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Archive for May, 2010

Good Beer Club May, 2010

Friday, May 14th, 2010

Wednesday evening was spent at Mr. Goodbar, enjoying brews from Rogue, paired with ham and black eyed pea soup, Cajun Stout BBQ pulled pork and Mocha Porter brownies.

Good Beer Club May List

Which Rogue offerings did we enjoy? Here’s a list:

  • Chatoe Rogue Single Malt Ale
  • Dead Guy Ale
  • Juniper Pale Ale
  • John John Juniper
  • American Amber Ale
  • Brutal Bitter Ale
  • Captain Sigs Northwestern Ale
  • Shakespeare Oatmeal Stout
  • Mocha Porter
  • Double Mocha Porter

Enjoying Beer Club

I’m always a fan of stouts and porters, so the last three tastings were right up my alley… not to say that I didn’t enjoy most of what I had. The standout for me that night, however, was the Brutal Bitter Ale. Sometimes I’m just in a hoppy mood and this American IPA certainly delivered.

It poured a cloudy, medium orange-brown color with a finger of head that stuck around for a bit. I expected even the aroma to hit me with hops, but it was rather malty-sweet smelling. The taste, however, is straight-up bitter hops, backed by sweet, bready malt in the dry finish. The malt in no way balances the brew, leaving the hops as the star. It was medium-bodied and smooth. Quite delightful.

Beer Club Winners

While I didn’t win another 6-pack last this month like I did in April, two of my friends did; Mocha Porters all around. Not a bad deal, if I do say so myself.

Wonder what next month’s Good Beer Club will bring…

Cheers!

TAGS [ BEER CLUB | BEER REVIEWS | ROGUE | ROGUE ALES ]

Pub Trivia Night

Thursday, May 13th, 2010

Pub Quiz GuideMondays and Tuesday nights at a bar are dull. Everyone knows that. The typical bar scene is a couple of the bar tender’s buddies, drinking for free, while the bar dumps money down the drain. Doesn’t sound like the best business decision, does it…

I’ve gone to a few local pubs that actually capitalize on the slow nights by offering a weird attraction that brings patrons in. In Portland, Maine, I visited a friend that could only talk about bingo night at the bar (with dollar store prizes). In Buffalo, some local taverns offer trivia night! When I showed up to one, I was surprised at how packed it was. Simple details that make things different enough to make all of the difference. Get a trivia book. Get in patrons. Get the word out.

Now go and do it. I REALLY need something to do other than try to escape my wife’s Glee night.

TAGS [ QUIZ BOOK | TRIVIA GUIDE | TRIVIA NIGHT | PUB QUIZ ]

American Craft Beer Week is Upon Us Once More

Thursday, May 13th, 2010

I wrote a post on American Craft Beer Week last year and I can’t believe it’s already time to celebrate again. Time sure does fly when you’re drinking the good stuff.

American Craft Beer Week

So what IS American Craft Beer Week exactly? It’s the "Mother of All Beer Weeks" and it takes place across the country. Beer fanatics, craft brewers, distributors, homebrewers, retailers and even the U.S. Congress celebrate the passion and successes of small and independent craft brewers and highlight everything that Americans love about microbrews.

This year the national effort will be underway the week of Monday, May 17th and end on Sunday, May 23rd. You can check out brewery and beer store promotions going on in your area here. If you can’t make any of the organized events, make sure to support these small businesses by drinking a delicious beer brewed by one of the 1400+ craft brewers in the U.S.

After a year in which the craft brewing industry grew 7.2% by volume and 10.3% by dollars, there’s much to celebrate. In 2009 some 1,595 breweries were making and selling beer and that’s the highest total since before Prohibition. If we can’t drink to that, what can we drink to? Here’s to a great year for craft beer and many, many more.

TAGS [ ACBW | AMERICAN CRAFT BEER WEEK | CRAFT BEER EVENTS ]

Serving Beer: Glassware and Temperature Guide

Wednesday, May 12th, 2010

Glassware
For most ales and pilsners, a standard shaker pint will do just fine, but there are indeed some beer styles that honestly do benefit from the correct type of glass.

Belgian Ale GlassBelgian ales, for example, are best enjoyed in a glass with a bulbous bottom that tapers up toward the top, and finishes with a slight flair at the rim. Our Belgian ale glasses allow the drinker to savor both flavors and aromas, from start to finish. The glass is constructed in this particular shape in order to keep the drinker’s nose close to the beer at all times, so that every last element can be taken in and enjoyed.

If weiss beers are more your fancy, you’ll benefit from a tall, slender glass that accommodates all of that fluffy, frothy head that’s typical of the style. Just do me (and yourself) a favor and skip the orange slice, ok?

The most important thing to remember about beer glassware, though, is to be sure it’s beer clean. If you value the head on your beer and prefer to make sure it pours and tastes right, make sure its beer clean, above all else.

Temperature
Each style of beer has an optimum serving temperature. I know that many people out there really only dig a refreshingly fridge-cold beer but honestly, unless you’re drinking some run-of-the-mill macro brew you don’t want your beer to be wicked cold.

Actually, one of the reasons that big breweries, like Coors, push drinking their beer so very cold (32-39°F) is because, if you drank it at a proper temperature for the style, you’d most likely be very disappointed. The truth is, cold inhibits taste receptors and the big boys know it. So if you’re a craft beer drinker, like me, follow these tips:

39-45°F is best for hefeweizens, premium lagers, pilsners, fruity beers, golden ales, weissbiers, Belgian whites and sweetened lambics.

45-54°F is the optimum temperature for American pale ales, amber/red ales, hefeweizen dunkels, stouts, porters, Belgian ales, schwarzbiers, Irish ales, unsweetened lambics and helles bocks.

54-57°F, also known as "cellar" temperature, works best for bitters, brown ales, IPAs, English pale ales, saisons, sour ales, biere de garde, Belgian strong ales, dubbels, bocks, Scottish ales, scotch ales and Baltic porters.

57-61°F is the temperature range that’s best for barleywines, qradrupels, imperial stouts and IPAs, doppelbocks and meads.

There you have it. Hopefully this glassware and temperature guide will help you enjoy each and every brew more that you did before.

Cheers!

TAGS [ BEER GUIDE | BEER SERVING | BEER TEMPERATURE | BEER GLASSES | BEER TASTING ]

The Beer that Made Milwaukee Famous is At It Again! Classic 1960′s Schlitz Returns.

Wednesday, May 12th, 2010

Schlitz was once the best-selling beer in the United States and today, it has returned in all its glory. Pabst Brewing Company now owns the brand and they’ve re-launched the "Classic 1960′s Formula" based on the beer’s original recipe and brown glass packaging. Schlitz is credited with introducing the innovative brown bottle in 1912. Brown glass was used because it prevented light from spoiling beer before it was served.

Throwback Schlitz Bottle Design

Schlitz’s senior brand manager, Kyle Wortham reports that Pabst Brewmaster, Bob Newman (2006 and 2007 Brewmaster of the Year at the Great American Beer Festival) tracked down and interviewed retired Schlitz brewhouse employees to recreate the classic taste. The company is also embarking on an advertising campaign to take customers back. The packaging, print and outdoor ads include imagery from the era and they all suggest that the drinker return to a time when values really mattered: "the cars were cooler, the athletes didn’t cheat, and the beer was better." You can see more of the campaign at the new Schlitz website.

I was born in 1984, so I can’t quite speak to the quality of the actual 1960′s Schlitz beer but I will definitely let you know what I think of the throwback version once I try some. If you’ve had it, please let me know what you think. At $5.99 a six-pack, it’s worth a shot. Besides, everyone loves a good throwback.

TAGS [ SCHLITZ | PABST BREWING CO | PBR ]

NHL Winter Classic Memorabilia

Tuesday, May 11th, 2010

2008 marked the very first outdoor NHL Winter Classic game, excitedly for us, in Buffalo NY. Our beloved Sabres took on the Pittsburgh Penguins on New Year’s Day in front of 71,217 screaming, freezing fans (which broke the NHL’s record for most fans ever in attendance, by the way).

The outdoor game was so wildly successful that the NHL decided to make it a yearly event, so in 2009 the Chicago Blackhawks hosted the Detroit Red Wings at Wrigley Field. This game may not have broken Buffalo’s attendance record but it had the highest TV ratings of any hockey game ever played in 33 years. Not bad.

In celebration of a rad new tradition, we’ve got fantastic prints from both of these games; the 2008 NHL Winter Classic in Buffalo, NY and the 2009 NHL Winter Classic in Chicago, IL.

Here’s a snapshot of the print featuring the 2008 game in Buffalo:
2008 NHL Winter Classic in Buffalo
Maybe it’s just because I hail from Buffalo but I get a warm, fuzzy feeling seeing so many fans piled in our stadium to watch our boys. I can’t wait to order one for myself!

Here’s a shot of the 2009 Chicago game print:
2009 NHL Winter Classic in Chicago
The city looks pretty rad behind the game. I may be partial to Buffalo but but of these prints have a lot to offer.

Cheers!

TAGS [ NHL WINTER CLASSIC | 2008 WINTER CLASSIC | 2009 WINTER CLASSIC | NHL WINTER CLASSIC PRINTS | NHL WINTER CLASSIC MEMORABILIA ]

Beer Tasting Shot Pong

Tuesday, May 11th, 2010

Tired of stuffy beer tastings? Studies have shown that typically after the first 3 or 4 tastings (yes, actual tastings, not full pints, Hercules) your palate decreases sensitivity a marked amount from when you began. So, instead of sitting around staring at each other, blathering about the lovely roasted almond nose on your stout, have some fun!

Shot Pong

The Shot Pong set is exactly what you need to go from a more formal event to a party-in-a-bag style event! Let’s face it, beer people are fun, so let some of that fun back into your tastings once you can’t distinguish that pale ale from the gasoline your brother-in-law bet you wouldn’t try!

Shot Pong is easy to carry and makes it convenient to break out the shot glass-sized cups, racks and ping pong balls for a raucous good time!

TAGS [ SHOT PONG | BEER PONG | BEIRUT | MINI BEER PONG | BEER SHOT PONG | DRINKING GAMES ]

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