Review – And Chill from Field Recordings Wine

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This wine meets beer from Field Recordings Wines is more accurately a Chenin Blanc meets Gose. It pours a sharp pee yellow. To me this is wine with grapefruit rind. A rind that is accentuated by a liberal dose of sea salt. Two others tried it and said it was more hoppy and 50/50 wine to beer.

Either way, this experimental can that I was given when I visited the Paso Robles brewery last month is not boring at all. From the super cool koozie as label design with all the grape, vineyard (Jurassic!) , barrel and beer-y ingredients plus the canned on date on one side and some Keith Haring style art on the other, this is a thought out limited edition. I wish most beers had this detail with what they are made of.

When I hit the lottery, I am joining the can club for sure. Experiments like this may be polarizing but they are worth trying.

On the Way Home from Paso Robles

On the way from Burbank to Paso Robles, it is all about getting there. I take the 5 and do not stop until I reach my destination.

Coming back after the FWIBF is different and I had multiple plans for where to brewery stop on the return 101 journey. I finally settled on a stop in Paso that was non-Firestone related and a stop in Santa Barbara.
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There is a great little winery grouping off Marquitas Road near Firestone’s main expanding campus that also includes the rapidly expanding Barrelhouse Brewing. I stopped as the “other” brewery opened and sampled their new, big DIPA, Big Sur which I found to be quite good. Didn’t quite land in a dank or citrus or floral style box but rather ticked off a little from each. I also had a sampler of a pre-release of one of three new sours that will be released soon to mark the occasion of the new building across the gully. Eleanor was made with prickly pear and had a lovely red, sparkle to it and it was puckeringly tart too. I only wished it wasn’t so damn hot out. I wanted to relax a bit near the rock work and bubbly fountain.
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I walked from Barrelhouse around the corner and down the street to Field Recordings for some wine. Because, the Central Coast is wine country too, plus Field Recordings cans some of their wines and in fact uses the Beer Monks who help some SoCal breweries can too! Even more cool is that they have a can club (that you should join) where you can get wine that uses additional beer ingredients. I tasted their version of a Chenin Blanc meets Wit Bier and it was really refreshing with both the wine and beer aspects making their presence felt. I really enjoyed their Chardonnay. You can find their wines at Silver Lake Wines where you can also find the koozy as label wine/beer hybrids (when available)
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Then a long drive with flashes of the ocean to Santa Barbara and the new Third Window Brewing. Tucked next to a winery space on the corner of Haley & Laguna in a brown, tin shack looking building it can be hard to find since the logos and signage blend into the exterior like a chameleon.

Once inside, there is a lovely little space and some interesting beers to sample. Despite the heat the Chocolate/Orange Stout was excellent. Tasted just like the ball shaped chocolate that I would get for Christmas. The other Belgian-style riffs were all light and tasty. Speaking of light, their pilsner is called Light and is a really solid version.

I will have to do a Santa Barbara brewery crawl in the coming months to check them all out.

Dino-Gose

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Grab the Jurassic World DVD (wow, just dated myself). Stream the Jurassic World movie and grab this Gose collaboration between The Bruery Terreux, The Libertine and Field Recordings Wine.

The hip salt and coriander beer has been aged in port wine barrels with Chenin Blanc grapes. Will it remain Gose enough or be overwhelmed by the other two components and more importantly, why do I still not like their label art?

Dry Hop that Wine?

In a recent wander in Pasadena I stumbled upon Everson Royce, a wine, spirits and beer shoppe and after perusing the gins and looking at the cost of the different whiskey bottles in their collection and being a little ticked that the beer choices were pushed onto a back wall and consisted mostly of Mikkeller, I stumbled upon wine, in a tallboy can with a can koozy wrapped around it.

My initial thought was how twee. How very Hollywood Bowl box seats. Then I noticed that it was a dry hopped Rose.
(See this photo borrowed from Instagram)
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It is from Alloy Wine Works sub-label of Field Recordings wine. I don’t know if I dare try it. Maybe something to buy for my Mom and have her review.