beer column

here are my notes from yesterday’s beer column on cbc radio’s on the coast
where i chatted with gloria macarenko about crowlers and the joys of infusing beer

Beer is a growing industry.  And that means that beer gear is taking off too.  Have you heard of the “crowler”?

No one in the Lower Mainland is equipped to do them yet, but it may just be a matter of time!  A crowler is basically a canned growler.  You go to a brewery that is equipped to fill a 32oz can with fresh beer and then seal it.  You carry it home, and pop it when you’re ready for some delicious fresh beer. 

Oskar Blues Brewery in Colorado invented the crowler and has been filling them since December.  Designed to keep beer fresh for longer than a growler,  Beerandbrewing.com did a taste test on a crowler five months after fill and reported that it was as fresh as the day it was poured.  Now, 32 oz cans have been around for a while in America, but freshly poured 32 oz cans?  That’s new!  Not as eco-friendly as a growler that you keep refilling, but the crowler is recyclable and intended to stand beside the growler rather than replace it.  Both have their place in the beer geek’s bag of tricks. 

Oskar Blues is a brewery that cans their beers, so this innovation just makes sense in their evolution of brewing.  The can is filled from a tap and then seamed using a table top design similar to those used to can homemade food.  CO2 is purged to ensure that there is no oxygen in the can, which is what gives the cans their long shelf-life.  They are also opaque, which ensures the beer does not get light-struck.  You don’t even want me to tell you how little Oskar Blues charges for a crowler, as there is no way anyone in the Lower Mainland could ever offer beer for so little!  ($6)

I’m not sure the idea will catch on outside Colorado, but I sure would like to try it! 
Another beer innovation is the beer infuser.  The one I have was given away by Alexander Keith’s as a promotional item.  It is a plastic cup with a strainer.  You put a substance you would like to infuse your beer with into the cup, pour your beer in and let it steep for a couple of minutes.  You then pour the beer out, through the strainer, into a glass and enjoy your infused beer.  If you weren’t lucky enough to receive the official Alexander Keith’s infuser, which I am guessing most of you did not, you can still infuse beer on your own – it only takes beer, imagination and a strainer.

 

I have talked here before about how much I love Storm Brewing’s basil IPa, so I tried to make my own basil infused IPA.  I had some friends helping me with taste testing and everyone loved the results.
We first infused a macro lager as we didn’t want to potentially ruin a good beer!  Just a little basil and that macro lager was delicious!  We didn’t even need to muddle the basil, just whole leaves were enough to change the whole experience.

macro swill and basil infusing its way into a tasty beverage

I also brought a growler of Storm Basil IPA with me, just to make sure that our infusing experiments had a proper yardstick to measure against.  Everyone liked the infused beer as much as they did the flavoured beer.  Which surprised me.  I went into the experiment expecting to have fun, but to come away disappointed in the results.  Silly me – freshly infused beers are delicious, even when you don’t start with the tastiest beer as a base.  I am in no way suggesting that the infuser replace quality craft beer for anyone, just that if you have a beer that you’re not in love with, you might want to try infusing it.  Maybe that will make it palatable.  If not, there’s always cooking with beer!

We kept the fun going with several other infusion flavourings, including muddled blueberries and cherries in with the basil.  We had that one with cider – very yummy and a great way to have a fruit cider that isn’t too sweet – and with beer.  The infuser also worked really well with soda water instead of beer.

cider being infused with basil – delicious!

Infusing beer isn’t a new idea, Dogfish Head in Delaware invented the Randall for infusing draft beer and if you have been to Bomber Brewing or Parallel 49, the Randall is the cylinder filled with tasty treats that draft beer is pushed through before serving it.  You can have one at home, but generally they are used at a bar.  Dogfish Head also came up with a personal infuser, called the Randall Jr.  You can find those original infusers on the Dogfish Head website, or Ebay.  The Alexander Keith’s infuser is also available on Ebay.

The personal infuser allows you to have just a single beer infused with a flavour, then you can clean it out and re-use it immediately with a different flavour, or you can keep layering flavours.   And you can control how much of a particular flavour you want to impart.  If you put just a little bit in the infuser, you’ll just get a hint of that flavour.  If you put a lot in, muddle it, and let it steep longer, you’ll get a more intense flavour.  As the friend who gave me my infuser helpfully pointed out, you probably don’t want to put the entire chopped hot pepper in the infuser… just a slice will do!
The infuser is my new favourite toy.  

Beer Picks:

In honour of International IPA day which is on Thursday, August 7th, my beer picks are all IPAs:

Four Winds IPA – available in bottles, and if you can find the Juxtapose Brett IPA around, get that too!  Library Square has it on tap.

Parallel 49 Filthy Dirty IPA – available at the tasting room currently, launching in bottles later this month.

Storm Brewing Basil IPA – available for growler fills at the brewery.

And of course, the ubiquitous Driftwood’s Fat Tug, available in bottles and on tap almost everywhere in Vancouver.

tasty

spent all day sunday vending at a craft fair
(didn’t make much money, but the people watching was pretty good)
so what’s a girl to do after being so virtuous?
go for a beer (or three) of course!

i’m talking about the alameda yellow wolves of thailand people
go have it!
gingery and melony
and oh so hoppy!
definitely yellow in colour
i could have gone for a little more basil in it
but so, so good!

currently available on tap at st. augustine’s
and i believe it is on the list at portland craft for the #yvrtweetup on wednesday

rain out – part 2

the finger crossing worked
my softball game got rained out last thursday
however… i wasn’t specific enough with the universe in my wishing
i ended up having to work some overtime
which meant i missed out on the basil esb cask at the yaletown afterall
doh!

i rescued my lousy evening by heading off to the alibi room for some tofino brewing spruce tip ipa cask and dave varga’s taylor’s crossing is dead ipa, and quality time with my personal viking
i tell ya, everyone needs to get themselves a personal viking – they rock!!

i found the spruce tip ipa cask a bit thin
maybe it aged a little too long?  or too little?
i dunno, i just recall the one at hoppapalooza being the nectar of the gods and this one wasn’t quite there

tofino brewing spruce tip ipa cask

dave varga’s taylor’s crossing is dead, long live taylor’s crossing ipa was delightful
too bad taylor’s crossing is dead and this brew isn’t going to be a regular one

taylor’s crossing is dead ipa

i rounded out my evening with gary’s imperial ipa and vern’s imperial ipa
i mean, why not?
strong beers that evoke my strong approval!

rain-out

i know we’ve had far too much rain here in vancouver lately
but i’m still crossing my fingers for a rain-out of my softball game this evening
not that i don’t like playing ball
its just that i’m tired
and really, really, really want to sample the yaletown cask of basil esb!
is that so wrong???

this just in…
another cask tonight:
coal harbour’s black sunshine (how weather appropriate!) blackberry weisen at the morrissey

cask night

the cask at the yaletown last night was a basil and lemongrass pale ale
i really liked it
the basil and lemongrass were not overwhelming
it would be a great patio beer if spring would bother to arrive in vancouver!

i’m not sure how many more of cory’s innovative casks we’ll get to sample
he is giving up beer to pursue his music career full-time
our beer loss is rock and roll’s gain
break an amp cory!
we also got the opportunity to sample a sour beer that ryan brought back from france
vent d’ange, aged for 14 months
(does that translate to angel’s fart??)

it had a great nose and initial flavour
unfortunately it turned a bit nail polish remover further through the swallow

there was quite a group of beer geeks there last night
i love it when that happens!


st. augustine’s

tasting notes back from my july 14th visit to st. augustine’s…
odds aren’t good that all of these will still be on the menu…

quote of the evening is that we “came for the basil, stayed for the huckleberry”

in my sampler were:
fernie brewing’s what the huck huckleberry wheat
storm brewing’s basil ipa
old yale brewing co pale ale
swans brew pub arctic ale

the huckleberry wheat was cloudy, but not overly yeasty.
there were but a touch of huckleberries blended with the wheat – smooth, creamy, crisp finish.
most delightful

the basil ipa was phenomenal
not a session beer, but omg it would pair with so many foods!
amazing basil nose, in an ipa
freaking delightful
i want this all year long
i am not happy that it is a limited edition dammit!

the old yale pale ale is very much a pale ale
would be a great session beer
crisp finish
i like it!  i can see why it got voted canada’s best pale ale.

the arctic ale is a “mild-tasting, cold, canadian-style light ale”
very drinkable
seems non-descript next to the flavoury beers i put it next to, but i think there’s substance there

amanda had a fruity sampler (natch)
she went with the huckleberry and the basil
tin whistle peaches n cream okanagan fruit ale
lost coast tangerine wheat ale

she liked the basil ipa and the huckleberry wheat
which is not surprising for the huckleberry, but she liked an ipa!! an ipa!
she found the peaches and cream had a very peach nose, only a little cloudy, a bit cidery, crisp and refreshing
(and found that going from the peaches and cream to the tangerine was like going from fruit to candy… but not in a sweet way necessarily, more like fuzzy peach gummies)
the tangerine was delightful as aways and is her current favourite

shockingly, bridget had a backhand of god
but i also convinced her to try the bear republic hop rod rye
which she enjoyed
it was really quite sedimenty (with hops not yeast), nice dark caramel head
well balanced and delicious
oh, and the label is fabulous!