The Session # 101 – Bottles, Caps and Other Detritus

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Our host for July is the Deep Beer blog / Jack Perdue.  To start the next 100 sessions off we have the topic “Bottles, Caps and Other Detritus.”

Since first discovering The Session, I knew one day I wanted to host a monthly edition. There are many great creative people involved in the beer industry: the brewers designing and creating the stuff of our attention, marketers bringing the product to market, graphic artists making the products attractive and informative and writers who tell the story of beer. The list goes on. And thus, many great products, that may or may not get your attention. The focus is on the liquid inside the bottle, can or keg, and rightly so. What about all the other products necessary to bring that beer to you? What about the things that are necessary but are easily overlooked and discarded. This months theme is, “Bottles, Caps and Other Beer Detritus”.

Detritus, according to one definition in the Merriam Webster Dictionary is “miscellaneous remnants : odds and ends”. While the number and quality of our beer choices has certainly improved over the recent decade, have you paid any attention to the rest of the package. Those things we normally glance over and throw away when we have poured and finished our beer. These are sometimes works of art in themselves. Bottle caps, labels, six-pack holders, even the curvature of the bottle. For this month’s The Session theme, I’m asking contributors to share their thoughts on these things, the tangential items to our obsession. Do you have any special fetish with bottle caps, know of someone that is doing creative things with packaging, have a beer bottle or coaster collection.”

For some time, I have collected the labels that I could get off (in one piece) of a bottle. But as the albums piled up and threatened to topple over onto my feet, I have kind of stopped with that fascination. There is also an old Halloween candy bucket filled with bottlecaps but though it threatened to overflow at one point, it still hasn’t.

The collection fever that led me to that brink has been dulled by the simple existence of the interwebs. Most label and bottlecap designs can be found in mere seconds with a Google search. I don’t need to remember which beers I had a few years back via a carefully collated album, it’s all on Untappd. I will still grab a coaster on occasion but for the far more utilitarian need for something to set a glass on.

But that desire is still there. Like a family that has moved but still in the same town. That proverbial new house for me is to “label approve” on my blog. At least once a month, there will be a snarky or celebratory post about why one label doesn’t work and/or why it does work.

That has led to a unwritten set of rules that I break out when a label catches my fancy one way or the other. That makes this Session the place where I can lay down the law of Label Design according to Sean. Three rules that you NEED to follow and three rules that are WANTED. None of which talk about the design per se, because that is so tremendously subjective.

NEED:
1. The name of the brewery, the beer and the style must be legible and easily found not some beer version of Where’s Waldo.
2. Each label should be part of a whole series and not so drastically different from the rest as to look from another brewery.
3. Where are you brewed? And when were you brewed? So the consumer can gauge freshness.

GOOD TO HAVE:

1. Best glass for the beer so that you can get the best experience possible
2. Food Pairing possiblities
3. A font bigger than microscopic

I have a lot of respect for label design because it has to convey technical information while standing out on a shelf while building the brand of the brewery while being a piece of art. Not the easiest job in the world to meld those competing interests and probably why you see labels change so often. Personally, I find the Eagle Rock Brewery brand one of the strongest (and that is not just because they are a local). They have been on point since day one and have added little pieces of flair as they have grown. They even managed to make it work in both cans and bottle format.

But to pick a more recent example to apply the “rules” to, let’s test out the California Craft Pack from Anchor Brewing which has three beers in it. The iconic Liberty Ale, California Lager and their newest beer Anchor IPA.

Except for Liberty, the name Anchor is prominent. On all three the beer name is prominent as is the beer style. When it comes to uniformity, again Liberty is the outlier from the other two but it is a special re-release so that is to be expected and is also branded more in line with their Double Liberty. Where brewed is there but the when is missing which is not good in my book. So a mixed bag on the NEED front.

On the WANT front, there is no glass or food pairing info, but the font strikes a good balance of size and design, so one out of three.

The overall design is stately though a touch cluttered on all three cans. The elephant on the IPA and the bear on the lager give an easy touchstone for beer buyers. The Liberty can is really well done and overcomes some of my rules by sheer force of the patriotic throwback design. Not to mention the positive feeling engendered by Anchor and their history in craft beer.

No matter my “rules” or yours, how a bottle or can looks can affect how it sells. So far, breweries seem to have taken the opportunity to be as bold in their art of labels as they do the art of beer.

Year of Podcasts – Beervana

Beervana – The Podcast sprouted just this year and is the team up of an Economics professor from Oregon State University aka the Beeronomist, and Jeff Alworth of the Beervana blog that covers all things Portland beer and beer (and cider) author.

The first podcast covered the topic that nobody really talks about, partygyle brewing.  Covering English beers that we in L.A. don’t really talk or hear about.

# 2 covers an even more obscure topic, ferulic acid rest while # 3 is all about Italian beers.

From the two hosts to the topics, this is a different beast of a beer podcast.

Session # 100 – Resurrecting Lost Beer Styles

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What is lost is found is the monthly topic for The Session, this month hosted by Tale of Ale.

Lost, or almost lost, beer styles. There are many of them that have started to come back in to fashion since in the last 10 years due to the rise of craft beer around the world.

If you have a local beer style that died out and is starting to appear again then please let the world know. Not everyone will so just write about any that you have experienced. Some of the recent style resurrections I have come across in Ireland are Kentucky Common, Grodziskie, Gose and some others. Perhaps it’s a beer you have only come across in homebrew circles and is not even made commercially.

There are no restrictions other than the beer being an obscure style you don’t find in very many places. The format, I leave up to individuals. It could be a historical analysis or just a simple beer review.

When I think of lost beer styles, after a weird side trip to the Dharma Initiative beer from the TV show Lost, I think less of gone forever and more of the history of the here and now. The more that I read, the more that I see that beer styles have always been evolving. Just trying to chart the rise and fall and changes of a porter is difficult. Which means, to a certain extent, many more beer styles have died out then are really counted. An 1890 porter was not the same beast as a 1940 version. And you would be hard pressed to find a proper pint of either in 2015.

From there, my synapses started firing in a new direction. Not towards gratzers and gose’s and overall style categories but towards beers that have the same name but are very much different from their 1st, 2nd or 3rd incarnations. Case in point. Golden Road Brewery is known for their hoppy offerings such as Better Weather or Wolf Among Weeds or Point the Way IPA’s. But the brewmaster at the founding of the brewery is no longer there. So Point the Way 1.0 is long gone. Quite possibly never to return again. Though it is technically not lost because the recipe is probably on a hard drive somewhere.

I know what your saying. In digging deeper than individual styles am I not seeing the forest because of all the saplings in my way? Quite possibly. On the smaller brewery levels, each batch may have quirks to the point where they are noticeably separate from the batch before or batch after. On an agricultural level, the hops and malts and adjuncts may be variable as well and that is only the known unknowns. But that is not what I am heading towards.

Gose from Goslar and Gose from Leipzig and American Gose interpretations are on a linear timeline. With each major stylistic departure noted. But an honest American interpretation of Gose with no crazy fruit or flower additions, would it be recognized as Gose? A rough approximation of the style would be there but the natural evolutionary drift away from the first batch would probably be considerable.

Not to block someone from attempting a historical beer resurrection, but an authentic California Steam beer would be hard to re-create too and that is in the not so distant past. A Goslar Gose would be a big task primarily because no one from that era could verify it’s accuracy.

Nowadays with information a mouse click away, a future brewer could possibly both have the recipe and the tasting notes to accomplish a task like this. Making a 2015 version of Golden Road 2020 IPA in the year 2030.

With all that in mind, I say let the lost be lost. Let’s keep evolving.

 

Year of Podcasts – Gastropod

I love reading about the history of beer (and the people saying other people’s history is incorrect) and I love the scientific underpinning of beer.  As of yet, there is no meshing of those two for beer in the land of podcasts but over on Gastropod, you can find a lot of information that can be taken back to our interaction with craft beer.

Especially this podcast that goes into detail about natural and artificial flavors and designer yeast…

The Session # 99 – Localizing Mild

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The topic for May’s edition of The Session is Localizing Mild and it comes from our host over at Fuggled. Here is the writing prompt….

“Each May CAMRA in the UK encourages drinkers to get out and drink Mild Ales. This May is the first, as far as I am aware, American Mild Month, which has 45 breweries, so far, committed to brewing mild ales. Of those 45 breweries some are brewing the traditional English dark and pale mild styles, while a couple have said they will brew an ‘American Mild’, which American Mild Month describes as:
a restrained, darkish ale, with gentle hopping and a clean finish so that the malt and what hops are present, shine through

An essential element of the American Mild is that it uses American malts, hops, and the clean yeast strain that is commonly used over here. Like the development of many a beers style around the world, American Mild is the localisation of a beer from elsewhere, giving a nod to the original, but going its own way.

That then is the crux of the theme for The Session in May, how would you localise mild? What would an Irish, Belgian, Czech, or Australian Mild look like? Is anyone in your country making such a beer? For homebrewers, have you dabbled in cross-cultural beer making when it comes to mild?”
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If May is the month of Mild in America, here in L.A. it would be the shortest month of the year. So close to the epicenter of IPA, there is not much room on tap for the humble mild. Sure you can find Solidarity Mild from Eagle Rock Brewery. Maybe Vanilla Solidarity if lucky. MacLeod Ales might have a mild or two on tap in their Van Nuys tap room but beyond that it is Citraholic, Hammerland and their hoppy brethren. Which come in handy on IPA Day (aka the longest day if you were to sample all the available IPAs).

So, how do you reconcile the bitterness endemic to the West Coast with a style that is, well, mild?

You could spin facts hard enough that you could say that Black IPA’s or Cascadian Darks have some aspects in common with the mild but that style certainly didn’t spring from mild parentage. Besides a hoppy mild would be a large oxymoron to swallow. So back to square one we go. What would a West Coast Mild look like?

More specifically a City of Angels accented Mild. If I was to spitball ideas, maybe a smoke malt tinged mild to simulate the smog that used to hover over the freeways. Maybe a hint of Sriacha to make a pepper mild. Both ideas would probably give CAMRA a heart attack. Both are also a bit on the obvious side as well.

Two strikes against me at this point. What might better serve as a SoCal Local mild would be something that a Brit living in L.A. would want to drink that would be comfort drink with a touch of reminder of home and also reflect where you are now. Past and present as it were.

With that thought percolating in the brain, I finally came up with what might be a solution. A tequila barrel-aged mild. Mind you, not something that is aged for a year or more but something that picks up a hint of the spirit. You don’t want to get too imperial or too boozy. You want the essential toasty malt notes to be the star of the show.

Whether it would work is up to an adventurous brewer.

Bootlegged & Blindsided – Full(ish) Recap

Firestone Walker Blogger Trip
Firestone Walker + L.A. Beer Bloggers = #FW3.

There comes a point where surprise becomes the new normal. Firestone Walker has reached that point.

The now annual trip has featured tractor rides to an organic farm. Blending my own gin and this year the historic barns of the Central Coast. That may sound facetious or trite but these trips north from Los Angeles have given me so much. Not only as a beer blogger but just as a total person.

That is why I feel compelled to post multiple times across so many social media platforms. Literally, it is the only time that I post on Instagram. My least utilized app.

That is just prelude to what I learned on the 2015 trip (aka LA2FW3) which I will list out because I don’t want to leave anything out:

Sour Opal (which will be “liberated” on the 25th of this month) is yet another winner from Barrelworks. It is a close second to my all-time favorite of Bretta Weisse.

Just the fact that it was mentioned, partially in jest, that Bretta Weisse would be canned made my day.

From the Barrel might not get the love that the Invitational gets but if I had more time and seating options, it would be really close. Firestone Walker knows their way around a tentpole event.

I now know much more about acidity in sour beers. And Olalliberries.

I hate coming in last in a competition especially when the winners get cardboard Firestone Walker crowns.

I could really get used to tasting wine. There is something about the setting of Thacher Winery that just relaxes a person automatically.

BBQ and wine go really well together as do beer and cupcakes.

Beer at 10am is fantastic. Especially nitro cream Velvet Merlin.

I like Easy Jack and 805 more than Pivo Pils.

Oh, and I do not have the talent to chug a beer. Probably a good thing.

(I will go more in depth about From the Barrel later on this blog and tomorrow is a recap of the Acid Trip with Jeffers over on Food GPS)

Bootlegged & Blindsided – Day 2

Firestone Walker Blogger Trip

Whiskey and beer and wine.   Firestone Walker has treated the L.A. Beer Bloggers very well for #FW3.

And Day 2 was no different. Starting at 10am with a tutorial on Ph. Acid. Malic, acetic and citric.  The most lasting impression from these weekends are the lessons learned. With sour beers, it is about balance. Is s level of four OK?  Or is it eight?  Tasting the base acids and then tasting Li’l Opal, Agrestic and SLOambic was a great way to see that complexity is better than puckery.

Lunch was next but was a prelude to another learning experience. Blending. A test of eight groups to see who could produce a reasonable facsimile of an Anniversary beer. Paired with Kip Barnes and Tomm Carroll, I fancied my chances. But our Velvet Merkin based blend was not in the top three, though I did like it.

After a short break it was off to dinner. At a winery no less. Thacher Winery hosted a tasting of GSM. A trio of red wines with grapes from different vineyards. Tasting wine is foreign to me but quite enjoyable because I don’t have knowledge that would lead me to overthinking. More blends came with names like Controlled Chaos and Resident Alien. Then done serious BBQ. All in a beautiful, bucolic Paso Robles hills. All very relaxing.

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The night concluded with a scene you do not get in L.A. A lightly roaring fire. Sitting on hat bales with a snifter of beer and a cupcake and the stars above.

Bootlegged & Blindsided – Day 1

Firestone Walker Blogger Trip

Off to Firestone Walker the L.A. Beer Bloggers go for #FW3.

The bus left the still in build-out mode future home of FW Venice mid-day yesterday and pointed north to Paso Robles with the destination being From the Barrel at the historic Santa Margarita ranch.

First though, a quick stop at Barrelworks to see “Sour Jim” and Jeffers and sample some beers. A little backtrack first, each trip with FW has started with a sneak peek at a beer not yet released. Two years ago was Bretta Weisse. (Still a favorite of mine) and last year was Bretta Rose a delightful sour fruit beer. This year we got another winner, Sour Opal. Woody and tart.  Simple and flavorful.

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With an eye on the clock we re-boarded the bus and headed to the hotel to dress up for the party. The end of prohibition was the theme and the whole troop was in period outfits.

From the Barrel might not get the love that the Invitational does but it offers a different brand of fun and libations. You enter the large and historic barn (a halfway stop between missions) and get your glass, plate and program. In front of you are seemingly table after table of food, spirits and beer.  Moonshine to sliders to Pizza Port beer then you might find port, hand rolled cigars and dessert.

All of the food I tasted was quite good, of course it had to do battle with the drink.  You could get a barrel aged Manhattan or Blueberry Sour from Crooked Stave.

The intersection of an old barn of stone, wood and brick and the night sky of the country with the company of the LA Beer Bloggers made for a great night.