Session Beer Night Recap

TC Perfect Pint Beer ClubMembers of the Twin Cities Perfect Pint Beer Club who have attended even one meeting have heard me rant about balance and subtlety in beer. While I like big beers and appreciate the complexities of high alcohol, barrel-aged, über-hopped, snifter-sippers, my real preference is for simpler, smaller brews. With this in mind, the club met Saturday night at the home of member Vickie Parks to explore session beers. A session beer is the essence of balance and moderation. Low alcohol allows you to down a few and still retain reasonable possession of your faculties. The best ones are both flavorful and light enough to make you want more. Session beers are beers for socializing and conversation. For the purposes of this event defined session beer as having no more than 6% alcohol by volume. It would have been nice to stay below five percent, but in this time of “bigger is better” those beers can be a bit hard to find. We persevered, however, and sampled our way through eight flavorful beers ranging from 3.3% to 6% ABV.

We began the evening with Samurai from Breckenridge Brewing Company in Denver. Like an ale version of an Anchor Small BeerAmerican or Japanese rice lager, Samurai is light, crisp, and refreshing. Lightly sweet and grainy malt is balanced by moderately bitter spicy licorice hops that set off a nice apple and citrus fruitiness. A great lawnmower beer for the lingering summer. Samurai was followed by Anchor Small Beer. For this beer Anchor Brewing, the folks that make Anchor Steam, have revived an old English brewing practice of getting two beers from one barley mash. The rich, sweet first runnings become their Old Foghorn Barleywine, while the more dilute second runnings become Small Beer. At 3.3% this was the lowest alcohol beer we tasted. But low alcohol doesn’t have to mean no flavor. Small beer has a sweet caramel malt profile with hints of toast that serve as a base for an assertive bitterness. Pleasantly grassy hop flavor and light fruitiness round it out. The big taste in this small beer led one person to ponder why all the supermarket 3.2% beers aren’t as flavorful.

Next up was Trout Slayer from Montana’s Big Sky Brewing. This beer was the surprise hit of the night. Big Sky calls this beer a “wheat pale ale” and the description is apt. This is a very well balanced 4.7% beer with moderate bitterness, bright citrus hops, and a beautiful bread and biscuit malt. Neither malt nor hops dominate as the beer heads to a clean, dry finish. This one’s a keeper. A fruit beer was next. Samuel Smith’s Organic Cherry Ale to be exact. Next to the Belgian Red and Raspberry Tart from New Glarus, the Samuel Smith fruit beers are the best tasting fruit beers I have had in a while. These blended wheat-based ales are brewed in collaboration with Melbourn Bros., the last sour beer brewery in England. They are lightly tart, deliciously refreshing, and enormously fruity. While the strawberry and raspberry versions are great, the cherry gives the most fruit bang for the buck. I would drink this beer all night and at 5.1% ABV I could.

Tyranena Brewing CompanyIt’s time for Oktoberfest, so we celebrated the season with Ayinger Oktoberfest-Märzen. Traditionally brewed in March at the end of the legal brewing season in Bavaria, Märzen style beers were stored cold over the summer to be consumed in the fall to celebrate the harvest. Lighter in body than some examples and with a crisp, clean lager character, the Ayinger Märzen still has a rich caramel/melanoidin malt profile. Malt is the star, but it is supported by moderate bitterness and spicy German hop character. The other German style session beer that we tasted was Headless Man Amber Alt from Tyranena Brewing Company in Wisconsin. Brewed in the style of a Düsseldorf Altbier, it has a caramel and toast malt profile with assertive bitterness and spicy German hops. This was everyone’s least favorite beer of the night. I found it to be a bit out of balance with thin malt and overdone bitterness that was somewhat astringent in the finish.

The favorite beer of the night was Moose Drool Brown Ale, our second beer from Big Sky Brewing. Moose Drool displays a rich toasty and Moose Drool Brown Alecocoa malt profile that I described as toasted Tootsie Rolls. The balance leans toward the malt, but spicy/resinous hops play a significant supporting role and assertive bitterness from both the hops and the light roasted malt keep it in check. It had been a couple of years since I had tasted this one. I don’t think I will wait so long to try it again. The last beer of the night was also the biggest. At 6% ABV, the silky smooth Black H2O Oatmeal Stout from the Town Hall Brewery in Minneapolis seemed almost decadent compared to the evening’s other selections. While some thought it was lacking in body and oat character, I found it to be quite satisfactory. Smooth and a bit sweet with pronounced coffee and cocoa roasted flavors, Black H2O was a satisfying capper.

At the end of the night, after tasting eight great beers and consuming the leftovers, we each headed our separate ways still sober. That is the real beauty of session beers.

Autumn Brew Review Recap

Autumn Brew ReviewSaturday was Autumn Brew Review. At least half a million people turned out at parking lot of the historic Grain Belt Brewery in Minneapolis. Okay, so maybe there weren’t quite that many, but there were a bunch of people there. The sold out annual event was very well attended with beer lovers given the opportunity to taste the wares of 57 different breweries both local and national. Construction in the field approaching the river made the festival confines feel much more confined than last year and hot muggy weather made the compact crowds a bit hard to take by the end, at least for me. However, food lines never reached the epic lengths that they did last year, which was a definite improvement. I think the line at the Surly Brewing booth was the longest that I saw anywhere all day.

It was a good day for sour beers in my view and so-so day for pale ale and IPA. The first three of my top five beers were sour beers, with funky wild brews on offering from a number of brewers including Surly, Herkimer, Ommegang, Two Brothers, Victory, Great Waters, and others. As for the huge numbers of pale ales and IPAs on offer, nothing really stood out. With so many of these out there, brewers have to do something really special to rise above the crowd. In this category I found myself writing over and over again, “yet another hoppy IPA.” I think I’m just kind of over it.

Because of a tie for the top beer, my top five picks are really my top six picks. Starting at the bottom and working up, my number five beer was Summit German Style Kölsch. This is just a fantastic beer. Light and delicate, bready and subtly bitter, it provided me a blissful retreat at the end of the day when my palate had been smashed by the excesses of big, bitter, and barrel-aged. Remarkably its flavors still held their own. My number four was Odin Baltic Porter from Town Hall. This was a wonderfully rich and chocolaty porter with luscious caramel undertones and assertive herbal/grassy hop flavors and bitterness. Continuing up the list, my number three pick was Chestnut Hill from Lift Bridge Brewery. A big Nut Brown Ale, this beer had a creamy nutty and caramel malt profile nicely balanced by spicy/herbal hop bitterness and flavor. Rich but drinkable, Chestnut Hill would make a nice session beer even at 7% ABV. In the number two slot I put Thermo Refur from Furthermore Beer. This was an aged version of the beer they released last winter. The further aging has done it some good. This beer has developed a wonderful wild yeast funk; not sour, but redolent of earth, leather and barnyard. It is bone dry, but not lacking in body. I even think I tasted the beets.

My two top picks for this year were Rouge from Brewery Ommegang and Gose from the Herkimer Brewpub. Rouge is a Grand Cru style Flemish red ale that is a collaboration between Brewery Ommegang and Brouwerij Bockor in Belgium. It was spontaneously fermented and aged for 18 months in oak tuns. The result is a beautifully sour and barnyard beer with loads of cherry and berry flavors. While the acidity is strong, there remains a balancing malt sweetness that keeps it from being over the top. Beautiful. The real surprise of the festival for me was the Gose from Herkimer Brewpub. Gose is a rare North German ale style from the city of Leipzig, one of the few surviving representatives of the “white” beers that were once brewed all over northern Europe. A sour wheat beer flavored with coriander and sea salt, Gose is unique. Only one or two breweries in Leipzig still produce it and I know of only one that is available in the US. The Herkimer example was a nice one. Light and refreshing, tart but not overly sour, with a roundness of body and subtle saltiness from the addition of sea salt, I went back for this one three times during the day.

Other beers that seem worthy of mention but didn’t make my top five list include New Belgium Hoptober, Schell’s Roggenbier, Little Sumpin’ Sumpin’ and Little Sumpin’ Sumpin’ Extra from Lagunitas (the only pale ales that managed to stand out from the crowd), Surly Brett, Avery Collaboration Tripel, and Vine Park English Premium Bitter. All in all it was a great event with a lot of great beers to sample. Can’t wait for Winterfest.

55 vs 64

While driving through Wisconsin on my way to Sheboygan today I saw two billboards on opposite sides of the highway. I had seen the same combination earlier with one following the other. One proclaimed, “64 Calories. I doesn’t get any lighter than that.” The other for Bud 55 screamed, “The lightest beer in the world!” Clearly the gauntlet has been thrown. And despite Miller’s seeming denial, Bud is currently winning the challenge to create the worlds lightest beer.

All I could think looking at this was, “what a stupid argument to be having.” Talk about a race t the bottom. But then I guess they do know where there market is, and it is a big one. But really, if you want to cut calories, drink good beer and drink less of it.

Great Divide 15th Anniversary Double IPA

Great Divide 15th Anniversary Wood Aged IPA15th Anniversary Wood Aged Double IPA
Great Divide Brewing Co., Denver, Colorado
Style: Wood aged double IPA
Serving Style: 22 oz. Bottle

Aroma: Earthy/floral hops dominate with very light citrus. English varieties win out over American. Vanilla and woody notes from the oak. Very light malt sweetness, but far in the background.

Appearance: Thick and persistent off-white creamy head. Dark mahogany, almost brown. Slightly hazy.

Flavor: Rich caramel malt sweetness is the dominant flavor with pronounced vanilla oak character. The sweetness of the malt with the oak vanilla give the impression of white chocolate. Peaches or apricots in heavy syrup. The same earthy and floral hops from the aroma. American hop varieties take a back seat to the English. Although the bitterness is high, it is more than offset by the thick and sweet malt. Alcohol is apparent but not hot. Finish is lingering sweet with vanilla and a final bite of bitterness.

Mouthfeel: Thick and chewy. Full bodied with medium carbonation. Creamy. Some alcohol warmth.

Overall Impression: While I appreciated the dominance of the English hop over the American (it was nice to taste a double IPA that didn’t smack me in the face with grapefruit), I feel that the oak was overdone. The strong wood and vanilla overpower the other flavors. This might subside some with age. I also wished it had been more fully attenuated for a dryer finish. It verges on cloying. I found myself wanting a cleaner and brighter hop bitterness and flavor.

Session Beers

The September Meeting of the Twin Cities Perfect Pint Beer Club

Session BeersWhen: Saturday, September 19, 2009
Cost: $25
You must be a member of the club to attent. Go to the Twin Cities Perfect Pint Beer Club to join and RSVP.

Great Taste! Less Filling!

No, we won’t be drinking Miller Lite, but when talking about session beers the often repeated advertising slogan is appropriate. A session beer is one that allows the quaffing of several beers without feeling the need to be wheeled from the bar either because of bloating or impaired coordination. Session beers invite another pint. They drinkable, flavorful, and low enough in alcohol that you won’t need to worry the next morning about what you might have done the night before.

For this meetup we will taste no beer above 6% ABV. We’ll return to the pleasures of small beer where simplicity, balance, and subtlety are the measure of greatness. We’ll lubricate our social interaction with beers that inspire conversation, not confrontation. So enough of the big, bad, boozy, bitter, bourbon barrel, monster beers. Let’s drink more of less.

(Don’t worry. We’ll get back to the monster beers in a later meetup.)

Victory Storm King

Victory Brewing, located in Downingtown, Pennsylvania is, in my opinion, one of America’s best brewers. They consistently produce high quality beers in a wide range of styles from straight-ahead Pilsner to super hoppy Double IPA and smooth, flavorful Belgians. They pride themselves on using traditional brewing processes in the production of their beers including the time consuming and resource intensive decoction mashing for their Prima Pils. Storm King is Victory’s version of an Imperial Stout. I often use it for Perfect Pint beer tasting events, but I have never published tasting notes for it. So…here’s my notes.

Storm King
Victory Brewing Company, Downingtown, Pennsylvania
Style: Imperial Stout
Serving Style: 12 oz. Bottle

Aroma: Hops dominate with a huge smack of pine and citrus American varieties. Somewhere underneath all those hops lie rich coffee and chocolate roasted malts. Some alcohol is noticable, but not hot or solventy.
Appearance: Enormous, creamy, tan head that sticks around a long time and leaves lace on the glass. Black and clear.
Flavor: Pine resin American hops greet the tongue first. The bitterness level is quite high, but not harsh. Gradually the hops are balanced by esspresso-like roasted malt with just a  touch of chocolate. Roasty, but without the roast malt bitterness that some big stouts exhibit. Some licorice and minty notes. Not overly sweet. Light alcohol.
Mouthfeel: Medium-high body. Medium carbonation. Some alcohol warmth. Too hop bitter to come across as creamy.
Overall Impression: Definitly an American version of the Russian Imperial Stout. The high level of hop bitterness and resinous flavors are barely balanced by the huge roasted malt. Many imperial stouts are too thick and chewy for my palate, I’m done with them after about half a beer. Storm King’s well attenuated lighter body makes it more drinkable than most.

Brewers Association Releases New Craft Beer Numbers

New mid-year numbers for US craft brewers were just released by the Brewers Association, a trade and lobbying group for the craft beer industry. Here are some of the main points.

  • The number of US breweries is the highest in 100 years. There are currently 1525 breweries in the united states, up from 1498 in 1910.
  • Dollar growth for craft brewers increased 9% in the first half of 2009. Although this is down from the 11% growth during the same period last year it still isn’t bad considering the overall decline in the economy.
  • The volume of craft beer sold increased 5% through June. This is also a decline from 6.5% increase in 2008.
  • Craft brewers sold 4.2 million barrels of beer in the first half of 2009 compared to 4 million in 2008.

Given the overall state of the economy, things look pretty good for US craft brewers. You can read the whole press release here.

Summit Kölsch

Summit Kölsch The folks at Summit Brewing in St. Paul have been busy this year. After not releasing any new beers for many years, they have released two this year with another on the way. The first was Horizon Red Ale, released in April. This week they are rolling out the first of their Unchained Series, a traditional German Style Kölsch. According to their press release we can look forward to the next beer in this series sometime in late fall.

I’m excited about the Unchained Series, which allows Summit’s brewers an opportunity to spread their wings and explore. According to the press release, “the inspiration for the series was to give the team of six full time brewers a chance to show off their skills and creativity and to have a little fun in the process. Each brewer will have an opportunity to choose their own beer style and manage the process from start to finish, from research and recipe development all the way to tasting the beer in the final stages to determine proper conditioning and filtration for the ideal flavor and aroma profile.” Not intended as license for brewers to get wild and crazy, the Unchained Series offers them the opportunity to explore seldom brewed styles using traditional methods.

The first in the Series is a Kölsch from brewer Mike “the Miz” Miziorko. The Kölsch style is an appellation protected by the Kölsch Konvention and use of the name is restricted to a few breweries in Cologne, Germany. It is one of the few remaining German ale styles, a holdover from the time before lager beers swept Germany and later the rest of the world. However, colder fermentation temperatures and a period of cold conditioning gives Kölsch a very lager-like character. Like a more delicate and slightly fruity Pilsner, it is typically a yellow to gold colored beer filtered to brilliant clarity. It’s light bodied and features a balance of pilsner malt and spicy European hops with a well attenuated dry finish. Kölsch is an easy-drinking and refreshingly light beer for summer. The Summit version is brewed with all imported ingredients using “traditional mashing and brewing procedures” that I’m told included a multi-step mash.

Here’s my notes:

German Style Kölsch
Summit Brewing Company, St. Paul, Minnesota
Style: Kölsch
Serving Style: 12 oz. Bottle

Aroma: Soft bready malt with slight DMS corny character of pilsner malt. Reminds me of the crust on a loaf of fresh-baked white bread. Malt is the centerpiece of the aroma with only the slightest hint of herbal hops and stone fruits. Simple and delicate, but still delightful.
Appearance: Deep golden and crystal clear. Moderate creamy white head that dissipated quickly leaving lace on the glass and a film on the surface of the beer. Nice to look at.
Flavor: Starts with a kick of bitterness and peppery and herbal hop flavors until balancing bready malt moves in. Well balanced between malt and hops. A bit of sweetness and the same light corny character from the aroma give some complexity to the malt. Mid palate brings very subtle stone fruit. The finish is dry with a lingering hop spice and light residual sweetness.
Mouthfeel: Light body. Crisp and clean like a lager. Medium carbonation.
Overall Impression: Light, delicate, crisp, balanced. This beer is everything a Kölsch should be. The bready malt has depth and reminds me of the great Helles beers of Munich. In the sea of überhopped, barrel-aged, high alcohol monster beers Summit Kölsch is a welcome reminder of the pleasures of simplicity and balance in beer. Nicely done.

Moaten

The other night I had the opportunity to meet Hildegard van Ostaden, the brewer from Urthel, her husband Bas, the business and design half of the Urthel team, and Jim Ebel, one of the brothers from Two Brothers Brewery. They were at the Four Firkins touting their newly released collaboration beer Moaten. Moaten is a Flemish word meaning “friends” and represents the relationship between the brewers that led to this collaboration. Two Brothers were the first American distributor of the Urthel beers. This early business relationship led to a friendship and a mutual respect for each other’s brewing prowess. For this first collaboration, brewed at Two Brothers outside of Chicago, they chose a Belgian style Flanders Red Ale. According to Jim Ebel, they deferred to Hildegard’s expertise in formulating the recipe. She is, afterall, a master Belgian brewer and taught brewing in Belgium for many years. I got the sense from him that another collaboration is in the offing, this time an American style to be brewed in Belgium. I can hardly wait.

Moaten is an oak aged Flanders Red Ale, a traditional sour ale from north western Belgium. It is typically a very wine-like beer featuring intense fruit character, caramel malt and a bright acidic sourness. The Urthel/Two Brothers version was fermented with champagne yeast and finished off with a dose of acid producing bacteria before being aged in spent whisky barrels. The barrels had previously been used for another Two Brothers beer, so the whisky flavors are all gone, leaving only a light oak. Here’s my notes:

MoatenMoaten
Two Brothers Brewery, Warrenville, Illinois
Brouwerij de Leyerth, Ruiselede, Belgium
Style: Flanders Red Ale
Serving Style: 12.7 oz. Bottle

Aroma: Vinous. Blackberry and grape fruitiness with light caramel malt. Very faint sourness that is less than other versions of the style.
Appearance: Deep reddish-amber and clear. Very small off-white head that stuck around in a thin layer of foam on the surface. Leaves some lace on the glass despite the small head.
Flavor: An explosion of flavors that gets more intense as the beer warms. A definite champagne-like vinous quality from the use of champagne yeast. White wine grape, blackberry, and raisin. The intense fruitiness sits on a base of rich caramel malt with some light toasty notes. The malt remains quite flavorful despite a high level of attenuation. Some herbal/peppery hop flavors are apparent but subdued, as is the bitterness. Again, the acidity is lower than other examples of the style and only really comes out after the beer has warmed a bit. Some oak notes lurk in the background.
Mouthfeel: Medium body, but with a rich and creamy malt. High attenuation leading to a dry finish. Effervescent carbonation.
Overall Impression: The real star of this beer is the beautiful fruitiness brought about by the combination of malt and yeast. The use of champagne yeast makes this beer unique, taking an already wine-like beer style and pushing it one step further. But don’t be alarmed. This is definitely still beer, as the caramel malt will attest. My only wish was that the sour acidity had been higher. While Jim and Hildegard spoke of wanting a subdued sourness, I am a fan of sour beers, and of Flanders Red Ale in particular. I missed the pucker and funk. I bought an extra bottle to lay down for a while. We’ll see if the bacterial beasties continue to do their work.

Beer Club Pot Luck

The August Meeting of the Twin Cities Perfect Pint Beer Club!

Beer Club PotluckWhen: Saturday, August 29, 2009
Cost: A beer and a dish
You must be a member of the club to attent. Go to the Twin Cities Perfect Pint Beer Club to join and RSVP.

August is my busiest month of the year and I am too booked up with other business to make a meeting happen. So we’re going to take a little breather. We’ll fall into the dog days of summer with a more relaxed theme.

The theme for the August meetup will be potluck. Everybody brings a beer to share. Something that sounds interesting that you have never tasted. Do a little research on the beer you bring so that you can talk about it and let everyone know what they are drinking. Bring a simple food item to go along with it; just enough for everyone to get a taste. That’s a beer club potluck.