Fox and Anchor

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I love one-stop shopping. When it comes to beer and travel, that means a room above where you are going to be drinking. The Fox and Anchor is part of the wave of chic gastropubs opening in the London area and England as a whole. I love historical pubs but I tend to stay longer in the places that have food options and updated decor. You can check out their drinks menu which they characterize as, “From a foaming tankard of local ale to a glistening bottle of Krug Grand Cuvée; from a sumptuous Foxy Sour to a fiery Glenmorangie; At Fox & Anchor we have everything you could ever wish for to slake your thirst in sublime surroundings.”

Untitled with no style

Upright Brewing of Portland is really following their own path. First they numbered their beers and now they are making “style-less” beers.

They say it better, “Upright specializes in farmhouse-inspired brews which are historically working man’s beers and so in the vein of the Punk Rock Warlords who wrote and played music for the poor and disenfranchised, we have decided to leave this brew both nameless and style-less and open to the interpretation of the thinking mans yob’s.”

Mike

I will be honest. The main reason I am highlighting this beer is the name. It is my late dad’s name and it’s my middle name. Thankfully, Weyerbacher is a respected brewery so the name won’t be spoiled by bad beer. I may have to buy a few of these

Coffee + IPA = Mikkeller

File this under, might work. Two distinct flavors that may fight each other to a standstill. The coffee is called Guji Natural and is roasted by a by Koppi of Sweden. The hops in the other corner are Tomahawk. And it was brewed at Mikkeller’s default brewery De Proef.

Abstrakt

Brewdog has something that will put high ABV to shame as a pursuit. It is beer as art according to the separate (from the main) website.

Abstrakt is a new type of beer brand, we will only ever brew and release a beer once
Abstrakt will release a very small number of limited edition batches per year
More art than beer, Abstrakt will brew directional, boundary pushing beers: blurring distinctions and transcending categories
All Abstrakt beers are bottle-conditioned, individually numbered and known only by their release code, e.g. AB:01″

They have released and sold out of three beers already with more on the way.
VANILLA BEAN INFUSED BELGIAN QUAD 10.2%
TRIPLE DRY HOPPED IMPERIAL RED ALE 18%
IMPERIAL ALE AGED OVER 2 YEARS IN WHISKY CASKS WITH RASPBERRIES AND STRAWBERRIES 10.5%

The 03 sounds delicious. Which one would you shell out 10 or more pounds for?

Matzo beer

Just when you think every ingredient under the sun has been used in craft beer along comes “Matzahbrau” from Ambacht Brewing of Hillsboro, Oregon.

Using Matzah (Matzo), a cracker-like unleavened bread made of white plain flour and water. Two pounds of Matzah is used in a 20 pound grain bill for this brew.

Then the beer is bottle conditioned with honey. So this might be a sticky sweet little bomb of a beer. Can’t wait to try it.

Hopworks Pilot Brew

File this under smart moves, Hopworks Urban Brewery. Already the organic beer leader in Portland, and the leader in beer and bikes is in the process of opening a “nano brewery” that they will open to home brewers. The 30 gallon capacity systesm will be available for home-brew clubs six times during the year and solo home brewers for all of the other free dates. Applicants will be encouraged to use all Organic base malts in their recipes and in exchange will be able to brew at Hopworks, make use of their mill and just be around and absorb the vibe and knowledge that Hopworks already has.

Raise the Jolly Rodger

Drakes Brewing from San Leandro first did a re-design of their core beers which are really good. Then the first bomber special, Denogginizer rolled into stores.

Now, we get the 2nd in the 22oz series! An imperial red. Even though, I am fast tiring of the “imperial”ization of beers as the only creative outlet, I will give this new Drake’s offering a go.

Zoigl beer

Here’s another funny beer style for you to try to pronounce

ZOIGLBIER

Say it five times fast…
“Tzoy-gel-beer” (“oy” as in “boy” and “gel” as in the last syllable of “bagel”)

It is harder to drink it than to say it. Here is the dictionary description… “Zoiglbier is a fresher more sparkly form of a Kellerbier but brewed from more highly kilned malt, which gives the beer a slightly darker, deep amber, color. It is also less hop-accented. Its alcohol content by volume is usually below 5%. The name Zoiglbier stems from “Zoigl,” the Franconian vernacular for “sign.” In Franconian home brewing, a Zoigl was a six-pointed blue-white star, shaped from two triangles similar to a Star of David. The star was made from wooden slats. In the center was a cutout of a beer mug or a pine branch. In the feudal system of the 13th and 14th centuries, every Bavarian home- and landowner in the region north of the River Danube also automatically owned the right to brew beer, and these medieval burghers and farmers used to hang the Zoigl in front of their doors wheneverthey had homebrew ready to drink. The Zoigl was in invitation to their neighbors to come over and have a few. These early burgher-brewers often also made their Zoiglbier in communal brew houses…a natural precursor to the brew’s communal consumption under the Zoigl.

One triangle of the Zoigl symbolized the three “elements” involved in brewing: fire, water and air; the other symbolized the three “ingredients” used in brewing: malt, hops and water. The function of yeast had not yet been discovered in the Middle Ages. Rather yeast was considered a byproduct of fermentation, known as “stuff” (“Zeug” in German) to be discarded.

Nowadays, Zoiglbier is brewed exclusively with noble hops from the Hallertau region of Bavaria (slightly north of the Danube). Like Kellerbier, Zoiglbier is unfiltered, unpasteurized, uncapped (“ungespundet”), and low in carbonation; but unlike Kellerbier, it is aged for only of few weeks, before it is served. It tends to have a shorter shelflife than Kellerbier and is generally not sold outside Bavaria. Several breweries nowadays package their Zoiglbier in bottles and kegs, in which case the beer tends to be slightly carbonated.”