Showing posts with label fermentation lounge. Show all posts
Showing posts with label fermentation lounge. Show all posts

Thursday, July 26, 2012

So long, Tallahassee!

Well, it's definitely been fun.

For those of you that haven't realized, or I haven't told - I have moved to Jacksonville. As you can see, that means I won't be keeping up on this blog anymore. Sorry, Tallahassee!

Will I do this in Jacksonville? Probably not. There are a billion more beer places in the metro area, and with my busy schedule, I don't think I can keep up.

More importantly, what do you need to know about Tallahassee as you read this?

Well, off the top of my head, I can only think of 2 things:

1). Proof Brewing Company launched their brewery tonight. They are having another release of 2 more beers in 2 weeks in honor of National IPA day. Though I couldn't attend, I was there for their first brew day, and I tasted a couple of the brews out of the fermenters. You're in for a treat, Tallahassee.

2). Ferm is opening a new location at some point in Midtown. Hipsters unite!

It's been fun! Thanks, everyone!

Wednesday, March 28, 2012

Interview with Golden Horn Brewing Co., Pt. 2

Greetings! Welcome back for part two of my interview with Golden Horn Brewing Company! If you haven't yet checked out part one, go ahead and click here!

I will also take this moment to release the details for our potential future collaboration. We hammered out the details to make what will hopefully be a chocolate orange milk stout, a combination of inspiration from one of their past beers and my love of the candy chocolate oranges! We're test batches and plenty of time away before anything goes down, but the idea is there!

If you had to choose something to change about one of your past beers, what would it be?

Jamie: Amaretto Porter… the very first version, but even the one that we did release. I think it had too much amaretto. I wanted when somebody drank the beer, if they’d ever had marzipan candy, to think of that – just that nice, mellow, yet somewhat pungent almond flavor. That’s what I was really looking for, but at that time we really couldn’t figure out a way to do it as far as finding that almond flavor, so we ended up using some amaretto extract in there. That put it a little too over the top. It definitely goes with the concept that there are times when we brew stuff, we’re trying to shoot for that bullseye. We think that we can miss the target when we give somebody something to drink, even if they say hey, this is an excellent beer.

Robert C.: We also disagree amongst ourselves. I liked the Amaretto Porter just where it was. Sue wanted more, and Jamie wanted less. So we had to compromise, and we often hit that. A lot of the beers I actually end up tweaking when we’re kegging. I will taste it at that point and a lot of times I will add simple syrup if it needs a little more sweetness, I will boil some hops down and add a hop tea if it needs more bittering. Sometimes I will do last minute adjustments as we’re actually kegging the beer. Often times, like the Amaretto Porter, it’s a rock-paper-scissors thing and we all have different opinions. At that point we have to say well, you want more, you want less, I’m happy, so let’s compromise in the middle. That’s the nice part about being a democracy – we all have equal votes and we all can express our opinions. It’s not Robert’s show, it’s not Daffin’s show, it’s not Jamie’s show – it’s Golden Horn’s show.

Any other beers you felt like changing?

Robert C.: The one thing I felt like changing, I changed when I kegged. I have gotten the beers to the point where I have been happy to serve them. There have been beers, like the first time we attempted to do the Amaretto Porter, that we could have served, but it wasn’t up to our terms. Some people were greatly disappointed and upset because we said we were going to serve it and we didn’t serve it – and that’s a risk that we took. My opinion was that we’d rather say we’re going to serve a beer and then and the last minute say it’s not up to our standards and say we’re sorry, we’re not going to serve it – than go ahead and put it out there. We could have put it on tap that day and we could have sold all ten gallons without a problem. We sold twenty gallons of the other beer in like 2 or 3 hours. We could have sold it. We let some people taste it and some of them were okay with it, some people were like “huhhh?” and it was varied – people were all over the place, but none of us were happy with it. We had a couple of small, technical mistakes and we have definitely learned from that.

I’m sorry that we upset some people, and we apologize for it, but the flipside of that coin – the other approach to take – is to not announce what or when we put it on tap and things are just spontaneously there without any information about how it’s made or what’s in it and customers have to roll the dice to see if there’s a beer or not. That’s a system with no promises and just putting things out there. We’re okay with saying hey, we’re going to serve a beer, and if at the last minute we have to say nay, we have the integrity to just say no. Both side has risks – you’re going to make people unhappy with either one of those decisions, but you have to decide which side you want to go with. I’m a very direct person, so I’d rather just say hey, we’re going to try, and if it doesn’t happen, I apologize – but at least we tried. And we changed our whole brewing schedule around because of it. We had other beers lined up for the schedule but we did the Amaretto Porter for the next one. When we do releases, we try to have 2 beers that are very different. We ended up having to change the other beer around because it was going to be too similar in profile to the Amaretto Porter. We changed everything so we could deliver that beer in our next go around. Hopefully people appreciated that, or we at least hope they understand we had the integrity to say this beer is unservable. It was maybe an 85 or a 90, and we’re not looking for an 85 or a 90. We don’t want a B, we want something that we’re proud of. We want to hit the flavor profile that we want.

Jamie: Exactly. I’m less worried about upsetting people because we don’t serve something than upsetting people because we served something. I’m not afraid to not hit the mark, but at the same time, I’m not going to serve something that we feel is technically flawed, which then leads to a beer that is completely not what we intended.

What’s the hardest thing about brewing at Ferm?

Robert C.: Multiple. For one, we’re using a homebrew setup to make ten gallons. To fill our 27 gallon fermenter, we have to do two batches back to back on a ten gallon setup. If we had bigger equipment, that would be easier. We’re also brewing outside on a sidewalk… not my preferred location. That’s one of the reasons our setup has pumps and is all closed. When we’re actually brewing, we’re using the pumps and hoses to move liquids around so we don’t have to open pots and let sand and whatever else is in the atmosphere get into our beer, so it can be as clean as we can possibly make it. It would of course be much easier if we were enclosed in an area with a professional setup. Fermenting in a bar, where the temperature is hard to control. We can get it to 70, but we can’t get it colder because it’s a bar and they don’t want to freeze all of their customers. So, temperature control is almost non-existent. It stays 70, but that limits us on styles and yeasts that we can do. Size. We’re making rather small batches of beer, which has the translation that the beer kinda sells quickly and some people don’t get to try it. We’ve all had situations where we have family or friends come into town and we really want them to try this beer. They get here on Saturday and we released it on Wednesday, so it’s gone. It would be nice if we could do bigger batches.

However, what we’re doing is within Ferm’s model. They opened to be an art house with movies that happens to serve beers. Two of the owners are very big into the film festival in town and wine, so they kinda wanted to follow that. One of the other owners was really into beer, so they said hey, we’ll have artisanal wines, we’ll have really nice craft beer, we’ll have a movie theater, we’ll show specialty art films, and they opened Ferm as a test project to see how that would do and then follow with a two screen theater. In a bar situation like that, you can’t hear what’s going on in the movie. You can see it, but you can’t hear it. What they quickly realized is that people were coming there for the beer, wine, and mead – they weren’t coming for the movies. Back when they used to do the Sunday night movie thing, it was a major flop. I loved it because me and a couple guys would hang out and we had the bar to ourselves, but other people would say, dude, I’m not going to a bar at 8pm on a Sunday night to watch Wild Thing… we were like, cool, wowee! It was not for everybody. They were able to say hey, the bar is doing well, so they kinda ran with that aspect of it. I look at it the same way with us now. It’s a test pilot. We’re showing that we can brew beer that’s interesting, that sells, and that people will go to a release of it and buy it. Once we can show that, then hopefully we can look at some investors, or someone that has a bigger setup that wants a brewer, or something of that nature and take it to the next level. This is a stepping stone for us, and that’s how we’re looking at it. Hopefully one day we’ll be on a nice, bigger system, but for now, it is what it is.

Any plans for the future?

Robert C.: I would love to be brewing on a 7-barrel system in the next year or two. Of course that’s going to depend a lot on money and right now people are being hesitant to invest, and there’s not a lot of money from banks and other resources.

Jamie: Yeah, hopefully within the next five years it’ll be a brewpub or a gastropub. I mean, just to be able to pair food with beers and beers with food – just to do that is a way to go.

Robert C.: I actually cook a lot with beer, and since I’ve been brewing, I’ve actually made beers just to cook with them. I’ll make certain beers and wines that are really more for flavoring things or marinating something, and that’s a nice part about making your own. If you want to make five gallons of wine to marinate chicken… you can. But you may not want to drink peppered lemongrass wine. Other people might… but either way, it makes a great chicken marinade… but drinking, maybe not so good. I experiment with things of that nature. I have a recipe for beef stroganoff that I make, which I wall “beer stroganoff” and beer is pretty much all the liquid that’s in it, so there’s a lot of things you can do. I’ve taken IPAs and made chicken herb soups. The IPA bitterness blends really well with the fresh herbs. It’s fun to play with it.

If you end up growing, do you hope to distribute at all?

Robert C.: Well, like I said, I’d like to be on a 7-barrel system, and that would be enough that we would distribute in kegs. I’d like us to do kegs, growlers, and maybe a bottle release once or twice a year. Optimally, I’d like to do a seasonal release every three months – like a seasonal bottle release. Maybe do a saison in the summer, a brown in the winter, or a stout. Kinda following the classic pattern of seasonal beers, because to me, it’s all coming back down to local, seasonal ingredients, and I really like that aspect that I can highlight those, just like I did when I was a chef – now I’m just doing it in a different medium.

Where would you distribute to?

Robert C.: Just locally. It’d be nice to throw beers on at Proof, or Ray’s, etc. There are some bars in town that are interested in good beer and they serve good beer. If we have a smaller system like that, we can distribute out a couple sixth barrels or half barrels to some of these bars and they would go over well. I think it kinda fits the theme of all of this. I hope that when Proof gets up and running and distributing, I hope we can get some of that beer at Fermentation. These bars in town are all about good beer.

Have you thought of doing specially treated casks or anything like that to serve at Ferm?

Robert C.: Absolutely. Again, it’s a capacity problem right now. We have talked to the owners about doing casks and things like that nature. What I would actually really like to do is make 30 gallons of beer and doing the same beer four different ways. Having a plain old keg and taking the remaining beer and splitting it between three different casks with different treatments. So have the beer and in this one we add fruit, this one we add oak chips, and this one we add dry hops… something completely different and really try to showcase the same beer multiple different ways. I think that would be fun and experimental. We talked about it, it just hasn’t really seemed to happen yet, and it may not, probably because of the capacity issues. We’ve only got so much we can brew and ferment at one time and we can’t take both fermenters out of production for three or four weeks to do these casks.

If you could make love to one beer or one beer style, what would it be and why?

Jamie: Oh man, I would make love to a stout because it’s strong, black, and bitter.

Robert C.: Just like you like your women! I would do a rauchbier because it’s hot. I like the fire! Hot and steamy.

Robert D.: I got nothing!

Robert C.: He would do an IPA because it’s bitter! …but he would always drink an IPA anyway.

Jamie: Then again, just maybe perhaps I might like a little ménage-a-beer-trois, adding in a bock. Weltenbergur Kloster is probably one of my top five beers. If I could make a sex doll out of Weltenbergur Kloster, I think that would probably be the beer that I would use.

Robert C.: Of course if you wanted to be completely misogynist, you could say Bud Light because I want it cheap and then it goes away. One and done!

Robert D.: I just can’t draw the sex and beer parallel! I can’t!

Robert C.: Can I change my answer to eisbock because it’s thick and creamy?

Friday, March 23, 2012

Events at Proof

Greetings! I'm working on finishing my interview with Golden Horn and you can expect to see that soon. In that post I will announce the details of our potential collaboration brew!

Well for whatever reason nobody has really been announcing any events except Proof, so I'll go ahead and fill you in with all of those.

Tonight they are having a Friday happy hour with some good stuff. If you haven't been to Proof around 5pm on a Friday - it's awesome. Smaller crowd, older clientele, etc. If you love good beer but want to avoid the nightlife, this is a good time to visit. Also, it's the weekend which means BOTH bars will be open, baby!

Anyway, tonight they will have lots of Bells Hopslam bottles, Bells on tap, Dogfish Head 120 Minute (and more) on tap, and some Terrapin stuff. It's also dollar off all drafts from 5-7 every day, so this would be a good time to stop by for sure!

In the same e-mail they announced their next couple of events as well. On Wednesday, March 28th they will be having a Southern Tier Glassware giveaway and the next week, Wednesday, April 4th, they will be having a Stone glassware giveaway. If you're wondering why my dates are different, it's because they typed the wrong dates in the e-mail, but it's always on Wednesdays, so I'm assuming these are the dates they meant.

Keep your eyes peeled for the rest of the Golden Horn interview!

Cheers!

Wednesday, March 21, 2012

Interview with Golden Horn Brewing Co., Pt. 1

I was recently lucky enough to sit down with three members of Golden Horn Brewing Company. I have to say, if you've never talked to any of these folks, catch them at the next release and you're definitely in for a good time. We had a lot of fun chatting about beer, their philosophies, how they got started, and oh so much more.

Golden Horn Brewing Company consists of four members: Jamie Hanuka, Robert Daffin, Robert Clark, and Sue Humphries. Currently they brew at/for Fermentation Lounge as a contract brewer of sorts. Right now they are waiting for some Federal red tape to clear before they get brewing there for the year, but we're hoping to see more soon!

Alright, enough jabber, let's get down to it! Because there were often 3 people answering, and because Robert C. is a windbag (just kidding!), this interview got quite long (I was there for almost 2 hours), so I opted to split this interview into two parts.

Part 1 will cover a lot about their histories and philosophies.
Part 2 (released later this week or next week) will cover brewing at Fermentation Lounge and future plans

I sat down for my chat with Jamie, Robert C., and Robert D.

Where did the name come from?

Robert C.: Sue and myself are both kinda history buffs, as well as Jamie, and Sue and I are both into making mead. There’s a story about a Germanic god named Odin who stole mead and put it in a golden chalice, well for them it was a golden horn, and if you drank that mead, basically it gave you the gift of poetry, and in that culture the gift of poetry was very revered because they had the gift of words and language. So, we tend to make higher gravity beers and use lots of honey – we definitely have a mead background. I always make the joke that I make beer so that I have something to drink while my mead is maturing. So that came from that concept of the golden drinking horn and getting the gift of poetry. And since we make higher gravity beers, if you drink enough of it, you might just get to talking!

Any particular beer or moment that got you into craft beer?

Robert C.: I think we all have our own individual stories. For me, both my father and my grandfather homebrewed. One incident that very clearly sticks out in my mind is when I was about 6 years old and my dad caught me pilfering his homebrew stash. I would take a bottle and me and my brothers would run out into the woods and we would all take turns drinking it. Well he caught me one day and he made me drink two bottles and I got sick. I enjoyed the flavors and the fact that he was making it. I remember helping him cap it - that was my favorite job. He had one of those big lever cappers and I would grab the handle and pull up my legs and let my body weight pull the capper down. I remember having lots of fun doing that because he would make about 10 gallons at a time. That’s my memory – capping the beer, watching them ferment, and occasionally explode.

Jamie: I would say my memory is really the first time I had my first homebrew. Like all college students, it’s all about Natty Lights and consuming in mass quantities the cheapest beer you can afford and I met some guys that were homebrewing here. You think everything is yellow, crisp, and watery until I had that first homebrew. It was just like “Oh my God” this is absolutely amazing! It pretty much opened the flood gates and convinced me to get a kit and start doing homebrewing stuff.

Robert D.: I was born and raised in Marianna, Florida, which is not exactly a bastion of anything, short of prisons. They changed the laws in Alabama some 20 years ago to allow the opening of brewpubs and one actually opened in Dothan, Alabama of all places, which I’m still rather surprised happened. But anyway, Poplarhead Mule Company opened up (not 100% sure of the name he said). A friend of mine told me I had to go there and try this beer. I did, they had 3 different beers on tap. One was a Budweiser clone that was not that interesting, one was a Bud Light clone that was not that interesting, but they had one called Downtown Brown and it was one of the best things I had ever had. We made regular pilgrimages to buy Downtown Brown by the pitcher. Me and my buddy Tommy would get… well, the quality of the night depended on the quantity of pitchers we had. A 2-pitcher night was probably pretty good. A 3-pitcher night was probably pushing it, and a 4-pitcher night… probably not gonna end well. In fact, I actually have a problem now because of that, and this was over 20 years ago. I have a problem now with browns because I’m still trying to find that beer. I’ve not found a brown that measures up to that… and I probably never will, because it’s a memory, you know. That was the point where I woke up and said, you know, there’s probably a lot more out there than just the mass market adjuncts that everybody else is drinking.

Robert C.: Daff and I want to work together with his memory and we’re going to try to make a brown that he considers worthy. So we’ll try to live up to that memory. If not, we’ll hopefully get very close or something that he’s happy with.

Jamie: Gentleman, you’re chasing the dragon!

What breweries have had an influence on your brewing or tastes?

Robert D.: Let’s see… Stone was probably one of the ones that really turned me around. I’m one of those that’s a bit of a hophead. I love Sublimely Self Righteous. I love Ruination for that matter. Lagunitas does some pretty amazing stuff. I really, really liked Lucky 13 when it first came out. I’m slightly less happy with their reformulation – the Lucky Alt version. Basically, I skew very hoppy. California hoppy styles, too – you know, Pliny the Elder is a wonderful thing. Ballast Point does some wonderful beers.

Me: Did you have Lagunitas Sucks? I thought that one was really good.

Robert D.: I did, and I thought it was very good. Of all the holiday beers this year, I really thought Lagunitas Sucks was the best of it. In fact, I’m kind of disappointed because we were supposed to be getting leftovers at some point and I’ve never seen them!

Jamie: Definitely Dogfish Head. It’s either hit or miss sometimes with their beers, but their bold brewing style and their desire to go way out there is really influential. The kind of beer that I really love is the kind of beer that I’ve never had before. They will usually make something I’ve never had before, so I’m definitely going to go ahead and give it a try. Samuel Adams, it’s funny that you’re wearing a Sam Adams shirt (I was wearing a Longshot t-shirt) because for many years, I was a big time snob on Samuel Adams in that my opinion was that whatever they brewed, somebody else brewed better. Robert C. here told me, you know, you have to look at Samuel Adams as the stepping stone to craft beer. Everybody who drinks the Budweisers and all of the big lagers and pilsners will then go to Samuel Adams to get something a try and it’ll then open up the door for them. But the Chocolate Bock that they made, the 25oz bomber they did with the silver label on it. When I had that, it just completely changed my mind about them and that was like, man this is just an amazing beer. The maltiness, the chocolate, everything just layered perfectly, blended perfectly, it’s like your Downtown Brown, Daffin, unfortunately now that they’ve retooled it and put it out as a part of their winter Brewmaster’s pick, now it’s like it’s not the same thing and it’s really disappointing. The other one that really got me and you can’t get this in the US – when I was traveling across Europe 12 years ago, I stopped off in Salzburg, Austria, and I went to this brewery called The Augustiner Brewery, which was in a converted monastery. The beer there – and it was most likely just the fact that they gave me a tour of the brewery and just the entire atmosphere of it, to watch them take this 3 barrel keg of beer and tap it – classic wooden style. It was the entire process, the entire atmosphere, but that was one of the best types of lagers I’ve ever had and it was absolutely amazing.

Robert C.: For my breweries, I’ll stick mostly with American ones, mostly some of the ones we’ve already heard and for some of the same reasons. Dogfish Head because they don’t brew to style and because they’re always trying to do something that noone’s ever done before, and that kind of epitomizes my brewing style. I really like that about them. Some of their stuff, like that Egyptian one, it smelled like tuna fish, but once you got past the smell, it was interesting… I don’t think I’d buy a second bottle, but I like the fact that they tried. They tried something completely out of the box. They said we don’t care how you categorize it, we don’t care what style, we’re just gonna do this weird thing.

I like breweries like Cigar City and Seventh Sun, that take a beer and then they say, okay this beer is good, so let’s try it with coffee, let’s try it with blackberries, let’s try it with honey, let’s try it with peppers. They’re not afraid to take something that’s already good and think outside the box. Oh, we have an oatmeal brown, let’s put cinnamon and raisins in it. Let’s put milk sugar in it. I like that creativity. Sometimes it gets a little derivative – how many versions of Maduro Brown can you have? But at the same time, I respect that they’re not just sitting back and saying, oh we have Maduro Brown, we’re done in browns. They’re like, no, we’re gonna try this and we’re gonna try that. Cubano Espresso came out of it, which I love. So, thankfully, they took that Maduro Brown, which is interesting and good, and they said, hey, put this in it! I like that kind of experimentation.

I also like places like Funky Buddha Lounge down in Boca. They’re doing the same stuff - hey nobody has a peanut butter and jelly sandwich beer! No Crusts is awesome! Last year at Hunahpu Day they had their maple breakfast beer and I was like, wait, that’s too many words in one beer title, and then I had it and it tasted like somebody took the best pancakes I ever had with some bacon and some maple syrup and coffee and blended it and put it in a bottle. It was amazing. Wow, it is breakfast in a bottle… it’s really good! They went out there on the edge and tried it.

I also like local breweries like Terrapin, and what I like most about Terrapin are their side projects. Again, they’re doing the same kind of thing – okay, we have our stable of beers, but we’re going to try something new and interesting every so often, and they do sometimes really push the envelope. Some of them, like the pumpkin Oktoberfest, are not so great, but they keep trying. I’m okay with a brewery if they try to push the envelope and the envelope kicks back. It’s gonna happen, but I’d rather them make that leap and try than never try at all. There are a lot of breweries out there that got their stable of beers and then they’re kind of stagnant at that point. Where’s their innovation? What are you doing now? Thankfully Sierra Nevada, who I like, has kinda jumped off that bandwagon the last couple of years and came out with Kellerweiss, their 30th Anniversary beers, they’re now doing some new stuff. But for years, it was like, these are their beers, nothing new.

I want, like Jamie, to try a beer I’ve never had before. I tried the Clamato just to try it, yes, Bud Light mixed with clam juice and tomato juice… and it’s really as bad as it sounds. I will try it because I want to try something I’ve never had before, even if I know it’s gonna suck, and it did. I looked at it and said well maybe there are some things I can learn from it. I pull a lot from my chef background and I’m always trying something just to see how it is because if nothing else, I’ve learned a lesson – never add clam juice and tomato juice to a light lager… EVER! So, lesson learned, check that little box off, and I can move on.

You were all homebrewers – what caused you to make the jump into commercial brewing?

Robert C.: I’ve been a fan of Fermentation since right after they opened. I just really liked the vibe there – it’s small, kinda cozy, and it’s usually an older clientele. It’s a very quaint bar. There’s a core of regulars that goes there and it’s really awesome. So I went to Ferm all the time and I started bringing in some of my mead and homebrews and the bartenders were really appreciative and I kinda just hit it off with one of the bartenders. I would go on Sunday nights when they were playing movies back in the day. Often times it’d just be us and the bartenders. We’d sit around, drink mead and watch the stupid movie and just have a blast at basically our own private bar. So I got really familiar with the bar staff and was bringing in a lot of my homebrew. The bar staff told the owners, so a couple of times one of the owners would be there and they would pull a sample to give to the owners and the owners were like “this is good stuff!” and they’ve tried a lot of homebrew, as I’m sure you’ve tried, and some of it’s… not so great sometimes. I’ve worked in a kitchen so I know sanitary methods and I’m very meticulous about it, and I’m very high on flavor profiles. I want to make sure there’s certain flavors here or there and that it hits certain notes. So, they kinda hadn’t had anything like that. I was talking to one of the owners one time and I mentioned that I wanted to get more into brewing – maybe do more of a meadery, and when we first started talking we were actually talking more about opening a meadery than a brewery, but because of laws and regulations, we decided to go more of a brewery route. So basically it was just by bringing my homebrew up there, talking to the bartenders and owners, and they had kinda wanted to add that aspect anyway, so it was just a matter of working that out with them. It slowly evolved over maybe a year or a year and a half and then it took another year or year and a half to get all the paperwork done.

How do you come up with these crazy beers and where did this philosophy come from?

Robert C.: We all have our different approaches. I would say that I come from a strong culinary background. I’m a chef – I was trained at Culinary Art Institute of America in New York. I was an executive chef at a restaurant for years after working my way up from a sous chef. So I have a really strong culinary background. For me, I consider beer as food, and that is a central part of my philosophy about brewing. Just like when I was at the restaurant, I would take my interpretation of something and flip it around and do different things with it, and I like chefs that do that. I also like chefs that are really focused on local, seasonal ingredients. If you notice the beers that are my recipe are all highlighting local, seasonal ingredients. If it’s in season and I can go get it – and by the way, I do consider South Georgia local because I can drive to Thomasville food market in 40 minutes, so for me I can get fresh peaches from them, I consider that local. Some people would say Georgia isn’t local, but it’s Tallahassee and we’re basically South Georgia (I’m thinking he was referencing my own comment on the blog). If I can drive 30 or 40 minutes and buy fresh peaches that were grown a couple of miles from that site, I consider that local. For our watermelon wheat, I drove down to Perry. So I take that brewing philosophy – I like to do seasonal beers, I like to use fresh local ingredients, and I like to highlight local ingredients. Whether I’m using Bradley Country Grits in a beer (had to look that one up), watermelon, or persimmons from a local farm. I even use stuff from my own garden – our chipotle beer had jalapenos and peppers from my garden – it can’t get much more local than that. That’s my philosophy and it’s coming from that culinary background.

I don’t really concentrate so much on the beer style I’m making, or making it fit in a box. I’m totally okay and go, “Is this a brown ale? Is this an amber ale?” I’d just say… sure! I’m totally okay with that. When I design a beer recipe and flavors, I start with how I’d want it to taste, look, and smell, and then I backwards engineer it and I make a grain bill based on what I want those characteristics to be. A lot of times I think brewers start the opposite direction. They start with a grain bill and then they start altering that grain bill. I start with what I want the finished product to be. I do the same thing with cooking. I’ll go somewhere and I’ll have a cannoli. I’ll taste it and I’ll say okay I like this, but I want more of this and less of that and I’ll make my own version through backwards engineering. That’s how I approach it. A lot of times Jamie and I come up with beer ideas because we’re sitting around brewing, or drinking, and we’re like, hey, this beer is interesting, but how about this, or how about that. Sometimes we’ll be eating something and we’ll say how can we make a beer that will go with this? One of the beers, Cerveza Lima, which I know you weren’t a big fan of (he’s referencing my first big article) was a tailgaiting beer. We liked Mexican food, we liked tailgating, and we wanted a beer that goes really well with Mexican food at a tailgate. It’s hot, so you want something light, a little bit crisp and dry, the lime and honey play well with the salsa and the tacos and other things that we’re eating. Sometimes beers form that way – wanting a certain flavor for an event or an activity. Other times it’s just like, hey, we want to try something completely different. We once came up with a chocolate hefeweizen. It’s hefeweizen with some chocolate flavors, so we kinda wanted that chocolatey banana thing going on. It evolves a lot of times.

Jamie: For me, as far as brewing and everything goes, I think of the road. There was a brewery that came by that cemented my thought on that. You look at a road or a highway and you look at those two yellow lines that go down the middle, there are so many breweries that just stay right in between those two yellow lines in the middle of the road. My brewing philosophy is that I never want in between those lines. We all shoot for beer that’s in the fast lane, but I am not afraid to make a beer that might end up in the gutter. That’s not a problem because at least I know that it’s not what everybody else is trying to do. I think Robert kinda hit the nail on the head. I’m more of a foodie in that I like food, but I don’t have a chef’s background. A lot of the beers that we come up with is just sitting around talking, drinkoing, and for me, it’s might even be a simple phrase or word, like when Robert was talking about the Chelada earlier and later mentioned tuna death. I kinda thought to myself, what if we come up with a gefilte fish style of beer (oh please God, don’t) with lime… maybe something Kosher or crazy, or something like that. My brain just kinda takes words and twists everything around to see what I can come up with.

One of the beers I came up with recently is I want to do a barbecue beer. I want to be like when you drink it it’s not going to be like drinking barbecue sauce, but almost like hanging out in a good southern barbecue all day long – getting that aroma and the sensation of being right there. It’s really just sitting around and talking and being creative – I’m sure that’s where a lot of brewers come up with ideas. It’s thinking about the concepts first, or the end product first like Robert said, and then figuring out a way to reverse engineer and coming up with the different ingredients we have to use to achieve that final product. A lot of our beers are something where you try one or two and then you want to try something else and I think that’s important for my philosophy related to my personal search for beers. I want to have something and then I want to move on to something else and try it. I don’t want to drink the same thing over and over and over again. So I don’t want to make beers that people want to drink over and over and over again. Maybe they do want to have it and then pick up a six pack to keep in their fridge and go back to once in awhile, but if somebody drinks our beers and they don’t want to buy two or three pints afterwards, that’s perfectly fine with me because there’s so much more out there that I want people to be able to enjoy than to stick with one particular beer style.

Robert C.: That kinda fits into how we drink beer as well. When I go into a bar, whether they have 12 taps or 50 taps, I almost never have the same beer back to back, unless it is something that is ultra limited and there’s only one cask in the whole world and it’s phenomenal and if I don’t get a second glass now, I may never get a second glass… and even then I may intersperse something in the middle of them. I think when you do that, you get more of the flavors in the beer. If I’m drinking a stout and then I have another stout, they tend to run together. If I have a stout and then I have an IPA and then I have a stout again, both the IPA and the stout are going to be more intense and flavorful than if I had them back to back. That’s why we’re drinking craft beers – we want the flavor, we want the experience of craft beer, we’re not just shotgunning beer to shotgun beer. It’s all about the flavor and the experience of drinking it.

That's all for now, folks. Tune in later this week or the middle of next week for PART 2!

Sunday, March 18, 2012

Updates!

Well, folks, we have lots of new events on the horizon!

Momo's has a new beer on tap - Rocket Rye Pale Ale. Perhaps the most exciting news, though, is that they actually sent out an email about it! HOLY JEEBUS!

Next, in chronological order, don't forget that Proof is having a cask of Oskar Blues Deviant Dale's IPA on Wednesday, March 21st (that's this Wednesday!) at 8pm, along with a glassware giveaway. It's a special double dry-hopped cask and they're getting this cask before the cans of this brew even hit our market! Expect to see me there, as I want to be one of the first to try this brew! This brew is dry-hopped with Columbus and people have been saying it's quite dank. The cask will happen in the upstairs bar.

Speaking of, the hot topic as of late is when Proof Brewing Company will start brewing and when Golden Horn will be brewing again. Long story short, they're both waiting for the Feds to approve some stuff and nobody is really sure. There is a lot of red tape when it comes to businesses and the government does not help the matter.

Fermentation Lounge announced that on Friday, April 13th (Friday the 13th!) they will have an event titled "Friday the Firkinteenth" (personally, I would have went with Firkteenth, Thirkinth, Thirkinteenth, Thirkeenth, or something of that sort, but we're splitting hairs here). They will have 4 casks (yet unannounced) that night. Let's just hope they don't get plugged, tapped while the spout is on, and the spouts aren't broken (just kidding, gents!). Depending on what they get, you can bet to see me there as well.

Lastly, I promise to get my Golden Horn interview up later this week. I had a great time talking to those guys and we certainly had some interesting conversations!

Cheers!

Monday, March 12, 2012

Hey!

I just wanted to say that I've been out of town for a few days, but the calendar on the right should be up to date for now. Momo's new wheat beer is still on tap as of a couple of days ago, and both Ferm and Proof have a lot going on this week with parties and St. Patrick's Day and all that!

Cheers!

Monday, February 27, 2012

Quick Updates

Well, I was out of town for a few days in Austin, TX for the RateBeer Winter Gathering. It was a blast, and I hope some of you able to attend the Swamp Head cask at Ferm without my help... so here goes.

If you haven't already heard, Fermentation Market has now been dubbed the Cider Lodge and now has some good stuff on tap and a nice bottle selection. In the future they plan to serve Belgian bottles in appropriate glassware as well.

Proof is having a Blue Point glassware giveaway on Wednesday.

Momo's new Night Owl Oatmeal Stout is on tap and pouring!

Cheers!

Friday, January 27, 2012

Cask Madness in Tallahassee

Like cask beer? You're in luck, because this town is going crazy.

But first, a few reminders... Fermentation Market is having their brew school this Sunday featuring porters and stouts. More information is available here. They've also opened their new tasting room, which you can see here.

Okay, so I guess that was really only one reminder. Deal with it. Let's get to the good stuff.

Keeping with Fermentation Lounge, they announced on Facebook that they got a cask of Cigar City's Humidor Dry Stout, which is going to be killer, I'm sure. The tentative tapping date is Saturday, February 4th. They usually tap them right at opening, which I believe is 4pm on Saturdays.

Proof announced a bunch of casks in their last e-mail. First of all, don't forget the killer Great Divide cask this coming Wednesday. Besides that, they have landed casks of Cigar City Smokeabaga (chipotle treated Tocobaga) as well as a kick-ass cask of Oskar Blues Double Dry-Hopped Deviant Dale's IPA, their brand new IPA. Stoked. In addition, they've announced that a Bell's cask will be present at some point but they aren't releasing what it is yet... mmmmmm.

Looks like we're going strong for the next couple of months, folks. Keep your eyes here for all the latest. Feel free to comment or e-mail me if you have more or new brew news!

Cheers!

Thursday, January 19, 2012

Updates... FINALLY!

Ok, here we go... I've been behind, and there is plenty going on.

Let's start with Proof, as they have a couple of things coming up. Next Wednesday, January 25th, they will be having a Terrapin event where they will be giving away glassware that includes Terrapin's logo as well as Proof's logo. That's pretty sweet! I don't have dates or exact brews yet, but word is they also have a few tasty casks coming as well, so keep your eyes peeled here for those, as I'm sure you'll want to go.

Fermentation Market now has taps in the store so you can drink while you browse. I'm not 100% sure how they got the licensing to do that, but I'm no expert. My guess is they are including the store in the bar license since it's next door now... or something of that sort. In addition, they will be having their first "Fermentation Beer University" course about stouts and porters on Sunday, January 29th at 5pm, featuring Brooklyn Black Ops.

Momo's is... probably making another beer. Who knows? I'll let you know as I find out!

Cheers!

Thursday, December 8, 2011

Cask at Ferm tonight!

Tonight Fermentation will be tapping a cask of Swamp Head Big Nose when they open at 5pm. From their blog:

"We’ll be tapping a cask of Swamphead Big Nose IPA today at 5pm. This beer has been oaked and dry-hopped and should be pretty tasty. Limited quantity (you know…one cask worth), plus it’s local which is a plus (see what I did there?)."

Sadly I can't make it - but get there if you can!

The blog says they still have some of the haus bier left as well - get it while you can!

Cheers!

Thursday, December 1, 2011

Beer People are Good People

Though I already knew it before, this blog has made me realize something once again.

Beer people are good people.

Granted I gave fair warning, but I have said some pretty negative things on this blog. Luckily for me, this has turned into positive things. This is why I love beer people.

Let's talk Golden Horn Brewing Company for a minute. Since my original post about them, their beers have gotten better and better and I have gotten to know one of the brewers more and more. Now, I'm not going to say we're best pals and we go skipping down Beer Avenue on a weekly basis... but we're friendly. He tells me about the upcoming beers online and in person and we're even working on setting up an interview with the brew team for my blog... and possibly even a GHBC/TBC collaborative brew... now that's crazy.

Let's recap. Step one: Write long, boring blog entry about a botched release and a couple of... uninspired brews. Step two: Strike up a conversation with a brewer. Step three: Interview and a collab brew?

Only beer people could make that jump.

Fast forward several months to my "State of the Union" post. Towards the end I mention Pensacola Brewing Company and how their beers are awful and the brewers are, to quote myself, "giant d-bags." Luckily for me, a co-worker went to Pensacola Bay's Facebook page, told them about my blog, and asked what the word was on their potential move to Tallahassee. Wait a minute. Luckily? Drawing their attention to my blog entry that calls their beers "awful" and calls their employees "giant d-bags?"

Yes, luckily.

I got a very kind e-mail from one of their owner/brewers asking if we had ever met and if I had ever been to Pensacola because he'd love to meet me and try to sway my opinion. A few emails later and I discovered this particular owner/brewer has never been to Tallahassee for a beer function and he personally invited me to come visit the brewery and sample beers with him next time I'm in Pensacola.

See... luckily! You have just got to love beer people. It's how we roll.

Beer people are good people. Don't forget it!

By the way, Pensacola Bay responded on their Facebook page that the move to Tallahassee probably wouldn't happen.

I could go on with many experiences involving RateBeer, traveling, trading, festivals, releases, relatives, negative stereotypes, and more, but I'll save those for another time.

Until then...
Cheers!

(also, do yourself a favor and watch this)

Sunday, November 27, 2011

Upcoming Events

Well gang, the Thanksgiving holiday is over. I hope you went deep into a food coma and awoke early on Friday to knock over a toddler and grab the last giant TV on sale... time well spent, for sure!

Since the break is over, events are popping back up here and there. On Wednesday, November 30th, Proof will kill the end of the month in style with a nice Sweetwater event. They will be tapping the newest Dank Tank release - Fresh Sticky Nugs - as well as the last dank tank - Ghoulash. I have to say Ghoulash (black IPA) was pretty tasty, and I'm excited for Fresh Sticky Nugs. It's a dry-hopped double red ale. For the entire goofy story - click here. As is Proof style, there will also be a glassware giveaway.

Speaking of Fresh Sticky Nugs... how on earth does Sweetwater get away with their beer names? I'm thinking they must have an insider approving their labels. For your pleasure, here are some of their more interesting beer names:

420
Big Ol' Belgian Blue Balls
Border Hopper
The Creeper
Donkey Punch!
Dubbel Ds
Happy Ending
Hummer
Jack Ass
Motor Boat
Tripel Lindy
Wet Dream

Some of these are a bit more coded than others, so you may have to do some Googling to figure them out. I'll get you started with an old poster they apparently used when they released Happy Ending:

Anyway... Proof is also having a Dogfish Head happy hour from 5-7pm on Friday, December 2nd featuring tappings of Faithfull, Burton Baton, Immort Ale, Chicory Stout, "and a few more surprises." I'm told they may have another keg of 120 Minute, which always goes fast.

On December 7th, at 5pm when they open, Fermentation Lounge will be serving a haus "Twigs and Berries" cider. I can't remember what they put into it to make it, but proceeds that night go to benefit one of the male bartenders who had a biking accident and needs help with his medical bills... I'll let you put those pieces together... no pun intended. For you RateBeer folk, sadly we won't get to rate this one, as RateBeer does not allowed flavored ciders. Balderdash!

UPDATE: Robert of GH was kind enough to pass along the cider info to me on Facebook:

"Dec 7 (Wednesday) is the Festical for Trevor and we are serving a Twig and Berries cider. Twig and Berries is a dry cider with cranberries and cinnamon sticks added in the secondary. I cooked down 4 lbs of cranberries with cane sugar, agave syrup, and three different types of cinnamon sticks. Once the pectin was broke down in the cranberries, I chilled the mixture and added it to the cider."

He was also kind enough to pass along the next GH Haus Bier release information, which will be at 5pm on Monday, December 5th.

"Dec 5 (Monday) we are releasing Date Brown (20g), a dark English style brown ale with dates added during secondary fermentation, and Spiced Persimmon Ale (10g), an Amber ale with locally grown persimmons and a fresh ground spice mixture. We roasted the persimmons on my grill, so there is a slight bit of smokiness present."

As always, these sound unique and tasty! Because of school, I don't know for sure that I can make the Festical (hah!), but I should be able to make the Haus Bier release on the 5th if anyone wants to stop in and say hello!

Cheers!

Thursday, November 17, 2011

State of the Beer Union Address - Tallahassee

Times... they are a-changin'.

2011 has most definitely been an interesting year for the beer scene in Tallahassee. Two new breweries are open, operational, and pumping out brews. Several new breweries are on the horizon, and rumors point to even more in the future. More and more people are embracing craft beer, homebrewing, and locally made brews. Tallahassee might not be the next Portland, but I have to say - things are looking up.

I'd like to begin with a re-cap of the breweries that are operational today. The first brewery to release beers was Golden Horn Brewing Company housed inside Fermentation Lounge. The last operating brewery in Tallahassee was Buckhead, which closed in 2003... wow. No fresh beer in Tallahassee for 8 years... Needless to say, everyone was thrilled when Fermentation Lounge opened their doors that first Wednesday to serve Golden Horn beers, and I was no different.

As you may remember me posting, they got off to a bit of a rocky start. I had plenty to say about how things were going... I have to say now, though, that Golden Horn has really started stepping it up. I still hate getting served 10oz pours in wine glasses for 4-5 dollars, but the beers have been getting better and better. Just yesterday I was lucky to hit their most recent release and try a tasty chocolate oatmeal imperial stout and a chipotle ale. These were hands down two of my favorite brews that they've made, and I've had a good time over the past few months getting to know the brewing team. They seem to be good people doing the best with what they have available to them. However, I do still wish the prices weren't so high, and I just can't wrap my mind around why they would ever open a brewpub that only brews 10 and 20 gallon batches. Regardless, they were the first to open up in town, and we're all very glad they're around. Even if they just keep making 10 gallon batches of weird brews, I'll still be there every time.

Market Street Brewpub, housed inside Momo's Pizza (Market Street location - get it?), was the second brewpub in town to start serving fresh, locally made beer. They boast a 3-barrel system (at least - I think they may have a 7-barrel fermenter or tank), which means they have beers on all the time and for longer periods of time than Golden Horn. They also have a much different philosophy - putting out classic styles that are drinkable. I could barely believe my eyes (and mouth!) the first time I sat in a Tallahassee brewpub drinking a locally made IPA. Wow, now that's a feeling. I've since had every beer they've released, and I continue to bask in the glory that is sipping on a fresh pale ale while devouring a slice of pizza the size of a small aircraft.

If I had to make a complaint or two, and I do, I have to say I'm annoyed by their marketing... or should I say lack of marketing. They never say anything when they tap a new beer. So far I've gathered that it always happens on a Sunday, but the timing so far has been erratic. Every time I've learned about a beer on tap, it has been because a friend or co-worker sends me a text, or I simply call them and ask. Also, though I enjoy them thoroughly, I have yet to be blown away by one of their brews. They are classic, drinkable, and go well with pizza, but I'm a beer nerd. I want them to put out an IPA that is dripping with so much hop character I sink away into a blissful hop coma until drool froths from my mouth and someone has to slap me back into reality. Until then, though, I will remain happy to go every couple of Sundays to enjoy a fresh, classic brew with 10,000 calories of pizza.

"I wanna know who's gonna pay for this - I spilt beer all over it when that car smashed into me."

So what does the future hold for Tallahassee beer?

Well... a lot of things, I hope. We know for sure that Proof is going to be opening a brewery downstairs, probably early next year, which will be awesome. Other than that... we mainly have rumors. Mike's Stone Baked Pizza was supposedly going to start brewing, but it's taken longer than expected, and my sources tell me it's probably not going to happen. There are also rumors of a couple of other homebrewers in town joining forces with local business owners to open brewpubs in or around the Midtown area, but nothing is 100% yet, of course.

Other than that, there are also rumors flying that Pensacola Bay will be either starting another location in Tallahassee or possibly moving here completely. I, for one, would be completely happy without them. Every single beer I've had by them has been awful, and though I don't have personal experience, many sources tell me the brewers are... shall we say... giant d-bags. I'd be completely okay with them not moving into town, though I hate to turn away fresh local beer. If you've ever had their brews or talked to them - you know what I'm talking about.

"But we have never measured progress by these yardsticks alone. We measure progress by the success of our people. By the jobs they can find and the quality of life those jobs offer. By the prospects of a small business owner who dreams of turning a good idea into a thriving enterprise. By the opportunities for a better life that we pass on to our children.

That's the project the American people want us to work on. Together."

Cheers!

Sunday, November 13, 2011

This week!

Proof will be having a Hoegaarden glassware giveaway on Wednesday, 11/16 at 8pm. Oddly enough this is one glass that I don't have, so I might just come out for this one.

UPDATE: Proof will also be having a Southern Tier glassware giveaway on Friday.

I have confirmed that there will be a Golden Horn release this Wednesday, 11/16/11 at Fermentation Lounge when they open at 5pm. They will be releasing a Chocolate Oatmeal Stout (YUM) and a Chipotle Ale (we'll see...). I will definitely be there at some point!

Cheers!

Friday, November 11, 2011

Utopias at Fermentation Lounge

This Saturday (11/12) at 4pm Fermentation Lounge will be opening one bottle of Sam Adams Utopias. It will be $17 for a one ounce pour. If you haven't had this brew before, I strongly advise you give it a shot. I think Proof also has some of last year's release left which you can still buy there as well, if you're looking for a comparison.

Cheers!

Friday, November 4, 2011

Fermentation Lounge News!

So I was just reading over Ferm's latest blog post and they dropped some news that is definitely worth noting!

First, they announced that this Sunday at 7pm they will be releasing their new haus made braggot, made with honey from Sweet Grass Dairy. In addition, you can get a cheese sampler to pair with the braggot that includes various Sweet Grass cheeses as well as the honey that was used in the braggot! I work until 7pm that day, but I will be there afterwards if anybody wants to say hello!

They also mentioned that the Fermentation Market will be moving in next door to the Lounge. I can't say I hit the Market that frequently, but that is good news for them and thirsty customers alike!

Keep your eyes peeled next week for an interview with a new brewer in town that will hopefully soon be opening yet another brewery in town!

Cheers!

Tuesday, November 1, 2011

Local Updates

Not much new going on these days, but here are a few quick updates and reminders. Also, I've been asked by a local up and coming brewer to come over, do an interview, and sample some brews. Once that happens I will post it on the blog! If any other current or future brewers would like a spot on the blog - feel free to contact me!

Tomorrow is Proof's big Stone event. They will have 2 casks, including a vanilla aged smoked porter and dry-hopped Oaked Arrogant Bastard. There will also be a glassware giveaway and any beers purchased from the Arrogant Bastard lineup helps towards the "Most Arrogant Bar in the US" competition.

The week after (November 9th) is Proof's Dogfish Head event. There will be a glassware giveaway as well as kegs of 120 Minute, Bitches Brew, Namaste, My Antonia, Olde School, Pangea, Hellhound, 60 Minute, 90 Minute, and Midas Touch. I'm not Dogfish's #1 fan, but that's a tasty lineup. They are also boasting bottles of "Dogfish Head Foundation," but I have no idea what that is. If anyone has any idea, do let me know! UPDATE: I assume they're talking about Dogfish Head's new Pearl Jam beer, dubbed "Faithfull," and it was just a mix up of names.

The brewer for Golden Horn/Fermentation Lounge told me awhile back that they are a week behind their original schedule, so their next haus bier release should happen on or around November 16th. The original schedule says they were planning a chocolate oatmeal imperial stout (yum!) and a date brown ale (gross). We'll see what pops up, though!

Well that's about it for now. Check back soon for that interview!

Cheers!

Tuesday, October 25, 2011

Huge News from Proof

In a recent e-mail, Proof dropped a couple of big bombs on the beer community, but let's get a few smaller updates over with first.

UPDATE: A co-worker told me Momo's threw a new beer on tap, and a call verifies so. It's a light, golden honey ale and the girl on the phone told me it's called "Honey Bear Ale." Cute. Now start telling us when you PUT YOUR BEERS ON TAP!

Fermentation Lounge is having the next haus bier release with Golden Horn Brewing Company this Wednesday, the 26th at 5pm. They are releasing a Spiced Pumpkin Beer and a Pale Peach Ale (peach pale ale). Normally I'd post the descriptions, but we have more important news to get to (no offense, Ferm dudes). Instead, check out their blog.

Proof is celebrating their 3rd birthday that same Wednesday with a Sweetwater event at 8pm. They will be tapping the new Dank Tank - Ghoulash, an imperial black IPA. There will also be a glassware giveaway as always.

The biggest news, however, comes in Proof's latest subscription email:

"We are in the process of expanding by adding:
A new bar and bar area!
A Biergarten!
22 more taps for a total of 50!
Dedicated beer engines for Cask Ale!
A BREWERY - with full scale brewing operations commencing soon!"

HOLY SHIT!

Let's read that again. 22 more taps? 50 total taps? Casks?! A BREWERY?!

Obviously, I knew about this a long time ago, but I have been keeping my mouth shut until the news was officially announced. Since that information is a bit scant, allow me to fill in a bit. Proof is currently in the process of turning their basement into another bar. This bar will have 22 more taps (making the total 50 with the current 28 upstairs), bottles, and liquor, but no macros (sorry, brosefs). Additionally, I believe some new bartenders and beer loving bartenders will be working down there (ie: myself, hopefully). So hopefully within the next couple of months (I'm not sure of the open dates), you will be able to come enjoy a beer served by yours truly! Additionally, you could take that beer outside and enjoy it in the biergarten. Crazy!

A BREWERY?!

Yep. I'm not sure exactly when this will be implemented, but I'm pretty excited. Proof has some good people in mind to help out with this, and again, I'm hoping one of them is yours truly. Who knows, someday you may be able to come to Proof and enjoy a beer served by me that I helped make! Yikes!

Well all of this is definitely good news, and I'm certainly excited!

Cheers!

Monday, October 10, 2011

Boring Fall

Well... I was hoping to do a local updates post, as I haven't been as dedicated to this blog lately due to school, but there's really nothing to update.

Brewfest Tallahassee is over, the latest Fermentation Lounge Haus Bier release is over, and Momo's has tapped their first beers... shoot.

I was at the Homebrew Den recently (they're the brewers at Momo's), asked about their new IPA (that's what I was told they're brewing next), and was given the now stereotypical response of "I dunno - a couple of weeks maybe?" I still have no idea why they're keeping all their beers a secret. It's weird.

Fermentation Lounge has a few events going on these days, but nothing that caters to beer nerds. If you're into weird movies, hipster music, or BS Oktoberfest events, then I'll let you read their blog to see what you want to hit up. Their original release schedule for their haus biers says they will be doing the next one on October 19th with a pumpkin beer and some sort of IPA. At the time they were contemplating peach, but they haven't updated since.

No word from Mike's Stone Baked Pizza or the other venture in town on 6th Avenue, but I'll certainly update when I get any information. I've sent out a few texts and Facebook messages to see if there is any news.

I've narrowed down a logo for some t-shirts and will be making some soon. If you want one, do let me know by commenting on here, contacting me on Facebook, email, or whatever. They will be simple iron-ons and I will only charge you what it costs me (probably like 5 dollars). Make sure to tell me your size.

Cheers!

Thursday, September 22, 2011

My Adventures in Homebrewing

Ah, another day, another boring class. That means it's time for a blog entry. Contenance Angloise? Eh, I'll take a beer.

Before we get started, a bit for the locals.

-Don't forget the weekly tasting at New Leaf on Saturday
-Fermentation's original release schedule says they're releasing a new Golden Horn beer on October 1st, but they haven't said anything else about it as of yet
-Momo's didn't release any beer this weekend, and myself and all sources were basically told, "I don't know. A couple/few weeks."

Now, let's talk homebrewing.

I've thought about writing about my adventures in homebrewing for awhile now, but I don't really know what to say... and I still really don't, so I'll ramble a bit and hopefully figure something out.

I suppose I should mention how I got started... that part's easy - my older brother, Calvin (pictured). He is completely responsible for beginning my interest in beer in general, let alone homebrewing. He's been doing it for years, and when I once asked him why people drink beer (I used to hate beer, but I just didn't know what was out there), he said something to me along the lines of, "It's not that you don't like beer - it's that you haven't had the right beer." The rest is history.

Before I got started, and I'm not 100% sure on these facts, I'm sure I brewed with my brother a bit, and possibly a few other people, and then started getting into commercial beer. My wife (girlfriend at the time) actually made the leap into homebrewing for me (a trend we'll see again later) by getting me a Mr. Beer kit for Christmas one year. After making their horrible first recipe, I immediately sought my brother's advice and started making my own recipes with his help. Unlike the Mr. Beer kits suggest, I started boiling, adding specialty grains, adding extra hops, using real adjuncts (fruit, etc.) instead of extracts, pitching liquid yeast, and so on.

Eventually I grew out of the kit and my roommate and I at UNI got a bunch of equipment and went to town, brewing quite a bit. I jumped into full 5-gallon extract brewing, bought a bigger pot, and started experimenting. My first full 5-gallon batch was a coffee Russian imperial stout, part of which I set aside and aged on Jack Daniels-soaked toasted oak chips. Go big or go home, I guess. This started to be my trend... I never really brewed anything normal, and my roommate at the time didn't help that fact. I started brewing fruit beers, coconut porters, and we both brewed a ton of weird ciders - many of which turned out... less than awesome. We even brewed a blueberry mead in honor of a famous visiting euphonium player. My roommate found a clone recipe for one of his favorite witbiers and we sent it to Calvin's hometown competition - the Drunk Monk Challenge - and didn't tell him. Him and his wife were both surprised when our names got called for a 3rd place ribbon in that category. To this day it's the only competition I've ever entered, for no specific reason, honestly. I also got involved with a homebrew club in town, CRAZE, and had a good time getting to know some of those guys, though at the time I was not nearly as experienced as they were.

For awhile, this kept going. I brewed a lot of extract 5-gallon batches over the next couple of years, even a coconut porter and a raspberry wheat for table favors at my wedding. I brewed with lots of different people as well - relatives, friends, fellow local homebrewers, etc. As always happens with homebrewers, I eventually felt the need for more control over my recipes and wanted to go all grain... but never wanted to purchase the equipment. My wife again made the leap for me by purchasing me an all grain ingredient kit for my birthday this summer... so I had to get the equipment right? Several hundred dollars later and I was happily pumping out my first all grain batch - an extremely hoppy IPA. I currently have a cooler type 3-tier system complete with a 10-gallon hot liquor tank, 10-gallon mash tun with a false bottom, and my old 8 gallon mega pot. I've since made two batches and already have several ideas for my next batches - with thanks to my wife, friends, and others.

The setup

The first IPA I made (pictured) turned out awesome. I would venture to say it is one of the best, if not the best, beer I have made to date. When I first tasted it I posted on Facebook something about how it tasted like pine dipped in caramelized grapefruit, or something like that. The hop character is very tasty, and I'm pretty proud of the beer. So far the people I've shared it with seem to enjoy it as well, but who knows. After that I wanted to try my hands at a more sessionable beer, and I took inspiration from a hoppy wheat beer of my brother's I had tasted recently. I took his recipe, altered it a bit, and produced what is a light, but tasty and slightly hoppy, wheat beer that is just under 5% and goes down like heaven on a hot day. Coupled with its sweet, hoppy aroma from loads of Centennial dry-hopping (pictured below), it's pretty dang good. Honestly, both of these brews had an ulterior motive for their production, but I won't get into that now. So far those are the only 2 all grain batches I've made, but as soon as I get a free day from work and school, more will be coming.

Dry-hopping the wheat

So what's next? Well, there is a coconut porter recipe I've made several times (though never all-grain), and I have a pretty awesome idea for it... imperial coconut porter! On top of that, I found out recently that I can get Palm Ridge Reserve Whiskey barrels through a distributor where I work... whiskey barrel aged imperial coconut porter! Yes, you read that right. If I can pull that off... this beer could be awesome. What's great about Palm Ridge Reserve is that it's local, high-quality, and the barrels are 5-gallons! It's like they're begging homebrewers to use them! Will do.

Palm Ridge barrels

Well, that's all for now, folks. Feel free to comment on here or email me with questions or anything you may have to say! This weekend I will be attending the Barrel-aged Hunahpu's release at Cigar City Brewing in Tampa, so you can expect a post about that next week.

Cheers!