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From the Field: Lisa Morrison at the Portland Holiday Ale Fest

December 18, 2006 By Jay Brooks

A couple of weeks ago the Portland Holiday Ale festival was held in the Rose City and award-winning beer writer — and Portland resident — Lisa Morrison was on hand to sample the holiday beers. Lisa filed this report along with a few pictures from the festival. Thanks, Lisa, for sharing the festival with us!

I don’t have a lot of detail on how well the fest was attended or anything, but I do know the “buzz” beer was called Jim, named after Jim Kennedy, one of the patriarchs of Portland beer and, really, one of the founding fathers of the good beer movement nationally. It was created by Preston Weesner and Alan Sprints (Hair of the Dog). It was conceptualized one day when the two were sitting around talking and enjoying some beer and cheese. Preston said Maredsous 8 was always a “Jim beer” for him in that he thought of Jim whenever he enjoyed it. They worked on a blend of some Hair of the Dog beers with a keg of M8 and Alan painstakingly aged it in oak barrels until the fest. Truly a one-time, one-of-a-kind beer that was appreciated and celebrated by all. A fitting tribute to a really great guy.

Fest-goer Eric Bressman shows off a T-shirt from recent travels while enjoying a beer at the fest.

Having some fun at the Holiday Ale Festival.

Chris Crabb, who does PR and is an organizer for the event, keeping chaos under control. With a smile, even!

Filed Under: Events Tagged With: Festivals, Oregon, Photo Gallery, Portland

Heineken Amnesia

December 17, 2006 By Jay Brooks

I came across this on Ad Punch, a blog about advertising. The post is about a new ad campaign by Heineken in India with fake news stories pasted to Heineken bottles about the supposed lengths people would go to actually drink Heineken beer. It still amazes me how powerful advertising is when it creates the perception that something as awful tasting as Heineken is considered a premium beer. So the first ad in the series really cracked me up. Here it is below.
 

 

Because in my opinion you’d have to have amnesia to drink Heineken willingly. Perhaps after drinking one it might give you amnesia. I certainly can’t remember any good reasons why anyone with or without amnesia would have one. There are other ads as well, which you can see on Ad Punch, but this one had me in stitches.

Filed Under: Just For Fun Tagged With: International, Strange But True

Freetown Not So Free

December 16, 2006 By Jay Brooks

According to the Herald News (in Fall River, Massachusetts) late Saturday, the Boston Beer Co. is rethinking their plans to build a new brewery in Freetown, Massachusetts. The cost now appears to be approximately 60-80% more than originally anticipated. As a result, the company is “mulling over” alternatives such as acquiring an existing brewery or expanding one of the two they currently own. Company spokesperson Michelle Sullivan carefully and diplomatically adds they have “not ruled out the option of building a brewery in Freetown, asserting that the company is still in the evaluation stage.”

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Business, Eastern States

Lucy Saunders at Pizza Port Carlsbad

December 16, 2006 By Jay Brooks

12.16

Grilling with Beer Book Signing
Pizza Port Brewing, 571 Carlsbad Village Drive, Carlsbad, California
760.720.7007 [ website ]
 

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Uncategorized

Brent on Beer: Moylan’s, Jones & Albion Castle

December 16, 2006 By Jay Brooks

My good friend, Brent Ainsworth — who sometimes writes for the Celebrator — is the Lifestyle Editor of the Marin I.J. and also writes a regular beer column, Brent on Beer. This week’s column is about Moylan’s adding fermenters to increase capacity 25% but the main story is the hiring of Denise Jones to help with the brewing while her new project in San Francisco has some legal wrangling and building issues worked out. Jones was the brewer at Third Street Aleworks for many years before leaving last year.

The new venture, Albion Castle Brewery & Caves, will be resurrecting a San Francisco brewery that dates from 1870. The Albion Brewery, also known as the Albion Ale and Porter Brewery, is a historic landmark located at India Basin Shoreline Park at Hunters Point. It closed in 1919 — yet another victim of Prohibition — but the caves underneath were still bottling spring water as last as the 1960s. The property was bought at auction by the Uzza Group on June 11, 2005. I hope the renovation comes together because it would be great to get back a piece of San Francisco brewing history like this.

Denise Jones with Ralph Woodall of HopUnion at this year’s GABF.

The abandoned Albion brewery in Hunter’s Point. There are also additional photos and history at the Albion Castle website.

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Bay Area, California, History, Mainstream Coverage, San Francisco

Grilling with Beer Author at Pizza Port Saturday

December 15, 2006 By Jay Brooks

My good friend, Lucy Saunders, author of the new fantabulous book, Grilling with Beer, will be signing her new book this Saturday, December 16, from 2-4 p.m., at Pizza Port in Carlsbad, California. If you’re in the area, stop by and say hello, buy a book or two or three — they make terrific Christmas, Hanukkah, Kwanzaa or Winter Solstice presents — and have some great beers at Pizza Port.

12.16

Grilling with Beer Book Signing
Pizza Port Brewing, 571 Carlsbad Village Drive, Carlsbad, California
760.720.7007 [ website ]
 

Filed Under: Food & Beer Tagged With: Announcements, Beer Books, California, Southern California

Kerstbierfestival

December 15, 2006 By Jay Brooks

12.16-17

Kerstbierfestival (12th annual)
Heuvelhal, Kapelstraat 7, B-2910 Essen, Belgium
[ website ] [ in English ] [ Directions ]
 

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Uncategorized

Paging Doctor Obvious

December 14, 2006 By Jay Brooks

health
My friend, Stan, over at Beer Therapy already mentioned this New York Times article yesterday, but I wanted to add my two cents, though knowing me it will be more like three or four cents.

The Times’ piece is about a recent M.I.T. graduate student’s paper “Try It, You’ll Like It: The Influence of Expectation, Consumption and Revelation on Preferences for Beer,” which will be published in this month’s Psychological Sciences, a scientific journal of the Association for Psychological Science. Leonard Lee, who has now received his PhD and is teaching at Columbia, along with research assistants Shane Frederick and Dan Ariely, conducted experiments in which they sought to discover whether tasting beer blind or knowing something about the beer changes people’s perceptions of it.

From the Times article:

[The researchers] found that they could change beer drinkers’ taste preferences by telling them about a secret ingredient in a beer before they drank it.

In previous studies, psychologists had found that putting brand labels on containers of beer, soft drinks and other products tended to enhance people’s subjective ratings of quality. But the new experiment demonstrates that this preference involves more than simple brand loyalty. It changes the experience of taste itself.

“It’s a clean demonstration that what we think is going into our mouth actually changes what we taste, down to the level of the taste buds themselves,” said Michael Norton, an assistant professor of business administration in the marketing department of the Harvard Business School who did not take part in the research.

To which my initial reaction is simply, “duh!” Having been tasting beer both openly and blind for many years, it’s only too obvious that knowing what the beer is or even knowing something about it changes your reaction to it. Not to throw vinegar in this “research,” but did they expect a different result than what experience and indeed common sense would have predicted? I say vinegar, because that’s what the researchers used when giving subjects two beers, one normal and one laced with a small amount of balsamic vinegar. When tasters didn’t know which one had the vinegar, 60% chose the modified beer as their favorite. But when they were told in advance which one had vinegar in it, that number dropped almost in half, to around 33%.

Dr. Lee said that the study showed that the experience of taste involved not only the sensation of a blend of ingredients, but also the “top-down” influence of expectations. Previous research with brain imaging had shown that expectations could change the trace of activity of people’s brains when tasting drinks.

Having experienced this phenomenon first-hand both in myself and others, it just seems incredibly self-evident. I would have been truly shocked to learn the opposite was true, because who wouldn’t think that objectivity is compromised or at least altered by knowing something about what we’re tasting? Why do you think we evaluate beer by tasting it blind, for chrissakes? For competitions in which beer is critically judged, it is always, always, always done blind precisely in an effort to remove as much prejudice from the process as possible, so I don’t see what this study is telling us that we don’t already know. And not just kind of, sort of know, but for which we have centuries of experience so that we really know. This knowledge forms the basis for how we judge beer and indeed probably how everything involving the ephemeral qualities of taste is judged in an effort to be as objective as humanly possible.

So maybe I’m being my usual curmudgeonly self here, but despite Dr. Lee’s protestations to the contrary, it seems to me he did get M.I.T. to foot his bar bill. I don’t see how his findings tell us anything new. I know it made the papers because it’s unusual for beer to be the subject of “serious” research at any level. If this same study had been done using juice or water or almost anything non-alcoholic we would likely never have heard about it. There are fifteen articles in the same issue of the Psychological Sciences Journal, yet this is the only one meriting a mention in the New York Times. Why didn’t “Sex Differences in Intellectual Performance: Analysis of a Large Cohort of Competitive Chess Players” or “The Neglect of Musicians: Line Bisection Reveals an Opposite Bias” get any ink? They both sound interesting to me.

But, okay, I’ll climb down off of my tall equestrian mount. While I’m certainly glad to keep seeing more and more attention paid to beer by the media these days, I continue to be cynical and more than a little suspicious of the motives for its content. Maybe it’s me who needs the psychological evaluation? What do you think?

drink-no-evil

Filed Under: Editorial, News Tagged With: Health & Beer, Strange But True

Chow Down with These Holiday Beers

December 14, 2006 By Jay Brooks

The food website Chow had an article recently on holiday beers by food and music writer Heather Shouse. It’s a nice beginner’s overview of the topic with an interview with Fritz Maytag and some history of holiday beers.

Filed Under: News Tagged With: History, Mainstream Coverage, National, Seasonal Release

Eckhardt on Cheese

December 14, 2006 By Jay Brooks

Today’s Statesman-Journal from Salem, Oregon has an article interviewing Fred Eckhardt and Rogue brewery owner Jack Joyce about the joys of pairing cheese with beer.

Filed Under: Food & Beer, News Tagged With: Oregon

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