A Capital Idea

Capital Brewing has found an interesting way to age and blend beer.

Here is part of what the Madison.com website says, “On April 17, Brewmaster Kirby Nelson will brew the seed beer for what will become “Eternal Flame,” a vertical beer that will begin with a hybrid recipe of the brewery’s Autumnal Fire and Eisphyre beers.

The 50 barrels brewed April 17 will sit for a year. Then next April, Nelson will brew another 50 barrels and blend it with the 50 barrels brewed this year. After a two-month aging, 50 barrels of the mixture will be bottled in June 2012. The remainder will age for another year and then another 50 barrels will be brewed in 2013 and be mixed with the aged beer. Another 50 barrels will be bottled and sold in four-packs, with the remainder stored for the following year’s batch. The process is intended to go on for years.”

Session # 51

The back-story and introduction for this month’s Session is a bit involved but thought provoking…all about pairing beer with cheese. In this instance, what pairs with iconic cheeses Blue, Cheddar and chevre.

Part 1: The Regular May Session
That brings us back to Session #51, and the topic of cheese and beer. So pick up some of each cheese, or if you can’t find those specific cheeses, choose similar ones. Pick a beer to pair with each one and post your results on the first Friday in May.

There are at least a few approaches you could take:
1. Guess what beer to pair, and then report the results.
2. Try a few beers with each cheese, then report the results on which worked best, and why.
3. Invite some friends over, and have each bring a beer to pair, then report the results on which worked best, and why.
4. Obviously, if you can only pair one cheese, or two, don’t let that deter you.
5. Whatever else catches your fancy.

And that is just 1/2 the challenge, check out the Brookston Beer Bulletin for Part 2 of the challenge…

Last Sunday, my beer buddy Richard and I headed to the Silver Lake Cheese Store to complete the May Session challenge of pairing beer and cheese.

We even got an employee who was well aware of beer and cheese pairings and was able to help us find the cheeses we needed. We ended up with a nice Stilton blue, a Dunbarton cheddar and the Humboldt Fog chevre.

Next stop was the nearby Cap’n Cork store to make our beer selections. We had chosen to each find a beer to pair with each cheese for a total of 6 beers. After perusing the many choices and each selecting a beer to sample, we set up for the grand tasting and roped in my sister-in-law as an additional taster and got the challenge under way.

Cheese # 1 – Stilton
My Beer Choice – New Belgium Lips of Faith Dunkel Weiss
Richard’s Beer Choice – Stone Old Guardian Belgo Barleywine.

This cheese did not play well with either of our beer choices though the Stone brew rated higher. It was a case of strong beers and strong cheese not working together. I thought the big malty backbone of a extreme Dunkel would undercut the blue but it was too smokey and powerful and didn’t add anything to the cheese. The Belgo was good on it’s own but really could not match with the blue at all.


Cheese # 2 – Dubarton cheddar
My Beer Choice – Sam Adams Longshot Friar Hop
Richard’s Beer Choice – Firestone-Walker Union Jack.

I went out on a limb with my first beer choice and then I went even further for my second and third. Selecting two beers from the Longshot 23 collection from Sam Adams. The cheddar was much more forgiving with beer. And at the end of this round, Richard and I agreed that the Union Jack and it’s big citrus taste really enlivened the cheddar. There was a spark of flavor that we had really missed with the blue cheese. The Friar Hop won my sister-in-law’s vote because it was less hoppy and more rounded with a caramel note from the Belgian candi sugar that she thought melded with the cheese.


Cheese # 3 – Humboldt Fog
My Beer Choice – Sam Adams Longshot Honey Lavender
Richard’s Beer Choice – Allagash Dubbel

I was hoping to go out with a win. But it was not to be. The chevre overpowered the light but noticeable lavender flavor and the sweetness did not cut against the creaminess of the cheese. The dubbel worked wonders though. I thought it would be too strong but it really added a layer to the chevre and both were on the same taste wavelength.

In the end, Richard was the clear winner of the afternoon. If you factor in that we both had great cheese and beer and learned a lot then we both won.

Oh and here is Richard’s side of the story.

Label talk

Occasionally, (especially for beers that I haven’t yet tasted) a label is just so weird or weirdly great that I have to talk about whats on the package instead of what’s inside. Such is the case for Cellar Rat.

First things first, I am not a rat or mouse hater or frightened victim. But due to paying attention in history class, I have learned my fair share about the rat’s role in disease spreading in the olden days.

Which leads me to label # 1

Aside from the old but iconic hammer and sickle, it is the color of red that really makes this not work for me. The color doesn’t automatically take me to thoughts of the devil. But the combined rat, USSR and color do. Plus it looks more possum-y to me. The font for the name is evocative without being too cutesy though.


What a vibrant green. And boy how it conjures disease. Especially in tandem with the swirly, hypnotic design on the possum, I mean rat, belly. I feel like this is one of those labels that would catch my eye, then immediately lose it.

They have a distinct brand and I certainly hope the beer is good. Maybe the rats will become the next Stone Brewing devil. But for now, it isn’t my pint of beer. And the motto of “Infest You” should go to.

the colLAboration continues…

…and here is the latest update, “colLAboration – the mobile craft beer garden from the brains behind Tony’s Darts Away, Verdugo Bar/Surly Goat, Blue Palms and 38 Degrees – is popping-up a second time in Hollywood on Saturday, June 4th at the corner of Gower and Hollywood, from noon til 7 p.m.

The garden will feature dozens of the best in California beers including:
Firestone Walker, Sierra Nevada, Russian River, Beer Valley, Craftsman, Green Flash, Moylan’s, Avery, Alesmith, New Belgium, Dogfish Head, Port/Los Abbey, Eagle Rock, Hangar 24, Oskar Blues, Grand Teton, Uinta and many more.

Also, for the entire month of July, COLLAB will be held every Friday (4 p.m. to 9 p.m) and Saturday (noon to 9 p.m.) on the Sunset Strip right across from the world-famous Roxy Theater, featuring craft beer from California and beyond.

When: Saturday, June 4th 12 noon to 7pm.

Where:6124 Hollywood Blvd. at the corner of Gower and Hollywood

Cost:Those who purchased the $10 glass from the first event can use that as their admission; most beers will be $5 to $6. Glasses will also soon be available for purchase online at http://www.collaboration.la/

Way Umburana Lager


If Stephen Beaumont says this about a beer: “Umburana Lager, at 9.6% alcohol and aged on Brazilian umburana wood chips to lightly tannic, vanilla-spiced smoothness, is really the one to watch here.”

Then I’m guessing it has to be good.

Click HERE to read about other Brazilian beer picks.

Venice Beach Brewing

As I was patiently waiting to see beer handles for El Segundo Brewing, another beach brewery was also bubbling away.


Venice Beach Brewing is headed by brewer Kerr Smith and has two beers ready….
Venice Ale
Our signature Amber Ale which we created right out of the gate. A unique blend of malt and hops crafted to perfection with love and lust. Not to mention a little help from the mighty Summit Hop.

June Gloom
Cloudy, like its namesake month, this superb Belgian White, a mix of half wheat and half barley, with a touch of coriander, makes this the perfect beer to chase those clouds away.

…..with two more (Dirty Blonde and Ink Chocolate Oatmeal Stout) in the pipeline.

There will be a release party sometime this month.

In the Tap Lines for May 2011

The craft beer world just keeps expanding. Every time I think that I may have to post less, more beer and beer news arrives to save the day. Like Beer and Cupcakes. Here are the other highlights:

~ e-visits to three breweries in Indiana
~ video reviews of beers from New Planet
~ Three suggested beers to buy this month
~ I will tap the Firkin and give my opinion on the craft beer world
~ my 2011 Beer challenge will enter the letter writing stage…
~ … and Session # 51 will pose an interesting view on the beer world
~ plus many more posts about new beers, beer products and breweries

Here are two events to get your May started in the Los Angeles craft beer world:
1) May 2 – Library Alehouse with Stillwater beer and other exotic Belgian offerings

2) May 6 – Blue Palms Brewhouse with Triple Rock bringing SF goodies

The Firkin for April 2011

Can a craft beer be crappy?

This was discussed back in February on the Appellation Beer blog. I could have made a snarky little comment on the post but I thought that I should let people know my full thoughts on the matter.

Yes, a craft beer can suck. It could be infected. It could be skunked. It could not taste the way the previous keg did and the next keg does. But that is the ONLY time that you can intelligently say that a beer is crappy.

All other times. And I mean ALL (sorry for the all caps, trying to be clear) the beer is not to your liking. It could use a hop that is not your favorite. The fruit could be too strong. The ABV could be too high. All problems of YOURS. The person sitting next to you loves that hop. It is his favorite. The fruit is that guy’s friends childhood memory of a tree in his parent’s backyard so the more the better and the beer geek next to him may think the ABV brings an additional note to the beer. So don’t loudly proclaim that the beer is crap.

Here is my suggestion. Tell everyone why you don’t like the beer. I don’t want you to lie and say that the beer is great just to keep craft brewers happy. I want you to explain why the beer isn’t to your liking. Those people that liked the beer(s) that you didn’t may have just had a beer that they didn’t cotton to. One that may be perfect for you.

Converse people. Don’t be a dittohead, don’t scream like a political pundit. Calmly verbalize your reaction to the beer. Then we all learn. I may find out that are tastes are similar and you had a great beer last month that I should try. But if you say, Wow this blows. I’m going to think you’re an idiot.

Seriously, if you can’t convince a fellow geek about a beer’s worthiness then how do you think you can tell your bartender, your publican, your distributor or you local brewer what to have on tap.