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Wikio Beer Blog Rankings For November 2011

November 9, 2011 By Jay Brooks

wikio
The November 2011 standings have just been released for Wikio’s Beer Blogs. Beervana increased his streak at the top to three consecutive months, with the rest of the Top 10 shuffling around. Here’s what happened to the Top 20 over last month:

Wikio November 2011 Beer Blog Rankings

1Beervana (=)
2Brookston Beer Bulletin (+2)
3Brewpublic (+4)
4A Good Beer Blog (+10)
5Appellation Beer: Beer From a Good Home (-2)
6The New School (-4)
7Drink With The Wench (-1)
8It’s Pub Night (+4)
9Washington Beer Blog (-4)
10Top Fermented (Not in Top 20 in October)
11Hoosier Beer Geek (-3)
12Seattle Beer News (Not in Top 20 in October)
13Yours For Good Fermentables (Not in Top 20 in October)
14Oakshire Brewing (Not in Top 20 in October)
15KC Beer Blog (+4)
16San Diego Beer Blog (+4)
17Road Trips for Beer (-6)
18Seen Through a Glass (=)
19The Brew Site (-4)
20Beer PHXation (-4)

Ranking made by Wikio

As usual, I included the relative movements of each blog from last month. Four new blogs emerged in the Top 20 that weren’t there last month, which is exactly what happened last month. Otherwise, there were a number of moderate swings, with movement 4 or 6 places being the most common. As always, I continue to stress that this is just a bit of fun and that we shouldn’t take it too seriously. Until the final month of 2011 ….

Filed Under: Just For Fun, News Tagged With: Awards, Blogging, North America, Websites

Wikio Beer Blog Rankings For October 2011

October 6, 2011 By Jay Brooks

wikio
The October 2011 standings have been released for Wikio’s Beer Blogs. No changes at the Top 2 spots, with Jeff, from Beervana and The New School at 1 and 2 again. Here’s what happened to the Top 20 over last month:

Wikio October 2011 Beer Blog Rankings

1Beervana (=)
2The New School (=)
3Appellation Beer: Beer From a Good Home (+6)
4Brookston Beer Bulletin (+1)
5Washington Beer Blog (+3)
6Drink With The Wench (-3)
7Brewpublic (-1)
8Hoosier Beer Geek (+2)
9Beer 47 (Not in Top 20 in September)
10The Daily Pull (+4)
11Road Trips for Beer (Not in Top 20 in September)
12It’s Pub Night (+1)
13BetterBeerBlog (+4)
14A Good Beer Blog (-7)
15The Brew Site (-4)
16Beer PHXation (Not in Top 20 in September)
17The Session Beer Project™ (-1)
18Seen Through a Glass (-3)
19KC Beer Blog (-7)
20San Diego Beer Blog (Not in Top 20 in September)

Ranking made by Wikio

As usual, I included the relative movements of each blog from last month. Four new blogs emerged in the Top 20 that weren’t there last month. Otherwise, only a few moderate swings. For the most part, things to move around too much this month. As always, I continue to stress that this is just a bit of fun and that we shouldn’t take it too seriously. Until next month ….

Filed Under: Just For Fun, News Tagged With: Awards, Blogging, North America, Websites

Wikio Beer Blog Rankings For September 2011

September 12, 2011 By Jay Brooks

wikio
The September 2011 standings have been released for Wikio’s Beer Blogs. I got an e-mail about them while I was on my way to Chile, and responded, but never heard back. The person who compiled the rankings, Florian, apparently had his contract coming up for renewal and wasn’t sure if he’d be back or not.

Jeff, from Beervana, overtaking The New School who had reached thetop spot for the first time last month. Here’s what happened to the Top 20 over last month:

Wikio September 2011 Beer Blog Rankings

1Beervana (+2)
2The New School (-1)
3Drink With The Wench (+3)
4The Stone Blog (+7)
5Brookston Beer Bulletin (-1)
6Brewpublic (-4)
7A Good Beer Blog (=)
8Washington Beer Blog (+1)
9Appellation Beer: Beer From a Good Home (-4)
10Hoosier Beer Geek (+7)
11The Brew Site (+5)
12KC Beer Blog (+2)
13It’s Pub Night (+8)
14The Daily Pull (-6)
15Seen Through a Glass (+7)
16The Session Beer Project™ (+4)
17BetterBeerBlog (-5)
18Oakshire Brewing (=)
19The Not So Professional Beer Blog (-9)
20Brewer’s Log (Blog) (-7)

Ranking made by Wikio

As usual, I included the relative movements of each blog from last month. Movement seems to have started to accelerate somewhat, there’s a lot more blogs changing places up and down the list. As always, I continue to stress that this is just a bit of fun and that we shouldn’t take it too seriously. Until next month ….

Filed Under: Just For Fun, News Tagged With: Awards, Blogging, North America, Websites

Slate’s Anti-Alcohol Hatchet Job

August 29, 2011 By Jay Brooks

Slate
I used to think of Slate’s online magazine as cutting edge stuff, but lately their coverage, at least of things I know something about, shows them to be staunchly conservative. Given that they’re owned by the Washington Post, I guess I shouldn’t be too surprised.

Today an article by William Saletan on the web titlebar is known by the more balanced title “MADD vs. Rick Berman’s American Beverage Institute: Who’s Right About Drunken Driving?” but on the webpage itself by the much less so “Mad at MADD: Alcohol merchants say you shouldn’t donate to Mothers Against Drunk Driving. Really?” (I’m hardly perfect, but I still can’t help but point out it’s not usually referred to as “drunken driving,” but “drunk driving.”)

The article itself is all smoke and mirrors, and starts out by trying to sound reasonable, before veering way off the rails of reasonableness, much like MADD itself, who the author wastes no time in defending. What got apparent MADD-shill William Saletan’s hackles raised was that someone had the temerity to suggest that the neo-prohibitionist organization was not ready for sainthood. Specifically, the American Beverage Institute released a press release pointing out that “Mothers Against Drunk Driving Receives Another ‘D’ from Charity Rating Guide.” The fact that their press release is true seems not to matter, nor is the fact that this is not the first year that MADD’s rating as a charity has been called into question. Saletan accuses the release of “shouting,” as if a press release could shout without turning on the ALL CAPS. Hey Bill, LISTEN UP; that’s how you shout in print.

But his real beef is that he seems to believe that the ABI shouldn’t be allowed to criticize MADD since they’re a trade organization that represents the interests of alcohol producers, therefore anything they have to say on the subject is suspect. It’s an argument that has some merit, but only if it works both ways. MADD has been twisting facts for decades, but when they do it it’s in the service of a higher purpose, therefore it’s allowed, one has to guess.

Then Saletan goes on to accuse the ABI of having its own agenda, that of weakening drunken-driving regulations and claims that essentially ABI wants people to drive drunk, and they probably hate dogs and children, too. I’m exaggerating — only slightly — but the point is that he takes the position that everything ABI does is evil and everything MADD does is benign and well-intentioned. The irony, of course, is that nothing could be further from the truth.

Saletan argues that “ABI has fought MADD on nearly every alcohol-related issue” and that “ABI doesn’t argue for moderation,” despite the fact that the top of their home page includes the phrase “Drink Responsibly, Drive Responsibly.” His dripping sarcasm would be easier to take without such hypocrisy. He doesn’t seem to acknowledge that there might even be a reason why the ABI might oppose an organization like MADD, whose very being is to undermine every aspect of the alcohol industry. MADD, and other neo-prohibitionist organizations, have been attacking the alcohol industry virtually non-stop since prohibition ended yet Saletan doesn’t seem to believe that the ABI even has the right to defend themselves.

The fact that he refers to the ABI as using “extremism” is almost laughable, especially given his own attempt to smear ABI president Rick Berman by using examples of non-alcohol lobbying and companies. He suggests that while he doesn’t “know enough about MADD’s finances to tell you whether MADD is the best investment of your charitable dollars,” he “can say this: Any organization Berman has vilified is probably worth giving money to.” Saletan ends by stating that “if they’re [other non-profits] pissing off Rick Berman, they must be doing something right.” Well, at least that’s not extremism. Nothing personal there. Just some nice, balanced reporting like any good mainstream news outlet. Present the facts and let the reader decide. Uh-huh.

Saletan conveniently ignores that even MADD found Candy Lightner left the organization she founded several years ago because of their growing extremism.

MADD also ranks poorly with another charitable giving guide. Charity Navigator gives MADD an overall rating of 1 of 4 stars, the lowest level rating reserved only for a charity that “fails to meet industry standards.”

These dismal ratings reveal a shift in MADD’s mission. In the words of its own founder Candy Lightner: MADD “has become far more neo-prohibitionist than I had ever wanted or envisioned … I didn’t start MADD to deal with alcohol. I started MADD to deal with the issue of drunk driving.”

No surprises there. Saletan’s screed is typical. He ignores what doesn’t fit his personal world view and rails against everything else. He also states that “ABI is waging PR wars” against MADD and others, while MADD’s own warlike propaganda campaign is not even acknowledged.

Curiously, ABI is pretty much the only alcohol trade group I know of that consistently fights back against MADD and the other anti-alcohol groups. Most try to get along as best they can, a fool’s errand IMHO. It didn’t work for Neville Chamberlain, and I don’t believe appeasement will work in this case, either. So, naturally, ABI has to be vilified. How dare they defend their livelihoods? How dare they defend themselves when attacked? We in the alcohol industry are pure evil, or so it seems every time I read one of these hatchet jobs. But somebody has to shout back. Somebody has to remind these people that the majority of alcohol drinkers do so responsibly and in moderation. Somebody has to point out that there are, in fact, at least two sides to every story. Too bad Slate decided only one side needed to be told.

Filed Under: Editorial, Politics & Law Tagged With: Mainstream Coverage, Prohibitionists, Websites

Wikio Beer Blog Rankings For August 2011

August 1, 2011 By Jay Brooks

wikio
The August 2011 standings will soon be released for Wikio’s Beer Blogs. This month there’s a new sheriff in town, who leapfrogged over Jeff, from Beervana, and me as we were do si do-ing around the beer blogging dance floor earlier this year. Congratulations to the folks at The New School as they ascend to the top spot. Here’s what happened to the Top 30 over last month:

Wikio August 2011 Beer Blog Rankings

1The New School (+2)
2Brewpublic (+2)
3Beervana (-1)
4Brookston Beer Bulletin (-3)
5Appellation Beer: Beer From a Good Home (+2)
6Drink With The Wench (+4)
7A Good Beer Blog (-2)
8The Daily Pull (+1)
9Washington Beer Blog (-1)
10The Not So Professional Beer Blog (+6)
11The Stone Blog (-5)
12BetterBeerBlog (+11)
13Brewer’s Log (Blog) (+8)
14KC Beer Blog (=)
15The Brew Lounge (+2)
16The Brew Site (+16)
17Hoosier Beer Geek (+8)
18Oakshire Brewing (-5)
19Seattle Beer News (+9)
20The Session Beer Project™ (-5)
21It’s Pub Night (-10)
22Seen Through a Glass (-10)
23Craft Austin (-4)
24Top Fermented (+5)
25The Potable Curmudgeon (-3)
26San Diego Beer Blog (-8)
27Beer at 6512 (-3)
28Musings Over a Pint (-2)
29Beer-Stained Letter (+13)
30I Love Beer (+11)

Ranking made by Wikio

As usual, I included the relative movements of each blog from last month. Last month — and for the past few — movement among the top of the list was limited and things were fairly static. All that’s changed this month, as only one of the top 30 is in the same position as last month, and only three moved up or down only one spot. That means of the remaining 26, each one moved at least two spots along the continuum. Things are shaking up.

This month’s champion mover was The Brew Site, who jumped 16 places. As always, I continue to stress that this is just a bit of fun and that we shouldn’t take it too seriously. Until next month ….

Filed Under: Just For Fun, News Tagged With: Awards, Blogging, North America, Websites

Wikio Beer Blog Rankings For July 2011

July 4, 2011 By Jay Brooks

wikio
The July 2011 standings will soon be released for Wikio’s Beer Blogs. Jeff, from Beervana, and I continued our do si do around the beer blogging dance floor, and I bow to my partner after our fourth consecutive month switching places. Perhaps we should merge our two blogs and create a formidable juggernaut, Brookston Beervana? Anyhow, here’s what happened to the Top 20 over last month:

Wikio July 2011 Beer Blog Rankings

1Brookston Beer Bulletin (+1)
2Beervana (-1)
3The New School (=)
4Brewpublic (=)
5A Good Beer Blog (=)
6The Stone Blog (+1)
7Appellation Beer: Beer From a Good Home (-1)
8Washington Beer Blog (=)
9The Daily Pull (=)
10Drink With The Wench (+14)
11It’s Pub Night (+6)
12Seen Through a Glass (+9)
13Oakshire Brewing (-3)
14KC Beer Blog (-2)
15The Session Beer Project™ (+4)
16The Not So Professional Beer Blog (-1)
17The Brew Lounge (-1)
18San Diego Beer Blog (+27)
19Craft Austin (-1)
20Beeronomics (+10)
21Brewer’s Log (Blog) (-10)
22The Potable Curmudgeon (+4)
23BetterBeerBlog (+4)
24Beer at 6512 (+20)
25Hoosier Beer Geek (+21)
26Musings Over a Pint (+2)
27Brewed For Thought (+2)
28Seattle Beer News (-14)
29Top Fermented (+12)
30Beer in Baltimore (+1)

Ranking made by Wikio

As usual, I included the relative movements of each blog from last month. This month, fully half of the top ten stayed put, while in addition to Beervana and myself changing places, another pair — Stone & Stan — did likewise. Only one new blog cracked the Top 10, as the Wench rocketed up 14 spots into 10th place.

I’ve listed the top 30 this time, and will start doing so each month. One additional observation is that of all 30, 13 moved up or down in the rankings one spot or less, whereas nine out of ten did likewise in the top 10. That suggests there’s less volatility in the rankings nearer the top, meaning blogs move up and down more freely nearer the double digits. And the champion mover was the San Diego Beer Blog, who shook up 27 places. As always, I continue to stress that this is just a bit of fun and that we shouldn’t take it too seriously. Until next month ….

Filed Under: Just For Fun Tagged With: Awards, Blogging, North America, Websites

Wikio Beer Blog Rankings For June 2011

June 2, 2011 By Jay Brooks

wikio
The June 2011 standings will soon be released for Wikio’s Beer Blogs. Machuca at Craft Austin got a sneak peak at the new rankings, so here’s what happened to the Top 20 over last month:

Wikio June 2011 Beer Blog Rankings

1Beervana (+1)
2Brookston Beer Bulletin (-1)
3The New School (+/-0)
4Brewpublic (+/-0)
5A Good Beer Blog (+/-0)
6Appellation Beer: Beer From a Good Home (+/-0)
7The Stone Blog (Not in Top 20 for May)
8Washington Beer Blog (+3)
9The Daily Pull (+/-0)
10Oakshire Brewing (+/-0)
11Lost Abbey Brewer’s Log (Blog) (Not in Top 20 for May)
12KC Beer Blog (+1)
13I Love Beer (Not in Top 20 for May)
14Seattle Beer News (+/-0)
15The Not So Professional Beer Blog (+5)
16The Brew Lounge (Not in Top 20 for May)
17It’s Pub Night (-2)
18Craft Austin (Not in Top 20 for May)
19The Session Beer Project (-7)
20Beer-Stained Letter (-1)

Ranking made by Wikio

As usual, I added the relative movements of each blog from last month. This month, 25% of the blogs are either new or have re-emerged in the Top 20. And a few of the dropouts were surprising, including such heavy hitters as Beer Therapy, Drink With The Wench and Lew Bryson’s Seen Through a Glass.

For the third time in as many months, Beervana and I switched places again. Congratulations to Jeff. I expected as much this time, as I was in South America for at least a third of the month, and access to WiFi was spotty at best and free time even less so. Over half of the top 10 stayed put, too. As always, I continue to stress that this is just a bit of fun and that we shouldn’t take it too seriously. Until next month ….

Filed Under: Just For Fun Tagged With: Awards, Blogging, North America, Websites

Session #51 Round-Up & Announcing Session #51.5

May 7, 2011 By Jay Brooks

session-the
Well that was great fun, I was certainly glad to see so many people step up and participate, despite my best efforts to make things as difficult as possible. And everybody seemed to have a very good time, too. Cheese and beers just brings out the best in all of us, I guess. Anyway, I’m doing the round-up a little bit differently this Session, because this is not just the end of the Session, but also the beginning of the second phase, or Session #51.5. Below you’ll find a list of all of the beers paired with each of the three cheeses, or their substitute parenthetically, along with a link to each Session post submission. In most cases, I listed just the best pairing from each blogger for each cheese, unless otherwise noted. Also, I’ll continue to update this list as late submissions continue to roll in, as they inevitably do. Following that, you’ll find instructions on how to participate in round two, Session #51.5 on Friday, May 20.

The Beer & Cheese Pairings

1. Widmer 1-Year Aged Cheddar

cheese-widmer

Here are the best pairings everybody chose for the Widmer 1-Year Aged Cheddar, or a suitable substitute. I’ve noted what substitute cheese was used, where applicable.

  • Adnams Innovation IPA (Lincolnshire Poacher):
    Reluctant Scooper
  • Alaskan Smoked Porter (Apple-smoked cheddar):
    The Brew Lounge
  • Brasserie Dupont vec Les Bons Voeux (English Cheddar, age unknown):
    Hoppy-Hour
  • DC Brau The Public Pale Ale (Isle of Mull Cheddar):
    Yours For Good Fermentables
  • Dogfish Head 90 Minute IPA (Three Year Old Aged Wisconsin Cheddar):
    Ramblings of a Beer Runner
  • Drake’s 1500 Pale Ale:
    Brewed For Thought
  • Firestone Walker Union Jack IPA (Dubarton Cheddar):
    Beer Search Party
  • Fort George Vortex IPA (Tillamook Extra Sharp Vintage White Cheddar, aged two years):
    The Brew Site
  • Green Flash Hop Head Red Ale (Black Creek Extra Sharp Cheddar, aged 3 years):
    Bottle Chasers
  • Green Flash West Coast IPA (Carr Valley 10-year WI Cheddar):
    The Pour Curator
  • Greene King IPA (Balderson 1 year old aged cheddar):
    BeerTaster
  • North Coast Old Stock (Black Creek 9-Month Sharp White Cheddar):
    99 Pours
  • Paulaner Hefeweizen (Spanish Adarga de Oro, aged):
    Thirsty Pilgrim
  • Samuel Smith Imperial Stout (Widmer 10 Year Cheddar):
    What We’re Drinking
  • Sierra Nevada Ovila Dubbel (English Cheddar, aged 15 months):
    Growler Fills
  • Speakeasy Payback Porter:
    Brookston Beer Bulletin
  • Uinta Organic Sum’r (Black Creek 9-Month Sharp White Cheddar):
    99 Pours
  • Unibroue La Fin du Monde (Balderson 3 year old cheddar):
    A Good Beer Blog
  • Williams Brothers Joker IPA (Wexford Cheddar):
    The Beer Nut

2. Cypress Grove Humboldt Fog

cheese-cypress-grove

Here are the best pairings everybody chose for the Humboldt Fog, or a suitable substitute. I’ve noted what substitute cheese was used, where applicable.

  • 21st Amendment Fireside Chat:
    Bottle Chasers
  • 21st Amendment Monk’s Blood:
    Ramblings of a Beer Runner
  • Allagash Dubbel:
    Beer Search Party
  • Brasserie Cazeau Saison Cazeau (Fivemiletown Cooneen):
    Reluctant Scooper
  • Butternuts Moo Thunder Stout (Monte Enebro blue goat cheese):
    Yours For Good Fermentables
  • Dogfish Head/Birra Del Borgo collaboration My Antonia (French, surface ripened goat milk cheese):
    Hoppy-Hour
  • Duchesse de Bourgogne (Brouwerij Verhaeghe):
    Wine and Beer of Washington State
  • Firestone Walker (for Trader Joe’s) Mission Street Pale Ale:
    Bottle Chasers
  • Fremont Brewery Abominable Winter Ale:
    Wine and Beer of Washington State
  • Gagleer:
    Brewed For Thought
  • Gordon Biersch Blonde Bock:
    Growler Fills
  • Harviestoun Old Engine Oil (Snøfrisk):
    99 Pours
  • Jolly Pumpkin Bam Biere:
    What We’re Drinking
  • Left Hand Fade to Black Vol. 2 Smoked Baltic Porter:
    The Pour Curator
  • Mill Street Belgian Wit (Woolwich Dairy Chevrai):
    BeerTaster
  • Paulaner Hefeweizen (Roquefort):
    Thirsty Pilgrim
  • Saison Dupont:
    The Brew Lounge
  • Schneider-Weisse Aventinus Weizenbock:
    Brookston Beer Bulletin
  • Sierra Nevada Ovila Dubbel:
    Growler Fills
  • Unibroue Blanche de Chambly (Woolwich Dairy Chevrai):
    BeerTaster
  • Widmer Cherry Oak Doppelbock (Trader Joe’s Goat’s Milk Cheddar):
    The Brew Site

3. Maytag Blue

cheese-maytag-blue

Here are the best pairings everybody chose for the Maytag Blue, or a suitable substitute. I’ve noted what substitute cheese was used, where applicable.

  • Brewdog Tactical Nuclear Penguin / Sink the Bismark (Long Clawson Stilton):
    Reluctant Scooper
  • Kasteel Rouge:
    The Pour Curator
  • Lagunitas Gnarleywine:
    Ramblings of a Beer Runner
  • Neustadt Springs Neustadt 10W30 (Tuxford & Tebbutt Stilton):
    BeerTaster
  • Pelican Pub & Brewery Stormwatcher’s Winterfest 2010 (Rogue Creamery Oregon Blue Cheese):
    The Brew Site
  • Pike Brewing Old Bawdy Barley Wine (2009):
    Wine and Beer of Washington State
  • Russian River Pliny the Elder:
    Brewed For Thought
  • Russian River Temptation:
    Brookston Beer Bulletin
  • Sierra Nevada 30th Anniversary Barleywine:
    The Brew Lounge
  • Sierra Nevada Bigfoot Barleywine Style Ale:
    Appellation Blog
  • St. Ambroise Vintage 2010 (Tuxford & Tebbutt Stilton):
    BeerTaster
  • Stone Old Guardian Belgo Barleywine (Stilton):
    Beer Search Party
  • Stone Sublimely Self Righteous (Salemville Amish Blue Cheese Crumbles):
    99 Pours
  • Williams Brothers Gold (Bellingham Blue):
    The Beer Nut

I was also glad to see so many people not stress too much about the specific cheeses I recommended. I knew that not everybody would be able to find them going in, but it seemed like the more who could find the same cheeses, the better the experiment would work, because it could more easily be duplicated regardless of location. But I also realized that with beer bloggers so spread out around the world, that in the end it was an impossible task and felt it was better to participate with a substitute cheese then not at all, and as long as the cheeses were somewhat similar, I figured it would still be valid. A number of people also added additional cheeses or could not find substitutions that were similar, so the list below is all of the other and extra cheeses that peoples paired together.

4. Other or Extra Cheeses Paired

  • Boulevard Smokestack Tank 7 (Gruyere & Manchego):
    Appellation Blog
  • Brooklyn Black Chocolate Stout (Mature Ardrahan, a semi-soft cheese):
    The Beer Nut
  • Brooklyn Lager (KH DeJong Gouda):
    The Pour Curator
  • Cigar City Maduro (Triple Cream Brie):
    The Pour Curator
  • Dogfish Head Indian Brown Ale (Snow White Goat Cheddar):
    The Brew Lounge
  • Duchesse de Bourgogne [Brouwerij Verhaeghe] (French Comte):
    Wine and Beer of Washington State
  • Foggy Noggin Anniversary Ale and the Quadrupel Belgian (French Comte):
    Wine and Beer of Washington State
  • Trappiste Rochefort 10 (Parmesan):
    Yours For Good Fermentables
  • Victory Headwaters pale (KH DeJong Edam):
    The Pour Curator
  • Williams Brothers Gold (Mature Ardrahan, a semi-soft cheese):
    The Beer Nut
  • Part 2: The Extra Special Second Follow-Up Mid-May Session

    Okay, I know not everyone will want to go for this, but if you’re with me so far and you’ve already participated in Session #51, here’s the idea for part two. Use the list of beers chosen by everybody for each of the three cheeses that are listed above to try a few more beers with the same cheese. Over the next two weeks, simply pick up some of the other beers that were suggested, and try them with the same three cheeses and do a follow up blog post on Friday, May 20 — which I’m calling Session #51.5 — to explore more fully pairing cheese and beer.

    You can write about how your choices compared, or what you learned from the other suggestions, or which out of all the ones you tried worked best. What recommended pairing most surprised you? Which didn’t seem to work at all, for you? It’s my way of taking the Session concept and making it more interactive and collaborative, essentially an “online cheese-off.” First, we made our best recommendations for pairing a beer with these three cheeses, and now we have an opportunity to try as many of the suggestions as we can, and discover which worked best. I’ll then do a second round-up and report the findings of the group as a whole to the beers and the three cheeses together.

    Spread the cheese .. er, the word. If you’ve already done Part One, don’t stop now, keep going. Read what your fellow bloggers liked, and pick a few to try yourself. To participate, just post a comment here with a link to your blog post for Session #51.5.

    Filed Under: Beers, Events, Food & Beer, Just For Fun, The Session Tagged With: Announcements, Blogging, Cheese, Websites

    Session #51: The Great Online Beer & Cheese-Off

    May 5, 2011 By Jay Brooks

    beer-and-cheese
    It’s my great pleasure to host our 51st Session, my second time playing host over the four years we’ve been doing them. I chose a frightfully complicated topic which I’ve taken to calling by an overly grand name: The Great Online Beer & Cheese-Off. You can go back and read the long, original version of what’s going on, or here it is in a nutshell.

    1. Pick up three cheeses:
      1. Maytag Blue, or another blue cheese.
      2. Widmer Cellars 1-yr old aged cheddar, or another aged cheddar.
      3. Humboldt Fog, or another goat cheese.
    2. Pick a few beers you think will pair well with each cheese.
    3. Drink them with the cheese.
    4. Write up your results and post them on or before Friday, May 6.
    5. Leave a comment here, the announcement, or send me an e-mail so I can find your Session post.

    session_logo_all_text_200

    So in addition to the Session Announcement , I also wrote about cheese and beer pairing in my last newspaper column, similarly challenging readers to try some beer with the same three cheeses and send in their best pairings, too.

    Wednesday evening, a few friends joined me to try several beers with each of the cheeses. Sean Paxton, the Homebrew Chef, and Pete and Amy Slosberg, who started Pete’s Wicked Ales in the 1980s, each brought a beer for each cheese, I picked a couple for each, and then I included some of the most promising sounding pairings that readers of my newspaper column sent in. Here’s what we discovered.

    The Beer & Cheese Pairings

    1. Widmer 1-Year Aged Cheddar

    cheese-widmer

    We started with the cheddar. The Widmer is a simple cheddar, but with solid, strong flavors. I love the nuttiness and the way it melts in your mouth. The beers we had for the cheddar were the Belgian sweet gale beer, Gagleer, Bear Republic’s Racer 5 , Russian River’s Pliny the Elder, Anderson Valley’s Brother David’s Double, Speakeasy’s Payback Porter, HUB’s Secession Cascadian Dark Ale and Firestone Walker’s Pale 31.

    A few of our choices didn’t really work at all, which was immediately apparent. The Gagleer was too sweet, Pale 31 was too mild to stand up to the cheese and the roasted malt in HUB’s Cascadian Dark Ale was accentuated by the cheese, making the pairing too harsh to work well. The vegetal, oniony cattiness of Pliny — delightful on its own — brought out an equal amount of bitterness in the cheese and led to a hash astringency in the combination. While talking through the cheeses, Pete asked if I had another dopplebock we might try, so I opened an older Salvator I had in my beer cellar (a.k.a. “the garage”). Even slightly oxidized, it was our third best pairing with the cheddar. It had only a slight malt sweetness, which complimented the nutty flavors in the cheese nicely. Racer 5, Bear Republic’s IPA, was our second favorite. It seemed to have the right level of bitterness to work with the Widmer Cellars cheddar, the two were a little bit more than the some of their parts. I think it could have been fun to try the cheese with just a variety of IPAs, because it really seemed like the IBUs and the choice of hop varieties make a big difference in whether or not the beer and cheese pairing is a hit or a miss.

    Our top choice, a unanimous decision, was Speakeasy’s Payback Porter. The cheese brought out an underlying smokey quality in the beer, accentuating it perfectly, and made the two something more than either could achieve alone. And that, we concluded, was what made a pairing great; when the two elements — the beer and the cheese — combined to become a third thing that was unique in and of itself.

    2. Cypress Grove Humboldt Fog

    cheese-cypress-grove

    We tasted the Humboldt Fog, a goat cheese from Cypress Grove Chevre, second. It’s a fantastic cheese; with unmistakably strong flavors. It’s creamy, with a zippy tang and sharp bite.

    The beers we had for the Humboldt Fog were Aventinus Weizenbock, the Bruery’s Orchard White, Ommegang’s Hennepin, Hoegaarden, Russian River Temptation and Saison Dupont.

    The Orchard White was an utter failure, the spices and floral notes really clashed with the cheese, making it too perfumy. We also tried the Pliny from the last flight and found its bitterness stomped on the cheese. Both the Payback Porter and HUB’s Black IPA did likewise, with the beer bringing out too much bitterness in the pairings that overwhelmed the cheese. In “The Brewmaster’s Table,” Garret Oliver singled out Hennepin as a beer to pair with goat cheese, but it didn’t actually work too well with the Humboldt Fog. It wasn’t terrible, but it brought out a bitterness in the beer when combined with the cheese that was less than ideal.

    But most actually worked fairly well with this versatile cheese. The Velvet Merkin/Merlin (which we went back and tried; see below) worked better than I expected; the oats in the stout smoothed and rounded out the flavor combinations. And the orange peel and coriander in the Hoegaarden, a last minute impromptu addition, brought all sorts of complexity to the pairing that made it hard to choose the best choice with the goat cheese.

    In addition to the new ones we added for each cheese, we also left all of the beers on the table from the previous cheese (and yes, the table filled up quickly) so we could try an even greater variety of combinations. As a result, we might never have discovered how well the Racer 5 went with the Humboldt Fog. It might not have occurred to be pair such a hoppy beer with the goat cheese, but the contrast was delicious, and we gave it an “honorable mention.”

    For our third best, we picked Temptation. The two were just heavenly together, as was our second choice: Saison Dupont. Both beers are zesty, spicy and complex and served to bring out a lot of flavor components from the cheese in the process, hitting that sweet spot of being more than the sum of their parts. But the beer that did all that, but better and with far more intangibles, was the Aventinus Weizenbock from Schneider-Weisse. The beer itself has an awful lot going on, and brought out so much more in the cheese that we thought we’d died and gone to heaven. I’d swear we heard choirs of angels faintly ringing in the air.

    3. Maytag Blue

    cheese-maytag-blue

    Lastly, we tried the Maytag Blue, a classic blue cheese that crumbles easily and is very spicy and tangy. The runnier it gets, the more I like it.

    In addition to the beers we’d opened before it, we also tried it with Firestone Walker’s Velvet Merkin (or Merlin for the feint of heart), Lagunitas Imperial Stout and North Coast’s Old Rasputin.

    Most of the lighter styles from the previous flights weren’t up to the challenge of keeping their own against such as strong cheese as Maytag Blue, though the Racer 5 was an exception, and showed itself to be a very versatile beer to pair with a variety of cheese. Both the Velvet Merlin and the Lagunitas stout were strong enough and worked well enough for us to declare a two-way toe for third place. Personally, I thought the Lagunitas had a slight edge because it was stronger and stood up better than the softer oatmeal stout. But I was alone in that, and unable to break the deadlock.

    Of the stouts, the already wonderful Old Rasputin became even better with the blue cheese, earning itself second place in our informal contest. Strength against strength, complexity upon complexity, the two were a beautiful match. There’s just something about a big, lip-smackingly good complex imperial stout, with all its roasty goodness, malty sweetness and alcoholic punch, that seeps into the veins of the tangy power of a blue cheese and can match it round after round in the boxing ring inside your mouth. But remember that was our second choice. The best was yet to come.

    Hands down, and unanimously so, we liked the Russian River Temptation from the second flight as the best beer to pair with the Maytag Blue. It was simply “otherworldly.” It’s even hard to describe. We all took a sip, looked at each other furtively and knew. It was that good. Everything just worked. The combination of the two was so much more than the either individually, it was if they were made to go together.

    beer-and-cheese

    And that, in essence, was the takeaway, what the exercise taught us. Like “white wine with fish,” any kind of guidelines about what beer styles goes with what cheese is only slightly better than guesswork. There is a very specific component to each beer and each cheese that alone determines if the pairing works or not, and that seems especially true for stronger beers (in both strength and flavors) and stronger cheeses, too. It may well be that milder cheese and beer do more easily fit a framework of guidelines. But in our little experiment, it became clear that guidelines are just a starting point. You have to really get under the hood and try various beers and cheeses together. And what you find is that while one IPA may work with one cheddar, it may not work at all with another. That makes it much harder to predict what will work together, but at least trying endless combinations is not exactly a grueling, miserable task. I’ll gladly try fifty beers with one one cheese to find that perfect pairing. Because when its good, holy moley, is it ever good.

    The other thing we noticed is that beers with pronounced flavors, such as very strong bittering or very sweet malt tended to accentuate those when combined with the cheese. As a gross generality, beers that were more balanced tended to work much better with whichever cheese we paired with them. That was interesting, and might require some more research.

    Well, that was great fun. Now it’s time to open another bottle of Temptation and cut up some Maytag Blue. Yum. I can’t wait to hear what everybody else tried and what combinations worked best. So that’s my round one. Look for the details on round two, Session #51.5 — which will take place in two weeks on Friday, May 20 — in the round-up, which I’ll likely be posting tomorrow morning.

    Filed Under: Beers, Food & Beer, Just For Fun, Reviews, The Session Tagged With: Blogging, Cheese, Websites

    Wikio Beer Blog Rankings For May 2011

    May 2, 2011 By Jay Brooks

    wikio
    The May 2011 standings will soon be released for Wikio’s Beer Blogs. Stan at Appellation Blog got a sneak peak at the new rankings, so here’s what happened to the Top 20 over last month:

    Wikio May 2011 Beer Blog Rankings

    1Brookston Beer Bulletin (+1)
    2Beervana (-1)
    3The New School (+1)
    4Brewpublic (-1)
    5A Good Beer Blog (+1)
    6Appellation Beer: Beer From a Good Home (-1)
    7Drink With The Wench (+/-0)
    8Seen Through a Glass (+1)
    9The Daily Pull (+1)
    10Oakshire Brewing (Not in Top 20 for Apr.)
    11Washington Beer Blog (-3)
    12The Session Beer Project (-1)
    13KC Beer Blog (+3)
    14Seattle Beer News (-2)
    15It’s Pub Night (-2)
    16brewvana (Not in Top 20 for Apr.)
    17Beer 47 (+2)
    18Beer Therapy (+2)
    19Beer-Stained Letter (Not in Top 20 for Apr.)
    20The Not So Professional Beer Blog (-3)

    Ranking made by Wikio

    As usual, I added the relative movements of each blog from last month. This month, three new blogs made an appearance in the Top 20, some for the first time. Another curious change is that #1 & #2, #3 & #4, and #5 & #6 each switched places. As always, I continue to stress that this is just a bit of fun and that we shouldn’t take it too seriously, though I’d be lying if I said I wasn’t pleased to be back at #1 again. Vanity of vanities, all is vanity.

    Filed Under: Just For Fun, News Tagged With: Awards, Blogging, North America, Websites

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