We leave Metropolitan Brewing Co and jump on the red line to U.S Cellular Field to see the White Sox. There's some craft beer here and we need to find it...
Miller Lite, PBR, Genuine Draft, Coors. Then the Midwest Brews stall with the longest line in the ball park.
Bell's, Summit, Leinenkugel and others. We take an IPA but I don't remember the brewery. Having just left there, we also get a Metropolitan Krank Shaft, a Kolsch, beautifully clean and soft with stone fruit and balanced hops. Perfect ball game beer.
We also get a PBR. Just because. It's not very good. And we see the Red Sox sock it to the White Sox.
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Saturday, 28 April 2012
Thursday, 26 April 2012
Miller beers at Miller Park
Miller Park. Home of the Milwaukee Brewers. Lager town.
Miller Lite is hard to ignore it with all the advertising and all the blue taps pouring it. It wasn't the first light lager but it was the first to get big. That kind of makes it important. Miller Genuine Draft and High Life follow. Where the Lite tastes of almost nothing, High Life gives a bit more and Genuine Draft gives a little more than that. Sort of.
After those, we go looking for craft beer. We might be in one of the most important American cities for lager, but we want more than that. New Belgium Fat Tire, New Glarus Spotted Cow and Milwaukee Brewing Hop Happy deliver three hits to counter the three Miller strike outs. No home runs, though.
More beer. More baseball. The Brewers lost.
Miller Lite is hard to ignore it with all the advertising and all the blue taps pouring it. It wasn't the first light lager but it was the first to get big. That kind of makes it important. Miller Genuine Draft and High Life follow. Where the Lite tastes of almost nothing, High Life gives a bit more and Genuine Draft gives a little more than that. Sort of.
After those, we go looking for craft beer. We might be in one of the most important American cities for lager, but we want more than that. New Belgium Fat Tire, New Glarus Spotted Cow and Milwaukee Brewing Hop Happy deliver three hits to counter the three Miller strike outs. No home runs, though.
More beer. More baseball. The Brewers lost.
Wednesday, 25 April 2012
Wrigley Field and Old Style
Wrigley Field. Chicago Cubs vs St Louis Cardinals; two of the most important beer cities in America squaring up on the old diamond.
I'm drinking Old Style - the beer of the Cubs. The scarves the ground are giving away tonight show the beer with the tagline of 'Authentically Krausened'.
It doesn't taste of much. Lager. The light version (yeah, we had that, too) is drier, simpler. It's good for watching the ballgame with a hot dog.
We look for good beer in the stadium but can't find it. It doesn't matter; we wanted Old Style. The Cubs win in extra innings.
Saturday, 21 April 2012
Spicy hops
I've been doing some hop reading and writing recently and so sources call particular hop varieties, mostly British, 'spicy', but I've never understood what that actually means...
It's not like chillis, it's not like festive spices, not Asian spices, so what is it?
I haven't found a good way of explaining it rather than the non-descript 'spicy'. I kind of get what it means as it's a tangy feeling - a sensation rather than a flavour - an earthy, peppery character, but I haven't got better than that.
Anyone got a better way of describing it or thinking about it? Or is spicy one of those words to put next to hoppy and malty on the list of beer terms which don't really mean anything?
Sunday, 15 April 2012
Hawkshead Well Hopped
Three
beers from Hawkshead Brewery, all 6% ABV, all part of a new Well Hopped range.
Windermere
Pale includes Goldings and Citra. Really pale gold with a thick white foam.
Citra jumps out first with that pungently sharp grapefruit, pine and orange
character, then the bitterness is like a steam roller, hitting the tongue and
growing and growing and never giving up but never getting too much. Something
peachy pokes through then come grapes and elderflower and a big fruit bowl of
other delicious things. The doesn’t interfere with all those hops, which is a
good thing.
Cumbrian
Five Hop includes Fuggles, Citra and Amarillo. It’s darker than Windermere
Pale, pouring an amber colour. Lush apricot-like Amarillo comes first, then
juicy tangerines, then some earthy, herbal stuff in the background. The malt is
more bulky in this, giving a more rounded texture and some tangy caramel to
hold everything together. Where the bitterness in Windemere Pale hits and
grows, this one hits and hangs around throughout. For me, it doesn’t have the impact
of the other two, but it’s still damn delicious.
New
Zealand Pale Ale is Green Bullet, Motueka, Riwaka and Nelson Sauvin. Those
names alone are enough to get my thirst raging. I might not have smelt a more awesome
beer this year. Oranges, tangerines, pineapple, perfumy grape flesh, nectarines
– it’s like fruit juice and I love that. The colour is right between the other
two and it holds a beautiful foam throughout – the foam on all these beers is
excellent. The body is big but somehow doesn’t have a noticeable malt profile –
it’s just somehow there holding the hops up onto a big platform for them to
holler out loud. Bitterness kicks on the way down and just makes you want to
drink more. Beautiful.
A
showcase of hops and a showcase of great brewing – these three are really excellent.
They are all made on cask as well, though Windermere Pale and Cumbrian Five Hop
are both much bigger in bottle. One complaint, which is pedantically minor, is that I
want to know all of the hop varieties used in each beer not just two or three
of the five. At least the NZPA tells me everything that’s in there.
I
don’t drink enough Hawkshead beer. I need to drink more because they make very good
beer.
Tuesday, 10 April 2012
Planet Thanet 2012
I
go with the intention of trying as much new beer as possible. I get there, grab
my glass, and go for an old favourite to get started – Gadds’ No. 3 (properly
English with that mouth-coating background of malt, a distant sack of apples and pears
and the epitome of balance). This makes sense. It’s a little warm-up before we
properly get on a beer tour of Britain.
Finding
a seat, I read through the beer list and scribble some notes and ticks and
arrows, just to make it easier for later when I’ve been up and down the bar a
few times – it’s about drinking tactics.
So
I start with No. 3 and then I fancy another Kent beer because the festival is
in Margate. I’ve been reading about steam beer recently so went back to Gadds
for a Common Conspiracy – the body is bulky yet refined, it’s dry and has a
brilliant candy and floral aroma; a little taste of San Francisco in East Kent.
From
now I’m off on my beer tour. There’s names I know and those I don’t. From
Ramsgate Brewery I get about 30 miles away to Hop Fuzz, a new Kent-based
brewery. I order The American, 4% and made with US hops. “Do you want to try it
first? It tastes weird,” says the guy serving. “What’s weird about it, I ask?”
When the reply is “tangy and piney” I expect that I’m getting a huge hop bomb
the likes that this man on the bar has never experienced before. Instead it delivers
more phenolic smoke than a bucket of Laphroaig, so I order Williams Bros.
Ceilidh instead. It’s super pale, sweet first then comes a doughy, almost
chocolately note, followed by fresh grass and a clean bitterness. It’s good but
lager in cask...? I think I’d rather take it on keg.
It’s
then back down south and to Kent Brewery where Summer Wheat was an intriguing
mix of light esters (banana, clove) which strike at exactly the same time as
the big dose of German hops which instead of giving a delicate finish makes it
rocket off in an unexpected direction. It’s a brilliant little tongue twister
of a beer.
Then
I went for the hops. Dark Star Revelation was on the exciting edge of balance (‘like
sitting on the edge of a mountain’ my notes read...), never sweet and never too
bitter but loaded with proper juicy American hop flavour – seriously good. Then
Gadds’ South Pacific IPA, which was unexpectedly subtle for the 6.5% ABV but
great because of it – lemony, floral and tropical fruit. This was part of an
IPA threesome along with West Coast IPA and East Kent IPA, which was No.3 on
some serious steroids.
And
then my beer of the festival. Made by Canterbury Brewers at The Foundry (a cool
brewpub), Hoppin’ Belgian is the best example I’ve tasted of Belgian yeast and
American hops getting it on. I hate citrusy C-hops which clash with clove in
most Belgo-American beers but here it was beautifully done – an amazing aroma
of mango, tangerine and pineapple, super juicy, then more fruit and fruity
esters with no nudge from the phenolic side, just a faint spiciness which lets
you know it’s definitely Belgian. It was so good I had another. And I almost
went back for a third half. (Canterbury Brewers’ Red Rye was also one of the
best beers on the bar. A sweetly nutty aroma plus a little rye spice then zesty
and punchy from the Chinook and Citra.)
Summer
Wine’s Diablo IPA almost split my tongue in half with brutal bitterness so a
Bristol Beer Factory Milk Stout came along to sooth with its chocolate
milkshake vibe, light roastiness and delicious balance – it’s a fun beer and I really
like it.
Then
looking back over the beer list and the ticks it’s more Gadds beer, more
Bristol, more Dark Star, some Otley. Outstanding’s SOS gave the beer tasting
note of the day: ‘like gunning Persil from a sponge’ as it was so bitter.
Another cask lager, Peerless’ Storr, was unfortunately a glass of butter which was dumped and
swapped after one sip. There was a Stewart beer, a Thornbridge, Tryst, a Waen
and a Crouch Vale Amarillo – all breweries and beers I’d had before (except the
Stewart Coconut Porter which I can’t really remember drinking...).
My
intention to drink far and wide didn’t really happen, looking back. Or it did
happen but it was down roads I’ve been on many times before. I stuck to the
breweries I know and trust and when I left that safe path I got hit with diacetyl,
TCP, too many hpos or just boring beer. But I got to drink a lot of excellent
beer from the breweries I know and I’d rather play safe and drink a beer which
I know is good (or from a brewery I know make good stuff) rather than risking
something new from a brewery I’ve never heard of – that seems to be where my
drinking is now.
I
think there’s a Premier League of breweries in the UK and when their beers are
on the bar it’s hard to ignore them, even if I’m looking to try new things.
The
photo at the top is the beer festival 15 minutes after the doors opened... Seriously.
Thursday, 5 April 2012
Bamberg Baked Beans
What
happens if you take a classic recipe – Boston Baked Beans – and add a bottle of
Schlenkerla Rauchbier to it?
Boston
Baked Beans is something I’ve wanted to cook for ages. Eating burnt end beans
in Brooklyn kicked off the obsession which was compounded by seeing this recipe
on Food Stories (Helen definitely writes the best food blog around). Those
mixed with my curious side which wondered how I could beer-it-up.
Rauchbier
was the obvious answer. It’s low in bitterness, uniquely meaty and smells like
the fire these beans should be cooked over. It’s also incredible with the rich
flavours of meat and beans (see: sausage, chips and beans).
I
took Helen’s recipe from Food Stories and halved it as I was cooking for one. I
soaked the beans and then when I put them on for their initial cook, the part
where you boil hard for 10 minutes, I under-filled the water by approximately
the volume of a bottle of rauchbier. When they were into the gentle simmer
stage I poured in the beer.
(I
then went for a run, knowing I had an hour until I had to do anything. Getting
back from the run, the house was filled with the smell of bacon, sweet smoke
and the smokiness of beans cooking.)
Then
the recipe just went as it should and over five hours after I started (the
actual time needed to concentrate on any cooking is about 20 minutes, the rest
of the time you just let it cook) it was a dark, bubbling pot of
delicious-looking beans.
Does
it taste like smoke? Not especially, which is a shame, but you still know a
bottle of beer’s been nearby as it gives a background depth and richness. I
guess the smoke is dominant in the aroma which is driven off in the cooking,
but who knows. To enhance the smokiness then smoked bacon would pimp it. And
this obviously needs a rauchbier on the side. I had the Helles and the Marzen –
the Helles was too delicate but the Marzen wrapped me in a beautiful cloud of
meat and smoke.