beer column

here are my notes from yesterday’s beer column on cbc radio’s on the coast:

As the year draws to a close, let’s recap the beer happenings in 2014.

2014 has been quite the year for craft beer!  So far 20 new breweries have opened up across the province.

I’d like to welcome the newest Vancouver craft brewery:  Strangefellows!  Strangefellows is now open on Clark Drive in East Vancouver.  They are still jumping through hoops to get their lounge endorsement, so currently they’re just serving up growler fills.  Iain Hill, formerly of Yaletown BrewPub, is the brewmaster and he is well-known in the craft beer world for his incredible sour beers.  Strangefellows will have a barrel program, so look for sour beers from them in 2015.  Currently they have a deliciously hoppy pale ale on tap that is a mere 3.8%, a wit, a lager and a brown ale.

Also freshly opened are Category 12 Brewing in Central Saanich and Sherwood Mountain Brewhouse in Terrace.

Cumberland Brewing (ComoxValley), Gladstone Brewing in Courtenay and Hearthstone Brewery in North Vancouver may squeak their openings into 2014.

Numbers-wise that could take us to 23 new breweries in BC in 2014.

Five breweries opened in the Lower Mainland in 2013 (GreenLeaf at Lonsdale Quay, 33 Acres and Brassneck in Vancouver, Deep Cove in North Van, Four Winds in Delta).

That number more than doubled this year.  Among the breweries opened in the Lower Mainland in 2014 are: Bomber, Main Street, Steel Toad, Strangefellows and Postmark in Vancouver, Dageraad in Burnaby, Moody Ales and Yellow Dog in Port Moody, Black Kettle in North Van, White Rock Beach in White Rock, Surlie Brewing in Abbotsford, and Steel & Oak in New Westminster. 

Add to that the out of town breweries opening up tasting rooms in Vancouver – like Howe Sound Brewing from Squamish’s Devil’s Elbow alehouse on Beatty Street and Prohibition Brewing from Kelowna’s tasting room on Hamilton Street.

And all the expanding breweries:  both Bridge Brewing and Powell Street brewing left their original nanobreweries behind in 2014 and opened larger facilities.  Parallel 49 keeps on expanding, and the newly opened Bomber brewing expanded within weeks of opening.  Demand just keeps growing for craft beer and breweries keep expanding to keep pace.

It will be interesting to see if 2014 is the peak year for brewery openings or if the upward trend can continue.

2014 was also a year of many liquor law changes.  I think most people are happy that the provincial government is addressing our very antiquated liquor laws.  Many of the changes are small and just make sense, like allowing patrons to carry their own drinks between areas in an establishment.  Previously a server would have to carry your drink if you moved from the restaurant area to the pub.  Now it is legal to carry your own.  Phew!

But not everyone is happy with the bigger changes to the liquor laws.  For example, the happy hour law change should have made it possible for bars to serve beer at a discounted price.  This has been achieved in Vancouver where bars mark the beers up higher than other places, so charging the minimum price is a discount.  But in many smaller locales, the price of beer actually had to go up to meet the minimum 25 cents per ounce price put on it by the government.  That is hardly a win for consumers or small businesses.

Other law changes such as allowing minors into pubs during certain hours, allowing alcohol sales at farmer’s markets and whole site licensing seem to have escaped complaint.  I guess that means people are happy with the changes… or haven’t even noticed them!

April 1st marks the date the next set of changes take effect, including sale of alcohol in grocery stores and standardized liquor pricing.  These changes have been controversial, so I expect we’ll be hearing more about those as they come into effect, especially if they translate into the higher prices many are predicting.

As for beertrends in 2014, my favourite is the rise of sessionable beers.  These are beers with less than 5% abv.  Full flavour without a staggering alcohol volume is a welcome addition to anyone’s beer offerings.  If you know you’re settling in for several hours of convivial drinking it’s nice to have a lower alcohol option.  (I’m putting my money on sours as the beer trend of 2015).

I think the “hop of the year” must be Mosaic.  It is very tropical fruity, think mango lemon and pine.  You can try it in Central City’s ISA, Phillips Brewing’s Kaleidoscope and Deschutes Fresh-squeezed IPA.

And finally, I have to mention how happy I am that Rogers Arena and the PNE have added craft beer to their beverage line-ups.  This has been a long time coming and sporty craft beer fans are rejoicing loudly!
 

Beer Picks:

The hobbit Trilogy series of Beers

Central City Brewers + Distillers acquired the right to brew Hobbit beers for the Canadian market back in November.
The three beers should be making an appearance in BC Liquor stores this week.

Gollum Precious Pils is a 5 percent lager
Smaug Stout is a whopping 9.5 percent and brewed with chili peppers
Bolg Belgian Tripel is 8 percent .

Parallel 49’s Sahti Claus is a Finnish style beer brewed with rye, barley and juniper berries.  Traditionally this style doesn’t use hops, but P49 has put Chinook and simcoe in to add to the piney flavour.

Dead Frog’s Nutty Uncle Peanut Butter Stout is a treat!  Not too sweet, not too nutty, and not too heavy hitting at 6.1%.

and the westender article about the perceived craft beer bubble

alibi room 500

not gonna lie to you, my head was hurtin’ this mornin’
the alibi 500 knocked the stuffin’ outta me!

photo credit: rodney gitzel

here we are enjoying a glass of iain hill’s oud bruin
the nail in the coffin of my feeling good this morning!

can i even remember what all i tried last night?
nope, but i did write it all down on my 500th beer list, which i inconveniently left at home
highlights include: four winds radler, lighthouse numbskull and brassneck / parallel 49 collaboration cereal killer
i really wanted the new belgium lips of faith terroir, but it wasn’t cold enough to serve yesterday
i am debating whether my poor head can survive a return trip for it…

vcbw – so far

well, i’m alive
and still making it to work every day
so vancouver craft beer week has not yet totally kicked my ass or any of my major organs!

opening night on friday was a really great event
they used the roundhouse to its utmost
new breweries were on one side, with the lone cider stall
lots of space in the middle for stage and oyster bar and mingling
then all the old stand-bys on the other side
it was packed, but not so full that it took too long to get a beer or from one side to the other
and there were oysters!
i made it to the yaletown for a pint after the event…
which may or may not have been a good idea!

saturday i attended the four winds open house out in the boonies
no really, its out somewhere that required bridges and tunnels to get to
but the beer was good,
we were greeted with a casked fir tip ipa sample,
growlers and bostons were already filled so no need to wait for yours,
the brewery was open for a tour or just wandering around and checking out all the shiny new equipment,
it was a really great open house / launch
kudos for pulling that off during the craziness that is vcbw
(i filled my boston with ipa)

sunday i went to the morning session of hoppapalooza
which lived up to my every expectation
of course
(with a little help from my friends i managed to sample all of the casks and all of the ipas… with a couple of ventures into the barleywines)
and then i went to the dix reunion at the whip
which i kind of remember… vaguely…
there are photos though, so i know i was there!
(i had derrick’s ipa and a fat tug after the casks ran out)

last evening i attended joe wiebe’s book launch at the yaletown brewpub
which was a whole schwack of fun
the place was packed, the three casks were drained within a couple of hours
iain hill introduced joe, joe was charming, everyone was smiling
(casks:  r&b cucumber mint ale, granville island low alcohol esb, iain’s passionfruit ipa
i am not going to admit to you just how many of those passionfruit ipas i had, thank the beer gods that the esb was only 3.6%…)

it has been an amazing week so far
now, i’m off to the railway for some cask!

vancouver sun

it is a sunny day in vancouver
but the vancouver sun i’m referring to is the newspaper, which currently has two articles about craft beer online:

the insatiable taste for craft brews article quotes lundy dale and iain hill

and the longer version of the article names names of lots of local drinking holes and breweries like crannog, tap and barrel, r&b, parallel 49, the alibi room, central city, all the soon-to-be-opened new vancouver establishments and goes into nano-breweries like bridge brewing

cask

well, for a not-so-beery week, i still managed to knock a few back!
wednesday night i hit pivo before and between queer film festival movies
had me the phillips hop circle

thursday night before the centrepiece queer film festival movie
i managed to swing by yaletown brewpub for some of iain hill’s ipa dry-hopped with sorachi ace
i am not sure there are words to describe it
besides hop heaven!!
delicious! delightful! divine!
the hop nose carried through to the body
i would have happily taken a growler to go if i had any time to get through one this weekend!

if i could be more than one place tonight i would be at both pivo for their second anniversary
and at beerlesque at the roundhouse
but i can’t be at both, so i’ll be doing my duty to my fellow craft beer lovers by pouring libations at beerlesque!

cask night

i was afraid there would be no cask nights for me this week
as i am filming for outgames tv every evening
i was sad to think i was going to miss out on the offerings
but very happy to have a television gig again!
luckily though, i got done filming early enough last night to hit the railway club for the lighthouse cream ale
those kiwi hops (that’s new zealand ones, not the fruit) sure had a unique flavour!
an enjoyable ale for sure

last week i had no problems in the cask department
i hit three cask nights and tried a fourth cask beer
the third of those three nights was thursday at the yaletown brewpub
where the beer was brown and delicious and the hops were cascades

i brought along all my work folks
who are becoming quite the fans of craft beer in general
and the offerings at yaletown in particular
(especially the growler option – which they all fill with the raspberry wheat ale!)

my lovely work friends

 

another growler convert


in fact i brought in so many people
the manager gave me a yaletown t-shirt!

we tried the deep-fried pickles
which are pretty darned good and paired well with the ipa


deep-fried pickle goodness

i also met my beer geek friends there
i love when my worlds collide so tastily!

the beer geeks

brewer iain hill was on hand to talk about the beers
and try the new fish cakes on the food menu

iain and the fish cakes


since i seem to be on a wheat beer kick
which is weirding me out a little, but i’m going with it
i had a pint of the raspberry wheat ale
and the other seasonal, the cassiopeia wit
i found the wit crisper and more coriandery than the regular wheat on the menu
which meant i was much fonder of it
maybe i do like wheat beers, i’m just particular about them
who knew?