The Hop Leaf, Chicago, Illinois

On my drive down to Chicago this week I was listening to a Brewing Network podcast. Two topics from the show stood out to me. The first was a discussion of the current generation of twenty-somethings who have never known a time when there wasn’t good beer. The craft brewing revolution began around the time that they were born and exploded when they were ten or eleven years old. They have never known a time when a trip to the store meant a choice between ten different light lagers, all basically the same beer in different labels. They cannot remember the days when “good beer” meant St. Pauli Girl, Becks, or Lowenbrau Dark. Many were not even born when Anchor Steam and Sierra Nevada Pale Ale came crashing onto the national scene, changing everything. The second topic that stuck in my head from the drive was a Forbes Magazine list of the top-ten beer bars in the country. Fairly high on the list was the Hop Leaf in Chicago. It had been probably ten years since I had visited the Hop Leaf so I resolved to stop in on this trip. While there, the two stories from the podcast came together.

The Hop LeafNestled on Clark Street in the bustling Andersonville neighborhood on Chicago’s North Side, The Hop Leaf is an intimate bar with a vaguely European ambiance. It was a tad loud for my taste in the main bar area, but otherwise comfortable. On this trip I discovered a back dining room that I never knew existed despite having spent a few nights drinking beer there while I still lived in Chicago. As you have to go through it to get to the bathroom, I don’t have a clue how I could have missed it. I made a mental note to come back on a night when I haven’t already eaten dinner to enjoy a pot of steamed mussels and frites. The bartender assured me that the Mussels-for-one pot contained “more mussels than you can count” for $11. The rest of the menu looked good too, with entrees ranging from $14 to $25.

But I had come for the beer. I counted 41 draft offerings and the bartender says the ever-changing bottle selection hovers around 250. Belgian beers are well represented here. They seemed to make up the bulk of The Hop Leafthe beer list and probably half of the draft selection. Pretty much every Belgian style is represented from light Wibiers to Belgian Pale Ales, Abbey Styles, and the sourest of the sours. But Belgians aren’t all they have and there is something here to please every beer palate. I started with the Amber Ale from Dark Horse Brewing. Expecting a simple American Amber, I got a Belgian instead. This tasty beer was like an American Amber with a Belgian twist. Caramel malt with an assertive spicy hop bitterness was underscored by banana and black pepper from a Belgian yeast strain. It was unexpected and delicious.

My next beer was Atomium Grand Cru. This strong wit style beer is brewed with barley, spelt, maize, rye, wheat, buckwheat, orange, and coriander. It is refreshing and fruity with a full body and dry finish that is enhanced by the spiciness of the rye. I capped the night with a glass of Boon Mariage Parfait Gueuze. This is sour beer the way it should be. Cidery, vinous, acidic, fruity, and funky. Notes of apricot, pear, tobacco, and farm animals. When the bartender came to take my order for another beer I told her that I had to stop because nothing they had on tap could match the beer that I had just consumed.

As I looked around the bar the two stories I had heard on the Brewing Network came back to me. Here I sat at the bar in the Hop Leaf, number whatever on the Forbes Magazine list, and I couldn’t help but notice the number of twenty-somethings, especially women, enjoying great beer. Watching people order, it was clear they either knew what they were ordering or were willing and eager to experience some new beer taste sensation. This is normal to them. This is beer to them. I take comfort in that.

Saison Athene

Saint Somewhere Saison AtheneSaint Somewhere Brewing
Tarpon Springs, Florida
Style: Saison
Serving Style: 750 ml Bottle

Aroma: Loads of fruit and perfumy spice. Pears. Bready malt.

Appearance: Crystal clear and deep golden in color. Second glass was cloudy from yeast in the bottle. Mousse-like white foam that lasted a long time.

Flavor: Pear, apple and strawberries. Light bready malt. Perfume spice flavors, coriander and star anise. Sweet with a dry, peppery finish.

Mouthfeel: Medium-light body with effervescent carbonation.

Overall Impression: This is a great Belgian style Saison. The fruit flavors are intense and are supported by a subdued but rich bready malt. Complex and refreshing.

Drinking Busch and Diggin’ the Priory.

I am currently in Chicago working on a theatre project at a halfway house on the Westside. While here I am staying at a priory. For those not familiar with what a priory is, think convent for priests. In past years working on this same project, I have stayed in an actual convent. I have to say, the priests have it better than the nuns. While being shown around the place it was pointed out to me that the refrigerator in the TV room is normally stocked with beer, although tonight it seems to be sadly lacking. I may have to remedy this. The refrigerator in the second floor common room, a quite well appointed room I might add, did have a couple of cans of Busch. Seeing as the Prior invited me to make myself at home, I had to avail myself.

I grew up in St. Louis. The Anheuser-Busch brewery tour was a frequently visited local attraction during my years at college. While I do still enjoy a Budweiser on occasion, I had not had the pleasure of indulging in a can of Busch in many a year. According to the Anheuser-Busch website, “the brand is the country’s largest-selling subpremium-priced beer in all major demographics.” So…in keeping with the spirit of of cheap beer night, here are my tasting notes.
Busch

Anheuser-Busch
Style: American Lager
Serving Style: 12 oz Can

Aroma: Very light sweet malt and sulfur. Pronounced green apple.
Appearance: Pale yellow. Brilliantly clear. Small white head that collapsed almost immediately.
Flavor: Tart green apple and lime dominate. Fairly sweet with little other malt character. Low bitterness and no noticeable hop flavor. Finish is watery with some lingering apple tartness.
Mouthfeel: Light body. High carbonation. Not much else.
Overall Impression: There are no off flavors as green apple acetaldehyde is acceptable for the style. This beer is very clean, but like many of the beers from cheap beer night, this seems a little sugary sweet. Green apple tartness balances this to some degree. Would be refreshing outdoors on a hot summer day, but there really isn’t much here.

Walker’s Reserve Robust Porter

Firestone Walker Reserve PorterFirestone Walker Brewing Co., Paso Robles, California
Style: Robust Porter
Serving Style: 22 oz bottle

Aroma: Chocolate and caramel with subtle roast. Light fruity notes, raisin. Oats.
Appearance: Pitch black with a big and persistent tan head. Loads of lace.
Flavor: Caramel coffee dusted with bittersweet chocolate. Light burnt raisin and burnt sugar/blackstrap molasses. Late in the palate an aggressive hop bitterness asserts itself with a pronounced citrusy hop flavor. Alcohol is noticeable. Finish lingers on hops and roast malt.
Mouthfeel: Alcohol warmth. Creamy on the outset but an astringency sets in when the hops kick in. Medium carbonation.
Overall Impression: A big and full bodied, roasty robust porter. I’d be inclined to call this a Baltic porter. The citrusy hops are a little too much for me and clash with the caramel/coffee flavors. Astringency also detracts.

Stone Vertical Epic 8-8-08

Stone Vertical Epic 8-8-08Stone Brewing Company, Escondido, California
Style: Belgian Strong Golden well hopped with American hops]
Serving Style: Bottle

Appearance: Light golden and clear with a big mousse-like white head.
Aroma: Light fruit, peaches. Spicy clove. Alcohol.
Flavor: Light fruit. Peaches, but like the syrup from a can of peaches. Pepper and clove spice. Hop bitterness is pronounced. Flavor seems more continental spicy than American citrus. Dry finish that lingers on a tart orange. Alcohol is a little hot.
Mouthfeel: Medium body. Medium-high carbonation. Very dry finish. Hot alcohol.
Overall Impression: A nice version of a hoppy Belgian Tripel. Would benefit from a little aging to let the hot alcohol mellow a little.

Lagunitas Brewing Co.

Lagunitas Brewing CompanyI had escaped the cold and snow of Minnesota. The sun was shining brightly. The temperature temperature in the San Francisco Bay Area was hovering in the mid-sixties with a cool breeze blowing from the west. This was the perfect day for a drive north into the wine country of Sonoma County for a tasting. A beer tasting of course. Today the brewery of choice was Lagunitas in Petaluma. Known for big, brash, hoppy beers, Lagunitas was long one of those mysterious breweries who’s beers we in the land of the cold could not get. In the last year, however, these brews have become available in Minnesota and they are flying off the shelf.

The afternoon at Lagunitas began in the tasting room before moving on to the tour, which started at the bottling line and ended at the brewhouse. I am going to go in reverse. The brewery was much bigger than I expected and much bigger than the pictures on the Lagunitas website would indicate. It turns out that they have not updated the virtual tour on the website since installing a new brewhouse that has dramatically increased their output capacity. The old brewhouse was a 30-barrel system that would only allow them to brew one batch at a time. The new brewhouse is an 80-barrel system with separate mash and lauter tuns, allowing them to have three batches working at any one time. It is the biggest brewhouse that I have seen at a smaller brewery. Another thing that I found interesting about the brewery was that the fermenters are kept outside. They are glycol jacketed to allow for precise temperature control, as are fermenters in most breweries. The mild climate in Northern California allows them to operate efficiently outdoors in a way that more extreme climates would make impossible.

Now on the the tasting room. The tasting room at lagunitas is like a loft version of a fraternity house basement. Overlooking the bottling line, it is full of old overstuffed sofas and chairs, a foosball table, and a bar against one wall a row of with mismatched bar stools. We sampled six beers with fairly generous pours, Pils, Censored, IPA, Hop Stoopid, New Dog Town Pale Ale, and Gnarlywine.

What I know to be my favorite Lagunitas beer, the New Dog Town Pale Ale, was unfortunatley spoiled by the Lagunitas Pilsorder in which the beers were served. This is a very drinkable American Pale Ale with a HUGE piney hop presence. It is not an extreme beer or a big beer, but it was one of the last two beers served. After sampling IPA, Hop Stoopid, and Gnarleywine I am afraid the Pale Ale was a bit overwhelmed. Because of that, my favorite beer at the tasting was also the one that struck me as the most interesting choice of brews from a brewery known for big hoppy brews. Lagunitas Pils is a wonderful example of a Ceczh style pilsner, with a full sweet/bready malt and loads of spicy/perfumy saaz hops. Easy to drink and tasty.

Hop Stoopid, soon to replace Maximus in the Lagunitas lineup, is described by the brewery as a Triple IPA. Aside from the 102 IBU bitterness rating, I don’t see what makes this anything more than a Double IPA. It’s modest 8% ABV certainly wouldn’t warrant the tripel designation. Whatever you want to call it, it is a nice beer, surprisingly more balanced than the IPA, it has a big grainy, caramel malt backbone to support the gigantic grapefruit hop presence.

The Gnarlywine, an 11% ABV barleywine style, was also nice. Less bitter than I expected, but still bitter enough to call it an American barleywine, this beer has a malty sweet richness that goes down easy. The alcohol presence is apparent, but not hot or solventy. While good to drink now, it will be even better with a year of age on it. Buy a bottle and lay it down for a while.

The Censored and IPA were my least favorite of the tasting. This is not to say that they are bad beers, I just didn’t feel that they held up to the others. I like balance in a beer and I find the Lagunitas IPA to be short on the malt character needed to back up the big hops. Censored, a red ale, just seems to fall a little flat compared to the others. Again, the hops were the dominant note with some toasty malt coming through as it warmed. Perhaps if I were drinking a pint of this beer without comparing it to five other Lagunitas hop bombs I would feel differently. It certainly is not a beer that I would turn away.

Backwater Brewing Co.

A visit to Minnesota’s smallest commercial brewery.

Wellington's Backwater BreweryWhile in Winona, Minnesota on business for a couple of days, I did as I always do when on the road, I searched out places to find good beer. This is not exactly an easy task in Winona. The choices are rather limited. However, while eating lunch at Culver’s, I looked across the parking lot to see that the bowling alley sign also read “Wellington’s Backwater Brewing Company.” Back in my hotel room I looked it up online and sure enough, there is a brewpub in the bowling alley. Of course I had to check it out.

That night I went in for dinner. I immediately ordered a sampler of all the house brewed beers which included a wheat, a pale ale, and a nut brown ale. They also brew an oatmeal stout, but that was out. Sadly, with the exception of the wheat, the beers were all very dissapointing. Each had a slightly vegetal and stale taste that was not pleasant. So, I ordered the wheat to accompany my BBQ sampler platter. The menu says that the wheat beer is a Kolsch style. I think I would classify it more as an American wheat, as the body and overall flavor profile were not as delicate as I would expect from a Kolsch. Whatever you want to call it, it was pretty tasty and went very well with the fine BBQ. As I was getting ready to leave, I saw the brewer, Chris Gardner in the brewery and took a moment to introduce myself and arrange to meet with him the next evening.

The next night Chris filled me in on the history of the brewpub. The bowling alley had been started by Chris’s father in the 1960’s. The idea for the brewpub came in 1995. At the time Chris was homebrewing and working at a liquor store/homebrew supply store connected to the bowling alley. One day while reading the Midwest Brewing News, he saw an ad for a 1-barrel brewhouse that Bell’s Brewing was selling. He talked to his brother, by then the majority family owner of the business, about buying the system and adding house beers to the menu. This was at a point in history when brewpubs were popping up all over the place so it seemed like a natural. One year and a lot of money later, the brewery was operating. Chris, a graduate of the short course at the Siebel Institue in Chicago, has been producing four house beers and an occasional specialty ever since. He brews once a week for a total annual output of around 55 barrels.

I tried all four beers again on this visit. I must say, they were all much fresher tasting. Chris explained that he has a hard time getting the staff to run the beer out of the lines at the start of an evening. I suspect that the samplers I had were first pours that consisted of beers that had been sitting in the lines overnight. The stout, that Chris took straight from the bright tank, had a rich, creamy mouthfeel and nice chocolate and roast malt character. The pale ale tasted very fresh with a bright citrus hop character and underlying caramel malt. The brown was toasty and lightly bitter, but seemed a little on the sweet side for my taste.

I very much enjoyed my visit to Minnesota’s smallest commercial brewery and my conversation with Chris. While none of the beers are outstanding, if you find yourself in Winona looking for a decent beer, I would recommend a visit to Wellington’s Backwater Brewing.

Scotty Karate Scotch Ale

Dark Horse Scotty KarateDark Horse Brewing Co., Marshall, Michigan
Style: Strong Scotch Ale
Serving Style: Draft

Aroma: Sweet caramel malt with wisps of smoke.
Appearance: Brown and murky with little to no head.
Flavor: Rich malty complexity, chocolate, caramel, smoke, with some dark fruity undertones. Very light bitterness. More smokey than I expected, but that’s not a bad thing. Flavor does not even hint at the 9% ABV.
Mouthfeel: Silky, creamy, and rich. I would have sworn this was on a nitrogen tap, but it wasn’t. Low carbonation. Only the slightest hint of alcohol warmth.
Overall Impression: This is a very satisfying beer. Rich, sweet, malty, with all that lovely smoke. The richness and high alcohol would probably limit me to one glass, however.

Alaskan IPA

Alaskan IPAAlaskan Brewing Company, Juneau, Alaska
Style: India Pale Ale
Serving Style: 22 oz Bottle

Aroma: Citrus and pine American hops
Appearance: Light amber/deep gold. Lighter than expected, must be mostly base malts. Fluffy and persistent white head.
Flavor: Grainy malt with very light caramel balanced by pine and citrus hops. Medium-high bitterness and hop flavor is lower than expected and allows the malt to shine through.
Mouthfeel: Medium body. Medium carbonation.
Overall Impression: A solid IPA. Nice malt with lighter than expected hops. I think I have come to expect “greatness” from Alaskan Brewing and this was not “great”. It was just a good IPA. That said, I would certainly have a couple more.

Russian River Brewing Company

Russian River Brewing CompanyTook a trip up north today into wine country to have lunch at Russian River Brewing Company in Santa Rosa, California. Best known perhaps for their exemplary Double IPA Pliny The Elder, brewmaster Vinnie Cilurzo also brews a full line of other ales including an extensive selection of barrel aged Belgian style and sour beers.

Russian River is one of those breweries with a reputation that far exceeds their production capacity. A very small brewery that distributes in only a few states , their beers are known and sought out by beer geeks across the country. In this case the reputation is well deserved. I enjoyed a sampler tray with lunch that included all eleven tap beers. Of the eleven, there were only two that were disappointing…and these were good beers, just not quite up to the standard of the nine others in my view. So let’s run down some of the highlights.

First, the two that I found less sumptuous. The Damnation, a Belgian Strong Golden Ale, was not bad, but seemed to lack the fruity/spicy complexity of other Russian River Belgian ales or similar beers from other breweries. The OVL Stout, an Irish Dry Stout, had a nice creamy mouthfeel and some nice coffee/roast malt notes, but was again, nothing to jump up and down about.

Now to the great stuff…Of the nine remaining beers, my favorite was Pliny the Elder. You can read about it in my reivew, but it bears talking about again here. This is a wonderfully crafted beer. Bright, bold hop bitterness and flavor with deep balancing malt. If this were the only beer Russian River brewed, it would still be worth the visit. There were two other IPAs in the selection, Blind Pig and Russian River IPA. Of the two, I preferred the Blind Pig. It again had a good hop/malt balance with nice caramel and biscuit character in the malt.

Of the Belgians I tried, I loved Salvation, a strong dark ale with rich dark fruit and characteristic Belgian yeasty phenolics. It weighs in at a sneaky, drinkable 9% ABV. Sanctification, a blond ale fermented with 100% brettanomyces wild yeast was also nice. Breattanomyces is a wild yeast strain that is a major part of what gives Belgian lambic and Flemish ales their characteristic sour funk. Light and tart with a touch of horse blankety wild funkiness, Sanctification has all the qualities I would expect from a brettanomyces beer, but have not found in some others I have tried. I also enjoyed the Perdition. Called a biere de Sonoma, it is a dry and bitter Biere de Garde style with rich toasty malt to balance the spicy Belgian yeast.

Also of note were Aud Blonde, a light blond ale with nice bready malt and bright spicy hops, and a nice creamy/caramelly porter.

The food was good too. We each had a calzone full of pesto and rich creamy cheese. If you happen to find yourself in the Bay Area, its worth a trip up to wine country for a Russian River beer.