No more hashtaggin’ #LABW5, but one more look back at the photos from the 19th through the 29th…..
Until next year LA Beer Week,
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No more hashtaggin’ #LABW5, but one more look back at the photos from the 19th through the 29th…..
Until next year LA Beer Week,
Another L.A. Beer Week is in the books and this year, I took a more relaxed approach to the “Week+”. I did not schedule an event (or two) each and every night. In years past, I would scurry around Los Angeles hoping to not miss a single beer. Now I know that I should enjoy each beer as it comes and not worry so much about the next. And not go chasing waterfalls.
With that as a reference point, my personal version of LA Beer Week was quite fun. My quick snapshot:
I had a taste of Double Mountain beer from my home state of Oregon at Sunset Beer Co. Tasted three versions of Eagle Rock’s Solidarity at Story Tavern. Learned about beer writing and writing for the interwewbs at at the L.A. Beer Bloggers meeting at Angel City. Volunteered at Union Station and marveled at how fast it came together. Went on a Brue D’Etat at Glendale Tap. Was treated to some great food and Green Flash beer at Tuning Fork. Sampled beers (and found two favorites) from new San Diego brewery, Modern Times. Went rare at Smog City and El Segundo breweries with grapes and melons. And ended by Taking the Black on the roof above Blue Palms. Not a bad line-up considering I also took two days off to recharge my beer batteries.
My favorite beers were Blue Sugar Cubed from El Segundo and Grape Ape from Smog City with Fortunate Islands and Blazing World from Modern Times in my third and fourth slots. Golden Brett from Allagash would round out my top five for the stretch of time. Craftsman’s Oktoberfest would also be close in there.
The only event that I really wish I could have gone to was the Craftsman/Maximilliano dinner. After seeing what Craftsman brought to Union Station and knowing what the food is like at Maximilliano, I can imagine a tremendous experience. Count yourself lucky if you were there.
I know in some minds, the festival, be it at the end as in years past, or as an opening gala like this year is the measuring stick for the success L.A. Beer Week. For some, it is the only event people attend. (Which I think is crazy) I have not written much about the Union Station event because I was a small cog in the group that arranged and executed the event. Moving to a new space inside Union Station created a new set of issues that the craft beer selection eventually bested, but I think with some medium sized alterations that it could be improved.
First though, gotta talk about the elephant in the room. Much blog ink has been spilled about the entry cost but, to me, the first to complain are those that don’t look at all at either the price tag for Union Station or the donations to the LA Brewers Guild and The Spero Foundation. You, the customer, get unlimited tastings from a wicked set of brewers in exchange for helping out two organizations doing good in the real world and the LA Beer World. Most times when you donate charitably you get a happy feeling for doing good and maybe some address labels. Here you got beer! And instead of organizing so called Fest Boycotts, how about patronizing a craft beer bar and spend your money there? Help create a stronger L.A. Craft Beer Community. Don’t set yourselves apart from it. Maybe create a fringe beer festival or a home brew fest? I am a fan of positive suggestions instead of kvetching and moaning. Turn the spent grains into something.
Now that my mini-rant is over, my suggestions start with… Better signage akin to what the Downtown LA Beer Crawl created is really needed. From where to line-up, what beers are available and where food is located. Professional signage with the logo emblazoned on it is a must. The smaller space also requires more bathrooms and a food solution needs to be found. (that may be logistically hard but maybe there is a way to squeeze into another room). I would also split it into two sessions and skip the after party. Lastly, I would have a pair of Festival volunteers roaming the area available to answer questions, talk about the Untappd badge and generally let people know about other events during the week.
I have been asked repeatedly what makes a successful beer week. That can be split into personal and the entire city. From my personal standpoint, each of the five iterations of L.A. Beer Week have had enough fun and odd events to make it fun. From an overall standpoint, if the craft beer profile is raised a notch in the L.A. area, then it is worth it. And from my journeys over the past ten days, I think that goal was achieved.
Another L.A. Beer Week comes to a close with a nod to our role in the mythmaking of the movies and TV.
Channel your inner White Walker and sample the 2nd offering in the Ommegang / Game of Thrones series, and Take the Black under the stars in Hollywood. A ticket is required if not already sold out.
Each morning throught L.A. Beer Week, I will give you my Pick of the Night. The ONE event I think rises to the top of the list. Some days that choice will be harder and there might be 1A and 1B’s (if I get wishy-washy). I will endeavor to pick events you can just head out to. But if tickets are required, I will mention it. But expect crowds. Craft beer and craft beer in L.A. is popular.
I cannot add anything that cannot be better said by this tap list:
Cask
2009 O.E.
2011 Callaborative Evil w/Vanilla Beans
Draft
Quercus Circus – 19 month sour barrel-aged belgian blonde
Tempest – 18 month barrel-aged sour red rye
Farmhouse Funk
Bourbon Collaborative Evil – 2011 Collaboration with Julian Shrago of Beachwood BBQ
Bourbon Red – 15 months in bourbon barrels
Bourbon O.E.- Bourbon barrel-aged Olde English
Bourbon Imperial Porter
Weird Beer- 5 Grain Saison with spices
Hive Five- LABW special ingredient beer! 5 different types of Honey at 5.5%abv
GrapeApe IPA- IPA made with 500lbs of flame grapes, pressed on site
Each morning throught L.A. Beer Week, I will give you my Pick of the Night. The ONE event I think rises to the top of the list. Some days that choice will be harder and there might be 1A and 1B’s (if I get wishy-washy). I will endeavor to pick events you can just head out to. But if tickets are required, I will mention it. But expect crowds. Craft beer and craft beer in L.A. is popular.
Modern Times Exclusive Los Angeles Preview at Verdugo Bar
Friday September 27th 2013 7:00 pm-11:00 pm
Celebrate the Exclusive Los Angeles Preview of Modern Times Beer!
Join us at Verdugo Bar on Friday, Sept 27th at 7pm for a taste of the San Diego brewery that focuses (non-monogamously) on aroma-driven, complex, flavorful, sessionish beers and other hybrid styles and mash-ups.
The Taplist includes:
Lomaland Saison
Fortunate Islands Hoppy Wheat
Black House Oatmeal Coffee Stout
Blazing World Amber IPA
Roraima 100% Brett Trois Amber
You may have heard about their mega-successful Kickstarter appeal. You may know about their ties to San Diego. But now you can actually try the beers. And that is what it is all about.
Each morning throught L.A. Beer Week, I will give you my Pick of the Night. The ONE event I think rises to the top of the list. Some days that choice will be harder and there might be 1A and 1B’s (if I get wishy-washy). I will endeavor to pick events you can just head out to. But if tickets are required, I will mention it. But expect crowds. Craft beer and craft beer in L.A. is popular.
Belgian Take Over w/Monkish & New Belgium at Village Tavern
Thursday September 26th 2013 7:00 pm-10:00 pm
Thursday Sept 26th New Belgium & Monkish Brewery Tap take over and Pint Night give away. Rare and Selective beers from both breweries on tap.
I have yet to visit the Village even though it is in nearby Atwater so this is a perfect excuse to see the decor and ambience. And the beer too. Those are two strong breweries paired together.
Food GPS tomorrow will reveal what I thought about some of the events so far this week. (And add some events to see in the remaining days as well). I thought I would use this space to review the L.A. Beer Week beer, Unity 2013 with honey and hibiscus from Eagle Rock Brewery.
Unity 2013 pours with a lovely red tint to it. I get a slight aroma of hibiscus on the nose as I tip the bottle towards me. The taste is very light on the tongue. I get mostly wheat and malt at first followed by a good amount of hibiscus. But not so much that it takes over which hibiscus is wont to do. There is some residual sweetness to it but the bubbles really do their work and scrub it away before anything cloying happens. A really nice beer for the late summer / early fall heat wave that L.A. is fond of having.
OK, this is a ticketed event and it will be a bit on the spendy side. But just like no L.A. Beer Week is complete without Eagle Rock, it is really not complete without Craftsman. The original trailblazer of the scene before there was a scene. And Maximiliano is THE place to get their beer. Plus the food is awesome.
And as a bonus you can check out The Hermosillo and see where a future L.A. brewery will be.
Each morning throught L.A. Beer Week, I will give you my Pick of the Night. The ONE event I think rises to the top of the list. Some days that choice will be harder and there might be 1A and 1B’s (if I get wishy-washy). I will endeavor to pick events you can just head out to. But if tickets are required, I will mention it. But expect crowds. Craft beer and craft beer in L.A. is popular.
Growlerfornia, Here We Come!
Tuesday, September 24th 2013 7:00-10:00 pm
Frustrated, relieved or just confused over the current state of California’s Growler Laws? You’re not the only one. Join moderator Tomm Carroll of Celebrator Beer News at Chloe’s Pub at Golden Road Brewery as he leads a panel of professionals to help explain the situation, including the recently amended AB-647 (California’s ‘Growler Bill’), presently awaiting Governor Jerry Brown’s signature. There will also be a Q&A.
Panelists will include State Assemblyman Wesley Chesbro (D – North Coast), who introduced and was the principal author of the bill’s amendments; Jeremy Raub, President of the Los Angeles Brewers Guild, as well as brewmaster and co-owner of Eagle Rock Brewery; and Lori Ajax, Deputy Division Chief of the California Department of Alcoholic Beverage Control (ABC).
The discussion will include the history of California’s Growler Laws, the state of the legislation currently, future plans and considerations for Growler-sale policies, and other related topics.
Each morning throught L.A. Beer Week, I will give you my Pick of the Night. The ONE event I think rises to the top of the list. Some days that choice will be harder and there might be 1A and 1B’s (if I get wishy-washy). I will endeavor to pick events you can just head out to. But if tickets are required, I will mention it. But expect crowds. Craft beer and craft beer in L.A. is popular.
d’eTap list includes 6 rare beers and then some:
Bottle pours & bottles to-go