Brookston Beer Bulletin

Jay R. Brooks on Beer

  • Home
  • About
  • Editorial
  • Birthdays
  • Art & Beer

Socialize

  • Dribbble
  • Email
  • Facebook
  • Flickr
  • GitHub
  • Instagram
  • LinkedIn
  • Pinterest
  • RSS
  • Twitter
  • YouTube

Powered by Genesis

Session #21: Your Favorite Beer

November 7, 2008 By Jay Brooks

The Session, a.k.a. Beer Blogging Friday, finally comes of age as this month it’s our 21st Session. Hosted by Matt C., from A World of Brews, the topic this month is What Is Your Favorite Beer? He frames the question like so.

No one has asked the one question that I am guessing all of you have heard. This question has probably come from friends, family, strangers from the bar, etc. every time you bring up you are really into beer.

That question is: What is your favorite Beer and Why?

Before you say I don’t have a favorite beer or how do I pick just one. I say BS everyone has a favorite. There will always be a beer that you would grab above all others, your go to beer per se. The one beer you will almost always choose over the others. When I get asked that question I almost always say I don’t have one but then when I came up with this topic I realized I did and I know you do too.

Actually, I’m afraid I must disagree not only that “everyone has a favorite,” but also with the notion that having a favorite is even desirable. In fact, this is one of those questions that quite frankly drives me to madness, and has done so for almost as long as I can remember.

A moment’s thought about your own drinking habits will likely reveal that you’re like most craft beer enthusiasts; you like to drink a variety of different beers, and in fact will seek out the new, the seasonally new, the unique, the different.

Last week, I interviewed Sam Calagione from Dogfish Head Craft Brewery for an article I just finished, and in it he said much the same thing, citing “how promiscuous the beer industry is, where we all share secrets with one another, where the consumer is generally catholic with their drinking habits, celebrating the breadth of styles available in the world.”

And demographic data collected by IRI and Nielsen, among others, seem to bear that out. Back in March, I wrote about Anheuser-Busch’s own market analysis, when they were announcing the debut of Budweiser Ale. They referred to craft beer drinkers as “experimenters,” which they elaborated as follows.

“They love beer, they just try a lot of different things,” said Dave Peacock, vice president of marketing at A-B’s domestic beer subsidiary. Although Peacock acknowledged that some craft beer enthusiasts won’t try a Bud-branded ale, the company expects that a sizable portion of the market will have no problem with the concept.

I wasn’t particularly thrilled with that characterization, but had to admit that, as I said at the time, “[m]ost craft beer enthusiasts do like to sample the many different flavors that brewers come up with, or taste new versions of existing styles. That’s part of the better beer culture, trying new and different things. But when I’m out with friends and just enjoying an evening out, I don’t suddenly start drinking one, and only one kind or brand of beer. The reality, at least for myself (and I’m going to hazard a guess that I’m not alone on this), is that people simply don’t just want one kind of anything, not all the time.”

And then there’s that question — sigh.

Whenever people I meet discover that I’m involved in the beer business, invariably the question they can’t help but ask is “what’s your favorite beer?” This question just exhausts me — I hate answering it — but I put on my brave face and try to explain why I don’t have one, and why I never will. My wife insists that it’s an “opportunity” to educate someone and I suppose she’s right (she usually is), but I can’t help but view it as someone asking me if I have a favorite child. I know they mean well, but just asking this question says more about them than they realize. That so many people think there is — or should be — just one favorite anything shows how notions of brand loyalty and marketing have worked their way into our thinking. Do people have a favorite food, one food they’d eat every single meal? Of course not, so how is this any different? That so many people find it a reasonable question to ask about beer tells me that not only do they expect that I will actually have one but also that they see nothing wrong with limiting oneself in the face of such diversity. Corporations whose marketing has created such ideas must be absolutely giddy with their success in planting this idea so deeply into our collective psyche.

There are, of course, dozens of very different beer styles and some are better with this food or that, are better during a particular season or weather, or might just be the right match for whatever else we’re doing or what mood we’re in. … To anyone who’s moved beyond that narrow definition of what beer is, there are many different flavors and no earthly reason to stick to just one. That’s not experimentation, but a common sense approach to making beer a part of a diverse, healthy lifestyle that includes many different breads, cheese, wine and all manner of local and artisanal products.

That’s what I said then, what I’ve believed for many years, and what I continue to believe. I don’t even have one favorite beer style, much less a particular favorite beer. And here’s the thing. I don’t think you should have one, either. This is not what we should aspire to.

The whole pint .. er, point, IMHO, is that craft beer is meant to, or at least should, encourage the notion that different beers are appropriate for different scenarios, be they food choices, time of the season, weather, mood or whatever.

I’d accept that you could have a few different favorite styles that you think go well with something particular, such as wheat beers are refreshing in hot weather or hoppy beers go nicely with spicy foods. I can even see having a favorite beer for a particular scenario. For example, I loved pairing Pike’s wonderfully spicy Auld Acquaintance with Thanksgiving dinner, before they stopped brewing it (though they have announced they’re bringing it back again this year). For the last decade or so, I’ve enjoyed Anchor’s Christmas Ale, Our Special Ale, though the last few years they appear to have restrained he spicing more than I’d like (though I know I’m in the minority opinion). Those kind of favorites seem perfectly reasonable to me, but trying to pick one all-purpose beer does not seem so. And beyond that, I just don’t want to. I constantly want something different in a beer all the time. Life’s just too short to drink only one beer.

 

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Uncategorized

Vote!

November 4, 2008 By Jay Brooks

For those of you tired of all the politics here lately, don’t worry; it will all be over soon. Today is the day. Get out there and vote! Regardless of which beer … er, candidate you prefer, the important thing is to participate in the process. If you do nothing else today, at least cast your ballot and register your choice for the future of your country. Vote!

 
Tomorrow we’ll return to our regularly scheduled program.

 

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Uncategorized

The Audacity of Hops Homebrew

November 2, 2008 By Jay Brooks

Back in August, I called one of my posts The Audacity of Hops. It was about Oskar Blues taking the iconic Barack Obama poster and turning it into one for Dale’s Pale Ale. It turns out a homebrewer in Washington DC, whose day job is as a paralegal at the Department of Justice, brewed a homebrew by the same name. Sam Chapple Sokol also writes about beer online at the Humble Gourmand, where he tells the story of his new homebrew, The Audacity of Hops, The Beer of the American Dream.

From the Humble Gourmand:

How to represent Barack Obama through beer? Well, it was obvious that it had to have malt, the backbone of beer, so I added even amounts of dark malt and pale malt to give it a beautiful brown color. Victory malt, a specially-kilned variety of barley, also had a place. For good measure, I threw in a couple of pounds of corn sugar, from Kansas and Illinois. There had to be hops, so Challenger and Progress seemed like logical choices.

Then, how to symbolize Obama’s global origins? A blend of coffees from Kenya, Indonesia, and Hawaii, roasted by my own dad (Beans From My Father?) The water is all filtered tap water from the District of Columbia, my home and that of the future president.

There are 51 bottles in all, representing the 50 states plus DC. Yes, each label is numbered, and yes, I will be drinking #14 (Vermont, what?). [Sokol is originally from Vermont.]

And guess what? It’s ’08 percent alcohol.

The Washingtonian also did a story on his beer, and mentions in an update that if there’s enough interest after the election, he may do a commercial batch for sale, though this time named InaugurAle, or something like that.

Label art by Drew Art Carlisle.

 

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Uncategorized

Happy Halloween

October 31, 2008 By Jay Brooks

Happy Halloween! I just put the kids to bed, a real challenge given that they were still on a sugar high from sampling their booty for trick or treating earlier this evening. Some family came over for dinner and we all went out around the neighborhood — six kids and six adults — and watched the kids load up on candy. Here are some random Halloween things I wanted to share.

Is it just me, or does it look like the pumpkin is smiling while he’s being stabbed it in the eye?

See what happens if you make poor choices.

 

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Holidays

Halloween Beer Costumes, Pt. 7: Beer Bottles

October 31, 2008 By Jay Brooks

This is part seven of seven days of beer-themed Halloween costumes. Today’s theme is beer bottles, of which, like cans, there are surprisingly few. Happy Halloween. Enjoy.

 
Genuine Premium Beer

 

Genuine Premium Beer – Green Bottle
 

 

Bottle Hat
 

 

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Holidays

Baptist Blasts Beer

October 30, 2008 By Jay Brooks

What is it about Baptists in particular that makes them so damned anti-everything, and beer in particular? Much of the rest of the Christian world seems perfectly able to turn the cheek and be tolerant of their fellow man, even if they don’t see the world quite the same way. I know many, many Christians who not only have no issue with the moderate consumption of alcohol, but even partake of it themselves with no concern whatsoever of being damned to hell for all time. Of course, there are so many different strains of Baptist thought that it’s as difficult to generalize what exactly they believe. If they can’t even agree on what to believe, I have a hard time being told what I should think by any one of them.

At monasteries throughout the Middle Ages, monks perfected the art of brewing beer in perfect harmony with their religion. They still do so today in at least the seven official Trappist Monasteries (six in Belgium and one in the Netherlands), along with many more unofficial ones. Some of the best beer in the world is made by these monks. And they’ve been doing so happily for centuries longer than the Baptist Church even existed. Obviously, Baptists can believe anything they wish to, but what I really want them to stop doing is telling everyone else what to think and believe, especially when they need look no further than other Christian groups to see that not everyone agrees that alcohol is the evil they believe it to be.

Case in point is an opinion hit piece by the Reverend Jim Sickmeyer, Pastor of the Worthington Baptist Temple in Minnesota. His letter complaining that ‘God & Beer’ article should not have been printed was published in today’s Worthington Daily Globe. It was sent to me by Tomme Arthur of The Lost Abbey, who takes some of the brunt in Sickmeyer’s opinion piece. Thanks Tomme. Keep an eye on his blog, too, as he’s assured me he’ll also be addressing it there. He’s also sent a letter to the editor in Worthington, too.

While I’m not 100% sure, I believe the article Sickmeyer is objecting to must be Finding God At A Beer Festival by AP Religion Correspondent Eric Gorski. It was picked up and syndicated fairly widely the week after GABF. I wrote about it, as well, because it was a great example of Christianity not taking itself too seriously and having some fun with beer and religion, something Sickmeyer either missed completely or was unable to grasp.

He starts his rant presuming he wasn’t the only one “appalled” by the article and even calls The Lost Abbey a “blasphemous business.” He probably wasn’t the “only” one, but the number is most likely far fewer than he might hope. If you know Tomme Arthur, co-owner and brewmaster of Port Brewing and The Lost Abbey, then you also know he’s a good Catholic, husband and father. He’s not exactly a poster boy for evil. Sickmeyer goes on to cite Bible verses that supposedly “show God’s attitude toward alcohol” and claims he “could go on with many more verses” showing God hates alcohol.

Well, guess what, you could find just as many verses that show support and/or tolerance for drinking in the Bible. That’s the great thing about the Bible, you can find support for virtually any idea. Alcohol is mentioned almost 250 times, and by far its use is most often mentioned as being “accepted as [a] normal part of culture” (58 times). Twenty-seven times it’s “called a blessing from God.” By contrast, only 17 times are warnings offered against abusing it. But even then, the warnings are about abusing it, not abstaining completely. For a full list, check out Daniel Whitfield’s Alcohol and the Bible, which includes a full listing of References to Alcohol in the Bible. Being able to point out one or two that supports Sickmeyer’s narrow view of alcohol is a fool’s game. It proves nothing except his own personal bias and interpretation.

He goes on to cite the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, saying that “over 100,000 deaths occur each year due to alcohol.” That statistic is just plain wrong. In 2006, “there were 13,470 fatalities in crashes involving an alcohol-impaired driver.” That’s assuming you even accept that statistic, which I don’t. I don’t want to suggest that we should take drinking and driving lightly or not discourage it, but inflating a statistic by nearly 750% does his cause no favors, and in fact shows he’s not above lying (a violation of the 8th Commandment) to push his agenda. He follows up that false stat with the following. “I’m sure God is not happy about that. Isn’t it amazing how alcohol brings out the hypocrisy in society?” Yes, it is quite amazing, and what’s more amazing is how it shows itself in such unexpected places.

He ends by voicing his appreciation that the newspaper has in the past taken a “fairly unbiased approach” in its religion section, but finding the offending article “over the top” and believes it should never have been published. I can only conclude that by “unbiased,” he means in agreement with his own views. He does say he “welcome[s] hearing from anyone who agrees or disagrees with me for that matter.”

But his conclusion is a little “over the top” for my tastes — and I suspect for Tomme, too — as he calls on Tomme Arthur and the gang from the Lost Abbey to “repent before its too late.” Yeah, I think it’s always a good idea to attack and threaten someone’s immortal soul as a means of trying to win them over to your way of thinking. That’s the very definition of self-righteous: “confident of one’s own righteousness, esp. when smugly moralistic and intolerant of the opinions and behavior of others.” I don’t even think he’s speaking for a majority of Christians, and possibly not even for other Baptists. His church appears to be an independent and not affiliated with any of the several Baptist associations of churches.

Obviously a letter to the editor is merely one man’s opinion, and people should be free to voice their beliefs. But by characterizing it as from his Baptist church and citing Biblical authority and expertise, I think it rises above mere opinion. He’s basically trying to make the case that God himself is against Tomme Arthur, The Lost Abbey and even beer itself, as he presumes to speak for God. That kind of rhetoric is best left in the pulpit, at least in my opinion. But then I respect the separation of church and state. Plus our founding fathers liked a good beer from time to time and saw little contradiction in it. I’m with them.

 

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Religion & Beer

Halloween Beer Costumes, Pt. 6: Beer Cans

October 30, 2008 By Jay Brooks

This is part six of seven days of beer-themed Halloween costumes. Today’s theme is beer cans, of which there are surprisingly few. Enjoy

 
Chugalaug

 

Buzzed Nice
 

 

Buzzed Lite
 

 
Budd Light

 

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Cans, Holidays

Election Night At Triple Rock

October 29, 2008 By Jay Brooks

If you’re looking for something to do or somewhere to go election night and watch the results, Triple Rock Brewery in Berkeley is hosting an Election Night Party, with specials for people wearing their “I voted” stickers. Good news (or, dare I say it, bad news) is always better shared over a beer.

Join us at Triple Rock Brewery and Alehouse, as we “TRIPLE ROCK THE VOTE”. Starting Thursday October 30th, we will be tapping our “Votemeal” Ale, a single hopped Pale Ale with Stryian Goldings and brewed with whole oats and a touch of flaked barley.

We will also be serving Democratic and Republican plates from our grill that will feature ingredients from both sides of the race. First up, flown in from Chicago, ½ pound hotdogs with all the fixings you desire. Second up, Caribou stew, made from Alaskan Caribou and spiced to perfection.

Then on Election day, Tuesday Nov. 4th, join us as we serve up the “Votemeal” ale three ways; cask-conditioned via our hand pumps, nitro tap and through our regular bar taps. We will be serving up specials on the beer, for everyone wearing their “I voted today” stickers all day. So get out there and vote and join us after to watch our states turn blue and red until the polls close.

 

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Uncategorized

Halloween Beer Costumes, Pt. 5: Glassware

October 29, 2008 By Jay Brooks

This is part five of seven days of beer-themed Halloween costumes. Today’s theme is glassware, costumes of mugs and pint glasses. Enjoy

 
Mug

 

Mug Hats
 

 

 

 

 

Mug Purse
 

 
Guinness Pint Glass
 

 
Other Pint Glasses
 

 

 
Pilsner Glasses
 

 
Oktoberfest Hat

 

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Holidays

Halloween Beer Costumes, Pt. 4: German Folk Costumes

October 28, 2008 By Jay Brooks

This is part four of seven days of beer-themed Halloween costumes. Today’s theme is German folk costumes. These are the Dirndls and Lederhosen usually associated with Oktoberfest in Munich. While we think of Oktoberfest as a beer festival, that’s not how the Germans see it. To them it’s a folk festival, and the Dirndl and Lederhosen (and Trachten) are traditional German dress. Not surprisingly, there are a great number of these costumes available, especially the Dirndls. In an effort to not be labeled a sexist by my feminist friends (and wife), I’ve tried to show nearly as many male as female costumes in this category. Enjoy

 
Dirndls and Lederhosen

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

A Bavarian Hat

 

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Holidays

« Previous Page
Next Page »

Find Something

Northern California Breweries

Please consider purchasing my latest book, California Breweries North, available from Amazon, or ask for it at your local bookstore.

Recent Comments

  • Ernie Dewing on Historic Beer Birthday: Charles William Bergner 
  • Steve 'Pudgy' De Rose on Historic Beer Birthday: Jacob Schmidt
  • Jay Brooks on Beer Birthday: Bill Owens
  • Steve 'Pudgy' De Rose on Beer Birthday: Charles Finkel
  • Steve 'Pudgy' De Rose on Beer Birthday: Bill Owens

Recent Posts

  • Historic Beer Birthday: Christian Heuser January 25, 2026
  • Historic Beer Birthday: Jacob Knecht January 25, 2026
  • Beer In Ads #5181: Turn Winter Into Spring January 24, 2026
  • Historic Beer Birthday: Philip Bissinger January 24, 2026
  • Historic Beer Birthday: Gottlieb Muhlhauser January 24, 2026

BBB Archives

Feedback

Head Quarter
This site is hosted and maintained by H25Q.dev. Any questions or comments for the webmaster can be directed here.