Author: mexican sharpshooter

  • Review – Dayglow IPA: That Label…Judas Titty F—ing Priest

     

    Seriously. Look at it.  How can I not pick this up?

    The Holy Diver of beers

    This is my review of Elysian DAYGLOW IPA.

    Here’s where I rant a bit.  Yes, this is an IPA, which means about half of you will avoid it to begin with.  The other half?  There are so many choices out there from so many breweries it’s hard to separate the men from the boys, so to speak.  Let’s face it, this isn’t exactly a niche market anymore.  According to the studies cited in this article the craft beer industry in 2016 contributed $67.8 Billion to the U.S economy.  It is responsible for nearly ½ million full time jobs nationwide. It’s still a fraction of the beer industry overall though, which in 2016 was estimated at $350 Billion in total.

    Rejoice!  Too bad though, the downside is there has to be something, anything, to catch the customer’s eye.  This one is eye catching.  It’s got a frickin tiger with frickin laser beams coming out of its frickin eyes…

    It’s the eye of the tiger! On acid!

    As you can tell from my photo there isn’t much head and much to Charlie Sheen’s dismay, it is 0% tiger’s blood by volume.  It’s a hazy yellow and has a bit of sweet fruitiness (pineapple, maybe) and yeast upfront, like an unfiltered wheat beer.  From the standpoint of hop insanity, this one will disappoint the hopheads among us.  You smell them; you certainly know they are there but they aren’t going prompt questions from the authorities as to your mental state–your driving erratically on the sidewalk will do that.  Overall it’s a pretty balanced brew, but given it’s bitchin 1970s psychedelic label it seems like they are trying way too hard to sell me something.  Elysian DAYGLOW IPA 2.8/5.

    Another one I was disappointed by was from Stone.  Typically, I like what they put out.  While insulting their customers is the norm for them, lately it’s gone beyond their usual ribbing and ventured clearly into virtue signaling. This is part of an annual release of the winner of a contest between their employees, so I’ll hold my nose and give them a shot.

    The flavor palate on this one is similar to Elysian’s but the hops on the back end are a bit more robust.  Still a bit disappointing given what they are capable of.  Stone Merc-Machine Double IPA: 2.9/5

     

     

     

    P.S. About my OT last week.

    I think it came out just fine.  3 ½ minutes per pound.  The temperature was all over the place after I pulled the turkey out so it was at approximately 350F.  When I dropped it in it was at 380, so I closed the valve and let it settle around 350, but had to fire the gas back up once it dropped to 325 ten minutes later.  Total cook time was 18 mins.

    For those that like it rare, here is your beloved center cut.

    Here’s Mr. Gobbles while I’m at it.

  • Review – Rogue Santa’s Private Reserve

     

    I can never understand the obsession with Santa Claus. Since this is the right time of year and since associating products with Christmas is lazy but effective marketing, there’s no sense in fighting it.

    See? Lazy marketing, and I fell for it.

    This is my review of Rogue Santa’s Private Reserve Ale. Go ahead and pretend I drove 2 1/2 hours north just to take this photo.

    Even as a kid it seemed a dubious task: one extremely obese man flies around the world delivering presents to all the good girls and boys on a single night. As an adult, unless Santa Claus holds the key to traveling between time and space it’s downright impossible. Besides, what does he do with the other 364 days out of the year? For one thing, Santa is actually an avid shooter. Here is a photo of him at the 2016 Las Vegas Shot Show:

    “You may think there’s no such thing as Santa…”

    He also spends his time in the summer riding the open road. Here he is at the annual Sturgis rally:

    “…But as for me and grandpa, we believe.”

    Santa has a lot going for him, and since he is a pretty high profile guy crisscrossing international airspace every year, the good folks at NORAD track his every move. Even if they started tracking him by accident, its once again proof there is nothing left to cut.

    In previous years, this beer was a pretty standard winter lager. There was nothing wrong with it, and Rogue probably managed to sell every ounce of the stuff. Despite this, they determined that 2017 would be the year they change it up. Maybe they got tired of people comparing it to Sam Adams Winter Lager or the overall market saturation this time of year with winter lager-I don’t know.

    Whatever the reason it was a good move, as the result is something much better in my opinion. It is now a Belgian-style ale. It is very fragrant, with notes of sour fruit. They list cherry and raspberry specifically. It is definitely a malty beer, but the tartness counters the overall sweetness nicely. Like everything else this time of year, it only comes once so find it while you still can. Unless you are the type that thinks Scrooge got soft and the Grinch was a poser, you’ll enjoy this. Rogue Santa’s Private Reserve 2017: 4.5/5

    And if you do think Scrooge got soft and the Grinch was a poser, here’s some girls at Sturgis peddling Jack Daniels:

    Merry Christmas!

  • Review – Goose Island Bourbon County Stout

    This is my review of Goose Island Bourbon County Stout.

    Barrels are one of oldest inventions in use today.  Herodotus is credited with the earliest written account over the use of barrels to transport wine, during the 5th century BC (or BCE if you are so inclined). The barrel itself may have origins further into antiquity due to evidence the Egyptians used buckets with slats held together by a metal ring dating to 2690 BCE.  There isn’t much of a jump between a bucket’s design and a barrel, simply build your bucket higher, curve the slats, add another ring and give it a lid.  Your bucket is now a barrel.

    It is difficult to say who built it first.  Some believe an iron age civilization such as the Celts or the Vikings.  Others credit the Romans, who previously transported wine in clay jugs.  The word for the tradesman, Cooper, after all comes from the Latin word Cupa, which means cask.  And of course there is always this theory…

    Whoever it was, modern tools and processes aside, this is an invention that has remained virtually unchanged for centuries

    Falling further down the rabbit hole, gun barrels were initially built in a similar fashion.  Due to the medieval guild system, where tradesman rarely worked with others outside the guild, lest they learn the trade secrets, coopers were consulted to build barrels for hand cannons.  The earliest design was constructed by slabs of metal arranged in a cylinder with metal collars welded around the cylinder for strength.  Later designs where a cylindrical blank was bored out, followed by rifling to cut into the bore was developed when the tools, techniques and metallurgy allowed for the modern design.  This is why gun barrels are called barrels.

    This is no ordinary stout.  It is aged in a bourbon barrel that otherwise would spend the next 30 years in Scotland turning whisky into something that smells like burnt leather boots. This is a 14.5% abv beast that has a high enough alcohol content and is complex enough that a disciplined drinker can age this similar to wine for up to 5 years–per the instructions on the bottle.  The bottle itself is well done.  Instead of settling on the standard bomber, they opted to have their own fashioned with their name permanently embossed in the bottle.  This tells me no corner was cut, no expense was spared in crafting this…and I slammed it down with a beer bong!

    Like a champ

    No, not really.  They call for a brandy snifter but the one I have is sized to hold an ounce of liquor so I called the trusty chalice out of the bullpen.  The beer pours like used 10w30.  Its nose reminds me of fresh cut wood, whiskey, fruitcake and chocolate.  You are greeted with an intense rush of sweet bourbon and finishes with like a smooth imperial stout.  It’s really difficult to describe it, so you have to try one of these yourself.  It is crafted in the manner of old where a craftsman, expert in his trade, puts everything he has into every project and gives his customer the best quality work possible.  It’s a limited release for 2017 so I bought another the following morning to keep in my liquor cabinet.  It costs $10 now, but if you find it later….Goose Island Bourbon County Stout 4.9/5.

  • De-winefying Beer

    Because there are times when you are stuck in a place that has nothing better.  Maybe you are at a baseball game and don’t want to look like a douche.  Maybe you are in Vegas and they give you a free beer while you play the craps machine. You are principled and thus your favorite beer is called, “free” and your second favorite is called, “cold”….

    ….okay maybe beer is beer and maybe we should just leave it at that.  Why fuss about it?  

    This is my review of the only beer on the planet with the balls to have George Clooney narrate a commercial:  Budweiser.

    Just to get this out of the way, these have a mean score around 2/5 on my usual 5 (or 20-DenverJ)  point scale. So these need to be scored differently but judged in as objective a manner possible.  All of these:

    • Quaffed in high quantity; available in 24oz cans and sold as part of a 2 for 1 special.  Yes, I drank 48 oz of beer in one sitting for each specimen.
    • Have no pretense of cultural significance.  All are available at a gas station, specifically the CircleK in my neighborhood (PV/Shadow Mountain area of Phoenix).
    • Consumed from the same glass that is not particularly fancy. Don’t worry I cleaned it.
    • Nothing to fuss about, given their very minor qualities.  So these were all the only beer I had that day, following a trip to gym. I was in no position to be picky.

    They will be graded by:

    • Price.
    • Skunkiness. (5 point scale)
    • Ability to get me drunk. (5 point scale)
    • Marketing campaign. (5 point scale)

    Points will be added to the price for a total numerical score.  Lower or higher the better?  I don’t know, I will make this your call. I fully expect to be excoriated in the comments for my methodology.

    Hat Tip:

    Budweiser therefore, stacks up like this:

    Price: 2 for $3.50

    Skunkiness:  It is as terrible as it ever was. 4/5

    Ability to get me drunk: 2/5

    Marketing: GoodBad. Ugly. Like Clooney is ever going to knock back a sixer of Bud like the proles.  I’ll be fair, they are trying to make beer in space3/5.

    Total: 12.5

    Next up is Straulian fah beeeyah.

    Fosters:

    Price:  2 for $3.50.

    Skunkiness: This is…charming. 4/5

    Ability to get me drunk: 2/5

    Marketing: I always thought these were funny.  Here’s a string of them.  4/5

    Total: 13.5

    Do they even sell these in six packs anymore or do they just go with the oil can? Next up, is something that meets all my criteria but unlikely to be found anywhere near you:

    San Tan Moon Juice Galactic IPA:

    Price:  2 for $4.00.

    Skunkiness: 2/5 (technically an IPA–score is debateable)

    Ability to get me drunk:  My wife was ever so pissed. 5/5 (7.3% abv)

    Marketing: 0

    Total: 11

    This might be unfair since it’s an IPA but it met all the criteria. Next up:

    Gilmore

    Coors Light:

    Price:  2 for $3.50.

    Skunkiness:  3/5

    Ability to get me drunk:  Meh.  My daughter can handle this. 1/5

    Marketing:  John Wayne?  Okay, but Clint Eastwood was better.  *shudders* John Denver You lost all the goodwill from CGI Duke and The Gunny, Coors.  This is what makes people light their own country music awards on fire.  You should get less than nothing for this, but my stated methodology said nothing about negative scores.  Then there is Smokey and the Bandit, but that classic of Americana loses points for Sally Field.  1/5

    Total: 8.5

    This next one was actually pretty good.  New Belgium supposedly sought to steal market share from InBev and MolsonCoors brands by making a yellow lawn mower beer to counter the corporate giants buying craft breweries and distributing them across the country.  The result is like that scene from Casino where Joe Pesci’s character gets mad about the FBI watching him, so he literally has his guys watch them back.  It’s a pretty good golden ale. Nothing to write home about and definitely non-threatening.

    Who doesn’t want to get blazed in the middle of the day?

    New Belgium Dayblazer:

    Price:  2 for $4.00.

    Skunkiness:1/5

    Ability to get me drunk: 3/5

    Marketing: 0

    Total:  8

    Next is one that I haven’t touched since college.

    Rolling Rock 33:

    Price: 2 for $4.00

    It works on so many levels.

    Skunkiness: I thought this was going to suck.  I am not totally wrong, but I will not admit it. 2/5

    Ability to get me drunk: 2/5

    Marketing:  Whiskey Tango Foxtrot.  Oh my god. LMAO.  The ball.  Hits the groin. 3/5

    Total: 11

    Now, I happen to like Amstel, ever if they cannot spell beer correctly, so I’ll give them a shot.

    Amstel Xlight:

    Price: 2 for $4.00

    Skunkiness: I am not sure they know this market.1/5

    Ability to get me drunk: 2/5

    Marketing:  Cute. 2/5

    Total:  9

    Sorry, I need to stop here.  There are several others that span a spectrum between Corona and Colt 45, but quite frankly…I do not like you guys enough to continue drinking like I am homeless.  Have a good weekend.

  • Glibertarian (inaugural?) Beer it Forward

    Not enough for the whole class, I see…

    This is my review of Platform (Cleveland, OH) Smokin Fineapple Gose.

    I was graciously given the day off by my employer in observance of Veteran’s Day.  I took the day mostly to hang out with my kids and on my way home I noticed the FEDEX truck driving around my neighborhood.  Way to work it on a Federal holiday, FEDEX!  

    I got my box, fed my kids, and let the sender know the Maguffin arrived.  Then I tore it open!  I got some schwag:  stickers, a new pint glass, a D-ring/keychain.  Somewhere in there was some beer.  Hat Tip of all hat tips:  Nephilium.

    Immediately the Gose caught my attention.  I’ve had a few that were made with lemon but pineapple seemed a bit off for this style.  I decided that I’ve trusted the judgement of others only to come back with a sour apple martini so I dismissed these fears and put it on ice.

    This link here has a few methods on cooling beer in a few minutes time, some without electricity. The absolute fastest way to chill a beer without electricity is to take a disposable tupperware container large enough to hold the can/bottle.  Poke a couple holes in the sides and in the center of the lid.  Put the beverage into the container and ‘seal’ it. Then take a can of compressed air and insert the straw attachment into the hole in the lid.  Invert the can of compressed air and go to town.  You may want to wear gloves.  It should take only a minute of two to empty the can but the results will be chilling.  So in the event of the apocalypse we all can still have a cold drink. Thankfully, I don’t live in Somalia so the refrigerator sufficed.

    The Gose is sour but the pineapple has a nice subtle sweetness to it to counter it.  It also has sea salt floating in the mix so the result reminds me a bit of grilled pineapple.  Its pretty good, but I was wrong about this one being the most interesting thing in the box. Platform Smokin Fineapple Gose: 3/5

    Others in the box included:

    Masthead American IPA
    Fat Head Sunshine Daydream IPA

    Masthead American IPA: 3.2/5  The head says it all, it has a lot of body and delightfully floral.

     

    Fat Head Sunshine Daydream IPA. 3/5.  I had this one the next night in observance of fight night, for obvious reasons. It was better than majority of that card.

     

    Millersburg Brewing Panther Hollow Vanilla Porter
    Hoppin Frog Infusion A Coffee Porter

    Millersburg Brewing Panther Hollow Vanilla Porter 4.5/5.  Hell yeah!  Go find it, right now.  Don’t worry you can record your college football game and/or Man City (probably) won.  Don’t hesitate to get a six-pack.

     

    Hoppin Frog Infusion A Coffee Porter: 3.8/5. A bit more bite than expected but overall is solid. It’s like a light imperial stout.

     

     

    Finally the most interesting thing in the box, not just because it’s watching you.

    Saucy Fauxbia White Stout

    This one calls itself a ‘white stout’ so go ahead and insert an appropriation joke.  The malts are roasted with a high intensity heat that doesn’t seem to alter its color.  It’s like grilling chicken with too much flame, where the outside looks good but the inside is raw.  The result is something akin to a nice bitters with a smoky finish.  Do you like Scotch Whisky?  You’ll probably like this.  Saucy Fauxbia White Stout:  4.1/5

    So the bottom line:  it may be easy for us to make fun of Cleveland, unless you’re in Detroit, but their beer is most excellent.  Thanks Nephilium!  

  • Review – Stouts Part 4: Miscellaneous

    This is my review of Southern Tier Choklat Oranj.

    Southern Tier brewery…. from Lakeside, NY?  Odd.  I like to think we have come full circle with the whole Stout thing.  There’s too many things one can do with it.  As it turns out, this is one of the simplest styles of beer to make.  The flavors that go into it can range from subtle to intense, so realistically you can add almost anything to it and come out with a palatable product—except Sriracha.  For example, after four years of studying chemistry and STILL not learning how to make VX nerve gas, I took this up:

    This is probably my third attempt at recreating something wonderful.  Back in Colorado, I threw together a now unknown mixture of chocolate malts, Champaign yeast, English hops, Rainer cherries and sprigs of vanilla.  It was amazing.  I gave it to a friend of mine who said it was amazing but he still preferred whisky and that he was keeping the bottle because the bottle was a convenient place to put excess screws and nails.

    Why is it now unknown?  I left the ingredient list on a fruit based mobile device.  That fruit based mobile device was dropped on a tile floor by a child—my child.  I tried to restart it, I tried shaking it, and even pressed both buttons at the same time.  Nothing.  I took that device to the fruit based store and was told that I could purchase a refurbished fruit based mobile device, or a new one.  It was done and I was slightly poorer, but at least I still had my tunes.   

    This one is rich, and has a nice milk chocolatey aroma to it.  There is certainly a nice citrus aftertaste to it.  It does indeed taste like a chocolate orange at first.  The reason I like it is because at 10% ABV, it tastes like something I made in my closet by accident.  This is best reserved for a cold winter’s night, which means I need to go outside and put my feet into my 55-degree pool to simulate a cold winter’s night.  I found this one at Total Wine.  Southern Tier Chocolate Orange: 3.9/5

    Another thing brewers add is peanut butter.  Don’t let the name of this one fool you, you’re probably going to like it.  Even if you don’t care for the information in that fun map I left at the bottom.  This beer, being from California, reminded me of the podcast my wife played on a road trip.  I was driving, so normally I wouldn’t care, but given the subject was excise taxes, I grudgingly listened in.

    Never mind the moral issues they said.  The argument they focused on was that excise taxes altered the behavior of the people taxed and thus were effective at achieving the ends of the state.  One of the examples they used was a tax on soda in Berkeley which did reduce the sales of soda—in Berkeley. They even conceded residents could still get cheap soda somewhere else.  Which is a bit of a no-brainer, and really didn’t get into the ill effects of excise taxes.  One of the ones they did mention was the taxes artificially reduced the supply of the taxed goods by pushing out smaller producers who cannot profit from the inflated price nor justify their product at the new price by reducing supply.  The price after all, is determined by supply and demand.  Because a producer cannot reasonably control demand, the consideration for the new market price + tax must come from a decrease in supply.  I would guess this assumes the product is not something like insulin.  It is outlined at this link here and honestly, I did not previously consider the angle presented.  I like the moral argument against excise taxes better–mostly because it’s easier for me to explain and it’s also more convincing.  

    I probably shouldn’t pick beer based on its ability to irritate me.  Whatever you think of excise taxes and I think I know what you think of them, the beer is good. Mother Earth Brew Co. Sin Tax Peanut Butter Imperial Stout 3.7/5

     

    Living in sin!!!
  • Review – Stouts Part 3: The English Stout

    This is my review of La Cumbre (Albuquerque, NM) Malpais Stout.

    The fun part about the English Milk Stout is that it does not contain milk, but it does contain lactose which as we all know is found in milk.  Lactose is a disaccharide known for giving people gas because of the angle of the Oxygen bonds between glucose and galactose.  That’s the O with the funny z-shaped bond that joins the monosaccharides below.  

    This bond in similar (but not identical!) to the type of bond found in the same type of polysaccharides found in dietary fiber.  Most mammals cannot process fiber on their own, even cows; they process it with the help of bacteria that is passed to the calf from its mother.  It’s also why fashion models and beauty pageant contestants eat celery.  So as not to lose my audience, here’s Miss Kansas 2014, who I am quite certain eats meat. 

    In other words, people have issues with lactose because in a way, humans were never intended to be able to easily process the sugar beyond infancy.  The sugar most people associate with beer of course is maltose.

    Science AND beer?! What kind of site are we running, anyway?

    Looks the same?  Not quite.  While they have identical chemical formulas, the difference is the angle of the oxygen bonds between the two monosaccharides.  What does this subtle to the point where it appears to be a nearly meaningless difference between sugar have to do with beer?  It has to do with everything.  The yeast that processes these sugars must do so in a different way because of this bond but it can process both easily.  The result is a beer that tastes slightly different—sweeter and not as dry.  This is the explanation as to why milk stouts taste the way they do, and why not all stouts taste the same and thus were broken up into multiple articles.

    Another fun fact about milk stouts:  they were initially marketed to lactating women.  No wonder your mom likes it.

    So begins…the circle…of stouts!

    A good example of the English Milk Stout is Mackeson Stout.

    This one is kind of hard to find in the US, so if you are looking for a good example of the English Milk Stout, check out Left Hand’s Milk Stout.  As a bonus, it is also available with the Nitrogen charged widget.

    Another type is the English Chocolate Stout.  Part 2 of this series I mentioned Young’s Double Chocolate Stout, but an arguably finer example is Samuel Smith’s Organic Chocolate Stout.

    It appears arrogant to the uninitiated yet deliberately proper, and understated–like everything else the English do well.  If you can find it, an example from the US might be Lancaster Double Chocolate Stout.  I’ve never had this one, but I have heard a lot of good things about it.  If I am wrong about it, I will recant on my deathbed.

    As for the stout featured above.  I asked everyone what kind of beer I should get on a Friday PM Links thread, and while I got an answer, I had already made my purchase by the time I checked my phone.  I picked this because for some reason all the Glibs from the Land of Enchantment seemed to show up all at once one evening.  So here is my shout out to the green chili eating weirdos to the east whose most famous resident painted pictures that my former boss has all over her office.  

    Internet points awarded to whoever actually knows who this is

    La Cumbre Malpais Stout has a ridiculous malt complexity and a subtle bite from the hops.  It’s ABV is at a healthy 7.5% and there is a slight burn to it.  This one is rather dry like an Irish stout, because it is.  Its old-world analogue is Guinness Extra Stout.  It is a solid effort, and one I would recommend.  La Cumbre Malpais Stout 3.5/5

  • Review – Racer 5 IPA and friends

     

    I have been avoiding writing about this style for a while now.  It’s pretty much everywhere and people seem to either love it or hate it.  People that love it are often accused of lying about it to look like they are “with it.”  Even though what “it” is, is scary, smells like a barber shop when the AC breaks down and tastes like spiked piss.  Then this happened:

    […]

    My TI:  Flight!

    Me:  Kill! (Parade Rest)

    My TI:  Attention!

    Me:  Osama! (Attention)

    Sorry about that.  Back to your regularly scheduled programing.

    True.  Also discussed in this thread is if Whole Foods Girl is attractive with gauged earlobes.  The short answer is, maybe.

    I did no such thing.

    Screw it.  This is my review of Bear Republic Racer 5 India Pale Ale.  Hat Tip:  Sean, Tundra, Playa(Hate-ah)Manhattan, et al.

    Ready your rotten cabbage, ladies.

    For the record, I found this one as a single at Total Wine but I have seen it in numerous places like Fry’s(Kroger), Safeway and BevMo.  Since I am in Arizona, this wide distribution is likely due to my location and thus cannot speak to how far their reach is.  This isn’t the first time I have had this one, but it has been a long time.  Since there are so many California brands in my area, there is a fair bit of difficulty in keeping up with all of them.  Then there are the local brands which for the most part are as good or better, but the Arizona brewers tend to focus on styles that aren’t this extreme.  The reason?  When it’s hot out the last thing I want is an IPA and I don’t think I’m alone.

    India Pale Ale tends to lose its potency over time.  The oils and aromatics in the hops that dominate the style break down, particularly when it comes in contact with light.  Yes, even if it is stored in a brown bottle.  Because of this, I always recommend finding a local brewer that makes a good version of the style, for me that’s Four Peaks Hop Knot. Fresh beer is always better and somebody that makes it nearby will likely give you the best version available for the style.  Don’t have a good one?  The Stone “Enjoy Before” series is your best bet. It’s not always available, but they give you the date specifically because that is the date they recommend will meet their quality standards.  The idea behind this style is they over-hopped the beer in England back in the day so it could make it to their English customers in India and still taste like a traditional Pale Ale.   

    I tried this once when I came across a Stone Ruination IPA at a gas station about a year ago.  Note, I did not say Ruination 2.0, this was the original still sitting in the corner on the bottom shelf of the refrigerator at an Arco station.  It was old, and quite frankly there is proof of concept as it tasted like a terrible pale ale.  If you come across this one with the green label, avoid it.

    Racer 5 is pretty good for the type of style it is.  Without looking it up, I would guess it is the Cascade/Centennial Hop combination that I mentioned before.  It’s made in the dry-hopped “West Coast” style that seems to generate the polarizing views.  I’ve been drinking a lot of balanced or malty beers lately, so it was quite the experience and even cleared my sinuses.  Very fragrant in the glass but it seemed to leave a dry, bitter feeling afterwards. There are a lot of citrus notes, and it is definitely not malty.  Overall, it’s a good example of the West Coast IPA style so if this is the style you like, you will enjoy it.  I’m not always up for it though.  Bear Republic Racer 5 India Pale Ale: 3.2/5.  Other good examples include the aforementioned Four Peaks Hop Knot.  Of the nationally distributed brands Sam Adams Rebel IPA, Dogfish 60 or 90 Minute IPA, Stone Ruination IPA 2.0, New Belgium Ranger IPA, Elysian Immortal IPA and if you have Avery in your area, most of their versions are very good as well.

    Winner winner, drink a Pinner!

    The alternative is finding one that pays homage to the traditional English version.  Oskar Blues Pinner IPA is a good example.  They don’t list the hops used on their website (surprise!) but I believe they lean heavily on traditional English hops.  Interestingly enough, they were going for something else entirely when they made it. This one is very light, and it does not have a lot of body to it but it does taste more malty than what one would normally find from this style.  The head in the photo disappeared rather quickly but to be fair, this is something I have found in all this brand’s styles.

    I will say this one is almost sweet compared to Racer 5.  Oskar Blues Pinner IPA: 3.2/5.  Another version to consider is Firestone Walker Union Jack IPA, and if you look closely in the import section at Total Wine you will find actual English IPA from time to time.  Not many other examples from the US come to mind.

  • Review – Stouts Part 2: The Irish Stout

    You’d drink it, too, if she handed it to you.“Guinness is the best beer in the world.  Hands down.” – Me, 2003.

    Like anything else, the more you’re exposed to different things the more likely your attitudes will change over time.  I was first exposed to Guinness in college, when a friend of mine picked up an 8-pack of Guinness Draught cans.  His dad was an F-16 pilot stationed at Aviano AB, Italy so he was a product of DODS and traveled all over Europe during his formative years.  It made him an interesting person to converse with but somehow or another he wound up in China in his late 20s.  I hear from him once every two years now, possibly when the Chicom government lets him check Facebook.  At any rate, he was fresh off a trip to Ireland with his dad and at the time we all thought it was the coolest thing in the world.  The can contained a “widget,” that charged the beer with nitrogen and when opened, will release its charge, mimicking what the beer would taste like if it came off tap.  Who else but the Irish would be at the forefront of beer drinking technology?

    The problem is, at the time I didn’t know much better.  My exposure to beer was limited to Bud Light, Corona and the like.  I will credit my friend with forcing me to try something different from time to time, after all the beer is black and sometimes requires a spoon, when it’s supposed to be yellow, watery and sometimes requires a funnel and some surgical tubing. This lead to me drinking a Fat Tire, which lead to me drinking damn near everything else.

    If we rag on the InBev brands for the ubiquity, their marketing campaigns and their trivial associations with pop culture, it shouldn’t be too much of a leap to come to the same conclusion about Guinness as we do with them.  Need an example?

    Is Obama cool because Obama gets jacked on Guinness or is Guinness cool because Obama gets jacked on Guinness?

    But it’s different, because Guinness is tasty!  Okay, maybe it is.  It has a nice texture, the head is certainly something to be desired and it is definitely better than 90% of the mass produced beers on Earth, but that is a bar low enough to trip over.  Its ingredients are to a large extent, trade secret—except for fish bladder, until recently. Because of its popularity, there is probably no beer on Earth that has as many “secrets” and “insights” that are intended mainly to make people look cool drinking it.  Such as:

    Secret:  Tapping a spoon against the glass.  This is to determine whether the beer finished dissipating and the head has settled.  The glass should make a dull clacking sound when tapped with a spoon—now it’s ready!  This is silly, as the glass makes a similar sound when filled with almost any liquid.

    Secret:  It’s better in Ireland.  This is mostly designed as a segue to the, “Oh you’ve been to Ireland, are the comely lasses really that comely?” conversation.  The former is somewhat true and there are a few explanations as to why.  The first being that for most Irish, drinking is a social event therefore they drink it in pubs, so it isn’t bottled.  Bottling and canning beer often requires pasteurization which can alter the taste of beer by denaturing the proteins and enzymes that you might find tasty and otherwise not get out of the can.  Also, the Irish drink so much of the stuff that once it’s brewed it’ll get consumed in a few weeks, so they might not be too concerned about it spoiling and thus won’t sully it with preservatives.  I’m not certain of the veracity of this one, since I doubt Guinness wants a lawsuit from their beer getting people sick.  Another practice in Ireland is Guinness will send a worker out to pubs with a distribution contract to purge the lines at 21 day intervals.  This ensures the lines are clean and thus do not contain foreign contaminants.   That’s what this guy is doing.  

    It sounds like a good business practice on Guinness’ part to control quality but if I’m the pub owner I might question how much beer that wastes because depending on the length of the lines, there might be a gallon or more of beer in there that I can no longer sell which means its 17 gallons/tap/year—you do the math.  The beer is fresher in Ireland, pubs are required to let Guinness maintain their taps, it may or may not be safe for drinking, and it is almost always served off the tap.  Couple this with the fact that for most Americans, it’s a special occasion they find themselves in Ireland and therefore a novelty, it’s no surprise everyone says it’s better in Ireland.

    Secret:  Drinking Guinness is good for you. Apparently, Guinness contains antioxidants and polyphenols like red wine, and in moderation the benefits outweigh the alcohol content. This is also ridiculous, as anybody drinking Guinness, like the stereotypical red wine drinker, is not going to be drinking it in moderation.

    Secret:  The Perfect Pint.  This is a six-step process

    1. Use a Guinness Branded Glass.  Preferably a clean glass.
    2. Pour at a 45-degree angle, aim for the harp in the Guinness logo.  Pull aft on the tap.
    3. Stop pouring when it reaches about halfway across the harp in the Guinness logo.  
    4. Leave the glass to settle for 119.5 seconds.
    5. Once ready fill the remainder, pushing fore on the tap rather than aft, holding the glass plumb.
    6. Serve. The foam should be domed like the crystal on a well-made watch.

    Not only that, there is a specific way to drink a perfect pint of Guinness and that is by drinking it in quarters.  In other words, gulping it rather than sipping it, thus leaving three foam lines in the glass.  Order a whisky between gulps 2 and 3.  DO NOT drink the whisky before finishing the beer. This whole thing sounds ridiculous to a rational observer, but I’m not about to argue with it beyond not telling me how to drink my beer.

    In the end, Guinness benefits from a legend they realistically cannot live up to and a cultural status that seems to feed upon itself—like Harley-Davidson.  There are better, more flavorful stouts out there that also have the nitrogen charged widget.  Want me to name one?  Okay.

    I suppose the pedants among us will point out this isn’t an Irish Stout.

    Guinness Draught:  3.0/5 (If I’m being generous)

  • Review – Speakeasy Prohibition Ale

     

    My sister recently had a birthday and I was voluntold to pick up a set of cupcakes from a baker specializing in cupcakes, and only cupcakes with ganache frosting.  I found out they only make a certain amount during the day and will close when they run out.  So when I arrived after they closed I still needed some cupcakes, and unfortunately for me there was only one place in the immediate area that would have what I needed to pick up.

    I love how nobody at Whole Foods ever looks like their file photos…normally they look homeless yet somehow drive a Mercedes Benz Genändewagen. I know what you’re thinking, don’t you like money?  Why are you shopping there?  Well they had what I needed that day and their beer section is stocked with a disturbing level of variety.  I picked this one up while I was there since the last time I bought from this brewery was in college.

    This brand has probably one of the more visually elaborate labels out there. All of their beers are adorned with art deco style and obvious cues to 1920-1930’s era gangsters, gazing narrowly upon us from the refrigerator. The beer itself doesn’t disappoint either.  It’s an American Amber Ale, which is a style that was popularized on the west coast and is probably the most ubiquitous style in the craft industry not called IPA.  Do you like Fat Tire, Alaskan Amber Ale, Full Sail Amber Ale, Avery Redpoint Ale, Northcoast Red Seal Ale, etc?  All fine examples of American Amber Ale.  This one is a hazy, deep red-brown color that finishes with a nice foamy head.  Cascade hops which is the norm but not exclusive for this type of beer, give it a citrus like aroma but not particularly floral–when it is cold.  

    Want

    Cascades are a strain of hops that was derived at the University of Oregon on a USDA grant in 1956 that was determined to create a species of hop resistant to downy mildew.  It originated from an open seed collection that comprises of English Fuggle, Russian Serebrianker, and “an unspecified male hop variety.” The name of course, comes from the mountain range that runs through the area.  In the event you run into a non-GMO type at a bar drinking a Full Sail Amber, be sure to point out this fact and provide a Dixie Cup to purge xirself of this vile example of patriarchy that displeases Gaia.

    Speakeasy’s version is a bit more fun, as it warms to room temperature it takes a different character, allowing the dark toffee malts to be more evident.  The malts balance out the hops, which is probably why this style is as popular as it is—it isn’t made to suit an extreme.  They also mix in another hop, Centennial, which is similar to the Cascade, but manifests itself better at optimum beer drinking temperature and does not taste so much like grapefruit.  This twist gives it a bit of complexity and lends itself specifically to the American standard of drinking beer while it’s near freezing.  Beer should be served around 55 F, which is something in C, I just don’t care to do the math for it.

    Speakeasy Prohibition Amber Ale easily rates at 3.5/5 or better depending on your glass of choice and if you are the type that prefers some balance.  I had it in a chalice but you can use a pilsner glass or other wide mouth glass for a good effect.  Otherwise if you read everything I just wrote about hops and determined it is another example of putrid, overpriced, over hopped, grapefruit flavored swill, there isn’t anything I can say that will convince you otherwise.  So I’ll just leave this here for you: