May 8, 2008

Should we wait until the summer solstice to drink summer beers?

Yesterday I had a Samuel Adams Summer Ale at Slainte Irish Pub in Fells Point, sipping it at the bar with a clutch of soccer-loving regulars.

I like the Sam Adams brewery, but was not impressed with this summer wheat ale. Perhaps one reason I didn't like it was that it was not really summer. It was still spring. The Sam Adams web site  describes this beer as a clean finishing beer perfect for those hot summer days.

I was drinking it  on a mild day in May. Summer doesn't start, officially, until June 21.

The craze in food these days is eating locally produced food when it is in season. All good "locavores" should soon be eating strawberries and rhubarb.

Should the same "locavore" rules apply to beer drinking?

Do you believe in drinking seasonal beers only in the official season?

If so, what should you call yourself -- a 'locabeervore?"

May 6, 2008

How did you celebrate the beer holiday?

Yesterday I celebrated Cinco de Mayo, by drinking Mexican beer, Pacifico, at a neighborhood get-together.  My kind of holiday.

The host pointed out that Cinco de Mayo has lost its historical roots. It marks the Battle of Puebla in 1862 when the Mexicans defeated the invading French army. The French won the rematch a year later.

Lately, the Fifth of May festivities have been promoted by the brewers of Corona and Tecate. This May, Bud Light has launched a Mexican-style beer flavored with lime, which competes with Miller Chill, another south-of-the-border-style brew flavored with salt and lime.

I have had the Chill, which with its salty notes was better than expected.

Anyone sample the Bud Light Lime?

On the whole I prefer Pacifico. Agree?

Any other Cinco de Mayo brews worth mentioning?

May 5, 2008

The cure: stout and champagne

Interesting story in yesterday's New York Times' "T" magazine by Toby Cecchini about a drink called Black Velvet, a 50-50 mixture of stout, usually Guinness, and real champagne (not sparkling wine).

Fergus Henderson, a hearty London chef who lives larg,e said the drink can bring you back from the edge of death. In others words, it seems to be a hangover cure.

Anyone try this?

Anyone have any other cures?

May 2, 2008

Mourning the death of last-minute tickets to beer festivals

It is difficult these days to go to a weekend beer festival without buying your tickets days in advance.

From the viewpoint of the festival organizers, advance sales yield a firm estimate of how many people will be attending. At the recent City Paper festival, organizers capped ticket sales at about 1,200, and the Saturday event sold out on Thursday. This resulted in good crowd control and kept the beer flowing.

However, procrastinators, who waited until the day of the event to see what their schedule was like and what kind of weather the day would provide, got shut out. I confess I was in that position but was saved by the kindness of festival poo-bahs.

The spontaniety of "oh, it is a sunny Saturday, let's go drink beer," is lost. I mourn its passing. Anyone else? Anyone have mournful tales of being turned back at the gates of a festival?

Howsabout tales from the other side -- festivals that did not cap sales and were mobbed?

The next local beer festival, Savor, with a theme of matching food and beer, is set for Washington the weekend of May 16-18. It features Boston Beer's Jim Koch, Brooklyn Brewery's Garrett Oliver, and Maryland's Flying Dog and Clipper City crews. The tickets -- $85 per session for drinkers, $50 for designated drivers -- are being sold only in advance. None will be sold on the day of the event. Click here for details.

 

May 1, 2008

What's all this I hear about Reinheitsgebot?

Prodded by the post of bryanintimonium who took issue with my fondness for fruit beers by proclaiming "Reinheitsgebot! Reinheitsgetbot! Reinheitsgetbot! No fruit in beers," I looked up the German beer purity law.

The Reinheitsgebot proclaims "the only ingredients used for the brewing of beer must be Barley, Hops and Water. Whosoever knowingly disregards or transgresses upon this ordinance shall be punished by the Court authorities' confiscating such barrels of beer, without fail." The law, written in 1516, forgot to mention yeast, which got added in one of the subsequent revisions of the brewing rules.

After reading a critique of the Reinheitsgebot by rpattinson on the ratebeer web site, I subscribe to the author's view that discussion of beer should "concentrate more around the factors which are truly crucial to the taste of a beer: the quality of the ingredients, lagering times, pasteurisation, filtration and carbonation."

So I say it is okay to drink fruit beer, as long as it is good beer. Agree?

Besides, don't the Germans put a slice of lemon in some of their beers? Doesn't that violate the spirit, if not the letter, of the law?

And does this law mean that the Belgian beers are not considered beers?

April 29, 2008

East buys west as Magic Hat set to merge with Pyramid

According to a joint press release issued today, Pyramid Breweries and Magic Hat Brewing Co. want to merge. Magic Hat will acquire Pyramid, through an agreed-upon all-cash tender offer and subsequent merger, at $2.75 per share of Pyramid common stock. The deal is supposed to close by Aug. 31.

Pyramid has a strong presence in Washington, California and Oregon. Magic Hat sells its beers from Maine to Georgia and as far West as Illinois.

Can this marriage work?

Are more mergers in the works for brewers as costs climb?  

Do you think their beers are similiar?

How do you name a beer?

Stopped by the Brewer's Art on a dreary Monday for a brightener or two. Drank the Tiny Tim, a Belgian ale made with, among other ingredients, hibiscus flowers, rosemary and buckwheat honey. Refreshing, not too sweet, 6.1 percent ABV.

Brewer Rob Perry was at the bar, always a good sign, and he explaned that they named the beer Tiny Tim after the ukelele-playing performer because it was the antithesis of their Ozzie beer, (named for Ozzie Ozbourne, the godfather of heavy metal).

This got me wondering: how do brewers name their beers?

Slaapmutske Triple Nightcap supposedly got its name when the brewer soothed his crying child by dipping his finger in this beer and letting the child suck on the finger. The child immediately went to sleep.

Any other good stories behind names?

Any ideal beer names?

April 28, 2008

City Paper's fine beer fest

Made my way down to Fells Point Saturday afternoon for City Paper's 12th annual beer festival. Twenty-four breweries set up booths in the fenced-in square and poured 40-plus beers to a crowd of some 1,200 cup-carrying sippers. A good time.

I was told that last year's festival was mobbed. But this year the organizers capped ticket sales (it sold out Thursday night) and as outdoor beer festivals go, this one seemed pretty smooth. It was a gorgeous day. The beer was fresh.The crowd was friendly. The lines for the spot-a-pots were long by midafternoon, but that, it seems to me, is a small price to pay for beery pleasure.

I saw Joe Gold and a couple of his running mates, Paul Simoes and Nick Fallice. These three wise men of beer festivals pointed me toward various taps. I tasted a lot of old friends: Victory Prima Pils, Lancaster Hop Hog, Brewer's Art Resurrection, the Flying Fish ESB. I made a few new acquaintances -- the Wharf Rat's Ironman (how had I missed this local ale?), DuClaw's hoppy but harsh Hellraiser, Clipper City's new Oxford Amber Aler , part of their organic line. A good session beer, but nothing like the rich and bountiful Clipper City Loose Cannon, a favorite of the three wise men.

Any other festival favorites?

Any other takes on this festival?

This, I believe is the oldest, and best, beer festival in town. Agree?

April 23, 2008

Another flip-flop on fruit beers

I am repositioning my previously changed position on fruit beers. Hey, politicians do it.

Cutting to the chase, my new favorite fruit beer, recommended by many contributors to this site, is Pyramid Apricot Weizen.

This wheat ale does a solid  job of delivering refreshing beer flavors with an apricot presence. I now prefer it to the Dogfish Aprihop, which was my favorite fruit beer last week. Okay, I admit I am a serial fruit beer lover.

Another reason for my current infatuation: the Pyramid comes in a six-pack. The Dogfish was a four-pack. The distributor of the Pyramid is Dops. I found it for about $8 a six-pack at the Wine Source.

Anyone else have this problem of flip flopping on favorite fruit beers?

Anyone try the new, organic Oxford Raspberry? Looks like there is fruit in our beer-drinking future.

April 21, 2008

Local beers make good in international competition

Congrats to Balto's Clipper City, Frederick's Flying Dog and Bethesda's Rock Bottom Brewery for garnering honors in the 2008 Brewers Association World Beer Cup. The awards were announced over the weekend at the international competition in Boulder, Colo.

Clipper City's Winter Storm won first place, a gold medal, in the International Pale category.

The folks in Frederick won a gold in the English-style India Pale Ale category with Wild Goose IPA, and their Gonzo Imperial Porter won a gold in the Imperial Stout category.

The Bethesda brewers picked up a silver, or second place, in the special bitter competition for their 1065 Raccoon Red, and a bronze, or third, in the Altbier competiton, for their 1065 Fire Chief Alt. A full list of winners in 91 categories from 58 countries can be found at www.WorldBeercup.org.

I am a fan of Winter Storm and Wild Goose. I like the Gonzo Imperial Porter, even if the old label was hard to read. Anyone disagree?

I have not tasted the Bethesda brews. Has anyone had them?

About this blog


Rob Kasper, a features columnist, has been writing about beer for 20 years, and he remembers when Anchor Christmas and Noche Buena were about the only beers at a holiday tasting and Sisson’s was the only brewpub in Baltimore. A collection of his columns, "Raising Kids and Tomatoes, Amusing Tales and Appetizing Recipes," was published in 1998. He lives with his wife, Judith, a professor at Johns Hopkins School of Public Health, in a downtown Baltimore rowhouse. They have two grown sons, who come home from time to time and drink their father’s beer.
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