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New Beer’s Day Session Topic Announced

December 9, 2009 By Jay Brooks

session-the
Our 35th Session falls smack on New Year’s Day, January 1, 2010 and the hosts, Christina Perozzi & Hallie Beaune, have chosen an appropriate topic for the holiday: New Beer’s Resolutions. Their announcement is currently up on Beer For Chicks, but come the new year, the Session will be on the newly launching The Beer Chicks, a new website by Christina Perozzi & Hallie Beaune, authors of The Naked Pint. In a nutshell, here’s what they mean by New Beer’s Resolutions:

So we want to know what was your best and worst of beer for 2009? What beer mistakes did you make? What beer resolutions do you have for 2010? What are your beer regrets and embarrassing moments? What are you hoping to change about your beer experience in 2010?

The month of January, of course, is named for the Roman god Janus, whose domain was gates, doors, doorways, beginnings and endings. He was the perfect choice when the calendar was changed around 713 B.C.E. when January and February were added to the Roman calendar (before that March and Spring were the beginning of the year). Janus is often depicted with two faces, one looking forward to the future and the other looking back to the past. That’s why the first holiday of the year is the ideal moment to stop and reflect on the year that just ended and to contemplate what path lies ahead in the coming one. Let’s hear how beer figures into that in 2010!

Filed Under: The Session Tagged With: Announcements, Holidays

Beer In Art #55: Gregg Hinlicky’s Brewer Portraits

December 6, 2009 By Jay Brooks

art-beer
Today’s works of art are part of a larger project undertaken by New Jersey illustrator Gregg Hinlicky. A decade ago, he began an undertaking to paint portraits of his favorite brewers.

Hinlicky-garret_oliver
Garret Oliver, from Brooklyn Brewery.

The original ten paintings were quite large, averaging seven-feet tall, whereas later portraits are three-feet by four, which has allowed him to speed up and increase output.

Hinlicky-John_Maier
John Maier, from Rogue.

The goal for Hinlicky it to paint at least thirty brewer portraits with an eye toward ultimately publishing a book of the portraits.

Hinlicky-Fritz_Maytag
Fritz Maytag, from Anchor Brewery.

Hinlicky attended the Newark School of Fine & Industrial Art and held several design and marketing positions before joining D&R Communications, which has been his day job for over seven years.

Hinlicky-henry
I’m not sure what brewery this is, but the painting’s titled “Henry.”

I particularly like this peek inside an unnamed brewery.

Hinlicky-Climax_10th
It looks like he’s also done the logo for Climax Brewing, shown here on the label for their 10th Anniversary Ale.

Hinlicky does sell his work and takes commissions, too. If interested, you can contact him through his website.

Paintings used with the permission of the artist. All works © Gregg Hinlicky.

Filed Under: Art & Beer Tagged With: New Jersey

Puttin’ Up The Brookston Xmas Tree

December 5, 2009 By Jay Brooks

christmas
My favorite parts of celebrating the holiday season all involve the originally pagan rites like the mistletoe, the yule log, exchanging gifts and, of course, the Christmas tree. We got our tree last night and decorated it this morning. My mother was somewhat obsessed with Christmas, and did a completely different tree theme every year, often making all the ornaments herself. She’d also buy a few ornaments every year and add them to a box for me and, when she passed away in 1981, I inherited all of the ornaments. I’ve continued the tradition of buying new ornaments every year, though I don’t have a whole new tree each year. Instead, the family looks through the boxes and boxes of ornaments and we choose the ones that catch our fancy each year to create our decorated tree. Many of the ornaments reflect our passions, so Porter has train ornaments and Alice has princesses. Over the years I’ve amassed ornaments of some of my peculiar fetishes, such as globes, clothespins, snowmen, birds, potatoes, bowling pins, the Packers and, of course, beer. So this morning I took a photo of each of my beer ornaments, which are presented below in he slideshow. Hoppy Christmas.

Beer: A 6-Pack

Below is a slideshow of my beer-themed Christmas ornaments. This Flickr gallery is best viewed in full screen. To view it that way, after clicking on the arrow in the center to start the slideshow, click on the button on the bottom right with the four arrows pointing outward on it, to see the photos in glorious full screen. Once in full screen slideshow mode, click on “Show Info” to identify each photo.

Filed Under: Art & Beer, Beers, Breweries, Just For Fun Tagged With: Christmas, Holidays, Photo Gallery

Beer In Ads #8: Eugene Oge’s Biere au Diable

December 5, 2009 By Jay Brooks

ad-billboard
Today’s ad is an old classic, by Eugene Oge, a French illustrator who did a number of great beer adverts during his lifetime from 1861-1936. He was a major figure in the Belle Epoque and did many outstanding ads for resorts, food, and all sorts of beverage brands. This ad, known as Biere au Diable (Beer to the Devil) was done in 1912. I’ll undoubtedly feature more of his posters, but this is probably my favorite. I love the bright colors, the contrast and the simplicity of it. As they (you know who “they” are) say, “in heaven there is no beer.” If true, then this is where we must go to drink it. I’m not spending eternity without beer. I’ll meet you there.
eugene-oge-biere-au-diable

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

Session #34: Stumbling Home

December 4, 2009 By Jay Brooks

session-the
Our 34th Session is hosted by Two Parts Rye, a quartet of bloggers in Ohio. Their topic is bringing us home, so to speak, with the provocatively titled Stumbling Home. Blog host Jim explains:

It’s time to give a shout out to your favorite watering hole. How good are the beers? Any interesting cast of characters? What are your drinking buddies like? They probably need to be embarrassed on the internet. Now’s the time.

You don’t have to limit yourself to one. Feel free to reminisce about the good old days if you like. Maybe you are a shut-in like this guy, and don’t get out that much, talk about the home bar.

There is a catch. This booze stuff has interesting side effects. That means, you can’t get behind the wheel. You gotta walk, take public transportation, or be a regular supporter of your favorite taxi company. Bicycles are acceptable but you still need to be careful.

While I’m not exactly a shut-in, having kids makes going out to bars just for the heck of it a pretty tough proposition. I don’t mind taking them, or them being in bars — I grew up going to bars with my parents — but they’re not that keen and it rarely fits with other stiff they have going on, doing homework, etc. Most of my bar visits have a specific purpose, for work, a tasting, an event of some kind. As a result, I don’t have a local, sadly. There’s really only two bars in walking distance from the one-horse town we live in. That’s the suburbs for you.

session_logo_all_text_200

So instead I’ll go back to the beginning. The first “local” I ever had was as an 18-year old stationed in Virginia shortly after I joined the Army after high school. I played in a military band and every musician in the Army, Navy and Marine Corps all had to attend a six-month music school near Norfolk. For reasons that pass understanding the locals hated the military and would literally harass and insult anyone with a crewcut. I still chuckle whenever I hear people talk about how universal the support for our military is. Not in Little Creek, Virginia in the late 1970s. But here’s the upside. There was a bar on base, crazily named the El Crocadrillo. The selection sucked, but the prices were like happy hour or lower all the time. We could be found there most evenings and stumbling home to our barracks later each night. Good times, sort of.

Afterward, I was stationed in New York City for the remainder of my tour of duty, playing with the 26th Army Band. Every bar in five boroughs was accessible by boat, bus or subway train. That was great. We spent a lot of our time in jazz clubs, from obscure hidden lofts you had to know the right people to find to the Village Vanguard. That’s where my love of better beer began. But as for stumbling home, the whole city was in range. Navigating the New York subway system took a certain skill after an evening of drinking and listening to music, but once you learned to get around, a whole new world opened up.

support_local_pub

The closest I ever came to a “Cheers” type of environment was the Britannia Arms in Cupertino. The first decade I was in California, I lived in the South Bay, first Santa Clara, then Sunnyvale, San Jose, Cupertino then San Jose again before moving to Oakland when my wife started law school at Berkeley’s Boalt Hall right after we married. But before we met, the gang of friends I hung out with would go to the Britannia Arms usually two or three times a week and at a minimum every Tuesday for quiz night. For several years we had a team — Abbey Something (a reference to “Young Frankenstein”) — and they had “seasons” for the quiz which encouraged us not to miss a quiz night. We got to know a lot of the other regular quiz folks and I’m still very good friends with one of the regular musicians we met there, and he even played at our wedding. They also had good pub food, a good selection of imports and even a few of those then new-fangled micros. I got to know the ex-pat British owners, Tom and Sue, fairly well. When I published my first book, “The Bars of Santa Clara County, A Beer Drinker’s Guide to Silicon Valley,” we had the launch party at the Britannia Arms. I miss the routine of having a local, a default place to go.

When I read about the English pub scene, plus the times I’ve experienced it, I feel sorry that here in the states we don’t really have any equivalent. Taverns historically used to be common meeting places, but Prohibition killed them off. As far as I know, they didn’t have that family friendly atmosphere that springs to mind when I think of the British pub. I’m sure a lot of that is idealized and isn’t like it’s portrayed in the countless British television programs I grew up watching or even like the American show “Cheers,” either. But the English pub is always portrayed as being family friendly, and that’s how I think bars really should be; bright, cheery places where you can get good beer, a hot meal, with music to listen to, books and magazines to read, and games to play. Fun for the whole family. It’s the rare bar in America that can boast such atmosphere, and most of the ones I know are imitations of British pubs transplanted over here. I get dirty looks when the kids come with me to a bar. That’s because of how drinking is demonized here, but I loved being in bars as a kid. Drunk people were very entertaining and always willing to buy a kid a root beer. They were wonderlands.

Still, I lament that American bars are nothing close to how I perceive the English pub, that it is a place that’s more than just for drinking. That said, I think the better beer bars, the ones highlighting craft beer or better imports, are more hospitable and inviting than the average corner bar that carries only the major big brands. If only I lived closer to them, I might find myself stumbling home much more often.

Filed Under: Beers, Breweries, The Session Tagged With: Geography, Home, Place

A Heavenly Take on BrewDog’s Brouhaha

December 4, 2009 By Jay Brooks

thank-heaven
You may recall that earlier in the week I wrote about British beer writer Roger Protz and his remarks regarding BrewDog’s Tactical Nuclear Penguin. I don’t believe I was alone in thinking his observations were not the highlight of a long, distinguished career. I just read the response of Thank Heaven for Beer, and Mike’s take, in a post entitled Roger Protz Gets it Wrong: An Argument of Assumptions and Insult is nothing short of brilliant. Based on its length and the passion of his arguments, I have to count Mike as a kindred spirit. Well done.

Filed Under: Breweries, Editorial Tagged With: Prohibitionists

Anchor’s Annual Christmas Party ’09

December 3, 2009 By Jay Brooks

anchor-xmas09
The lovely missus and I attended the annual Christmas party at Anchor Brewery, one of our favorite events of the year, and one of the few my wife regularly attends. Good friends, good food and great beer. I always start with a Liberty Ale — a perennial favorite — and also finally had a chance to try their new Humming Ale. The Humming Ale is brewed with an “unusual hop variety called Nelson Sauvin” and was brewed to commemorate the 30th anniversary at the brewery’s present location on Mariposa Street in San Francisco.

Me and the Missus at Anchor
Me and Mrs. Brookston Beer Bulletin all dressed up and somewhere to go.

Though there was some terrific food this year, as always, I can never get enough Maytag Blue Cheese. There was also a tasty brisket with sage mashed potatoes, and a veggie table that included some wonderful au gratin potatoes. But my favorite was Pumpkin Soup Shooters with toasted mini-turkey and cranberry Panini.

This year's Xmas Box Tree
The annual tree made from Christmas Ale mother cartons and decorated with bottles and bows.

The dessert was Spiced Gingerbread with dried fruit compote and Anchor Porter ice cream. The ice cream was so good I had seconds of just that, which I found paired really well with the Christmas Ale.

Below is a slideshow of this year’s Anchor Christmas Party. This Flickr gallery is best viewed in full screen. To view it that way, after clicking on the arrow in the center to start the slideshow, click on the button on the bottom right with the four arrows pointing outward on it, to see the photos in glorious full screen. Once in full screen slideshow mode, click on “Show Info” to identify each photo.

Filed Under: Beers, Breweries, Events, Food & Beer Tagged With: California, Northern California, Photo Gallery, San Francisco

Two Companies, 265 Brands

December 2, 2009 By Jay Brooks

abib millercoors
Anat Baron, who created the film Beer Wars, according to a recent post, “has received hundreds of emails and tweets since the film came out asking for a list of the beer brands owned by the 2 big brewers.” In Who Owns What?, she posted a first draft using IRI Data for the 4 week period ending 11/1/09. I spent the evening hastily putting together a second draft, which undoubtedly is still not complete, but I think moves the ball forward. My list of The Big Brewer’s Brands is on a separate page. Please let me know who’s missing or what I got wrong, as I didn’t spend as much time on it as I might have liked.

Filed Under: Beers, Breweries, Just For Fun Tagged With: Big Brewers

Best Use Of An Old Computer

December 1, 2009 By Jay Brooks

websites
Thanks to Julie from Bruisin’ Ales who tweeted this my way, but this has to be the best use for an old computer ever.

computer-beer

It’s posted at a number of websites like Neatorama and WebUrbanist, which leads you to an Italian gadget blog but the trail goes cold in Slovakia at an inscrutable website called Dusky.

Filed Under: Beers, Just For Fun Tagged With: DIY, Draft Beer

Tactical Penguin Goes Nuclear

November 30, 2009 By Jay Brooks

brew-dog
Unless you’ve been ducking and covering under a rock, you no doubt saw that, while we were sitting down to eat turkey on Thursday, Scotland’s BrewDog released Tactical Nuclear Penguin, which they’re touting as the new champion “world’s strongest beer.” Weighing in at a robust 32% a.b.v., it bested the current American contender, Samuel Adams Utopias, by a whopping 5%. As is typical of the self-styled punks of beer, the release was amid controversy. Predictably, anti-alcohol groups in the UK wasted no time denouncing the beer’s strength as irresponsible, a laughable claim given Scotland’s whisky industry. Jack Law, head of Scotland’s own Alcohol Focus Scotland, said “it is child-like attention-seeking by a company that should be more responsible. The fact that they have achieved a new world record is not admirable. It is a product with a lot of alcohol in it – that’s all. To dress it up as anything else is cynical. It’s as strong as whisky, so you have to ask whether this is actually a beer or a spirit – it’s clearly a spirit.” So obviously the Scots have no shortage of ignorant blowhards in their neo-prohibitionist organizations, too. The fact that there are only 500 bottles and each one sells for £30 (almost $50) and is only a 330 ml (roughly 11.2 oz.) would suggest this is not cause for widespread panic, as it’s hardly going to be selling out of the local Tesco anytime soon.

Perhaps more surprising, one of BrewDog’s bitterest critics of late has been Roger Protz, the grand old man of CAMRA and British beer writing generally. I usually have great respect for Roger and all he’s done for beer, but he seems to have lost his mooring on this one and drifted out into the waters off insaneland. In today’s BrewDog Go Bonkers , he calls the BrewDog lads all sorts of unflattering names and accuses them of all manner of impropriety, even incorrectly accusing the new beer of not actually being a beer — it clearly is — and gets the barest details of its manufacture wrong, despite the fact that BrewDog’s website includes a video explaining how they created Tactical Nuclear Penguin.

He even throws his hat into the ring with the likes of Jack Law, head of Alcohol Focus Scotland, which I find almost unforgivable, especially given Law’s churlish quote about BrewDog’s “childlike attention-seeking.” Um, gentlemen, what exactly do you think marketing is? The very point is to get attention. You can disagree with the way a company goes about the marketing of their products, but calling it “childlike” or suggesting that it’s seeking attention is like saying the goal of advertising is to sell things. Duh. Paging Captain Obvious.

tnp-1
James Watt in his penguin suit, with his newest beer.

Just two weeks earlier, in Enough Is Enough, Protz was again telling BrewDog’s James Watt and Martin Dickie it was time they “grew up and stopped behaving like a couple of precocious teenagers standing on a street corner with back-to-front baseball caps screaming for attention.” Wow. Watts referred to Protz, when he retweeted this, as “Grandpa Protz” and I think he may be onto it. I can’t imagine telling a brewer to grow up in print. That takes more cheek than I possess. They’re all adults, conducting their business the way they want to. But apparently taking their cue more from American sensationalist brewers than the often stodgy traditions of UK beer really ruffled Protz’s feathers. I know Roger to have strong opinions and to be a great champion of English brewing traditions, but these two anti-BrewDog posts seem more like personal attacks, as if they’ve offended him directly. As much as I hate to say it, he comes across as out of touch, a sentiment apparently shared by a great number of people who left comments to his posts. There were an enormous number pointing out the flaws in his reasoning and calling him on being set in his ways and unable to appreciate anything outside classic English beer’s range. Read the comments, they’re as illuminating as Protz himself, and are in many cases highly entertaining on their own.

tnp-2
James Watt out of his penguin suit, with bottles of Tactical Nuclear Penguin.

From the press release:

This beer is about pushing the boundaries, it is about taking innovation in beer to a whole new level. It is about achieving something which has never before been done and putting Scotland firmly on the map for progressive, craft beers.

This beer is bold, irreverent and uncompromising. A beer with a soul and a purpose. A statement of intent. A modern day rebellion for the craft beer proletariat in our struggle to over throw the faceless bourgeoisie oppression of corporate, soulless beer.’

The Antarctic name inducing schizophrenia of this uber-imperial stout originates from the amount of time it spent exposed to extreme cold. This beer began life as a 10% imperial stout 18 months ago. The beer was aged for 8 months in an Isle of Arran whisky cask and 8 months in an Islay cask making it our first double cask aged beer. After an intense 16 month, the final stages took a ground breaking approach by storing the beer at -20 degrees for three weeks to get it to 32%.

For the big chill the beer was put into containers and transported to the cold store of a local ice cream factory where it endured 21 days at penguin temperatures. Alcohol freezes at a lower temperature than water. As the beer got colder BrewDog Chief Engineer, Steven Sutherland decanted the beer periodically, only ice was left in the container, creating more intensity of flavours and a stronger concentration of alcohol for the next phase of freezing. The process was repeated until it reached 32%.

Pete Brown, by contrast, has a far more measured reaction to BrewDog’s new beer. We agreed on what was the best part of the press release.

Beer has a terrible reputation in Britain, it’s ignorant to assume that a beer can’t be enjoyed responsibly like a nice dram or a glass of fine wine. A beer like Tactical Nuclear Penguin should be enjoyed in spirit sized measures. It pairs fantastically with vanilla bean white chocolate it really brings out the complexity of the beer and complements the powerful, smoky and cocoa flavours.

Pete takes the right approach IMHO, wanting to focus on the beer itself, which he describes as “an Imperial Stout that has been matured in wooden casks for eighteen months. It has then been frozen to minus twenty degrees at the local ice cream factory in Fraserburgh. By freezing the beer to concentrate it this way, they get the alcoholic strength.” Hard to say what it might taste like, but Pete speculates it will have “very rich, smooth, mellow and complex flavour.” Also, like him, I’m certainly keen to find out. I recently attended a Utopias beer dinner, my third tasting of this year’s version, which is 27%, tantalizingly close to Penguin’s 32%. It’s a wonderful beer, but its release was not accompanied by the frenzy of this beer. Likewise, other very strong beers like Schorschbräu (at 31%), Hair of the Dog Dave (at 29%), as far as I know, did not cause any beer writers to scold them for their efforts. So what’s the difference?

As to the question of whether or not it’s beer, Pete continues:

I once attended a breakfast hosted by Jim Koch, founder of Samuel Adams, father of the awesome Utopias. I asked him a similar question — is this still beer? — and was inspired by his answer. He said something along the lines of beer has been around for thousands of years. Over that time it has evolved continually, and the pace of evolution has picked up considerably in the last couple of centuries. “How arrogant would we have to be to say that in this time, our time, we’ve done everything with beer that can be done? That we’ve perfected beer?” he asked me.

This is why when I love Brew Dog, I really do love them. It’s easy — and not always inaccurate — to accuse them of arrogance. But not when they do something like this. It’s far more arrogant to say ‘we can’t possibly improve on our beer’ than it is to never stop trying to do precisely that. In my marketing role, I often hear brewers talk about something like a slightly different bottle size and refer to it as ‘innovation’. Brew Dog are genuine innovators on a global stage, redefining what beer can actually be.

I guess I just don’t understand the bombastic reaction the release of this beer produced and the way in which it and the brewer’s intentions have been misinterpreted. Why wouldn’t any beer lover want to try it? After all, it really should be about the beer.

brewdog-penguin

Filed Under: Beers, Editorial, News, Politics & Law Tagged With: England, Scotland, UK

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