fire department is taking out an ad to apologize. Would they have done that if it was a bakery and the firemen had nicked a couple of miraculously saved peanut butter cookies? I think the bar owner should give the firefighters some back up and say they are welcome at his next place anytime. But that is me. Would Fireman Sam have done? He is my true ethical guide in such matters.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2010/06/21/Why_Did_Ontario_Beer_Have_To_Make_Its_Own_Way_'

    Why Did Ontario Beer Have To Make Its Own Way?

    Posted: June 21st, 2010, 4:26am CEST by Alan McLeod

    Why did Ontario have to make its own path to beerdom? Well, a war and a river for one thing. As we discussed yesterday, the land that is now Ontario was settled in 1783-84 by Loyalist refugees from New York state after the American Revolution. For the first five years, Kingston is a military town without civic government. Over the years that follow until about 1843, it is the leading town in the new British colonies of Upper Canada and then Canada. But the threat of war with nearby America hovers over it well into the 1860s. Kingston sits where the first Great Lake meets the St. Lawrence River which flows on past Montreal, past Quebec and out to the sea. For well over the first hundred miles of that flow, the south shore of the river is in US hands as are half of the islands. And that made shipping drink to that spot particularly difficult as this summary of a letter to the Governor of Canada dated 11 May 1783 suggests:

    The want of rum; the Indians have been supplied a little more liberally than usual to keep them in good humour. The honourable and liberal conduct of Hamilton and Cartwright in lending rum, by which they must be considerable losers, only stipulating that a certain quantity of dry goods might be shipped for them at Carleton Island, to which he had agreed. The Indian officers that have resided at the Indian Villages for some time cannot be removed for fear of creating suspicions, but they will be discontinued as fast as circumstances permit, The Indians behave well, but he wishes Sir John Johnson would appear soon.

    The Johnson clan, founders of Kingston, were an integrated family of Anglo-American's and Mohawk. John Johnson's step-mother was Molly Brant or Konwatsi'tsiaienni so the references to rum and its use describe a bond, not the disrespect and degradation that came in later generations. Almost thirty years before, in 1775 William Johnson, the elder, described his provisions of beer and their purpose in his accounts: on 6 June as " 2 Barrels beer of Hend'k Fry for the Conajoharees to drink the Kings Health" and again on 22 July of the same year "To a Bull to the Mohawks + 3 Barrels of Beer for a War Dance at their Castle". Beer and rum were part of the supply requested and required when you were making allies at the farthest end of the reach of the Empire. Because until 1777 - and really for some time later - the Johnsons and their well stocked booze stash are the western end of the British Empire except for a few thinly manned forts.

    Which leads to a few observations. If you click on the map above, you will see that there is a route A and a route B to Lake Ontario, the navy filled buffer that protected the Loyalist settlers and later immigrants for their first four decades there. The St. Lawrence, a 112-gun first-rate wooden warship of the Royal Navy along with other cannon laden ships, was built at Kingston in 1814. It was bigger than any other ship in the fleet globally. But it could not reach the sea. Not by route A or route B. The St. Lawrence, route A, was filled with rapids that left the early inhabitants lake locked. Route B fell into US revolutionary hands with the fall of Johnstown in 1777 after thirty years of the upper reaches effectively under control of the one family, one man.

    So, how to get beer to Kingston when one route is under constant risk of attack and the other is in enemy hands? Well, you don't. You have to wait to grow crops and then you have to feed yourself, sell some off for cash and then sooner or later you get to the point that there is enough extra to make beer. Have a look at that ad we looked at yesterday placed in a Kingston newspaper in 1820 by the brewer Thoma Dalton. He is seeking both ale customers and malt suppliers in the local farming community as a means to overcome imported rum, as a means to create a local economy. The next year he is in Montreal with a trial shipment of 100 barrels of "Kingston ale" for public auction. He must have convinced the farmers of Kingston to do business.

    Over the next decade and a half Ontario continues to fill and local breweries are there. In 1836 there is a brewery for sale or rent in St. Catherines and another at the River Credit at the western end of Lake Ontario. Five years earlier, in 1831 there was a brewery even further to the west serving the 800 residents of the area of Guelph, currently home to micro turned national Sleeman as well as the craft brewers of the Wellington Brewery and the F+M Brewery.

    So why did Ontario become a land of local beers made with local products sold to local people? There was really no other reasonable choice, no other good way to get your beer.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2010/06/20/The_Origins_Of_Ontario_s_Good_Beer_Tradition'

    The Origins Of Ontario's Good Beer Tradition

    Posted: June 20th, 2010, 12:19am CEST by Alan McLeod

    Beer. It only gets to you in so many ways. You make beer and provide it to your community. You make beer and ship it to another community. You ship beer in and provide it to your community. There are not too many other options for the beer trade whether you are talking about 1810 or 2010. Today we are talking about the late 1700s and early 1800s.

    The community I happen to live in now, Kingston Ontario, is a lucky choice if you are interested in the history and beer in Ontario as it is where Ontario began. Actually, it was all the Province of Quebec when it began as a British governed community in 1783. At that point, Quebec then ran all the way west and included Ohio and Michigan. The people who first settled here were wealthy Mohawk Valley NY land owners, their slaves, their Mohawk allies and their Loyalist tenant farmers evicted from New York state during the American Revolution. Not the British. This is a community started by battling Yorker farmer warriors.

    Allen Winn Sneath in his book Brewed in Canada states that the first brewery in what by then was called Upper Canada was the Finkle's Tavern, founded a few miles west of Kingston in Bath in 1800. The Ontario historic plaque indicates it was built earlier, in 1786 when the area was still Quebec. Sneath's book has a photo from the collection of beer writer Ian Bowering. What did they do before then? For the first years of Kingston we are likely looking at locally made home brewed ales, maybe some casks of strong ale being brought in for the wealthy but mainly lots and lots of rum if you go by the ads in the available newspapers. In a way, the tastes of Kingston echo of the community led by Sir William Johnson who died suddenly in upstate NY in 1774 just before the Revolution. He left his affairs to his son John who went on to lead led the Loyalist defense of upstate NY in the Revolution and then because the Superintendent of the resettlement here, the first colonization of the Great Lakes basis under British command. William Johnson was in the habit of importing good strong beer. It's likely his son, John, continued the practice.

    Kingston was still a strong ale town in 1890 according to this article from that year in The New York Times. The town was filled with farmer warriors who would have immediately grown their own grain crops as soon as they hit the shore. In that clip from the Kingston Chronicle of the 3rd of March 1820 above, the first commercial brewer in Kingston, Thomas Dalton, seeks out local grain to make his extra strong bodied ale, even using a nationalist argument to encourage drinking of Canadian beer over West Indian rum.

    So, good strong ale was likely being both brewed and brought into Kingston soon after its founding in 1783. And with it came the genesis of the Ontario craft beer trade that continues today.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2010/06/19/I_Am_An_Ontario_Craft_Beer_Week_Event'

    I Am An Ontario Craft Beer Week Event

    Posted: June 19th, 2010, 4:30am CEST by Alan McLeod

    I love it. Things are getting interesting. In response to Troy and Cass setting up a beer crawl, I asked and have been personally declared an Ontario Craft Beer Week event in my own right. Me. Not me going somewhere. Not even me doing something. Just me. Mr. Event. I had some Beau's in the back yard this evening. Event. I am doing some research into beer in my town in 1810 to 1830. Event. Woooooooooooot!!! Here is what the listing in the beer week events calendar says:

    Alan McLeod will spend all week blogging about the OCB. He will include craft beers from Ontario and will explore what Ontario's great beers mean, where they have been and where they are going. Historical, observational, poignant and humourous, Alan will take readers on a journey that will surely leave them thirsty for more.

    Get out your kleenex everybody because I am taking a journey. I am told I am even going poignant, for God's sake. I have no idea where they got that idea but I guess it means that I have to tell you about that time I had some Ontario craft beer and... it was on a moonlit night... and ... no... I am getting verklempt. Not ready to share.

    Anyway, like the idea of having a province-wide craft beer week, this is a hoot. We are going to talk a bit about what beer means around here, how long it has been here and what I think about its future. You join in, too, because this is not just about me. I hope to have some good local beer, to visit a few craft beer places in my town and hover expectantly over some great craft beers I have yet to try. Ontario Beer week runs from June 20th to 26th. Be prepared. Brace yourself.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2010/06/18/Jeff_Of_The_Gunmakers_Considers_Twitter'

    Jeff Of The Gunmakers Considers Twitter

    Posted: June 18th, 2010, 3:21am CEST by Alan McLeod

    Amongst the many things one misses in this post-Stonch portion of of the history of the information superhighway is Jeff Bell's optimism - you know, the optimism that shined through the pessimistic grouchiness which itself was framed by a cheery glint of sunshine? No? Me neither. Well, he's doing very well and seems the happy lad these days and even got a short interview posted in the UK's Morning Advertiser this morning about his use of Twitter as a means to get the message to the right people about his London pub, The Gunmakers:

    Since setting up the pub Twitter account six months ago, Jeffrey Bell, licensee of private lease the Gunmakers Arms in Clerkenwell, has amassed more than 600 followers, despite only advertising through a small Twitter feed on the pub’s website’s homepage. He said it was not the quantity of customers booking through Twitter that makes it worthwhile, but the quality. “The people who follow me on Twitter tend to be enthusiastic about good food, wine and ales,” explained Bell. “They come for a really good knees-up.” As many as “three dozen” people book a table through the network each month. Bell has found Twitter to be an effective way to spread word of changes such as new menus or events.

    Twitter is a funny thing. I think you have to be sensitive to how it works to pull off the success Jeff has found. Jeff does not really need 60,000 followers. He needs those 600 fans of what he is doing in establishment, the people who actually pay the bills. His Twitter feed is just a tiny 140 character window on the reality of The Gunmakers. It's not always the case. I am not sure I needed to know Mark Dredge had waaaay too much last night - a school night even - but that is his call, his life, between him and the HR staff at his job who follow his Twitter feed. Others have used the inherent short sharp shock to express a moment's frustration, using the easy access and focus to crap on a badly organized trade event, as tellingly as a shive neatly placed amongst ribs. Twitter can be cruel but - interestingly for the small world of beer - for all the brutal effect snapping at something via Twitter, it does not seem to attract the same sort of tone accusation that can pop up in blog comments. Is it that old "relax - it's only haiku" principle? Or is it that we all have time for a well placed kick? Whatever it is, it conveys a certain immunity as long as the wag does not become the crank.

    Message? Twitter is fine if you are conveying something honest and good. But it is not likely to make the unfortunate and needy look better. And might make your dud idea the focus of some easily provided honestly earned criticism.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2010/06/16/First_There_Was_Albany_Ale..._Now_Taunton_Ale'

    First There Was Albany Ale... Now Taunton Ale

    Posted: June 16th, 2010, 3:10am CEST by Alan McLeod

    I have a great pal with whom I have a recreational and professional interest in events in the Mohawk Valley of New York from around 1750 to 1785 and particularly William Johnson or rather Sir William Johnson, 1st Baronet of New York. Johnson was the landowner whose tenants become rather successful Loyalist soldiers under Sir John Johnson, 2nd Baronet, who kept upstate New York largely in British hands during the American Revolution. But for that little thing called the Treaty of Paris, they would have had no reason to become the founders of my town Kingston and thereby the founders of Ontario and thereby in significant part the founders of modern Canada by being the first British colonizing settlers on the Great Lakes.

    What am I going on about? You will recall that Albany Ale discovery indicating that there was a sea trade of strong ale out of New York's capital city from roughly 1800 into the middle of the nineteenth century. Well, my pal had the ability to do a quick word search through the papers of William Johnson looking for the word "beer" and, in addition to a reference to "Hyson tea" which is also along side Albany ale in the Newfoundland newspapers of almost a century later, came up with the following classes referenced in his correspondence:

    • 1755: two barrels beer of Hend'k Fry,
    • 1768: Taunton ale,
    • 1772: six barrels of Lispenards beer.

    That last reference is neither to the shipper or the wholesaler as this note from the merchants Hugh & Alexander Wallace from Oct. 2, 1772 shows:

    ...There is no Red port to be got here [at] this time, if any comes shall secure some for you - The Syder (sic) is not yet made, nor fitt to be bought for [at least] a Month. & Mr. Leispinard Says [he] will have the Beer ready to go along with the Syder (sic), at present he says he has none brewed that he would recommend to you. We hope all the things will please you, we have taken all possible care in the Choice of them, & bought them on the lowest terms.

    It looks like Lispenard or Lispinard was the actual brewer. And one month later on Nov. 3, 1772, the following is invoiced by Hugh Wallace to William Johnson:

    We have put on board Capt. Marsails in Mr. Adams's care for your use:
    6/-/- for 3 Barrl Strong Beer at 40/
    4/10/- for 3 Barrl. Ale @ 30/
    1/7/- for 6 Barrels at 4/6
    7/-/- for 10 Barrels Newark Syder at 14/
    0/3/- for Carting ale to the Sloop

    Interesting to see three grades of beer being bought but the more interesting reference for me is to "Taunton ale" as it also is referenced in a 1789 meal put on by George Washington as well as in a shipment to Newfoundland in 1810. It is clearly not a reference to something in passing or personal to some particular step in the supply. But what was it?

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2010/06/15/Straining_Reality_To_Keep__Craft_Beer__Meaningless'

    Straining Reality To Keep "Craft Beer" Meaningless

    Posted: June 15th, 2010, 3:51am CEST by Alan McLeod

    I have every sympathy for the Boston Beer Company and their Sam Adams brands if for no other reason that they keep coming up with brews that surprise me unexpectedly with their quality and value. That being said, it is getting silly out there with the efforts being made to continue their right to be called a "small" brewer or a "craft" brewer even as they get bigger and more industrial from a technical point of view. Take, for example, what was reported last week in The New York Times:

    Mr. Koch said Sam Adams would remain a craft beer regardless of whether the Boston Beer Company hung on to its official craft brewer status. Quite simply, he said, a craft beer is one recognized for flavor versus thirst-quenching qualities. “A craft beer you would not drink,” he said, “after you just mowed the lawn on a hot day.”

    Excuse me? That's a tad pompous, isn't it? I would be guessing (as I haven't exactly kept notes) but would be confident in saying that over 50% of my lawn mowing experiences since 2006 have been followed by a craft beer and that well over 80% of the beer Koch's company makes would be quite welcome at the post-mow lawn chair moment. Sam Adams brews may be tasty enough but, like most craft beer, they hardly cause chores and household duties to grind to a stop whenever they are near.

    It isn't about flavour, is it. There is more to it. While the real issue is the lower rate of excise tax the legislatively deemed small brewer enjoys, the Brewer's Association also has part of the problem with any change for as soon as Sam Adams stops being craft beer, the entire craft beer market in the US loses about 20% of its production. One solution seems to be making small brewers be those producing under six million barrels instead of the current two. I don't have recent stats but it appears to me that this would make all breweries "small" except for the few national macros. Isn't that just an admission of the core of meaninglessness at the heart of the use of "craft" or "small" to describe brewing in the USA today?

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2010/06/14/Oregon__Hop_In_The_Dark__Deschutes__Bend'

    Oregon: Hop In The Dark, Deschutes, Bend

    Posted: June 14th, 2010, 3:08am CEST by Alan McLeod

    From the fine people at Deschutes, this one pours deep mahogany. Cola even. With a frothy rim and foam of light mocha. On the nose, it is a West Coast US IPA - pine hoppy Cascade. Makes sense as this is a "CDA" or Cascadian Dark Ale. In the mouth, it's going in the same direction and then it's not. There beyond the tang of the hop acidities, it has toast scrapings, a bit of blackstrap. The body is curious with the combination of toffee notes from the crystal malt as well as the slick feel of oats. But you are not able to pursue them given the persistent wall of hop. A notch less or more cream would take this beer in very different direction. As interesting as it is good.

    Part of their Bond Street series, beers celebrating the original Deschutes brewpub focusing on hops like their Hop Trip I tried last fall. Jon liked it plenty as did Rick. BAers love it.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2010/06/14/The_Joy_Of_The_Pub_To_One_Who_May_Well_Hate_It'

    The Joy Of The Pub To One Who May Well Hate It

    Posted: June 14th, 2010, 1:57am CEST by Alan McLeod

    We beer geeks can be a bit too precious. We can forget that the joy of being in a bar is that you are in a place with other rules. Watching France v. Uruguay Friday in a neighbourhood pub, I was reminded of the din and the confusion, the sideshow of bar staff and the human churn that is a packed bar. I loved it but some scenes in other pubs elsewhere - well - go a little further, as Bryony Gordon wrote in today's Telegraph:

    Behind Jason, some men are arguing pointlessly about who is wearing the most current England strip. They stop when the big screens come down. The place erupts at the sight of Adrian Chiles. Outside, the sky could be falling in and nobody in here would be any the wiser, or care for that matter. "Eng-er-land", they chant, thumping tables, blowing klaxons. "ENG-ER-LAND." It is actually quite emotional when the national anthem is played, despite the fact that half of the representatives of our country do not seem to want to sing it (perhaps they don’t know the words)... At what point does it all go so wrong? Perhaps when ITV choose to cut to a car advert just as Steven Gerrard scores his goal. Scores of pints are flung through the air – it seems such a terrible waste given that the place is packed like sardines and there is no way of getting to the bar for the next 40 or so minutes.

    A waste? Arguing pointlessly? That is the entire point. Being wasteful and pointless at times is the key to healthy human existence and the pub is the finest example of it's meaningful exercise. Public knuckleheadedness. Without it, are we still as free?

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2010/06/12/Talking_About_Beer_In_The_Garden_On_Friday'

    Talking About Beer In The Garden On Friday

    Posted: June 12th, 2010, 4:53pm CEST by Alan McLeod

    Do you like the lawn furniture? The bit of gardening? Very pleasant early evening yesterday with a few staff from Beau's and friends talking about beer. It's become apparent that the ability to hold symposia is a bit problematic for me. I had to decline the very tempting call from Ohio Brew Week over the implications of an unplanned family vacation. I've also found it hard to find a venue that is acceptable under the law to give chats to the trade. But having people over works perfectly well as was the case two summers ago when the Hieronymi were here.

    What did we discuss? Well, we started with Beau's Lugtread and talked about its properties: thickness, steely hops, bread crusty malt. Lugtread is styled upon a kolsch so we moved to Gaffel from Cologne and did the old compare and contrast. Lighter, more floral. Yet still structured in the same way with the arc of rusty spoon. Next, to illustrate that steely hop even more, I passed around DAB original, a Dortmunder. Lighter still, but for that hop. Not generally as enjoyed compared to the other two. Except when sausage and sauerkraut was considered. Then, to illustrate bigger malt in a similar beer, Creemore Kellerbier was shared. Happiness restored as the capacity of malt to reveal many things was discussed. The last illustration was provided by Steam Whistle pilsner to give a glimpse beyond steel. It also showed how beer can be softer or harder when the Slavic was compared to the Teutonic. Which led to the idea of beer reflecting locality through things like water quality and local hop preference. Which led to beer being from somewhere. Which is like Beau's.

    As a reward, I opened an early, ridge bottled Local 1 which had the intended "wow" effect. We'll meet again in a month in the backyard. I may do wheat beers. Then in August maybe sours. Who knows?

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2010/06/11/It_s_A_Great_Big_Beer_Drinking_Pot_'

    It's A Great Big Beer Drinking Pot!

    Posted: June 11th, 2010, 2:30pm CEST by Alan McLeod

    I had no idea until the opening ceremonies that Soccer City, the main stadium build for World Cup 2010 is a replica of a South African communal beer drinking pot - the calabash. Please refer to your copy of Xhosa Beer Drinking Rituals for more details as to how to use one's own village's calabash.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2010/06/10/Ontario__Lemon_Tea_Beer__Mill_Street__Toronto'

    Ontario: Lemon Tea Beer, Mill Street, Toronto

    Posted: June 10th, 2010, 3:24am CEST by Alan McLeod

    I wasn't expecting to like this beer. The enamel stripping effect of Chapeau Lemon might have been at the back of my mind. But I received a swell sample pack from the brewer and gave it a whirl.

    The beer pours an orange amber with a rich off white head that resolves to a rim and foam. The aroma is extremely true Earl Grey and juicy lemon pulp along with a bit of pale malt sweetness. In the mouth, it is subtler than I expected - American wheat grassiness and a bright light body. No heavy sweetness masking and smoothing edges. Not a cooler pretending to be beer. A bit like Magic Hat #9 but lighter and cleaner without that brewery's rich buttery diacetyl legacy. The lemon is subdued at first as you notice the hop and then the tea. Low carbonation helps make it all moreish. And I didn't refrigerate this first. I wanted to try it warts and all. It passed the test.

    So, not a compromise or a gateway to anything - a pretty good beer displaying authentic ingredients including the lemon and the tea. As Greg wrote yesterday, no Bud Lite Lime. Not even a Bud Lite Lime Draft Ice. A good beer.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2010/06/09/Best_Beer_Related_Celebrity_Sighting_Ever'

    Best Beer Related Celebrity Sighting Ever

    Posted: June 9th, 2010, 2:05am CEST by Alan McLeod

    Is this the best beer related celebrity sighting ever? It has proximity, exclusivity and... royalty:

    About a minute later, who walks out the door but the Queen! She’d been attending a meal with the Privy Councillors and was leaving the building. As she exited, she stopped to say something to someone. Her gaze fell upon my buddy and me. She looked at my red running shoes, then the beer, then back to my shoes, then up at me, smiled, said something that made those near her smile, then got into the car and left.

    Her Majesty having a laugh at your expense has to be one for the record books. Not that I am in the Monarchist League's Rolodex or anything but you have to respect the "oh dear, a loser Canadian kid with a case of beer" response.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2010/06/08/Illinois__IPA__Goose_Island_Beer_Co.__Chicago'

    Illinois: IPA, Goose Island Beer Co., Chicago

    Posted: June 8th, 2010, 3:20am CEST by Alan McLeod

    On a Monday night when elementary school children are melting down all around you, it is hard to imagine Friday. Friday is that tiny light at the end of a long tunnel. A legend you hear about only in whispers in that place between waking and sleeping. And, worse, it's four days away.

    But at least I booked the afternoon off as well as the next Monday to watch some Work Cup soccer over a long weekend. Apparently, the USA is one of the teams playing and this might be the beer I save for this Saturday game against Engerlant. It pours a swell orange amber with a swell clingy white head and the smell of freesias and marigold. It has a great mouth feel with a good bit of body, a bit cream, a bit of heat from the hop acids and plenty of white grapefruit pine sour, too. The brewer has a pretty full spec sheet but suffice it to say it's yum without being like aiming a can of aerosol furniture polish at the back of your throat like so many of the big bomb IPAs these days. You won't need a Rolaid mid-bottle, either. Great BAer respect - and if England pulls into the lead, well, I can switch to Honkers just to be safe.

    So, if this is the beer for USA... what does one have with Uruguay?

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2010/06/07/Sad_News_With_The_Passing_Of_Bernie_Rivers'

    Sad News With The Passing Of Bernie Rivers

    Posted: June 7th, 2010, 3:43am CEST by Alan McLeod

    Beer fans in central New York are mourning the passing of Bernie Rivers who ran Galeville Grocery in Liverpool near Syracuse. The shop hails it self as "your complete historical neighborhood grocery store since 1888." I met Bernie this past January on a beer run into Syracuse and enjoyed a few minutes with this cornerstone of the community as well as the CNY beer scene. I've been shopping at Galeville for almost six years so far and have always been struck how dependent we beer fans are on the passion and risk taking of the shop keepers like Bernie who stock the shelves, hoping the locals will support the decisions and selections they make. I've rarely been anything less but excited with my finds there.

    Tributes can be found at the Facebook pages for his store.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2010/06/05/Session_40__Session_Beer_Is_All_Around_Us'

    Session 40: Session Beer Is All Around Us

    Posted: June 5th, 2010, 2:57pm CEST by Alan McLeod

    There is a joke in Canada about why drinking American beer is like making love in a canoe. The punchline notes their common proximity to water. We may protest that those days are long gone if they ever existed. But who are the "we" who protest? One of the fallacious ideas popular among craft beer nerds is that the 93% or so of people who like beer who do not drink craft beer are fools. We are told that craft beer is the future. We pray for that day that 8% or more of all beer drinkers will soon reject gas station beer for the good stuff. I sometimes wonder who the fools really are.

    I was at a ball game last evening in Watertown NY. It is a fine thing to live in a border town. I picked up some Goose Islands, a mix 12 of Brooklyn as well as a few Ommegangs at the grocery store as part of the run but those beers were not on sale at the ball game. There were a couple of light beers on offer and they sold fast. The gang of young couples ahead of me bought themselves rounds as did the Dads over by third base enjoying the Friday night, watching the kids running after fouls. No one was out of control. Every beer seemed to taste like a good reason for another. It was a community beer drinking session.

    When I have complained about the good beer meets good food movement, I hope I have made clear it is because of the limits of its appeal. Most people have no interest in fine dining. Most don't care that good food matches with good beer anymore than they care to learn that they might actually like light opera if they just spent some time with it. Some may call them fools but others call them customers. If North American craft beer is ever to move into mass appeal of session drinking, our craft brewers will have to accept that their beers need to be placed in the hands of those young couples and those Dads. It has to meet them where they are found on a regular basis. And where is that? Not at fests or beer bars. Certainly not tucked under linen at precious food pairing events. They are heading to the grocery store, in the backyard and at the game. They are buying beer.

    Tasty, accessible, affordable, not needing note taking and not intense. That's what a session beer is. Macro-brewing knows it. Some micros get the point but not enough yet. The session goes on. Will craft beer join in?

    [Ed.: This month's edition of The Session is hosted by the fine folk at Top Fermented.]

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2010/06/04/Denmark__Helene_Heather__N%c3%b8rrebro_Bryghus'

    Denmark: Helene Heather, Nørrebro Bryghus

    Posted: June 4th, 2010, 2:53am CEST by Alan McLeod

    You know that you've been hanging out with the wrong crowd when you have a sip of a new beer and think it tastes like Pimms or rather those cucumber sticks that sit soaking in Pimms. But it sort of does. The taste opens. Soon the aroma is like a lumber yard in a light damp rain. My guess at rye in this amber ale gives a well balanced peppery spice along with flashes of honey, irn bru, orange, lime and grassiness, cinnamon and almond. Pine even. Fairly modest carbonation makes for a soft easy sipper even with the body and complexity. Care of R+R. The brewer says it has heather, lavender and yarrow... like I could pick those out.

    The only other heather ale I personally can compare this with is Fraoch from Scotland. This one is at least as likeable as the BAers will tell you. The Irish Beer Nut (the only true beer nut) loves it. You need any other recommendation than that?

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2010/06/03/What_Books_To_Choose_To_Start_A_Beer_Library_'

    What Books To Choose To Start A Beer Library?

    Posted: June 3rd, 2010, 3:16am CEST by Alan McLeod

    I had the idea that part of my playing at training brewery staff might be to recommend the beginnings of a library. I figure most long distance sales rep and junior brewers have plenty of hours to flip through the pages of text books. I just needed to figure out which ones to select. Right? Then they'll immediately be converted into book wormery. Right?

    I figured I had a tough job on my hands. Then I turned on my computer this evening and found that Martyn had posted a piece mere hours ago entitled "How to be a Beer Historian in Just 10 Books" and soon I was in that golden place where I know that someone else has done the heavy lifting already. Except I was not thinking of only beer history and specifically not British brewing history as a focus for my young students. So, here for now is the beginning of my list of works in no particular order to build a beer library around:

    I won't repeat my book reviews or references, other than care of the links above, but there is some reasoning behind it. You have to remember that the class in question meets in Canada so Heron's book is essential to understanding why a brewer in Ontario finds himself or herself where they do in relation to everything from styles and laws. Pete's second book is a genial introduction to the world's relationship with ales and lagers. Brewing With Wheat by Stan will give an example of the latest thinking about style largely from the brewer's perspective. The English Pub is Jackson's best and most accessible book which focuses on the consumer's experience in a context analogous or at least related to the British North American scene. The Brewmaster's Table is the best statement on the current key trend in beer marketing even if it is not one I would rely on too heavily. And the work of both Unger and Honsey is stunning in both their scale and detail.

    There are many more books to add. This is only the start of the library. But I think this selection displays the range of text that are out there. What would you add?

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

    "Beer Banned From Dwile Flonking Championship"

    Posted: June 2nd, 2010, 2:07am CEST by Alan McLeod

    That is what the headline read. I heard it from Paul and thought "it's a joke, right?"

    No joke. See, there are things that don't go with beer like driving a car and then there are things that not only go with beer but are only really about the beer - dwile flonking is one of them. But not everyone agrees in Norfolk:

    Norfolk District Council had warned licernsees Lorraine Clinch and Sue Hancock at the Ludham Dog Inn that the game would classify as a drinking game and would be illegal under the new code. Dwile flonking involves competitors throwing a beer soaked towel at opponents using a pole. If you miss your target twice in a row you have to down a pot of real ale.

    The Code? Apparently on their way out the door Old Labour decided to impose a code for proper alcohol retailing and included restrictions on drinking games. Now I understand what Pete was going on about last winter with the whole dentist's chair thing. But not even Pete could have imagined this would reach out and suck the life out of dwile flonking.

    Dwile flonking? It gets a page and a half in 1975's Pub Games of England including this bit on its creation: "According to one account it was a court pastime of King Offa of Mercia in the eighth century. According to another it was dreamed up by an underworked BBC man during an extended tea-break." I lean towards the latter understanding.

    Does it matter that this strikes at silly middle-aged reasonably middle-class made up rural drinking game when the law was clearly aimed at urban youff? I suppose it shouldn't... but that would make it a dumb law, right? Unless the dwile flonkers are out of control and no one is admitting it.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2010/05/31/Sometimes_The_News_Is_Quite_Acceptably_Untrue'

    Sometimes The News Is Quite Acceptably Untrue

    Posted: May 31st, 2010, 4:46pm CEST by Alan McLeod

    You would think that the headline "Alcoholic ginger beer set to be most popular summer drink in England" might mean that someone is claiming that alcoholic ginger beer set to be most popular summer drink in England. But it isn't. There is no way in Hell that beer or tea or even fruit juice will be outsold by the stuff yet there it is:

    Ginger beer is going to be this summer’s most popular drink with the beverage fast gaining a devoted consumer base. The competitively priced drinks have already bested many well-established beers in terms of sales... “It really has taken the drinks market by storm. It appeals to a really wide market from older drinkers who remember traditional ginger beer to curious youngsters,” a supermarket drinks buyer told The Mirror.

    "Most popular" - that's it. The story in Daily News and Analysis, whatever that is, is lifted from The Mirror which ran the headline "Alcoholic ginger beer set to be drink of the summer" - much better in its overt meaninglessness. Meaninglessness is comforting.

    I am starting to develop a theory, a little pet idea, that there is no actual knowledge about anything in the drinks trade. Expertise is based on assertion and opportunity. Reversible hats with labels like journalist / judge and critic / consultant get passed around according to the best chance to make a buck. Is this so bad? Times are tough and acceptance of this simple principle would certainly have relieved Pete of the need to update his very good but very first book. Except that presumes his revision is more accurate. Maybe it's just different. Which may well make it the book of the summer. Or even the most popular.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2010/05/30/Maine__11th_Anniversary_Ale__Allagash__Portland'

    Maine: 11th Anniversary Ale, Allagash, Portland

    Posted: May 30th, 2010, 2:24am CEST by Alan McLeod

    Memorial Day weekend el norte continues with this four year old treat from Allagash in Maine. Sixteen bucks for 750 ml at 9.2% in 2006? I have no idea. Pre-recession pricing is meaningless to me now.

    The brewery speaks highly of this creation which finds itself this far into its life looking very much like a very good Belgian dark strong. Fig and licorice are works used by Allagash but there is a fabulous texture to this beer, like a sticke alt, that speaks to enough residual sugar to let this one lie in a cellar for years yet at this strength. Another word not mentioned is rum - dark rum at that. You could nicely soak fruit in this or have it with Christmas cake. Or smoked salmon. Buckets of it. Herbal, too. Rosemary?

    The deep BAer respect may be one notch too light.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2010/05/29/Wisconsin__Moon_Man_Pale_Ale__New_Glarus'

    Wisconsin: Moon Man Pale Ale, New Glarus

    Posted: May 29th, 2010, 3:12am CEST by Alan McLeod

    It's Memorial Day weekend in the USA and I am celebrating. Mainly because I've been sick since the middle of last weekend's Victoria Day long weekend up here. Being in a border town it's not a great stretch even if I can't get over to witness one of the glories of the western world, a small town US parade. Eat a hot dog this weekend, woudja?

    This beer was launched just a few weeks ago and arrived in a mixed 12 pack care of my Wisconsin mule - oddly by way of a village in north western Quebec. It gives off the aroma of peaches and apricots at an alarming level. It pours light burnished gold with an actively sustain pure white foam. On the swallow, theres a wall of pale malt sweet graininess with black tea hop with a weedy floral overlay. The finish is a bit tea, a bit bitter green with a squirt of juicy malt right at then end. Yum.

    Structurally, it's quite singular - a overly perfumed kolsch? And at 5% its a reasonably sessionable beer but I bet it could be rolled back to 4.4% with reasonable integrity. BAers got the love thang.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2010/05/27/Who_Has_The_Greater_Moral_Right_To_Sell_Me_Beer_'

    Who Has The Greater Moral Right To Sell Me Beer?

    Posted: May 27th, 2010, 2:36am CEST by Alan McLeod

    I think I find this weirder than I might if I ran a pub or a CAMRA local branch but it seems to me that there might have been some unwritten unspoken arrangement between pubs and CAMRA not that far from CAMRA’s national administrative centre in St Albans, Hertfordshire if the pub owners quoted in the Morning Advertiser today are to be believed:

    ...the Harpenden Beer and Cider Festival will take business away from pubs. They questioned why CAMRA is getting involved in showing football. The Festival takes place at the Harpenden Public Halls from Thursday 10 June until Saturday 12 June, when England play the USA in South Africa. Last year’s event drew a crowd of 2,800. “We had a pubwatch meeting yesterday and all the members agreed that it was going to have a negative effect on pubs,” said Grant Hollier of the town’s Plough and Harrow pub. “We are saying that we support CAMRA because they support beer, but they are taking trade away from us.”

    You know how you get my beer money? You do the best job earning it, that's how. I hope that idea is also on the agenda for most "pubwatch" meetings and not just "tips for better collusion" and "keeping an eye on those CAMRA guys" and such stuff. What really grates is that the World Cup is a national and international phenomenon that should rise above who gets how many bucks because, frankly, everybody is going to get a hell of a lot of bucks out of it.

    Me? Who has the greater moral right to sell me beer during an event like this? Probably the place who treated me right on a boring Tuesday lunch back in February.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2010/05/25/Pizzaria_Owners_Advised_To_Short_The_Public'

    Pizzaria Owners Advised To Short The Public

    Posted: May 25th, 2010, 11:20pm CEST by Alan McLeod

    I came across an extraordinary bit of beer business advice in PMQ which I take in this context to be "Pizzaria Marketing Quarterly"¹ Read this and let me know what you think:

    ...It’s also important to know how many servings you should get from a keg. For example, most owners know there are 1,984 ounces in a 15.5-gallon domestic keg, and they know they pour 16-ounce pints, so they assume 124 servings per keg. However, with the evolution of the 14-ounce pint glass (in combination with ½” head), they should expect closer to 155 servings per keg. At $4 per serving, that adds up to $124 per keg in lost revenue!

    Because you've shorted your customer by 12.5%! That's not you lost "revenue" - that is other people's money! The bizarre thing is that the bit of sage advice sits at the end of an article entitled "Managing Your Draft Beer" in which the issue of lack of controls in retailing draft beer is discussed. Apparently, an average of 20% of draft beer does not make it out of the keg and into a paying glass through spillage, giveaways and other forms of shrinkage. Good thing to know but, as always, a good diagnosis does not mean you are going to get the right prescription.

    Don't get me wrong. While I have no sympathy for the circumstance described illustrating how losses can be caused by bad apple bartenders, I think the author goes way too far. Frankly, I find the claim to 20% loss unlikely. If that is the average then 50% of pizza shop owners are dunces. And I am especially disgusted that controlling loss is tied to the idea that bars and restaurants should short pour their clients. A bad employee represents the failure of duties under a contract. But the sale of a beer to a customer is also a contract and a fair measure at a fair price is what the customer expects. So, if your menu states that the measure is 16 oz - or whatever implies that measure - you better serve a full 16 fluid ounces. Not head. Not 14 oz of beer and 2 of additional glass weight. Otherwise, it is a failure of contract just as bad or worse than the bad apple bartender. Sounds like it is time we all renewed our vows with The Honest Pint Project. Time we armed ourselves with beer gauges.

    This sort of business writing illustrates nothing so well as the absence of a meaningful beer consumer advocacy environment in North America. Maybe it's an illusion but you have the sense that within CAMRA's jurisdiction armies of large bearded sweatered men with notebooks would pounce on any operator who acted in the manner suggested in this piece. Nothing less would be deserved... even if the prospect is rather distasteful.

    ¹... and not for me the short form of "Post Married Quarters" or suburbs on Canadian armed forces bases. I lived in military towns growing up.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2010/05/25/Lots_Of_Club_Soda_And_A_Pity_Barbeque'

    Lots Of Club Soda And A Pity Barbeque

    Posted: May 25th, 2010, 2:31am CEST by Alan McLeod

    I hate not getting to get the BBQ going even if I am sick. And no, in true Canadian style, it wasn't really a BBQ even if I smoked the rib steaks for the last bit of the grilling. As our dinner guests took the hint, it was more of a pity 'que. Just a man, briquettes and meat. At least it wasn't a turkey wienie on a hibachi or whatever else my countrymen call a BBQ. I had to. Watching a mid-80s weekend happening just right out there, beyond the picture window can drive a man mad. Even if you have the voice of Barry White. OK, a sniffly Barry White.

    It's no fun when the taste for beer disappears as it has this Monday replaced by an urge for club soda and Sinutabs. I did get to try that sample of Vrienden wit by Beau's while on a break from gardening in the first half of the weekend. It was lovely, substantial. None of the too frequent "lemonade in disguise" for this wit. Big body from the unmalted wheat as well as complex, fresh waves of herbs and citrus. I had a very good selection from Charlevoix as well - the tripel, double and ESB. Old Canada has been showing itself proud with these beers. So it hasn't been an entire wasteland of used Kleenex and over the counter cold remedies. It has, however, left me with a certain sympathy for Jay's question posed to us all: "What is beer?"

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2010/05/24/Planning_Sessions_For_The_Upcoming_Beery_Seminars'

    Planning Sessions For The Upcoming Beery Seminars

    Posted: May 24th, 2010, 12:44am CEST by Alan McLeod

    Gaffel Kolsch has shown up in the LCBO after, my guess, a 15 year absence. I used to get this up in the Ottawa Valley when the LCBO used to do things like stock beer preferred by local communities. My part of the Ottawa valley had an army base which included a lot of former residents at German posts. I picked it up because Ontario's famed Beau's has asked me to share what knowledge I have with some of their staff. As you know, I like to help.

    My idea is to have a series of sessions after work on Friday in my backyard using the old "compare and contrast" approach. Beau's flagship beer is a kolsch-like thing and so the first compare and contrast I am thinking of is to try it next to a Gaffel to see if there are commonalities. So I've stocked some away. Then I think I will move to a common helles, then a Czech pilsner and on through a few beers that are seemingly similar but then not as close as you might think if you had one of each in hand.

    Does this make sense? I see this taking a number of months and, heck, could go on forever if it makes sense. What other sorts of methods could I use? I was thinking that I will lean heavily on the methodology in The Naked Pint but am happy to take on any ideas. Any thoughts on what you would do?

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2010/05/23/That_Oddly_Named_Canadian_Holiday_May_Two_Four'

    That Oddly Named Canadian Holiday May Two-Four

    Posted: May 23rd, 2010, 2:51am CEST by Alan McLeod

    The 24th of May does not need to fall on the May two-four weekend for it to be a holiday even if this year Monday will really be the 24th. As this food feature in the National Post implies, this holiday has become something of a celebration of beer for Canada. "Two-four" is our slang for a 24 bottle pack of beer - what I gather they call a "slab" in Australia. Moosehead beer reports a 15% jump in sales this time of year.

    Officially called Victoria Day, as we move more and more away from associating ourselves as a nation with the monarchy, the holiday has become more and more associated with ourselves, relaxation and the gateway to the summer to come. Here in Ontario, it is also called Firecracker Day the combination of cottages, lots of beer and cheaply made recreational explosives adds a note of anarchy to this time of year. Cops are busy as they always have been. Campgrounds get accosted. Doesn't sounds all that Victorian, does it.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2010/05/21/Are_Fingers_Crossed_Behind_Beer_Writers__Backs_'

    Are Fingers Crossed Behind Beer Writers' Backs?

    Posted: May 21st, 2010, 1:33pm CEST by Alan McLeod

    Writing about beer writing is both boring and interesting. Mark Dredge, a young lad in London, poses the occasional enjoyable question of this sort and I have to admit they draw me in. Here is his latest post about the propriety of describing having had too much to drink and this was my response:

    "...a disservice to beer..."? I have no idea what this means. What I take from the disassociation of drinking from , you know, the obligatory effects of drinking is that if it is discussed somewhere a consultant loses out. Forget the distinction between being barfingly blotto and merrily drunk, you would think that most drinks weigh in at "-2%" if you rely on the way they are described by beer writers. Given that few beer writers are not otherwise involved in the trade's cash box (or positioning to be) why would they not create and adhere to taboos of those realities that make brewery accountants in ill fitting suits uncomfortable?

    I could have put that last it better: "given that few beer writers are not otherwise involved in the trade's cash box one way or another (or positioning to be) why would they not be subject and adhere to taboos related to those realities that make brewery accountants in ill fitting suits uncomfortable?" That's better. The trouble with and / or reality of beer writing is that it is the playground of the tippler who is often aware of the business end of the tipple and is attracted to it equally well. This is reasonable and maybe unavoidable.

    First, like all pop culture writing, it takes an interest in the topic to get involved at all. You don't have to like or be in the government to write well about it, you don't have to have cornered Wall Street to analyze business. But if you have not had enough evenings at the bar or popped enough Belgian corks you have little chance of understanding what you are on about.

    Second, it make your brain a different place to be. Is it a dirty white lie that many beer writers probably have degrees of dipsomania? It's such a modern idea, the objective and disengaged experience of a mood altering drug. It implies that there are clubs of perfectly satisfied ale smellers. That beer fans use spittoons.

    Third, I do think money colours all this. When asking a shop owner in a US college town how they deal with underage drinking, there is the knowing smile. When one reads the exploits of beer writers reporting from shadowy marketing meetings, on PR junkets, of the event that they are at that just happens to be sponsored or another fest where they meet all their friends the brewers for hours of clinky clinky and you can, too... well, why not? It's not only the free samples that friends envy not to mention the ad money - but the role of being that bit nearer to the beloved fluid so as to earn favour. The idea that beer gives back or even pays for itself is a dream for so many.

    We need to face facts. Beer makes you chummy and chummy sells. Therefore, you can't talk about chumminess in ways that potentially turns off chum. Like talking about how chumminess sells. Chum is literally the agent that gathers. So, there is a contradiction: we can't talk about the two things we like about beer and writing about beer - chums and benefits. Or, as Pete noted today, the fact that it turns people into this:

    I think Mr Big Laugh was paid for his part. And this one, too. We like it. We like the whole overlapping messy business because we like buying beer and having beer and thinking how nice it was that we were able to buy that beer and feel this way and all the better when beer pays for your beer. Because beer makes you feel like you wish you felt when you did not have a beer. Someone else wrote that. Might have even been paid for being clever enough to come up with it, one way or another.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2010/05/21/Not_Beer__What_Is_In_Your_Liquor_Cabinet_'

    Not Beer: What Is In Your Liquor Cabinet?

    Posted: May 21st, 2010, 12:42am CEST by Alan McLeod

    I am fairly old school. I have red wines, a bottle of Plymouth gin, black rum, sweet Cinzano, Pernod, bourbon, various sherries and the Pimm's added today. When I think of it, Kingsley Amis would not get lost amongst those bottles. I also have Angostura bitters, cans of club soda and tonic water. Lemons and limes. Down at the back of the beer stash I even have a slowly growing collection of vintage ports and Hungarian tokays but I plan to only open those in my retirement years.

    Old man's selection? I admit it. But is this so wrong? Here's what I can put together and what I depend upon to get me and mine through the hot weeks ahead:

    • Gin and Tonic,
    • Manhattan,
    • Cinzano, soda and lemon juice,
    • Mint Julip,
    • Pink Gin,
    • Pernod and water, and
    • Pimm's experimentations.

    Do I need more than this in my life? Maybe I do but I don't know when I am going to notice. If you are sufficiently disturbed you may suggest what else I could add or what you depend upon. If you are sufficiently creative, you may see what else I could make with the available ingredients.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2010/05/20/Quebec__Porter_Baltique__Les_Trois_Mousquetaires'

    Quebec: Porter Baltique, Les Trois Mousquetaires

    Posted: May 20th, 2010, 3:51am CEST by Alan McLeod

    This must be the best value in Baltic porters on the planet at $7.99 a 750 ml at 10%. Dated and "grand reserve", too. I don't know what "grand reserve" means in this particular case as I picked it up at Marche Omni and it didn't come out of a deep dank cavern but...

    The beer pours inky brown with a deep dark mocha head. The aroma is licorice with pumpernickel and even a sort of candy thing. In my mouth there are layers of dark things accentuated by fine light carbonation - dates, coffee grounds, dark cocoa, milk chocolate, stone-esque minerally things, children's chocolate biscuits - all with a smooth sweet background that makes me question whether this from the empire of Baltic porter or the empire of milk stout. Does it matter? No. I like it a lot but have a look - it earns abiding BAer love.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2010/05/19/When_Is_A_Stonch_Not_A_Stonch_'

    When Is A Stonch Not A Stonch?

    Posted: May 19th, 2010, 2:13pm CEST by Alan McLeod

    When it's his business. Jeff the artist formerly known as Stonch has announced a blog for his pub The Gunmakers will be updating soon. Excellent news. Now, if he can just work on closing the street for Tuesday night London Skittles league play.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2010/05/18/Adnams_Seeks_End_To_Small_Brewery_Tax_Break'

    Adnams Seeks End To Small Brewery Tax Break

    Posted: May 18th, 2010, 3:41am CEST by Alan McLeod

    [Note: I have been well chastened by a generous application of the facts by Mr. Stephen Pugh in the comments and now am compelled to consider his objections to the format of the tax subsidy far more seriously. This post has been edited accordingly but done so in a way to ensure continuing admission of my blockheadedness.]

    Still with the news out of Britain, it appears Adnams of Suffolk is none too pleased with the recently retired Labour government's tax break for small brewers if this letter by Stephen Pugh, Finance Director of Adnams, to the Financial Times is anything to go by:

    The undeniable truth that markets do not always create an optimal outcome was taken by Mr Brown as an excuse to regulate and tinker to an unprecedented extent, often with unforeseen consequences. An example from my own industry is the introduction of "small breweries' relief" in 2002. The taxpayer now provides a small brewer producing around 5,000 hectolitres of beer with an annual duty subsidy of about £170,000 (and even more for those brewing stronger beers). The relief is so highly tailored to the small brewer that those brewing slightly more are likely to be in the position that even if they could brew their beer for nothing, their duty bill would still make them more expensive than a microbrewer.

    Southwold, home of Adnam, is in solid Conservative country on the south-east English coast so it may not surprise that they are comfortable speaking out about the end of overt leftist politics (as opposed to the apparent covert leftist politics of the new coalition.) But it is interesting to note the slagging of concern for small brewers by a medium-sized brewer - especially one which lists it product lines in the following order: wines, kitchenware, beer, gifts. They have hotels, too. At what point are they not really brewers anymore but small to medium conglomerates producing a variety entertainment packages?

    If Adnams has passed that point, what is Mr. Pugh really saying? He does make an important point about non-graduated duties but that is not a fault with a subsidy program but one that has too few steps unlike the sensible one we have in Canada. But isn't he really saying that tax relief for small brewers (aka the inversely described "duty subsidy") is unfair to firms that are not small brewers. Like firms that are small to medium conglomerates producing a variety entertainment packages?

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2010/05/17/Err..._About_The_Pub_As_A_Campaign_Issue'

    Err... About The Pub As A Campaign Issue

    Posted: May 17th, 2010, 4:14am CEST by Alan McLeod

    So, when the government gets the boot and is replaced by a coalition you know that what plays out is the true feeling of the population mixing with the true intentions of the parties. And, all of the sudden, it seems like the pub is not the flavour of the month with the new British government:

    The association, whose members account for 98pc of beer brewed in the UK and own more than half of Britain's 54,000 pubs, believes that the increased cost of a pint could have a damaging impact on trade. It is so concerned about the effects that a VAT rise would have that it is planning to ask the Government for a compensatory reduction in beer duty. George Osborne, the Chancellor, is widely expected to increase VAT from 17.5pc to 20pc as part of the Government's plan to cut the UK's deficit. Experts have warned that the potential impact of a VAT rise could leave some ordinary families £3,000 a year worse off.

    Where is the two dimensional Minister of the Pub now? What says Clegg, the LibDem Deputy PM, about the over taxation of pubs? We need to face facts. In the early 1990s Canada went through this and our great centre-left Prime Minister, Jean Chretien, led the way. He cut and taxed to avoid the nightmare scenario of a country unable to control its own finances. That is what the UK faces and what the UK must face. How much better to face it with a scheme to pay the way through a national program to pony up for the beer and the full taxes levied against it. Beer would truly be best if the result was fiscal stability. Beats the hell out of buying a savings bond every pay cheque.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2010/05/15/A_Brewery_Trapped_By_Local_Culture'

    A Brewery Trapped By Local Culture

    Posted: May 15th, 2010, 3:06pm CEST by Alan McLeod

    Josh Rubin has a good article in the Toronto Star today about Creemore Springs and the real or perceived pressures it faces in moving its business model forward. Let's count them, shall we:

    • A former owner who remains vocal and opinionated.
    • A brand that is too closely tied to location.
    • A village that is fearful of short term expansion and long term abandonment.
    • An opportunity to bring greater financial stability and jobs to a rural community.
    • An absentee owner that operates at a massively larger scale.
    • Unhappy if friendly neighbours.
    • A new CEO being parachuted in Whose favorite beer is favorite beer is Molson Export.

    For the craft beer fan, so much of this is a side show. Creemore has expanded their range and won me over despite earlier suspicions. But good beer can be made in large facilities or on equipment that can fit in your living room. It can be made in rust belt urban cores or pristine countryside. I think the former owner might be living in his own dream if he thinks that to some "a beer made by elves, lost in some little village, has more appeal" unless we are speaking about people who have no real sense of beer. People out antiquing. See, "local" can be a distraction.

    I have had nothing but great relationship with the fine folk who work at Creemore and it makes me sad - even frustrated - for them. This story is a poignant example that the obsession for local and whatever that means to any give person, like nationalism, can sometimes also be the recourse of cowards, a curse - even as much as it is a source of pride and motivation making the best. Compared to the boom that is being experienced with relative ease at the other end of southern Ontario at Beau's, the news sounds like they are weighed down by so many forces that have ultimately little to do with their good beer.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2010/05/14/What_Would_I_Tell_Ohio_About_Beer_If_I_Could_'

    What Would I Tell Ohio About Beer If I Could?

    Posted: May 14th, 2010, 3:08am CEST by Alan McLeod

    I got a very nice email this week inviting me to be a speaker at Ohio Brew Week. We've never been in southeast Ohio and July needed a new destination assigned to it so this may well happen. But what to talk about? What theme should I focus on?

    • Economics: walls filled with rapidly flashing power point graphs as the audience uncomfortably waits for a pause to rush the bar?
    • Autobiographical: why I type about beer when I could just drink the damn stuff?
    • New Media: how to drink alone with greater social acceptability.
    • History:all the things I did not know and still don't.
    • Sociology: patterns in beer blogger bickering during the century's first decade.
    • Geography: all beer has terroir. It's just that you don't like where it's from.

    There's so much to offer Ohio, isn't there. But maybe I need a little help. What should I glean for the over 2,000 posts and nearly seven years of doing this that someone could sit for an hour or so and take something from? And if you are from southeastern Ohio - where are the good diners?

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2010/05/13/Toronto_Gets_Breakfast_Beer_For_The_World_Cup'

    Toronto Gets Breakfast Beer For The World Cup

    Posted: May 13th, 2010, 2:27am CEST by Alan McLeod

    OK, with a month to go to World Cup soccer from South Africa I am glad this has been cleared up... at least for Toronto:

    The sun will be over the yardarm a little bit earlier during the FIFA World Cup, thanks to Deputy Mayor Joe Pantalone. “We’re approaching more of a European attitude to alcohol — that is, in moderation it’s good,” Pantalone said, shortly after his motion to allow bars to open an hour early during the soccer championship starting in June passed at city council. “It will be appreciated by the general public and it will be appreciated by the people who enjoy a good game of football with a glass of beer in the hot days of July and August.” The games are being played in South Africa and will air early in the morning here in Toronto. The changes will allow bars to start serving at 10 a.m. instead of 11 a.m. Closing time will remain 2 a.m.

    Frankly, if I am having a breakfast beer I am having it in my jammies and fuzzy Netherlands slippers at home. I have booked a few days off work through the first round of the tournament to make sure I get, you know, my Portugal v. Brazil fix. I have a flag of one and a jersey of the other, you know. But I don't know if I want to sit in a bar all day slugging beer. I mean I may have a hefeweissen with my eggs on toast but after that I expect to get all sleepy and nap well before extra time. How do people do these things? Is that what those little tiny coffee cups are for?

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2010/05/12/New_York__Rare_Vos__Ommegang__Cooperstown'

    New York: Rare Vos, Ommegang, Cooperstown

    Posted: May 12th, 2010, 1:36am CEST by Alan McLeod

    I haven't mentioned Ommegang's Rare Vos in something like seven years of being aware of it. I haven't mentioned other things but I keep them to myself. It is called a Belgian-Style Amber Ale on the neck label. Sad that the regulators of such things couldn't have settled on Belgianesque instead of that "-style". Maybe it should be "-arama." Belgianarama... -esque.

    Amber also becomes a difficult word with a beer like this. It's like calling something very medium. What quality is it supposed to convey? The brewer actually goes on and on about it. At 6.5% it is reasonably quaffable, enhanced by the soft water characteristic of central New York as well as a measure of richness. Grainy with caramel along with little wee nods to apple, raisin and tobacco. Black tea hoppiness sits there quietly doing its job. It gives off floral aromas that may well include orange but could as easily be a hedge in mid-June. Earthy and green twig.

    Fabulous and understated. Was there ever greater BAer love for a beer you can buy for $7.50 a corked 750 ml at a grocery store near me? One of the best values in beer going. How do they do it?

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2010/05/11/Another_Fact_Or_Two_Relevant_To_Albany_Ale'

    Another Fact Or Two Relevant To Albany Ale

    Posted: May 11th, 2010, 2:48am CEST by Alan McLeod

    Reading a book on Mohawk political figures called The Two Hendricks when I came upon a few facts that may become relevant to the Albany Ale question:

    • In 1721, Albany developed a trade in flour and bread to the West Indies.
    • In the 1740s, the loyalties of the Albany Dutch were held suspect by the British and the Mohawk. There was even rumour of Montreal - Albany alliances based on the smuggling trade that saw one half or more of the French fur trade rerouted through Albany rather than through French Royal channels.

    Point? Albany traders had an independent streak, were culturally distinct over two generations after British take over in the 1660s and also they had pre-existing distant trading relationships. They also had surplus cash crop grain. Just the sort of thing that might lead to wealth through a vertically integrated local farming, malting, brewing and exporting enterprises.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2010/05/09/Ontario__Our_First_Craft_Beer_Week_Is_Coming'

    Ontario: Our First Craft Beer Week Is Coming

    Posted: May 9th, 2010, 5:25pm CEST by Alan McLeod

    As I think you all might know, I live in eastern Ontario and have often cast an envious eye towards other nearby jurisdictions especially New York but also recently Quebec. I was south just yesterday to buy some Ommegang, Brooklyn, Sierra Nevada and Goose Island at a grocery store. A grocery store. Next Saturday, I have managed to set up a plan that includes an hour and a half to hit an SAQ for some Belgian beer as well as Marche Omni, my favorite dep, for a few of Quebec's finest. But things have been happening in Ontario that have been tipping the balance back towards parity:

    • As Steve from Beau's has discussed, he is co-chair of Ontario Craft Beer Week set for June 20 - 26, 2010 organized by my sponsor the Ontario Craft Brewers. Twenty-five of the province's small and medium sized brewers are taking part and should make for some interesting promotions at the breweries. Trouble is Ontario is a big place with something of a Toronto-centric habits. I am not sure how much the event will reach out to the bars in other cities and towns, let alone into oligarchical - yet wonderfully named - Beer Store owned by the big three or the governmentally monopolistic LCBO. It's a practical problem as Ontario include 344,092 separate square miles. Bigger than France. Bigger than Japan. Almost as big as France plus Japan. Getting the product to the auslanders is a heck of a task. I will keep an eye on that but let's be clear - good step for good Ontario beer.
    • I even have a bit of trouble getting Ontario samples. It's just not done as much as in the US or elsewhere. But the week before last a truck from Creemore Springs rolled up into our suburban driveway and an eight-pack of this year's version of their well-respected Kellerbier was dropped of. Nice touch with the use of multi-ton machinery. The beer is a delight - smooth and malty, nutty with a neatly placed hop bit to cut the cloy. Not an extreme anything or a double imperial whtchamacallit. Just quality beer.
    • And the Speaker of Ontario's legislature, Steve Peters, has announced the annual selection of the Member of Provincial Parliaments' six favorite beers. The Speak added his own selection, choosing Dead Elephant Ale from Railway City Brewing from St. Thomas, in honour the 125th anniversary of the death of circus elephant Jumbo. Quite an appropriate as Jumbo was killed by, you know, a train. That's your Ontario fact for the day.

    I've yet to have a DEA as St. Thomas, where the beer is made, is 453 km from here, a distance greater than Prague from Munich. or here to Scranton PA for that matter. As I said, Ontario is a big place. Where things are happening.

  • Permalink for 'A_Good_Beer_Blog/2010/05/08/Session_39__Collaboration__Call_O__Bore_a_tion_'

    Session 39: Collaboration? Call O' Bore-a-tion?

    Posted: May 8th, 2010, 3:07am CEST by Alan McLeod

    That's not very clever. Or polite. But one must pun as one can. And one has to be always on watch for indulgence - especially when it comes to marketing... or is it marketability. That is what Stan mentioned: "Collaborations are good business, good marketing, good fun and often result in interesting beer." Or a bit of what he said... or implied. Sorta. But can they also result in bad business, poor marketing, tedium and dull beer? Of course they might. If not, what point would there be to this month's edition of The Session?

    This brew is a good illustration of the quandary, Brewmaster's (sic) Collaboration Signature Ale #1 which resulted from a brewing get together 3 years ago and two months ago between Tomme Arthur of Port Brewing and Dirk Naudis of De Proef. It pours a deep rich varnished pine under thick rocky clinging off white head. The aroma includes pine sap and nutmeg, bubblegum and marigold. The mouthfeel is very soft and compelling but turns on you with the twin bite of hops and alcohol. There is pear and honey in the malt. All very attractive yet it's a bit of a muddle. It's overly hot from just 8.5% alcohol, the hops also burn and the malt's a wee bit flabby. There is a bit of brett or some other sour tang a bit down there as well as a little of spice. But the furniture polish hops overwhelm it all. As they usually do. Like using the fuzz or the waa-waa pedal or a car with an intentionally bad muffler. The label claims that "these notes could be out of balance were it not for the generous maltiness that holds the beer in check." I am not sure I agree.

    Could be that time or the shelves of the middleman have taken a toll? I think not. This beer is like a decent Belgian golden strong ale got mixed up with a good California double IPA which stumbled into little dubbel. Plenty of BAer love but hasn't this been done? A hundred times? Could be by now - but had it "been done" back in March of 2007? Three years and two months is a lifetime in craft beer marketability trends. It took until 2009 before folks got a bit jaded on the idea. Maybe this was one of the first inquiries into the collaboration idea that branched into or at least was working with into that early late mid-decade Belgian double IPA idea. When collaboration was new and interesting.

    Collaboration might be a great idea but it also might be an idea with less universal applicability or longevity than one might have hoped a few years ago. Let's be honest. All craft beer is collaboration. Brewers work with other brewers, were trained by brewers and were inspired by brewers. Does it really matter that one craft brewer held the basket of hops as they were shaken into the other's brewing kettle? After taking a jet?