The Bruery Provisions

the-bruery

In a slight change of course, The Bruery will not be opening a cafe. Instead it will be a bottle shop and tasting bar.

Here is the info, straight from the source:
“This summer, The Bruery plans on opening The Bruery Provisions, a boutique bottle shop in Old Town Orange that specializes in craft beer as well as artisan wines, cheeses and charcuterie. The Bruery Provisions hopes to provide the ideal destination for anyone looking to learn about and purchase an assortment of specialty beers from across the United States and beyond. Not only will patrons be presented with a great selection of beers and cheeses to take home, there will also be a small tasting bar where beer and wine flights will change sporadically from week to week. Certified Cicerones (read: beer sommeliers) will staff the store and lead customers on detailed samplings, helping them understand what flavors they sense and what beers they might enjoy taking home to share. As Cicerones, the staff members are experts on pairing beers with food and cheese, so you can be sure to bring the perfect bottle to your dinner party along with a bit of insight.”

Beer Camp

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In the past, Beer Camp at Sierra Nevada has been by invitation only.

Now it is being opened up as a contest for anyone who would like to experience beer the Chico way.

As I write this, I am thinking of what kind of entry that I could send their way.

Saboteur from Odell

What do you get when you create a brown ale then dose it with Brett yeast. You get this…
odell-saboteur-3

I like this type of experimentation. Maybe it will bring back people to simple, satisfying ales like the brown or amber.

The Firkin for May 2010

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RESPECT

Wine gets it and beer doesn’t. It seems to be a thorny issue. Especially now that craft beer has raised it’s profile. Beer has prestige where once it was only a plebian drink. But the pro-beer crowd seems to feel that despite innovation within the brewing industry and educated palates of consumers that proper respect isn’t being given and that wine is sitting on its grape laurels.

That is so beyond the point to me. Beer shouldn’t be compared to wine in that way. By reducing it to a class struggle or vying for preeminence at the dining table, it takes away what is great about both drinks. And it makes both seem like inaccessible drinks for the highly cultured few.

Beer does not have to justify itself as classy. Beer is classy. And wine people who put down beer as beneath them and the beer people who fight every perceived slight just reinforce the old and outdated image of beer as just a watery lager for the masses.

An argument is made that there should be a level playing field. Wine and spirits and beer starting at point A. They are all great and deserve a participation ribbon. That seems very short sighted. We should celebrate the heritage of beer and marvel at the journey it has taken. Then the beer world needs to focus on what is good for the advancement of beer. Not in comparison to others but simply beer.

Beer does not need to keep up with the Jones’s of the wine industry. Remember that this new renaissance started not to compete but to make a good beer because the beer available was watered down and not getting any better. It wasn’t done to win a competition of beer vs wine.

Oddly enough though, I love beer vs wine pairing dinners where people can vote on what works better with their palates. This is because it is an educational setting. It may be externally a competition but in the end people from both sides of the aisle are being exposed to different flavors and their combinations.

The people of the craft beer world need to use whatever GPS is needed to relocate where beer is in history and move forward from there. We are not on the same trajectory as wine or spirits or coffee or tea. They have their own arcs. If beer has a problem then let’s find a BEER ANSWER.

If an alcohol law need to be changed, then we should craft resolutions that fit this industry.

If restaurants don’t use beer to cook or as an accompanying beverage, then we should start restaurants that are beer centric.

If informed media exposure is needed then, then we need to provide either the content or the screens, be they computer or TV, for potential customers to see it.

Epic Brewing

My tour around breweries of the southwest concludes with Epic Brewing. Not to be confused with Epic Ales of Seattle, this is a later in the year to be opened brewery in Utah.
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And they have a unique spin on their beers…
EPIC Brewing beers fall into one of three categories Classic, Elevated or Exponential.

The Classic Series are the regular line-up craft beers.
The Elevated Series are limited in quality and numbered. The recipes will change from year to year.
The Exponential Series are highly specialized beers handcrafted in very small batches. These beers will use unique ingredients.

Beer Squishee

Here is something that will make beer snobs turn purple with rage but I would be willing to try if it was available near me.

“Bia Wun” (jelly beer, in Thai) machines from Thailand that essentially turn bottled beer into beer slushies, which are then served with a straw.

I wish I could find a photo of it to not only show you out there on the interwebs but also because I am curious myself about it. If anyone out there has tried it, let me know about it.

Marble Brewing

marble
Back to New Mexico for the Marble Brewery.

Here are my two suggestions…
Simcoe Pale Ale
This single hop pale ale is a great spring beer, with big citrus hop aroma and flavor, little malt character and a nice crisp and refreshing finish. 5.4% ABV

TIPA
Yes, it?s what you think it is. Loads of hops, rich pale malt, long bitter-sweet finish. 11% ABV. $6.00 a pint. No 22s. $20 growlers.