A brewery that makes great beer and is enviromentally conscious? Excellent. Central Waters has just released “Shine On” an easy drinking red ale, made to commemorate our solar hot water system and our partnership with the Midwest Renewable Energy Association (MREA). Enjoy a pint, and GET YOUR SHINE ON!
Great Craft beer news
The sky is not falling. There is reason to be optimistic. Check these stats courtesy of Draft Magazine
~ The number of U.S. breweries is the highest in 100 years because of small and independent craft brewers.
~ America’s small and independent craft brewers are still growing despite many challenges and are continuing to provide jobs to the U.S. economy.
~ Dollar growth from craft brewers during the first half of 2009 increased 9 percent, down from 11 percent growth during the same period in 2008.
~ Volume of craft brewed beer sold grew 5 percent for the first six months in 2009, compared to 6.5 percent growth in the first half of 2008.
New roads for hops
If you go to FoodGPS.com, you will see the latest musings by yours truly on the latest trends in hoppy beers. You will also probably see a new restaurant or cafe you will want to try out. I found at least three places to try in San Francisco when I drive there in November.
Gruit from Dr. Fritz Briem
The Search Party pours a non-hopped beer from Germany…
[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BOMfiknEKtk]
Loser Pale
I love the special beers, the anniversary beers, the once and done beers. And now, a pale from Elysian. A pale as a tribute? Counter to trend, but I like it. A Pale Ale made in honor of 20 years of records from Sub Pop. Sounds like a winner to me.
Ephemere with…
..cranberries? This sounds like it won’t work but if I know the people at Unibroue. They could pull it off.
The Brewing Network
Every day I am pleased to find more beer information on the web, today is no different. The Brewing Network is a great resource for brew information. Based in San Francisco, but not afraid to venture further afield. They have a great website, radio show and home brew show. Anyone who enjoys beer will find something great here.
You can also follow them on Facebook and Twitter.
Geek vs Snob
Let me start this post with a story. It is a St. Patrick’s Day party. The corned beef is being prepared for the table and I pick up a Harp and drink it straight from the bottle. Now my friends have seen odd behavior from me before but even this is beyond the pale. I have told them on numerous occasions that you need to let the beer breathe. Was I going back on my word?
Yes and no. And it boils down to geek vs snob. Every thing in this world has enthusiasts and enforcers. From movies to architecture to beer. To me, geeks take pleasure in that (carefully chosen) movie or cafe while snobs are looking for chinks in the armor so they can take that musician or politician down a peg. Because that is where they get their pleasure. In feeling better than something else. I prefer to select the elite and celebrate what the best brewers in America bring to the table.
So why did I drink Harp from the bottle? Lazy is one for sure. I won’t deny it. But if it had been Crannog’s Beyond the Pale Ale, it would have gone into the glass. No questions asked. The main reason is that some beer is better cold and will not markedly improve in the proper glassware. Harp is a fine beer but a blah beer. Boring. Steady. Better than the mass marketed crap here by a long shot. But I do not need to carefully drink it and take tasting notes.
I’ve had it before and I understand it’s place in the beer world. Let me use cars to explain my point. Would you take the new Porsche (fresh from the dealer) to the grocery store and back? Or would you take it on the open road? Same with beers. Some beers are utilitarian. Crafted and artisan but still utilitarian. While other beers are meant to showcase the art of brewing.
And this is another fork in the road that separates the geeks from the snobs. A geek will drink the Harp. Enjoy what it is and move on. A snob will, either, not touch it or will pour it with great ceremony into a special glass and try to make more of it than it should be.
I am all for the proper temperature and the right glassware and other assorted beer geekery but I have learned to step back and enjoy beer. There are more than enough opportunities to carefully analyze a beer with the beer round table but there is just as much pleasure in enjoying a beer for the sake of enjoying beer.
For me, it is better to stop and savor each beer for what it is at that moment and what it’s purpose in that moment is. I know that is vague and zen-like, but grasshopper ,when you are sitting on the patio with a beer and your wife is there smiling. That is beervana and no snob can take that away from me.
Southern Tier Brewing
The awesome Beer America folks brought this brewery to my attention and now I pay it forward to you…
Southern Tier Brewing is not, I repeat, not in the south. Their home is in Lakewood, New York. They have quite the line-up of beers.. Year-round | Seasonal | Local | Imperial | Ltd Imperial | Seasonal Imperial | Blackwater | Cuvée Series. What intrigued me the most was the Creme Brulee Imperial Milk Stout.
Beer Co-Op
The Black Star in Texas has taken the owned by thing seriously.
Owned by and for themselves, not some conglomerate of breweries they are close to being up and running and I applaud them.
I also thought this tidbit from their website was interesting…”Drinkability is a term that comes up frequently when we’re talking about our future Black Star beers, and with the majority of our recipes, I’ve tried to tweak them to be more “drinkable.”
From a recipe standpoint, this usually means lower finishing gravities, slightly higher carbonation levels (although this is debatably more drinkable), use of wheat, and a balance of maltiness, hoppiness, and alcohol. I would say drinkability is made up of mouthfeel, refreshinicity (yeah, you heard me), and inebriatability.”