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Beer In Art #64: Sam Yeates’ The Returnable

February 8, 2010 By Jay Brooks

art-beer
Today’s works of art is cleverly called The Returnable, and is by a contemporary Texas poster artist named Sam Yeates.

Sam-Yeates_Lone-Star-Returnable

This poster was done for Lone Star beer in 1978, when the idea of the Space Shuttle being reusable was still novel concept. So the play on words for returnable bottles and spaceships is pretty clever, I’d say. According to his Past Works/Prints Available page, prints of the The Returnable are available for sale.

Here’s a short biography of Yeates from his website:

Born and raised in the Stephenville, Texas area, Yeates graduated from North Texas State University with a BFA in Drawing and Painting in 1974. After teaching at a private school in Dallas for about a year, Yeates moved to Austin and soon began working at the Armadillo World Headquarters, a music concert hall. Posters promoting shows followed and led to promotional art for Lone Star Beer during the 80’s. Through this medium, Yeates’ art traveled around the world. Through the years, he has continued to paint and show his work in the San Francisco, Dallas, Austin and Taos areas.

You can see more of Yeates’ work at his own website, along with the Cohen Rese Gallery and the Wilder Nightingale Fine Art Gallery.

Filed Under: Art & Beer, Beers Tagged With: Southern States, Texas

Bistro Double IPA Winners 2010

February 6, 2010 By Jay Brooks

bistro
Pizza Port‘s Welcome Back Wipeout IPA was chosen best in show at the 10th annual Double IPA Festival today at the Bistro in Hayward, California. That’s the second year in a row that a Pizza Port beer has won. The full winner’s list is below.

  • 1st Place: Welcome Back Wipeout IPA, Pizza Port Brewing
  • 2nd Place: HopSauce, Rubicon Brewing
  • 3rd Place: II Max Imperial IPA, Triple Rock Brewing
  • People’s Choice Award: Russian River Pliny the Younger

Below is a video of Vic and Cynthia announcing the winners.

Filed Under: Beers, Events, SF Beer Week Tagged With: Awards, Bay Area, California, Northern California

SF Beer Week Begins!

February 6, 2010 By Jay Brooks

SFBW2010-full-400
Last night, SF Beer Week officially kicked-off at the Opening Gala held at Yerba Buena Center for the Arts. It was a great event, with big kudos to Meg Gill, Rich Higgins and Dave McLean (among many others) for pulling it off in such grand fashion. It was a fun time seeing so many friends, drinking so many great beers and I was honored again to deliver the opening toast. Only nine more days to go!

I’ll post more photos from the event as time permits, but now it’s off to Hayward for the Bistro’s Double IPA Festival. Perhaps I’ll see you there.

sfbreerweek-toast
Me and Rich Higgins toasting the opening of SF Beer Week. (photo by Mike Condie)

Filed Under: Events, SF Beer Week Tagged With: Beer Festivals

Guinness Ads #4: Two Heads Are Better Than One

February 6, 2010 By Jay Brooks

guinness-toucan
The fourth Guinness poster on our John Gilroy odyssey is a double, this time featuring not one, but two pint glasses of Guinness. The tagline is the also popular “Guinness Is Good For You” which is used on many later ads.

guinness-good-for-you-two

Filed Under: Art & Beer, Beers Tagged With: Advertising, Guinness, Ireland

Beer In Ads #38: Gangloff

February 5, 2010 By Jay Brooks

ad-billboard
This Friday is also the three-year anniversary of The Sessions, a.k.a. Beer Blogging Friday. When I created the logo for the Session, I used this Gangloff beer ad from 1930. I chose it for its simplicity and clean lines. I think it’s worked well, and so it made the obvious choice for today’s ad.

biere-gangloff

As far as I can tell, Brasserie Gangloff was an Alsatian brewery that closed in 1970. The only photo I could find of it was after it was bombed on July 16, 1943 during World War II.

brasserie-gangloff

Filed Under: Art & Beer, Beers Tagged With: Advertising, France, History

Session #36: Cask-Conditioned Beer

February 5, 2010 By Jay Brooks

session-the
Our 36th Session marks the three-year anniversary of our little project, spanning over 1,000 posts covering 36 topics, including today’s, which is cask-conditioned beer. Our host, Tom Cizauskas, from Yours For Good Fermentables, wants everybody to write from almost any angle so long as it’s about cask-conditioned beer. He gave a litany of ideas, which I earlier summarized as follows:

  • Ale vs. Lager Knockdown: “can lagers be cask-conditioned?”
  • Beer Ticker: “who makes the best, and who serves the best?”
  • Cellarmanship: “how should a pub handle a cask?”
  • Cultural Debate: “how Americans have ‘extremed’ the cask experience, or how Americans need further lessons from the British.”
  • Definitional: ” other than that CAMRA description, what ‘is’ cask-conditioned ale?”
  • Encomium: “how cask-conditioned ale will transform the world.”
  • Geek: ” at what temperature to serve, to sparkle or not sparkle, and how clear should clear be?”
  • International: “where was the most unexpected place you drank a pint of cask-conditioned ale?”
  • Lifestyle Essay: “how you first lost your cask-conditioned ale virginity.”
  • Pesce PETA: “can one be a vegetarian and drink cask ale?”
  • Style Harangue: “why saisons, for example, should have no place in a cask, or should.”
  • Zymurgical & Practical: “how does your brewery commercially produce and transport cask-conditioned ale?”

“Make it a sad story. Make it a love story. But … make it!” But ending with this entreaty to participate. “Above all, let’s have perspective folks, perspective! Cask-conditioned ale is not a matter of life and death; it’s much more.”

session_logo_all_text_200

I’ve been so swamped with SF Beer Week that I’ll have to keep this month’s Session post short, no small feat for me. So I figure I’ll go for “lifestyle essay” and tell the tale of how I lost my “cask-conditioned ale virginity.” It was my first trip to the UK, with my first wife (didn’t know that, yeah, I forget sometimes, too, it was so long ago) and we rented a flat near Clapham Junction. But we arrived one day before the flat was ready for us, so we had to find a hotel for one night. For no better reason than I loved the old Ealing Comedy Passport To Pimlico, I picked a small hotel in Pimlico, a small area in central London, officially part of the City of Westminster.

After checking in, we went for a walk and ended up at the Orange Brewery on Pimlico Road. I didn’t realize it at the time, but it had only opened that same year, in 1983. It was a brewpub, with the brewery in the basement. I remember that because I had a peek at it. After flying all night from the East Coast and lugging our bags on the Tube and to the hotel on a humid August day, I was pretty hot, tired and thirsty. So when I saw this corner bar, we immediately ducked inside.

orangebrewerypimlico

Over 25 years later, I can barely remember what I ordered. What I do remember is how much I immediately took to it, loved it in fact. Up until that point I’d pretty much taken for granted that all beer was served cold. To have one at cellar temperature was a revelation. It tasted so good. So I had another. And another. I was immediately hooked, though it would be years before I could indulge such passions on a regular basis. It’s really only been in the last decade or so that cask-conditioned ales have become more commonplace on this side of the Atlantic. While hardly ubiquitous, you can find them pretty easily, at least in the Bay Area where I live. We have our own local firkin festival that’s been going for about 6 or 7 years. There’s definitely a growing awareness and appreciation for them. We may never get to the point where the UK is — trying to save their real ale — but I think it’s safe to say that cask is here to stay and should continue to grow for the foreseeable future. I, for one, am very happy about that development.

Filed Under: Beers, The Session Tagged With: Cask

Germany Retakes The Title

February 5, 2010 By Jay Brooks

Schorsch
It only seems like yesterday that BrewDog’s 32% a.b.v. Tactical Nuclear Penguin captured the title of world’s strongest beer, besting German brewer Schorschbrau’s 31% beer. But now the German brewery has retaken the title with a whopping 40% monster of a beer. Schorschbrau describes the beer as follows:

The currently Strongest Beer in the World: 40% Alcohol

Available in 0.33 liter ceramic bottles, personally signed and hand-numbered by the Braumeister himself. Each bottle is sealed with wax by hand and comes in a wooden case with a transparent window on one side.

August Beer Examiner Lonnie Best has the full story as Germany wins another victory in the extreme beer wars.

40dl

Filed Under: Beers, News Tagged With: Extreme Beer, Germany

You Say You Want A Beer Revolution

February 5, 2010 By Jay Brooks

beer-revolution
Oakland’s newest beer store is set to open today. Beer Revolution, located at 464 3rd Street in Oakland, just off Broadway. Co-owners Rebecca and Fraggle plan to open the doors today at Noon. Stop by and check it out. Better yet, pick up a few bottles to let them know you support better beer stores.

beer-revolution

Filed Under: Beers, News Tagged With: Announcements, Beer Stores, California, Northern California, Oakland

Beer In Ads #37: National Bohemian, Oh Boy-What A Beer!

February 4, 2010 By Jay Brooks

ad-billboard
Thursday’s ad is for Baltimore’s National Bohemian. There’s not much info about the ad, though I’m guessing based on the indistinct background that it’s more late-50s to early 60s. I love the cartoony bartender (The Natty Boh mascot Mr. Boh, from the 1950s to the present) with the clean, empty bar showing the slide down to the unseen patron at the end of the bar.

nationalbohemian2

Filed Under: Art & Beer, Beers Tagged With: Advertising, Eastern States, History, Maryland

Super Bowl Shut-Ins

February 4, 2010 By Jay Brooks

football
I don’t recall who originally Tweeted this, but I believe it was one of the Alströms, either Todd or Jason, so thanks to whichever one of you passed along these interesting Super Bowl statistics. The statistics I’m talking about came from the NielsenWire, the same folks that tally who watches which TV shows. While it’s believed by most people that the Super Bowl is a huge revenue generator for alcohol, especially beer, and snack foods, it would appear that’s not actually the case. In fact, the Super Bowl weekend actually ranks seventh. According to Nielsen’s research, 9 in 10 Will Watch Super Bowl at Home; Most will Spend the Same or Less on Food and Beverages. According to the data, 90% of everyone who watches the Saints and Colts vie for the Lombardi trophy this Sunday will be either at home or a friend/relative’s house. Of those, 95% are planning on buying less beer and food. That’s welcome news for grocery stores but not so good for bars, brewpubs and restaurants.

superbowl-plan
Here’s the breakdown of where people will watch the Super Bowl.

superbowl-spend
Here’s a chart of football watching spending. Sadly, crackers outsell my beloved potato chips.

Filed Under: Beers, Editorial, Events Tagged With: Football, Sports, Statistics, Super Bowl

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