Kick Off & Kick Start

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Indie Brewing Company will be throwing open their doors for a Kickstarter kick-off party which give Angeleno beer lovers the chance to see exactly where they are and learn more about one of the two DTLA breweries without tasting rooms. (Dry River being the other). On Saturday, July 16th from 12pm-7pm, they will be open for anyone to come have a beer, take the nickel tour and imagine what their tasting room will look like in the future.

The important part being that Indie will have our full lineup of beers on sale for tasting.

#LABW8 – DTLA United

Last night was the night for Downtown LA beer to shine. L.A. Beer Hop was shuttling from Boomtown in the North East to Iron Triangle in the South and each brewery in between.
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I did not stop at each and everyone but I did get a few pints and here is the report from the LABW8 evening….
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Thank God for ½ pours and tasters. A long night stretched ahead starting at Boomtown where Dry River was the guest and where I started my beer ordering with their Cigana Brett IPA. It had a strong does of bitterness which was cut by heavy horse blanket notes. This was old school Brett. Then I moved on to the the other beer on offer, Lady Roja. The first of two red/pink beers that I would have on the evening. It had a lot of pie spice notes and heavy hibiscus but neither was too overbearing.

Then it was over to the Boomtown side of the room to try their Aliso – Belgian Strong Dark. This beer was right on point for me. Nice hit of Candi sugar, bit of bitterness, and it had good strength to it. Probably my favorite of the night. Then it was on the bus to….
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Iron Triangle where I picked up a pair of new hoppy samplers starting with the Sluice Gate IPA. Nice. Probably a notch above the vast swath of IPA’s that are just fine. It had good body and aroma and I paired it with the Jawbone Black IPA. Which to me was not so hoppy. More on the dark malt side of the equation. There was a lurking grapefruit flavor in the back but that didn’t match well with the malt to me. I also had a few sips of the Socially Awkward Berliner. There is an initial burst but then the tart fades too quickly. Left with wheat notes.

Then the next stop was….
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…Angel City to try the premier of their Strawberry Gose. First off, strawberries are hard to add to beer. This is probably one of the better attempts at utilizing the berry. Now is it a gose? No. But there was a huge aroma and it was very tart and very cloudy pink. It worked for me.

Overall, this was a great way to get people to enjoy the beers at the breweries. There was a couple of things to add for next year. The buses stopped at 10pm and Mumford closed up shop around that time. Each of the LA Beer Hop buses should have had that fact displayed to help people plan. My group was left without a bus at Iron Triangle and had to get back to the center of action via alternate methods. Had we known the closing times, we could have planned our time more effectively. My second thought was that information about the breweries in DTLA could have been on the bus to pass out to. If the goal of the night is to get people to try new breweries, then a little bit of info might be a good sales pitch.

I just wish there had been more time to sneak in one more brewery before the clock struck last call.

News & Notes – DTLA Version

Despite Monday being a beer off-day for me, I headed down to Angel City to hear what some of the DTLA breweries had to say about the area and the growth of LA beer as well as their fledgling DTLA Brewers United group.

I took notes and when I got home, a trend emerged. They were mostly about Mumford Brewing. Not a smack at all against the others on the panel but what was piquing my interest were three things from the Skidrokyo brewery…

1. Cloudy IPA is coming this weekend. Will our West-Coast San Diego culture join this trend?
2. Mumford is looking into canning and getting some core beers onto shelves
3. June 12th is the date for the 1st Mumford anniversary. They will have a Russian Imperial Stout in three different variants.

Other tidbits, Indie Brewing is looking at end of year for their tap room to be open. Arts District Brewing is looking at creating a “Study Room” for the more beer obsessed and geeky. Plus this fall, their just might be a DTLA only brewfest.
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Inside Indie

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I headed down by the partially demolished 6th Street Bridge to see the future home of Indie Brewing in Boyle Heights south of the Arts District. Connor Forbes was my tour guide and patiently answered my questions.

Indie Brewing is hidden in a gem of a building that most people would just drive by. Nothing much to look at from the outside but once inside there is a long, cool corridor that in the future may house restaurants and other shops
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Inside the brewery is in pre-tasting room mode. Space that will be tables and chairs houses equipment, boxes and the like. This isn’t one of those 24 hour a day brewing operations. Until the tap room is humming along and until a distribution deal is inked, the amount of beer being made is lower with the focus being on canning the XPA and getting the 7th Street Saison and Port(er) of Los Angeles into 22oz bombers.
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I tasted both the Superfood Saison as well as both a can and off the fermenter Eastside XPA. The Saison had notes of blackberry underneath but a gripping and strong (to me) Saison base. There is a juice bar of ingredients in the beer but the actual style still leads the way. The XPA was more IPA to me but was tasting quite nice, especially fresh.

The coolest take-away from the afternoon was that Forbes (like many brew people) was complimentary about the growing group of brewers in DTLA and was excited about a DTLA event that would include all of the brewers showing off their beers.

Indie Brewing

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I did a profile of three on-the-way L.A. breweries for the latest Beer Paper LA that didn’t reference Hand Brewed, Arts District Brewing or Iron Triangle which are also in stages of development. At least, I knew about the existence of them though.

It was in a Brewyard Brewing newsletter that I learned of yet another brewery in progress, Indie Brewing.

So, head to their website and sign-up for their newsletter so you can be reminded automatically when these 4 entrepreneurs have their casual taproom spot ready for us LA craft beer fans.