This is One of My Favorite Beers…..

The next event of the Twin Cities Perfect Pint Beer Club!

This is one of my favorite beers.....When: Friday, June 26, 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.

“This is one of my favorite beers.” If I had a nickel for every time I have said that I would be rich. If I had a nickel for every time members of the Twin Cities Perfect Pint Beer Club have laughed at me for saying it I’d be rich. Okay, I like a lot of beers. I’m not going to apologize.

Instead, I’m going to share the love.

The theme for the June meeting is simply “my favorite beers”; no style category limitations, no ingredient restrictions, no regional or color demarcations. Just eight beers that I think are phenomenal. I don’t yet know what they will be. There are so many to choose from. There could be a stout. There might be a pale ale (yes, I do like hops). There may even be a wheat beer, pilsner, or funky Belgian sour thingy. Oh, where to begin?

But you know whatever they are they will be great. Each one will be (say it with me now) one of my favorite beers.

100,000 ruined bottles of Lambic!!!

Drei Fonteinen brewery in Beersel, Belgium, one of the worlds leading traditional lambic breweries, has suffered a serious blow. An equipment malfunction has resulted in the loss of 100,000 bottles of lambic and gueuze in storage. That is 1/3 of the brewery’s annual income. A serious blow to say the least. But all is not lost…

Read more.

What Makes Craft Beer “Craft”?

What makes a craft brewer a “craft brewer.” As defined by the Brewers Association, the craft brewers’ trade group,  it is partly a matter of annual production. Any brewer with an annual output of more than two million barrels can no longer be called “craft.” This means that Boston Brewing Company, makers of the ubiquitous Sam Adams Boston Lager along with a gazillion other beers, will probably be kicked out of the club next year. This, despite the fact that Boston Brewing Company and its owner/founder Jim Koch do an extraordinary amount to promote the craft beer industry.

Watch for an upcoming rant on this and other beer-world pet peeves coming soon in this blog. In the mean time read more about this story at the Washington Post.

Yeasty Beer Night

Last Friday the Twin Cities Perfect Pint Beer Club met in Minneapolis to celebrate yeast. This was the last of three club  events each highlighting the flavor and aroma contributions of a particular brewing ingredient. For this event we sampled our way through a bevy of beers that showcase the beloved fungi (and even some bacteria) that turn hoppy sugar water into beer. We tasted eight different beers representing eight different styles ranging from a balanced English Extra Special Bitter to and intensely funky Belgian Gueuze. Of course a few more beers mysteriously appeared after the official tasting finished. An added bonus for this event were the delicious food pairings prepared by our host Cory. The combination of great beers, great food, and great people put this club meeting over the top.

Yeasty BeersAs with the other two of these ingredient focused events, we started off tasting an English Bitter to see how our highlighted ingredient plays out in an essentially balanced beer. This month it was Huvila ESB from Finland. A great example of the style, this beer starts with a solid bite of hop bitterness that fades into a luscious caramel and toffee malt. The yeast comes through as a subtle orange marmalade  with none of the buttery character that is sometimes a part of this style. Cory paired this beer with a cheddary macaroni and cheese.

From there we moved solidly into the realm of yeast starting with Weihenstephaner Hefe Weissbier. Hefeweizen means “yeasty wheat beer” in German, and in my view Weihenstephaner is one of the best. It does a great job of balancing the characteristic citrus, banana, and clove Weihenstephaner Hefe Weissbieryeast character with the rich, bready wheat malt. This one was a crowd favorite. Next up was the Smokestack Series Saison from Boulevard Brewing in Kansas City. Historically a Belgian farmhouse ale intended to keep farmhands hydrated through the hot summer months, Saison is a light, effervescent, and refreshing beer with a unique yeasty profile. The Boulevard saison is true to style with a sharp dry finish and a tasty blend of black pepper spiciness with citrus and stone fruit esters. Paired with an aged gouda this was heaven.

It’s the flavors of the yeast that define Belgian beers as “Belgian”, and you can’t talk about yeasty beers without including at least one example. For this we went to the Trappist Westmalle Dubel. Rich caramel malt and dark fruit combine perfectly with the fruity and spicy “Belgian” yeast character in this beer. The Westmalle example has a drier and more bitter finish than some others that I like. This beer was the perfect compliment to the slow boiled beef tongue and heart that cory prepared. I had eaten beef tongue in the past and was never a great fan. I had never eaten heart. Both were absolutely amazing and worked wonderfully with the beer. This was one of the favorite pairings of the night.

Jolly Pumpkin Oro de CalabazaFrom there we dove headlong into the world of true fermentation funkiness, the sour beers. We waded in cautiously with Rodenbach Classic Flanders Red Ale. Wine like, slightly sour, and redolent of cherries and other fruits, this beer received a mixed response. Some loved it. Some simply choked it down. Others thought it would make an excellent salad dressing. The pairing of this beer with pickled herring was the surprise of the night. The sum of the sours was less intense than either separate. It worked quite well. Next was Oro de Calabaza from Michigan’s Jolly Pumpkin Artisan Ales. This is a Belgian Strong Golden ale that has been aged in barrels harboring wild yeast and funk producing bacteria. Strong barnyard and leather aromas and flavors dominated, but didn’t completely cover up the fruity and spicy belgian yeast character. This was the favorite beer of the night to many in attendance.

My favorite beer and food pairing was 3 Fonteinen Oud Gueuze with gueuze steamed mussels. Gueuze is a blend of one, two, and three year oldSteaming Steamed Musseld lambic beers. Intensely sour, cidery, fruity, leathery, and complex, these beers can be a shocker on first tasting. I was really curious to see how the group would respond to this one. I encouraged them to look beyond the sour to find the complexity hidden beneath. By the end of the five ounce pour, it was beginning to grow on many of the tasters. I was happy to see that no one dumped it out. One even commented, “I don’t hate this. I think it could grow on me.”

The last official beer of the night was Oud Beersel Kriek. Take a young unblended lambic and let it sit on a boatload of tart cherries until even the pits dissolve and you have kriek. The intense fruity almond character from the cherries tones down the funkiness and subdues the sour of the lambic making the perfect desert beer.  Cory paired this one with a New York Cheesecake for a very proper end to the evening.

Ommegang Biere de Mars

Beire de Mars is a special version of the French farmhouse ale Biere de Garde. Brewed to a higher strength during the gusty month of March, it is intended to last through the summer, providing a welcome relief from the doldrums of July and August, and keeping the family in beer until brewing starts again in the fall. Brewery Ommegang makes their version extra special with a shot of Brettanomyces, the wild yeast that is partly responsible for the crazy tastes of Lambic.

Ommegang Biere de MarsBiere de Mars
Brewery Ommegang, Cooperstown, New York
Style: Biere de Mars
Serving Style: 750 ml Bottle

Aroma: Caramel malt and fresh dark fruit, plums and cherries, not raisins. Pronounced leathery and barnyard brettanomyces funk.
Appearance: Deep golden to light orange. Clear. Long lasting, fine, off-white head
Flavor: Light caramel malt supporting rich cherry and plum fruitiness. A hint of acidic sourness, but only a hint. Good amount of barnyard and leather funkiness like the aroma. Medium-high bitterness and light spicy hop flavor complements the funk. Dry finish that lingers on brett character.
Mouthfeel: Medium-light body. High carbonation. Dry.
Overall: A very nice beer. Good balance of malt and yeast with an extra charge of spicy hop that really complements the brettanomyces character. Light and easy to drink. Drinking it with a stinky, Spanish, washed-rind cow’s milk cheese and they pair wonderfully.

2007 Goose Island Bourbon County Stout

I have had a couple of these in the basement for a couple of years. Last night seemed like a good night to try one. Wish I had had a couple of chocolate chip cookies to go along with it.

Goose Islant Bourbon County Stout2007 Bourbon County Stout
Goose Island Brewing, Chicago, IL
Style: Bourbon Barrel Aged Russian Imperial Stout
Serving Style: 12 oz. Bottle

Aroma: A big hit of bourbon whiskey with some chocolaty roast and vanilla. Sweet alcohol fumes round it all out. The gigantic aroma jumped out of my snifter and just about knocked me down.
Appearance: Blacker than black. Almost no head, but maintained a fine mist of dark tan foam on the surface.
Flavor: Chocolaty roast is dominant, like burnt bittersweet chocolate or the cookie part of an Oreo.  Alcohol is a major player here, but sweet, not solventy. These are complemented by a mix of light smoke, vanilla, wood, caramel, and molasses. This is one hugely flavorful beer, but smooth. It has a remarkably dry finish, but one that lingers on forever.
Mouthfeel: Thick, rich, creamy. A big boned beer that remains drinkable because of the dry finish. Low carbonation.
Overall Impression: After two years in the bottle this was a fantastic beer. Could probably still take a couple more years of aging as the alcohol is a bit intense for my taste. I’m not a fan of big, thick Imperial Stouts, so the dry finish on this one made it nicely drinkable. It’s a sipper though. At 13% ABV it will mess you up.

Dogfish Head Chateau Jiahu

Chatuau Jiahu is the third historical recreation beer that Dogfish Head has undertaken. This one was cobbled together from the analyzed remains taken from 9000 year old pottery jars discovered in China. Brewed with barley malt, rice, muscat grapes, hawthorn fruit, and chrysanthemum flowers, this beer just screamed at me from the shelf. “Try me!” it said, “Try me!” So I did. I took it from the shelf, walked back to my hotel, and anxiously waited for it to chill in the little refrigerator. This will either be really good or really bad.” I though.

Dogfish Head Chateau JiahuChateau Jiahu
Dogfish Head, Milton, Delaware
Style: 9000 year old historical recreation
Serving Style: 750 ml Bottle

Aroma: Vinous, white grape. Light toast. Twigs. Pears. Sugary sweetness but not a cloying impression.
Appearance: Golden and clear(?) (At least I think so. I’m drinking it from a black styrofoam hotel cup so it’s hard to tell.) Thick, creamy, persistent, off-white foam.
Flavor: Sweet, heavy. A bit syrupy. Explosions of fruit, pear nectar, white grape, strawberry, peaches and cream. Lightly nutty and toasty. Faint sweet alcohol. Herbal mint and woodruff notes come in and out. Vanilla. Floral. Green apple. Some wine like acidity adding tartness that compliments the sweet. Will the flavors ever stop revealing themselves? Finish is sweet lingering long on herbal, nutty honey.
Mouthfeel: Full-bodied and thick. Creamy. Tongue coating, but not unpleasant. Low carbonation but leaves an interesting tingle in the back of the throat on the way down.
Overall Impression: My first swallow was, “what the heck is this?” But it grew on me quickly. Complexity is what this beer is all about. Multiple overlapping and intertwining flavors of fruit, herbs, and earth. The flavors just keep coming. The sweetness will limit consumption. I have a 750 ml bottle sitting in front of me. I Doubt I will be able to finish it. Not because of taste or alcohol, it’s just too full-bodied and sweet. Drink this one at just a touch below room temperature for the full flavors to come out.

Best of Arborfest

Here are my picks and pans for the 2009 Arborfest (at least from what I got around to tasting).

My best of Arborfest 2009.

Great Waters Imperial Wit – High-test and refreshing. Nice wheaty malt with Belgian yeast character, citrus, and spice. So light and quaffable that you will be tempted to drink several pints. But watch out for that.
Fitger’s Brewhouse Belgian Single – Everything you love in a Belgian Triple but with a moderate amount of alcohol. A golden beer with rich malty sweetness but spicy dry finish. Dashes of Belgian yeast and citrus. You can drink several of these in a sitting.
Flat Earth Sunburst Ale – Apricot infused Belgian Pale Ale. How can you miss? Better than Magic Hat #9, you get the malty/yeasty/bitter of Flat Earth Belgian Pale Ale with an explosion of fresh fruit that lasts from start to finish.
Town Hall Belgian Cherry Ale – Looks like the Belgian styles won the night for me. A Triple infused with cherries, the base beer character was the highlight with subtle cherry notes in the background. Nice balance and tasty.

My Worst of Arborfest 2009

Town Hall Cherry Smoked Porter – I love porter. I love cherry wood smoked beer (see my tasting notes for the Goose Island cherry wood smoked bock). The two didn’t work together. The char-pit character of the cherry wood smoke needs a sweeter beer. A case of the parts just not working well together.
Town Hall Oak Aged Honey Saison – I don’t mean to pick on Town Hall. I love their beers and spend a good deal of time there. But again, the parts did not add up to a wholesome whole on this one. The oak was too intense and clashed with the spicy saison yeasty character. The honey added a layer of odd sweetness on top of it all. Three good ideas that just didn’t add up.
Barley John’s Pale Ale – This just tasted wrong. Unbalanced, watery, unpleasant. It was the only beer of the night that I dumped.

My Question Mark of Arborfest 2009

Surly Ashy Cynic Cask – Here is the conversation I had with the person pouring at the Surly booth.
Me: Why is it Ashy?
Them: Because there’s a piece of ash in it?
Me: What does that do for it?
Them: Makes it taste like ash?
“Ash” jokes aside, I asked because this tasted to me like Cynic Ale from a cask. Not that this was a bad thing, I just wasn’t getting any ash. Perhaps it was because I came to this one late in the evening and my palate was already shot. I can’t say. I just didn’t get it.