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Jay R. Brooks on Beer

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US News & World Report on the Hopslam Between Big & Small Breweries

February 11, 2013 By Jay Brooks

hopslam
If you haven’t seen it yet, U.S. News & World Reports had an interesting read entitled Hopslam: How Big Beer Is Trying to Stop a Craft Beer Revolution, and subtitled “The blocked merger between Modelo and Anheuser-Busch shines a light on the long-brewing fight between big beer and craft brewers.” It’s a long piece, but worth it for pulling together a number of threads that have been pulling together lately.

Another kind of Hopslam.
bells-hopslam

Filed Under: Breweries, News Tagged With: Big Brewers, Mainstream Coverage

SF Beer Week Opening Event 2013 Video

February 11, 2013 By Jay Brooks

sf-beer-week-2013
Each year, videographer Steve Atkinson has done a video of the opening celebration for SF Beer Week. There’s a lot of fun interviews, though I confess I’m slurring my words a bit in my short ramble about the beer scene 25 years ago. Enjoy.

Filed Under: Breweries, Events, Just For Fun, SF Beer Week Tagged With: Bay Area, California, San Francisco, Video

Weyermann Specialty Malts

February 11, 2013 By Jay Brooks

barley
Today’s infographic is from Weyermann Specialty Malt, which is located in Bamberg, Germany. If you get a chance to visit them, jump at the chance. This poster shows the production steps for malting and the spectrum of colors in malted grains.

Weyermann-specialty-malt
Click here to see the poster full size.

Filed Under: Beers, Just For Fun, Related Pleasures Tagged With: barley, Germany, Infographics, Malt

Home Brewer’s Formulary

February 10, 2013 By Jay Brooks

home-brewing-graphic
Today’s infographic is a Home Brewer’s Formulary, showing many of the calculations and formulas used in homebrewing. It was apparently created by a homebrewer, but was unabale for a time. It now appears to be back and can be purchased at the Home Brewer’s Formulary website.

brewers-formulary-11x172
Here you can get a very large version of the poster, of this even larger huge version.

Filed Under: Beers, Just For Fun Tagged With: Homebrewing, Infographics, Science of Brewing

Bistro Double IPA Winners 2013

February 9, 2013 By Jay Brooks

bistro
Societe‘s The Roustabout was chosen best in show at the 13th annual Double IPA Festival today at the Bistro in Hayward, California. The full winner’s list is below.

  • 1st Place: The Roustabout, Societe Brewing
  • 2nd Place: Double Jack, Firestone Walker Brewing
  • 3rd Place: Pliny the Elder, Russian River Brewing

And for the second year, Triple IPAs were judged this year.

  • 1st Place: Pliny the Younger, Russian River Brewing
  • 2nd Place: Notorious Triple IPA, The Boneyard
  • 3rd Place: Simtra Triple IPA, Knee Deep Brewing

And for the third straight year:

  • People’s Choice Award: Kern River Citra Double IPA

Congratulations to all the winners.

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

The Very, Very Many Varieties Of Beer

February 9, 2013 By Jay Brooks

bubble-connect-chart
Today’s infographic shows the Very, Very Many Varieties of Beer, created by Pop Chart Lab. For $32, you can buy yourself a copy of this infographic.

Beer_final_1028
Click here to see the poster full size.

Filed Under: Beers, Just For Fun Tagged With: Beer Styles, Infographics

SF Beer Week Opening Celebration 2013

February 9, 2013 By Jay Brooks

sf-beer-week-2013
It’s hard to believe this is our fifth SF Beer Week. Things seemed to go off without a hitch last night at the Concourse Exhibition Center and it was another great kick-off to over 500 events that will follow this week. I spent most of my time drinking and talking to old friends and meeting new ones, but did snap a few photos along the way.

P1010454
The calm before the storm, about an hour before the SF Beer Week Opening Celebration began last night.

P1010455
Alex from Uncommon Brewers.

P1010458
Natalie Cilurzo (from Russian River) and Dave Keene (from the Toronado).

P1010463
Jay and the crew from Pine Street Brewery.

P1010468
Angelo Roselle with Geno Acevedo from El Toro Brewing. Angelo’s on a mission to drink every beer in the book I contributed to, 1001 Beers You Must Try Before You Die, and Geno’s Oatmeal Stout was one of the beers that I wrote up for the book.

P1010469
The Concourse Exhibition Hall with the celebration in full swing.

P1010474
John Martin, me and Peter Hoey.

P1010477
Rodger Davis (now from Faction Brewing) with Gabbi mugging for the camera in the background.

P1010481
I finally had a chance to try the beer we made at Beer Camp in December. Our Celebrator 25th Anniversary Double Pale Ale is tasting better than I ever could have hoped. It should be appearing at bars and festivals throughout the week, so keep an eye out for it.

P1010482
Tom Dalldorf (from the Celebrator) and Dave Keene (from the Toronado).

Filed Under: Beers, Events, Just For Fun, SF Beer Week Tagged With: California, San Francisco

Beer In Ads #800: The Thirsty Soul’s Most Welcome Sight

February 8, 2013 By Jay Brooks


Friday’s ad is for Barclay’s Lager, probably from around the 1930s. It’s another scraperboard illustration, and I love the poetic ad copy: “The Thirsty Soul’s Most Welcome Sight, Barclay’s Lager — Dark or Light.” And then there’s this bit of wisdom from the bottom of the ad, extolling Barclay’s Lager as “the drink for every kind of thirst.” Now that’s got me wondering about how many different kinds of thirst are there? Is there is list? Is it ranked by degrees of thirstiness? I need to know.

scan

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

X-ray Crystallography Figures Out Structure Of Hops

February 8, 2013 By Jay Brooks

beer-x-ray
Here’s an interesting scientific development, where a team of scientists “used a process called X-ray crystallography to figure out the exact structure of [hop] acids, humulone molecules, and some of their derivatives, produced from hops in the brewing process.” According to the story in Futurity, they already knew that “beer and its bittering acids, in moderation, have beneficial effects on diabetes, some forms of cancer, inflammation, and perhaps even weight loss.”

The story comes from the journal Angewandte Chemie International Edition and a recent article Absolute Configuration of Beer′s Bitter Compounds. Here’s the opening part of the article.

The science and art of making beer, likely the oldest liquid fermented by humans, stretches over millennia. Production typically involves boiling beer wort together with hops, which acts as a natural preservative, but the generated iso-α-acids are known to be prone to decomposition, and consequently, more stable reduced hops extracts, such as the tetrahydro-iso-α-acids, have been developed. These latter compounds are separately produced and frequently added to beer to achieve a consistent level of bitter taste. Scheme 1 gives an overview of the iso-α-acids formed by heat-induced isomerization.

nsch001

The rest of the story talks about how they isolated the hops in such a way that they might be able to be extracted to use in medicine to take advantage of their healthful properties, that you couldn’t really get just by drinking beer because the amounts in beer were too small to be effective.

The press release from the University of Washington, where the study was conducted, explains the study in layman’s terms.

Humulone molecules are rearranged during the brewing process to contain a ring with five carbon atoms instead of six. At the end of the process two side groups are formed that can be configured in four different ways—both groups can be above the ring or below, or they can be on opposite sides.

Which of the forms the molecule takes determines its “handedness,” Kaminsky says, and that is important for understanding how a particular humulone will react with another substance. If they are paired correctly, they will fit together like a nut and bolt.

If paired incorrectly, they might not fit together at all or it could be like placing a right hand into a left-handed glove. That could produce disastrous results in pharmaceuticals.

Kaminsky cites thalidomide, which has a number of safe uses but was famously used to treat morning sickness in pregnant women in the late 1950s and early 1960s before it was discovered to cause birth defects. Molecule “handedness” in one form of the drug was responsible for the birth defects, while the orientation of molecules in another form did not appear to have the negative effects.

To determine the configuration of humulones formed in the brewing process, coauthors from KinDex Therapeutics, a Seattle pharmaceutical firm that funded the research, recovered acids from the brewing process and purified them.

They converted the humulones to salt crystals and sent them to Kaminsky, who used X-ray crystallography to determine the exact configuration of the molecules.

“Now that we know which hand belongs to which molecule, we can determine which molecule goes to which bitterness taste in beer,” Kaminsky says.

The authors point out that while “excessive beer consumption cannot be recommended to propagate good health, isolated humulones and their derivatives can be prescribed with documented health benefits.”

Some of the compounds have been shown to affect specific illnesses, Kaminsky says, while some with a slight difference in the arrangement of carbon atoms have been ineffective.

The new research sets the stage for finding which of those humulones might be useful in new compounds to be used as medical treatments.

Anybody seeing a new kind of hop pellet? One you take every day with your vitamins, perhaps.
hop-pellets

Filed Under: Beers, News Tagged With: Hops, Science, Statistics

The Top Beers Of Asia

February 8, 2013 By Jay Brooks

asia
Today’s infographic is the Top Beers of Asia, showing a beer — the most popular? — from each of eleven Asian countries. It was created for Travel Indochina, an Australian travel agency specializing in travel to those nations.

top-beers-of-asia

Filed Under: Beers, Just For Fun Tagged With: Asia, Infographics

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