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October 30, 2009

Moving On

 Just wanted to let you know that the beer blog, Kasper on Tap, is being retired.  In its two year run, the blog did not attract a large enough audience to sustain it.  

  I have enjoyed the blog's give and take, the humor and the honest discussion about this area's beers and its brewing culture. Much of that came from the readers. As I said in my first post in October, 2007 my mission  is to drink good beer, to spread the word, and to spark interesting and entertaining discussion about the beer-drinking life.

I am still  at The Sun  and I plan to write about beer in the print and online editions. I may eventually end up blogging about beer  through some other forum.   Blogging about beer, like sipping it, can be habit forming.

Cheers

Posted by Rob Kasper at 9:46 AM | | Comments (27)
        

October 27, 2009

Michelob Bavarian Wheat : Good Drinking Out of Season

I drank a wheat beer in cool weather.  That seems to violate some principle.

Moreover the wheat beer, Michelob Bavarian Wheat, was from a major brewer --the crew in St. Louis--- and I liked it.

It was remarkably crisp and had tremendous citrus notes. . Since it was unfiltered, the label had pouring instructions. Those Michelob guys are sticklers on  pouring.

I know you are supposed to drink wheat beer after you have mowed the lawn.

But I drank it after raking the leaves. 

Did I commit a sin? If so it sure tasted good.

Continue reading "Michelob Bavarian Wheat : Good Drinking Out of Season" »

Posted by Rob Kasper at 11:09 AM | | Comments (7)
        

October 26, 2009

Halloween beer drinking tips

Grown-ups may like to behave like kids on  Halloween, but they also like to drink adult beverages, 

Our friends at  the web site Chow have put out a video demonstrating how someone wearing a mask or a fake beard can drink beer without ruining their Halloween costume. Hint, it involves a straw.

 

Continue reading "Halloween beer drinking tips " »

Posted by Rob Kasper at 11:00 AM | | Comments (2)
        

October 23, 2009

Beery boxers : Phillies trademark?

I find it  hard  not to like the Philadelphia Phillies. They  begin to  defend their World Series title starting Oct. 27 . 

The Phillies have been off the radar of most of the sporting media, especially ESPN.. As Bill Rhoden, now a columnist for The New York Times but not so long ago my colleague here at The Sun, has pointed out  the Phillies get no respect.

So they are the underdog, especially matched up against the media darlings of Gotham, the Yankees. The Angels will have something to say about that, rallying last night to win 7-6 and force  a game six.

Yesterday I found another reason to like the Phillies.

Continue reading "Beery boxers : Phillies trademark?" »

Posted by Rob Kasper at 7:00 AM | | Comments (1)
        

October 22, 2009

Norm of "Cheers" Has A Beer Book

Norm has a beer book.  George Wendt, the actor who played Norm Peterson, the affable barfly in the television show "Cheers" has written "Drinking With George,: A Barstool Professional's Guide to Beer. 

I heard him interviewed Thursday  morning on Mike and Mike in the Morning  the national radio sports talk  show aired on Baltimore's ESPN 1300 AM .

Judging by his time with Mike and Mike and his comments in other interviews, Wendt  has a lot of beer stories to tell.  Wendt is very funny, if not a connoisseur. 

When questioned about his beer knowledge he told USA Today's Lorrie Lynch. " I’ve been reaching out to Oktoberfests and craft beer festivals and things like that, and I know nothing. I realized I am a complete idiot, both in terms of my palate and my knowledge of the process."

Continue reading "Norm of "Cheers" Has A Beer Book" »

Posted by Rob Kasper at 10:13 AM | | Comments (1)
        

October 21, 2009

Fresh Hop Ales

Interesting piece in Wednesday's New York Times about fresh hop ales.

The writer Lucy Burningham quotes  brewer Phil Markowski saying that these beers are like homegrown tomatoes or fresh corn, they don't hold up, but instead are pleasures of the moment.

I have enjoyed some good fresh hop ales, in particular ones from Sierra Nevada.

 

Continue reading "Fresh Hop Ales " »

Posted by Rob Kasper at 9:27 AM | | Comments (2)
        

October 20, 2009

Das Beer Bier ist hier

pilsner.jpg

A few weeks ago I introduced you to Sigrid Beer, a poltician from Paderborn, Germany, whom we met via a Facebook connection.  In an email, Sigrid mentioned that one of the things her city is known for is the Paderborner Brauerei, and she offered to send us some of its pilsener (the proper German spelling) to sample.

The beer arrived a couple of weeks ago and on a Friday afternoon as the clock chimed 5, Rob, our colleague Anica Butler, and I popped the top of a Paderborner Pilsener and poured some into our respective paper cups.  Our reaction to the beer was that it was pretty much like our American pilsners - cool, light and bubbly with a not-unpleasant bitterness.  It was also a little dangerous, but that probably had more to do with the fact that we were still sitting in the workplace when we drank it.

It will, however, remain for me one of the more memorable beers I've ever had.  And that's due to the special circumstances that brought it to me.  How often do you wind up with a beer in hand thanks to developing a chance overseas friendship via Facebook?  It's given me the opportunity to learn about Sigrid, about the city of Paderborn and its resident brewery.

Paderborn is a city of just under 150,000 in the North Rhine-Westphalia district of Germany.  The city, which was founded in the year 795, is home to a university and several theological institutes.  It's also home to the largest computer museum in the world.

PaderbornerGame.jpg

Paderborner Brauerei dates back to 1852.  In addition to the pilsener, they brew Paderborn+Cola, a malt beverage, and several other varieties of beer and alcoholic drinks.  One of the things I really liked about the brewery's website is that it has a nifty little Flash "Spiele", or game, on it.  The objective is to move the little man with the beer case under the bottles of beer that are raining from above, so that they land safely in the box.  It's a great way to spend a productive hour or two.

Danke, Sigrid, for the beers and for introducing us to the charms of Paderborn.

Posted by Steve Sullivan at 8:45 AM | | Comments (1)
        

October 19, 2009

Almost perfect ending to Baltimore Beer Week

It was an almost perfect ending yesterday to Baltimore Beer Week. If the Ravens Steve Hauschka had made the field goal, it would have been a storybook finish.

I was among the crowd sipping  glasses of rare beer at Max's Taphouse watching the Ravens- Vikings on a giant screen.

The beers--- a Samichlaus 1996, George Gales Prize Ole Ale 1998, a Leg Coq Imperial Stout--- to name a few were exceptional.  I had never heard so many corks pop at a beer/football event.

The only clinker was a bottle of Brimstone. Its time had passed.

Spirits were high when the Ravens rallied and set up Hauschka for a 44 yard game- winning field goal.

Continue reading "Almost perfect ending to Baltimore Beer Week" »

Posted by Rob Kasper at 10:24 AM | | Comments (3)
        

October 16, 2009

A dreary, but beery weekend forecast

The weekend weather forecast is gloomy: rain and temperatures in the 40s.

But there are some rays of sunshine.

Saturday afternoon  is the SPBW Chesapeake Real Ale Fest at the  Pratt Street Ale House.

Tickets are $35 if you get them online by Friday night , $45 thereafter.

 

Continue reading "A dreary, but beery weekend forecast" »

Posted by Rob Kasper at 7:00 AM | | Comments (1)
        

October 14, 2009

The Great Pumpkin keg

I have seen a lot of photos of keg tappping, and cask tapping,

But here is the first photo I have seen of a pumpkin tapping.

Doing the honors are John Gasparine, who made the mallet dubbed The Star Spangled Banger, and Casey Hard of Max's Taphouse.

They are tapping Cape Ann Fisherman's Pumpkin Stout, a Baltimore Beer Week event.

 

Continue reading "The Great Pumpkin keg" »

Posted by Rob Kasper at 10:31 AM | | Comments (3)
        
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About Rob Kasper
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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