Share-able

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Beers from The Bruery come in a bottle size and (sometimes) ABV that promotes sharing and now the Orange County brewery has announced a new bi-annual beer series, Share This.

The basics are that each release of Share This will both “spotlight unique ingredients and an important cause in a specific region.” The only constant being that the base beer will be an 11.9% ABV imperial stout.

ST:1 is an “imperial stout with Bourbon & Catimor variety coffee beans from the Cagat family farm of the highlands of Mindanao island in the Philippines.” The coffee coming to The Bruery via Mostra Coffee.

More importantly, each bottle of Share This™: Coffee produced, one dollar is donated to Free Wheelchair Mission’s efforts in the Philippines. Free Wheelchair Mission (FWM) is a nonprofit organization that provides wheelchairs at no cost to people with disabilities living in developing nations.

Into the Woods

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There have been single hop beers. single yeast, single malt, this year it’s SMASH beers. But maybe this new trend will take off since The Bruery is doing it…..
“The Arbre series is an exploration of barrel toast. We brewed a rich, malty imperial stout and divided it into three parts, laying each down in brand new American oak barrels from our friends at Kelvin Cooperage in Kentucky. On Friday, bottles of two of these variants – Arbre Light Toast and Arbre Medium Toast – will go on sale to the general public. Arbre Light Toast spent time resting in lightly toasted barrels and reveals notes of oak as well as raisins and just a hint of smoke. Arbre Medium Toast spent time resting in medium toasted barrels and reveals more oak-forward notes in addition to coconut, roasty vanilla beans, bakers chocolate and black cherries.”

That would be quite a tasting.

Holiday Ale # 1 – 8 Maids-A-Milking

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We start with the holiday season off with the 8th in the series from The Bruery. If you had to guess a style for each line of the song, this would have been the easiest to get right.

“8 Maids-a-Milking is the 8th beer in our “12 Days of Christmas” series, and we’d be udderly crazy to release anything but a milk stout. So we made an imperial milk stout to stand up to whatever Old Man Winter throws our way from now through 2019 with the final release of our series. 8 Maids-a-Milking is brewed with lactose, which is commonly referred to as milk sugar. It’s the only type of sugar that is unfermentable by yeast, which adds more perceptible creaminess and sweetness to the finished beer. This mouthfeel and sweetness is complemented by robust layers of milk chocolate, subtle spice accents from our house Belgian yeast and roasty, cafe elements indicative of our take on the style. Celebrate the seasons with the best of both worlds: enjoy some now, and lay a few down for up to 4 years to be enjoyed upon the release of 12 Drummers Drumming.”

#BABeerDay

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Hey! Did you know that today is Barrel Aged Beer Day? First started in 2013 to get the beer world to raise a snifter (not a pint) to celebrate the beer that is made better by sitting around lazily in barrels.

One way to celebrate the barrel would be at Barrel Down in DTLA tonight. You will find some “fun BA stuff on tap that doesn’t get out there much such as Wineification II, Smoking Wood mole, Barrel-Aged 6 Geese, White Oak.”

More info HERE.

Or you can sit around lazily yourself and get the hashtag #BABeerDay ready to go viral on Facebook, Instagram, and Twitter. And don’t leave it at the one hashtag. Show some love to the brewery that let the beer sit instead of selling it.

Leaks and Butter

QC. Quality Control.  It is super important.  And devilishly hard to harness, especially when working with bugs and critters. Even for large outfits like Hangar 24 and for places that have encountered taste issues before, like The Bruery.

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Both of which encountered issues recently which highlight the other side of QC.  Informing the public of QC issues and offering concrete solutions.

Hangar 24 had some bottles of their Sanguinello sprout leaks through wax due to a balky piece of equipment. The Bruery had to track down why some bottles of Hottenroth with peaches were more diacetyl heavy.

Both breweries explained the situation in clear language and took steps to ameliorate the problem. Either by tossing the bottling equipment or storing the beer at different temperatures.

The next step is to add that problem to what I call the “watch list”. This is a simple list of problems that have occurred.  But it does not end there. It is incumbent on breweries to also look at that list and make a second list of what could occur.

The other piece to the puzzle is to have plans, in place, to make your customers and fans happy-ish if something does goes haywire. Which it will because, you know, life happens.

Review – Jardinier from The Bruery

The Bruery has a new addition to their year round lineup,  Jardinier.  French for gardener, it is a Belgian table beer meant for pairing with food or any other occassion.  Oh and it is hoppy too.
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Well, not that hoppy.  It is certainly Belgian, especially in the bouquet.  But this is a very light beer.  Probably the lightest beer that I have had from The Bruery, if my memory serves.  It is more a Belgian pilsner to me with the floral flavor notes and the tiny bite of metallic that follows.  Very pleasant and perfect as a table beer or as an appetizer beer.  I think too many food courses would overwhelm this one even though it does have a tendency to linger on the palate.

I had it during the run-up to the Super Bowl and it worked well with chips and popcorn but it did get pushed around by the nachos and other spicy foods.  That being said, this is quite a nice beer and I am glad that it has been added to the year-round lune-up.  There are far too few light options out there and this is almost champagne like and could be used as a celebratory beer that the whole family could enjoy.

$30 Taste Test

Traditionally, I break out the more expensive beers for Christmas and New Year’s Eve. The holidays demand something more, in my mind.

This year, a bit of a change-up though. I had a Gose from Cascade to pop as 2014 became 2015 but decided to save it for a different type of taste test. A Colbert Platinum version. (Sad to see that show go)

I brought a Gose and my beer buddy Richard provided the Black Tuesday (2014) and we proceeded to have a light vs dark but both over $30 session.

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The Gose starts off with a green apple aroma coming off the well laced glass. The salt is in the foreground but not in a savory way until it sits for a bit. I took one sip near the end of the glass and it was a bit more concentrated. The sourness does bite. The mouth does pucker. This is certainly one of the more straightforward examples of the style. Especially considering that Cascade is not shy about additions of fruits and spices. After it sits for awhile, a ton of floral aromatics show up. Almost potpourri like.

The 2014 Black Tuesday begins with a hot aroma. That heat extends to the taste which is also quite syrupy. So to start it seems the balance is off. Was this meant to sit longer? Lots of chocolate and maple syrup taste. Their is some coconut from the barrels but the alcohol runs over that taste. Overall, the dominant flavors are syrup and caramel.

On a positive note, the near 20% alcohol doesn’t warm up the cheeks or burn on the way down which is good. But I just wish it wasn’t so syrupy. I keep thinking pancakes when drinking.  I think I will age my bottle a few years.

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The winner for me was the Gose.  It had multiple elements going on and despite the high salt factor it was still quite tasty to drink.

Holiday Ale # 5 – Seven Swans a Swimming from The Bruery

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I broke my own rule and tried this beer before the Holiday season commenced.  It is a prototypical Bruery beer.  Strong and flavorful but it just didn’t scream Christmas to me.  But it was really good.

Here is the brewery description: “7 Swans-A-Swimming is the 7th beer in our “12 Days of Christmas” series.  For this verse of the story, we chose the path we don’t often take – we brewed to style.  No bells, no whistles, just our best take on the Belgian Quadrupel style.  Brewed with nothing but water, malt, yeast, hops and a bit of Belgian dark candi sugar, this beer may not be as out-of-the-box as some of our past winter brews, but it’s just as tasty.  Rich and complex, this robust dark ale juggles notes of raisin bread, dried apricots, burnt caramel and roasted pecans.  The sweet flavors provide a full body and the bright yeast wafts the sweet holiday notes out of the glass, into your life.  7 Swans-A-Swimming is a perfect holiday sipper.  Delicious right now, but suitable for aging up to 5 years, upon the release of 12 Drummers Drumming.”

 

Session # 90 – Beer Fight Club

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For the momentous 90th Session, it is time for Beer Fight Club.  Topic courtesy of Hipster Brewfus. And though it pre-supposes that there is too much ass-kissery in beer blogs, I do think the challenge is a strong one.

The groundrules: “The idea for this session stemmed from a couple of few places. The first being my first experience with a bottle of Stone Brewing Vertical Epic 11-11-11. I have never wanted to punch a beer so hard in its glassy face before. The second item is my growing frustration with the general acceptance that all craft beer is good beer, and that any hint of negativity will do damage to our burgeoning scene. Lastly, a lot of the topics on The Session lately have been pretty unimaginative, uninspired, and uninteresting. 

The premise is this: Have you ever drank a beer that became a battle, more than an enjoyable experience? Maybe a beer that was far bigger than you had anticipated? Something you felt determined to drink, just so you can say you conquered that son of a bitch, and you are all that is powerful. Or perhaps it is something that is just so bad, all you want to do is slap it around a bit. Or maybe you were on the verge of passing out, but you just wanted that one last beer, and the valiant struggle between taste bud fulfillment and the velvety embrace of sleep that ensued.

It’s time put down whatever praise you were about to dole out, and serve up a nice can of ass whupping.”

This is so not a gose. Smells of salad dressing. no salt or coriander to be found. it’s a cloudy yellow. still hard to get past the smell. mostly savory in flavor with small bits of lemon. just not good to me.

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You may be surprised at which brewery created this type of reaction.  And it explains why I struggled against this beer and took far too many (and increasingly tentative) sips when I should have chucked the offending glass at the wall.  Even though it wasn’t the fault of the glass, so I should have poured the remaining 3/4 down the nearest and dankest drain I could find.  And then got something better to fill that poor glass with.

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Yup, The Bruery.  Maker of an ever expanding list of really great beers.  Or is that too positive for this challenge?

Back to point.  This No-Gose was served at a Bruery event.  With Bruery people there.  And it was one of the first beers that, when asked by a Bruery-man, I had to say was bad.  There was no way around the grimace on my face and the nearly full glass that was sitting on the table conspicuously not being enjoyed.  It was slick and viscous and the taste wouldn’t leave my mouth.  I struggled to find the coriander through the stink of the truffle oil and came up empty.

This was a beer that was so bad that is a permanent marker of the bottom half of the beer rating spectrum for me.  “Well, at least it wasn’t that slimy, salty beer.”  Looking back, I wish I could have phrased things better because I certainly didn’t want the Bruery to stop experimenting.  (Sorry, too positive again) But I just couldn’t believe that this had actually passed by many people’s lips and was deemed tap worthy. It had shocked me out of my normal practice of politely asking questions about the philosophy behind the beer which I think is more enlightening than just slagging the beer or brewer.  (Oops, I am such a Pollyanna).  After that I explain what flavors or aromas that I didn’t like or loathed or didn’t mix with my palate. Which in this case was everything.

I have encountered no other beers with truffle oils in the intervening 3+ years and if I saw one, I would probably run screaming from whatever establishment I was in or I would put crime scene tape on the bottle.