Congratulations to the First Master Cicerone

Cicerone Certification Program

The Cicerone Certification Program™ today announced awarding of the first-ever Master Cicerone™  certification to Andrew Van Til, Account Manager at Elite Brands Michigan, a division of CKL Corporation. Van Til earned the certification through a series of exams culminating with two days of intense written and oral questioning about beer styles, draft systems, beer evaluation, brewing technology, and beer and food pairing.

Van Til becomes the first person to earn the Master Cicerone title—the third and top level of the Cicerone Certification Program. Founded in 2007, the program tests and certifies beer expertise similar to the wine world’s Master Sommelier program. The Master Cicerone exam included 8 hours of written questions, 2 hours of oral questions and 2 hours of beer tasting and evaluation. Candidates needed a score of 85% across all three areas to pass.

The Cicerone Certification Program is a service of the Craft Beer Institute, the Chicago-based beer and brewing education organization.  The program is directed by brewer, author and beer educator Ray Daniels. A variety of breweries, beer distributors and retailers sponsor the program.

To date, the Cicerone Certification Program has given more than 1000 exams across the three levels of the program. Approximately 800 individuals have earned the first level title of Certified Beer Server and about 75 individuals have achieved the title of Certified Cicerone™. Van Til was one of seven beer industry professionals who took the Master Cicerone exam and the only one who passed.

A Perfect Pint’s Michael Agnew was one of the first 17 individuals to achieve the Certified Cicerone™ level.

Shiner Holiday Cheer

Tucked away in the south Texas hill country between Houston and San Antonio, Spoetzl Brewery has been around since 1909. It survived prohibition. It survived the arrival of the mega-breweries after prohibition’s repeal. It even survived the great brewery consolidation of the 1970s. Spoetzl’s Flagship beer Shiner Bock has been brewed since 1913 and could be seen as a holdover of an earlier and mostly lost American beer style. I have never beer a great admirer of the Shiner beers. However, last year a friend sent me a bottle of Shiner Holiday Cheer. I loved it. He sent more this year. Here’s my notes:

Shiner Holiday CheerShiner Holiday Cheer
Spoetzl Brewery, Shiner, Texas
Style: Dunkelweizen with peaches and roasted pecans
Serving Style: 12 oz. Bottle

Aroma: Peaches, peaches, and more peaches.

Appearance: Dark amber and clear. Creamy, off-white, persistent head.

Flavor: Malt balanced with brown sugar and caramel flavors. Hop bitterness and flavor are low. The real star of this beer is the fresh peach flavor. POW! Juicy, peach/apricot nectar. Nice background note of cinnamon, clove, and toast. Peach cobbler anyone?

Mouthfeel: Medium-light body. Medium carbonation. Very drinkable

Overall Impression: If you like peach cobbler this is the beer for you. The peach flavor shines but blends well with the malt and background spice notes. Light body and low alcohol make it an incredibly drinkable holiday brew. I could down a few of these.

Sam Adams vs. Brew Dog…Not so fast

I have no further verification of this, but I just read an article about an even stronger beer that is going to be released soon. Schorschbräu Schorschbock 40%. It’s an Eisbock from Germany. The company claims another beer at 31%, which already had Utopias beat. I’ve never heard of this particular brewery. Some additional investigation seems warranted.

I was thinking though that these new world record beers don’t seem as impressive to me as Utopia. Using the “ice” method of distillation seems like cheating. Sam Adams actually ferments Utopias to 27%. Oh well…

In the meantime, here’s the link to the original article.

Utopias No Longer World’s Strongest Beer?

Sam Adams Utopias, long the strongest beer in the world at 27% ABV, has been knocked off of that throne.  Scotland’s Brewdog has announced the release of Tactical Nuclear Penguin, a 32% ABV barrel-aged, iced, imperial stout.

To make this beer they brewed a 10% ABV Imperial Stout and aged that in barrels for eighteen months. This aged beer was then taken to an ice cream factory where it was frozen. The water content of beer freezes at a lower temperature than everything else, allowing them to run off a concentrated version of the original beer. After a couple of freeze/runoff cycles they ended up with Tactical Nuclear Penguin. The website claims that the year and a half of aging has left them with a super-strong beer that is nonetheless smooth and drinkable (in small amounts and from a snifter of course).

They are only releasing 500 330ml bottles, so don’t count on seeing it in your local liquor store. The first 250 bottle will sell for £30 ($50). The remaining 250 bottles will sell for £250 ($412) and will include shares in the Brewdog company through their Equity for Punks program. And you thought Utopias was expensive.

Here’s some video from the Brewdog Blog.

Tactical Nuclear Penguin from BrewDog on Vimeo.

Beer Club Potluck II

The December Meeting of the Twin Cities Perfect Pint Beer Club

SOLD OUT!

Beer Club Potluck IIWhen: Friday, December 18, 2009
Cost: A beer and a dish
You must be a member of the club to attend. Go to the Twin Cities Perfect Pint Beer Club to join and RSVP.

It’s back by popular demand.

December was going to be a month off from the Beer Club to let everyone celebrate their holidays. But club members want to celebrate the season together. They asked for it. They got it. The Beer Club Potluck II.

Here’s how it works. You bring ONE beer and a food item to go with it. Yes that’s right, ONE beer. Don’t go crazy! Bring enough beer for everyone in attendance to get a 4 – 5 oz pour. Bring something you have never had before or something you thought was worth sharing with the group. Research your beer so that you can talk a bit about it. Let us know what we’re drinking.

That’s it. It’s just that easy.

Holiday Ales & Winter Warmers Recap

Last night the Twin Cities Perfect Pint Beer Club gathered once again, this time to celebrate Holiday Beers and Winter Warmers. Our host for the night was club member Rachel who is the only person to have attended EVERY club event. I can’t even claim that and I’m the organizer. Rachel’s condo was also the site of our very first meeting nearly a year ago. We had a record number on hand for the nearly sold-out event. As always great beer was tasted and great conversation was had.

Sam Adams UtopiasThe highlight of the evening was also the first beer we tasted; a bottle of 2007 Samuel Adams Utopias. For those who don’t know, Utopias is the gold standard of extreme beers. Made from a blend of several different beers aged in several kinds of wood and fermented to a whopping 27% ABV, Utopias is more like a spirit than a beer. It is un-carbonated and best served at room temperature in a snifter. I had tasted the 2007 previously, but it had been at least a year. The passage of time has served this beer well. Rich and warming with a complex blend of butterscotch, maple, sherry, and vanilla flavors, this was a real taste treat. Utopias was the nearly unanimous favorite for the night. Of course paying $12 for 1 ¼ ounces may have influenced people a bit.

From there we tasted our way through nine holiday beers from around the world, with examples from the United States, Great Britain, Denmark, Austria, Belgium, and Italy. We began in England with two very different examples of the classic British winter warmer, Samuel Smith Winter Welcome and St. Peter’s Winter Ale. Winter Welcome is the more traditional of the two, an excellent example of an English Old Ale. Falling somewhere between a strong bitter and a light English barleywine, this beer has beautiful caramel and toffee malt character with plenty of plum and citrus fruit to complement. While balance to the sweet side, there is enough hop bitterness and floral hop flavor to keep it light and drinkable. The St. Peter’s Winter Ale is a much darker brew, verging on a porter or brown ale. The malt has a nice nutty and biscuit character with a background of roast and deep dark fruits. Both were excellent beers, although the St. Peter’s suffered for having come after the Utopias.

Next we came back home with two classic American holiday beers, Sierra Nevada Celebration Ale and Anchor’s Our Special Ale Sierra Nevada Celebration Ale(A.K.A. Anchor Christmas Ale). To introduce the concept of holiday beers I explained to the group that it is a wide-ranging category. Whether spiced or simple, high or low gravity, a holiday beer is such because the brewer says it is. These two beers exemplify this concept. Sierra Nevada Celebration Ale is really nothing more than a great, hoppy, American IPA. While the hop flavor does emphasize the pine-resin notes of the American Cascade hops and the malt backbone is a bit heftier than some others, there is nothing specifically “Christmas” about this beer except the timing of its annual release and the holiday theme of the packaging. Anchor’s Christmas Ale on the other hand is the quintessential American holiday beer. A yearly tradition for nearly 35 years, the 2009 version is a dark and spicy beer with luscious fresh plum fruitiness underlying festive nutmeg and allspice flavor. One member said of this beer that it tasted just like the “old-time, traditional gingerbread” that he makes.

We straddled the Atlantic for the next beer, Van Twee, a collaboration between Belgian brewer De Proef and Bell’s Beer from Wisconsin. Van Twee is a mash-up of styles combining elements of a Belgian dubel and a porter, then adding fresh cherries and wild Brettanomyces yeast for a bit of barnyard funk. You can read my detailed tasting notes for this beer here. This brilliant brew inspired the quote of the night when one member stated, “This is like licking a cherry pony.” I’m not exactly sure what that means, but everyone seemed to agree…in a good way. Van Twee was one of the favorite beers of the night.

St Bernardus Christmas AleNext we had three very different examples of the Belgian strong dark style all brewed in different parts of the world, Nöel from Birreria Baladin in Italy, Klosterjul from Denmark’s Ølfabrikken, and St. Bernardus Christmas Ale from Brouwereij St. Bernardus in Belgium. Nöel is a straightforward example of the style with rich dark fruits, bready malt, and the characteristic cotton candy Belgian sugar and yeast flavors. The bottles we had exhibited slight papery oxidation, but not enough to ruin the beer. While Nöel is a good example of the style, it doesn’t really hold up to some of the better Belgian versions that are available. Klosterjul is a strongly spiced version of the style with pronounced anise flavors. Yeast-derived green banana notes detracted from my overall enjoyment of this beer, but it is still an interesting example that reminds me in some ways of a Gruit. The best of the Belgians was the St. Bernardus Christmas Ale. Built on a base of the St. Bernardus Abt 12, one of the best examples of the strong dark style, subtle spicing adds cinnamon and clove notes to the ample bready and dried dark fruit character to make this resemble bottled fruitcake. This is one of the best holiday beers out there and it was a big hit with the club.

We finished off the evening with what is perhaps the world’s foremost holiday beer, Samichlaus from Austrian Brauerei Schloss Eggenberg. SamichlausSamichlaus is brewed one day a year on December 6th, St. Nicholas Day, and then aged for eleven months before bottling. It has been described as a doppelbock, but its 14% ABV puts it at nearly twice the strength of the typical beer of that style. However you wish to classify it, it is a world-class beer. Definitely a sipper, it is remarkably drinkable for its strength. Smooth, sweet, caramel and melanoidin malt is balanced by spicy noble hops and warming alcohol, with rich dark fruits and light chocolate notes forming a compelling undercurrent. While big and sweet, it still has the crisp, clean character of a lager. Samichlaus is a beautiful beer and a fitting capper for the official tasting part of the evening.

After the official tasting, we entered the usual “free-for-all” portion of the club meeting. I want to give a shout out to Flat Earth Brewing. Club member Cory brought a growler of Grand Design, the S’more infused version of their Cygnus-X1 porter. It made for a tasty desert. Huge marshmallow aroma was a teaser for the chocolate, graham cracker, and vanilla flavor explosion that filled each sip. I have never liked S’mores. This beer might lead me to reconsider.

Follow the link for information about the Twin Cities Perfect Pint Beer Club.

21st Amendment Beers in MN

The 21st Amendment Brewpub in San Fransisco is a must-do stop for beer enthusiasts visiting the Bay Area. I’ve been there. They make some pretty decent beers. A while back they started offering two of their beers in cans. As a brewpub, they don’t have the brewery capacity, packaging lines, or storage facilities to produce package beers themselves, so they contracted the canned beers out to Cold Spring Brewing Company about sixty miles up the road from the Twin Cities in Cold Spring, Minnesota. I can’t tell you how frustrated I was to discover this, having shipped cans of Hell or High Watermelon Wheat back from San Fransisco on a visit a year ago. The beer was brewed an hour from my house, but I couldn’t get it…

Well, the 21st Amendment beers become available in the Twin Cities tonight. You can try them out at Grumpy’s NE tonight. You can read my review of Hell or High Watermelon Wheat here.