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Jay R. Brooks on Beer

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Denver Beer Dinner Announced

August 22, 2006 By Jay Brooks

Great Divide Brewing, Oskar Blues Brewery and Duo Restaurant, have an announced two beer dinners to be held at the restaurant in Denver, Colorado on Wednesday, September 13, the first at 6:30 p.m. and the second at 8:30 p.m. The dinner will be four courses paired with 4 Colorado beers. The cost is $35 per person. For reservations, call 303.477.4141

From the press release:

Colorado has some of the best beers in the world so let’s drink them! Great Divide Brewing Company is teaming up with Duo Restaurant and Oskar Blues Brewery to offer a fun & delicious evening. Enjoy a four course specially created menu paired with four different beers. Meet the brewers and learn how to pair fantastic food with great beer. This evening is sure to be full of fun, laughter, and plenty of little brewery give aways so bring a crowd or have a fun date night.

9.13

Denver Beer Dinner

Duo Restaurant, 2413 West 32nd Avenue, Denver, Colorado
303.477.4141 [ website ]

Filed Under: Food & Beer Tagged With: Announcements, Colorado, Press Release

Don’t Shun the “Tion” Dinner

August 16, 2006 By Jay Brooks

Beer Chef Bruce Paton’s next beer dinner has been announced, and it should be another great one. Dubbed the Tion Dinner, because it will feature Damnation, Temptation, Supplication, Salvation and Redemption from Russian River Brewing, it will be a four-course dinner and well worth the $80 price of admission. It will be held at the Cathedral Hill Hotel on Monday, September 18, beginning with a reception at 6:30 p.m. Call 415.874.3900 or 510.769.8422 for reservations.
 

 

9.18

Dinner with the Brewmaster: Russian River Beer Dinner

Cathedral Hill Hotel, 1101 Van Ness Avenue, San Francisco, California
415.874.3900 or 510.769.8422 [ website ]

Filed Under: Food & Beer Tagged With: Announcements, California, San Francisco

Take a Ride on the Skunk Train

August 15, 2006 By Jay Brooks

Lagunitas Brewing is once again firing up the boiler on the Skunk Train and making a steam-powered beer run from Willits, California to the Northspur Station and back again.

The Skunk Train rumbles through the Redwoods.
 

On Saturday, September 9, beginning at 10:00 a.m., Lagunitas will be hosting a beer festival on wheels. With music by the Dog Town Ramblers aboard the train (and at the station), beer from several local brewers and barbecue from Jerome’s it’s the recipe for a perfect afternoon. Tickets are $54.20 and will benefit the Trees Foundation, which supports various nature conservation projects. As of this morning about half the available tickets had been sold, so if you want to come you should call soon for reservations. After the train gets back to the station, they’ll be an after party at the Shanachie Pub in Willits.

The Skunk line runs 40 miles from Fort Bragg on the coast to Willits on US Highway 101. Along the way, the tracks cross some 30 bridges and trestles and pass through two deep mountain tunnels. The half-way point of Northspur is popular lunch spot, giving passengers a chance to snack before continuing to Willits or heading back to Fort Bragg.

9.9

Lagunitas Skunk Train Rolling Beer Festival

Skunk Train Station, Willits, California
sponsored by:
Lagunitas Brewery, 1280 North McDowell Boulevard, Petaluma, California
707.769.4495 [ Skunk Train website ]

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Announcements, California, Northern California

Festival Announcement: Russian River Beer Revival & BBQ Cook-Off

August 14, 2006 By Jay Brooks

The 4th annual Russian River Beer Revival & BBQ Cook-Off will take place this Saturday, August 19 from Noon-6:00 p.m. (beer tasting 1-5:00 p.m.) at Stumptown, Guerneville, California.


 

8.19

Russian River Beer Revival & BBQ Cook-Off (4th annual)

Stumptown Brewery, 15045 River Road, Guerneville, California
707.869.8304 [ website ]

Filed Under: Food & Beer Tagged With: Announcements, California, Northern California

Fal Allen’s Archipelago Brewery Opens

August 2, 2006 By Jay Brooks

Last year, my friend Fal Allen left for Singapore to open an American-style craft brewery for Asia Pacific Breweries. Archipelago Brewery originally opened in 1931 but by 1941 was sold to Malayan Breweries (which today is Asia Pacific Breweries). Closed since then, it finally reopened July 24 with three craft beers created and brewed by Fal: Traveller’s Wheat, Straits Pale Ale and Trader’s Ale, which is made with “a touch of Gula Melaka (palm sugar) and ginger.”

From the press release:

Combining the best of Western beer brewing techniques and exotic Asian spices, Archipelago draught beers will be created in small, unpasteurised batches to obtain the freshest beers that complement the region’s weather and food – perfectly.

“We wanted to create a craft brew that is distinctly Asian with a strong heritage. With the use of special Asian spices in our beers, the distinctive taste of Archipelago will undoubtedly appeal to beer connoisseurs in Singapore”, said Ms Andrea Teo, General Manager of Archipelago Brewery Company. “With the refined drinker in mind, the signature tastes of the Archipelago Beer range promises both pleasure and adventure with every drinking experience. By introducing specialty craft beer to the market, we also hope to educate the public about the finer points of beer appreciation and beer-food pairing.”

Brewed and crafted in Singapore to ensure maximum freshness and optimal product quality, the new Archipelago Brewery Company is devoted to the art of brewing and the enjoyment of flavour with a unique blend of East and West. Launching the brand are three main variants, Traveller’s Wheat, Straits Pale and Trader’s Ale. All three combine the credibility of Western brewing techniques with Asian ingredients such as lemon grass, tamarind and Gula Melaka, to create what is arguably the first Asian conceptualised craft beer with Asian characteristics.

I can’t wait to get over there and try them for myself. But Fal will be in Denver for GABF in late September. Perhaps he’ll bring some of his new beers with him for us to sample.

Fal at the brewery opening.

Work, work, work.

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Announcements, Asia, Press Release

Beerfest is Coming: Run, Hide & Disavow

August 1, 2006 By Jay Brooks

Listed at the bottom of the poster for the upcoming film, Beerfest, is the tagline From the Comic Geniuses Who Brought You the Phenomenon “Super Troopers.” Super Troopers was a phenomenon? That’s a scary thought. If they treat beer the same way Super Troopers did the police, it’s hard to be enthusiastic for this movie’s release on August 25.

Based on the poster alone, the film seems to be aimed at the same people who enjoy beer commercials about frogs, twins, frat boys, catfights and girls in bikinis. I imagine I’m going to feel about this film the way Canadians must have felt about Bob and Doug McKenzie‘s Strange Brew.

A promotional tour for the Warner Brothers’ movie was in Portland on Sunday, the last day of the Oregon Brewers Festival. Throughout the festival, many people were talking about the film, but nobody had anything good to say about it, and I can’t say I blame them. All of the promotional material, the trailer and the bad puns seem to suggest an embarrasing — at least to those of us who think beer is worthy of respect — cinematic disaster.

This is the plot:

When American brothers Todd and Jan Wolfhouse travel to Germany to spread their grandfather’s ashes at Oktoberfest, they stumble upon a super-secret, centuries old, underground beer games competition – “Beerfest,” the secret Olympics of beer drinking. The brothers receive a less than warm welcome from their German cousins, the Von Wolfhausens, who humiliate Todd and Jan, slander their relatives, and finally cast them out of the event. Vowing to return in a year to defend their country and their family’s honor, The Wolfhouse boys assemble a ragtag dream team of beer drinkers and gamers: Barry Badrinath, the consummate skills player with a dark past; Phil Krundle (AKA Landfill), a one-man chugging machine; and Steve “Fink” Finklestein, the lab tech with a PhD in All Things Beer. This Magnificent Five train relentlessly, using their hearts, minds and livers to drink faster, smarter and harder than they ever have before. But first they must battle their own demons… as well as a bunch of big, blond, German jerks who want to destroy the team before they can even make it back to Munich. Revenge, like beer, is best served cold.

I generally disdain criticism of movies by people who haven’t seen a movie, but here I am doing it myself. That’s because everything I’ve seen so far about this comedy makes it appear that it can only further damage the image of beer in America. There’s some support for that in the write-up at the website Worst Previews. At the end of the trailer itself there is a mock disclaimer saying “no Germans were harmed” and that you should “treat all women with respect.” If you have to tell people to treat women respectfully, that probably signals that the film will do just the opposite, and the trailer does seem to bear that out. Unlike Oregon’s Brewers Summer Games where industry professionals compete in events that have some relation to their jobs, the Beerfest ones appear to be nothing more than juvenile drinking games. These are the sort of games played on college campuses and high school parties with the only goal being to get drunk, and often as fast as possible. I’m sure plenty of people will find that hilarious, because many people seem to enjoy comedies that drag them down to the below slapstick level that appeals to five-year olds and the blissfully uneducated teens and early twenty-somethings. I realize I’m sounding like that old curmudgeon whining about “these kids today,” but I do enjoy the ocassional low-brow teen comedy, especially ones that are smart and witty.

I think what bothers me about everything I know about this film so far is that it appears to be a two-hour beer commercial with all the worst elements that have skewed people’s perceptions of what beer is over the last several decades. Glorifying over consumption, pandering to male sexual urges, misinformation such as the “ice cold” idea or that low-calorie beer has any additional health benefits. The official website even has flying frogs holding a banner.

I realize people can be entertained by all manner of things, and certainly have the right to laugh at whatever they want. I’m sure Warner Brothers knows its audience. They’ve been doing this successfully for a long time now. But I just can’t abide the idea that beer will once again be dragged through the mud in the name of entertainment. I’ve spent most of my adult life trying to lift up beer and get it the respect I believe it so richly deserves. A film like this has the potential to undo so much of what so many of us have been trying to do for good beer that I just want to sit down and cry.

Maybe I’m wrong. Maybe I take these things too seriously. Maybe I’m a lone nut shouting at the wind. Maybe this is what America wants, is yearning for. After all, my finger is so rarely on the pulse of America’s tastes. But to me this just has disaster for the beer industry written all over it.

 

 

If you want to see the trailer for yourself, here it is in a variety of formats and sizes:

Quicktime:

  • Super Hi-Res
  • Hi-Res
  • Med-Res
  • Lo-Res

Windows Media Player:

  • Super Hi-Res
  • Hi-Res
  • Med-Res
  • Lo-Res

Filed Under: Editorial, News Tagged With: Announcements, Mainstream Coverage, National

OBF is Coming, Get Your Watermelon Wheat Early

July 26, 2006 By Jay Brooks

Tomorrow the Oregon Brewers Festival begins and will continue through Sunday, July 30. I’ll be driving up early tomorrow morning with Celebrator publisher Tom Dalldorf. Perhaps I’ll see you there?

If you weren’t planning on going, clear your calendar and get yourself to Portland. It’s one of the best festivals in the country, beautifully situated in downtown Portland along the Willamette River at the Tom McCall Waterfront Park between the Morrison and Burnside Bridges. Each brewery is only allowed to bring one beer and many create a special brew just for the festival.

An inside source at the festival, Chris Crabb, revealed that the most popular beer at the festival is none other than San Francisco favorite, Watermelon Wheat brewed by 21st Amendment Restaurant & Brewery. A thrilled Shaun O’Sullivan, brewer and co-owner of 21st Amendment, was proud as a peacock to learn the news.

You may also want to consider playing a little golf in the 2nd annual Sasquatch Brew Am at McMenamins Edgefield Pub Course Friday morning beginning at 9:00 a.m. (8 o’clock registration). It’s for a very worthy cause and sponsored by the Glen Hay Falconer Foundation. The Bulletin is sponsoring a hole, too, so come out and join us. Check out the website for more details if you’re interested.

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Announcements, Oregon, Portland

Brit Antrim Returning to the Mainland

July 21, 2006 By Jay Brooks

Brit Antrim, who was formerly the head brewer and production manager for Anderson Valley Brewing from 1996 to 2003, moved to Hawaii three years ago to take a position as production manager at Kona Brewing. I found out yesterday that he’s not going to be renewing his contract and will be returning to the mainland after he trains his replacement. Brit is a great person and a terrific brewer. If you need an excellent brewer, production manager or both, he’s your man. If you’re interested, shoot me an e-mail and I’ll put you in touch with Brit.

Britt Antrim (at left), Production Manager of Kona Brewing with Rich Tucciarone, Kona’s head brewer, at last year’s GABF.

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Announcements, Western States

Oregon Trader Gets New Owners, New Name

July 10, 2006 By Jay Brooks

According to an article in the Corvallis Gazette-Times, Orgeon Trader Brewing located in Albany, Oregon has been sold and re-named Calapooia Brewing Co. The new owners, Mark Martin and Laura Bryngelson, opened about three weeks ago. Their best-seller so far is Yankee Clipper IPA. They also apparently offer an amber, a chile beer, a pale ale, a stout and a wheat beer. Best of luck to them both.

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Announcements, Business, Oregon

Avery 13th Anninversary Party Announced

June 30, 2006 By Jay Brooks

Avery Brewing’s 13th Anniversary Party will be held from noon to six on August 6th. The flyer they sent me has all the details:


 

8.6

Avery Anniversary Party (13th annual)

Avery Brewing Co., 5763 Arapahoe Avenue, Unit E, Boulder Colorado
303.440.4324 [ website ] [ map ]

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Announcements, Colorado, Press Release

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