beer column

my notes from last evening’s beer column with stephen quinn on the coast:

It’s the most wonderful time of the year for hop-heads! It’s hop harvest time, and to beer geeks that can mean only one thing: fresh-hopped beers. 
Fresh-hopping, also referred to as wet-hopping, is the process of using fresh hops to bitter the beer. Hops are ready for harvest at the end of August or the beginning of September in this part of the world. Growers know they are ready when the cone is plump and the lupulin is at a maximum. If you look at a hop flower, the lupulin is the yellow stuff between the green bits. This is where the oils come from that impart the bitterness and flavour to beer. Despite looking hardy, hops are actually quite delicate. They don’t survive long after being cut. To preserve the oils and resins they need to be dried right away.. Most of the hops harvested are dried right after picking and then frozen, or ground into pellets. These are then sold to brewers and used all year long. Fresh hops follow a different process. They are harvested and then immediately scooped up by brewers and put into a brew within hours of being picked. Hence the namesfresh-hop.

You can only get fresh-hopped beers at harvest time, so they’re rare commodities. You also get a slightly different hop flavour in a fresh-hopped beer. A little green or herbal perhaps. The base notes are the same, floral, bitter, tangy, but there’s less intensity – instead they are delicate, bright and vibrant. Its hard to describe really, so you should definitely try a fresh-hopped beer this season! Keep in mind, these are beers that will not cellar, the oils break down over time and the flavour changes. You have to drink a fresh-hopped beer right away. And that is a large part of the hype around fresh-hopped beers. They represent a moment in time in your local terroir.
 
Let’s look at how Driftwood brews its Sartori Harvest IPA – probably the most well-known fresh-hopped beer in BC. It is comparable to a pilgrimage to make this beer. The brewers travel from Victoria to the Sartori Cedar Ranch in Chilliwack, load their truck with fresh hops and then drive back to Victoria the same day. The batch gets brewed first thing the next morning, with additions of fresh Centennial hops at multiple points during the brewing process to highlight the bittering and the flavouring elements of the hops, and then the final product goes out to stores a few weeks later. That’s when the fun for the consumer starts – this is a very sought after beer, so if you don’t get your hands on some the day it is released, you may be out of luck to try it at all. People use social media to announce where they got theirs – and to beg others to share the wealth.
 
The good news is that Driftwood Brewing finally has enough tank space to brew a double batch of the Sartori this year – which should make it a little easier to come by than past years. But if you get a bottle, make sure to drink it right away. No storing a fresh-hopped beer, not even for a month! It really does need to be drunk right away. Driftwood Sartori Harvest IPA will be in stores next Monday – that’s September 23rd.
For this list of fresh-hopped beers in BC I need to give a shout-out to Joe Wiebe who wrote an article for the current edition of the BC Craft Beer News all about fresh-hopping and which beers to be on the look-out for.
Vern Lambourne of Granville Island Brewing is making a fresh-hopped ESB (extra special bitter). This year’s concoction will be called Mad Dash, and will also use hops from the Sartori ranch.
Tin Whistle Brewing in Penticton will have a fresh-hopped Harvest Honey Pale Ale made from fresh hops from a farm in Grand Forks and honey from Cawston. This will weigh in at around 30 ibus and use mostly Cascade hops.
Salt Spring Island Ales has a hop farm located quite close to the brewery, which will make it quite easy for them to brew a fresh-hop version of one of their regular styles. From bine to boil is so much easier when the hops are local.
Hoyne Brewing plans to crowd-source hops from backyard growers in the Victoria area for its fresh-hopped brew.
Lighthouse Brewing is brewing its first fresh-hopped batch this year. Their brewer, Dean McLeod says it is an American brown ale with Chinook and Zeus hops from a farm in Cedar on Vancouver Island. The brewery shut down for a day, the staff all travelled to Cedar to pick the hops.
Townsite Brewing will have their Time Warp Pale Ale with hops from Powell River and Texada Island.
Parallel 49 is brewing a Bohemian Pilsner with Sartori hops.
I suggest you follow social media and the CAMRA website for announcements of when these beers have hit store shelves, and also for cask nights featuring fresh-hopped beers.

tin whistle and half pints

last night i needed nachos
it was imperative that i have some
and who does better nachos on the drive than st. augustine’s?
no one!
and what goes down better with nachos than ipa?
nothing!
so i had a tin whistle scorpion double ipa for double the fun
8% – “loaded with citra hops and a huge malt backbone. brewed in small batches”
they weren’t kidding about that huge malt backbone
it was teetering awfully close to the ‘too much’ precipice
i could have used a little less
but then i do like my ipas bitter(er)
darker in colour, dense head, clear as the day is long
its a fine beer for sure
its not going to crack my top ten list though

and… i’ll be making a brief appearance at st. augustine’s again this evening
its the beerthirst half pints re-launch in bc
i hear there will be swag as well as good beer!

eat vancouver

yay beer garden!
eat vancouver last weekend was good times!

we showed up nice and early and ate our way through half of the exhibitors
and then hit the beer garden!
who was there?
well, let me tell you:

yangjing

russell brewing

granville island brewing

cannery brewing

tin whistle and mt. begbie

dead frog brewery

r & b brewing 
driftwood brewery – check out all the awards from vcbw!

singha

and central city…
lots of wine and spirits as well
fun fun fun on a weekend afternoon!

we ate our way through the other half of the exhibitors
and returned to the beer garden for more
and had us some absinthe from taboo
i hear it makes the heart grow fonder…

first you pour the shot over a sugar cube

then you flame the sugar cube

then you dissolve the sugar cube with 2 parts water
then you muddle it all and drink it
(you may note this was more than 2 parts water… disappointing for $3 a shot)

hightlights:
nando’s giving out 125ml bottles of wild herb peri-peri sauce
natura giving out three packs of soy milk drink boxes
coupons
recipes
1921 cream of tequila
leo of vancouver beer blog having too many tickets to use and sharing them liberally with me!
russell being so excited about their new cans for the lemon ale – hipster branding!
and being generous with their pour to ticket ratio

more yoghurt samples than i could shake a spoon at
brookside dark chocolate pomegranate samples
ian of driftwood saying my money was no good at his booth
(yay fat tug!!)

grimm`s turkey jerky sample to take home for my non-sexual life partner
delicious goldseal tuna demo – no mayo, but day-am it was the tastiest tuna salad ever!
lisa being asked to model for singha

some crazy smoking juice drink
that i didn’t actually drink, but damn did it ever intrigue me!

lord, i shoulda put my utensils down and taken notes!
so many samples
so many delicious morsels
what a great way to spend a day!

round two!

last weekend i had the opportunity to try a couple of beers again – yay!

as part of anna’s and my tasting afternoon on friday, we went with the tin whistle black widow ale
i thought this would be a good one since anna likes the dark beers, but not the terribly hoppy ones
i already knew i liked it, would it be a good choice for anna?
you better believe it – she liked it too!

black as night and opaque as treacle
this truly is a mild ale
very nicely roasty malty
not much on the hop side, nor the thick and creamy side
this one is just a very drinkable black ale
i could drink it all day i tell ya!
on saturday night at timbre
while everyone else was eating the elk and playing with the kangaroo balls bottle opener,
i had the elysian immortal ipa again
its not the hoppiest ipa on the block but it is quite a lovely brew
floral and aromatic and bitter
delicious!

i must admit that I did happily move on to the red racer ipa to finish the night though
i am a very happy camper that the gib on tap has made way for the central city goodness!

beernesday II

i have been remiss
i just found my tasting notes from beernesday back on september 29th
bad, bad beer blogger!

i had two samplers
1. brooklyn brewery post road pumpkin ale:  5%  subtly spied, orange-amber color, warm pumpkin aroma, biscuity malt center, and a crisp finish
1. hopworks uban brewery ipa: 6.6%  100% organic. rich and resinous flavours of citrus fruit and pine.  the finest organic canadian pilsner malt and organic munich and caramel malts then bring balance to your new favorite beer
1. old yale brewing sergreant’s ipa: 5.5%  uses special pale and crystal malts and loads of golding hops
1. storm brewing 12 year black current lambic: 7%  not for the timid! this beer is INTENSELY sour, dry and complex

2. red truck limited steam beer: 5%  a hybrid beer style brewing using ale yeast fermented at lager temperatures. the result is a full flavoured, yet surprisingly crisp beer
2. mt. begbie nasty habit ipa: 6%  a perfect balance between the subdued english-style ipas and west coast hop monsters
2. crannog anniversary ale (wasn’t on the menu yet, so i don’t have st. auggies’ tasting notes on this one)
2. tinwhistle black widow (wasn’t on the menu yet, so i don’t have st. auggies’ tasting notes on this one)

beers i had tried before and loved, so needed to include in the samplers, were the storm lambic, red truck steam and mt. begbie nasty habit – big fan of all three of them, and not disappointed to have them again.  nope, not one iota sad!  (and who doesn’t love a nasty habit (or three!))

in the first round i found the pumpkin not at all to my liking.  it smells great and spicy, but the biscuity malt is not at all to my taste.  gwen thought it was okay, and christal thought it was great.  they finished my glass between them!
i love the hopworks ipa – citrusy perfection and organic to boot!  it really could well be my new favourite beer!  please sir, can i have some more?  oh portland, how i love your beers!
i found the sergeant’s ipa to be a much maltier creature, still nicely hoppy, but not as much to my liking as the hopworks.  probably due to my preference for the more citrusy hops…

from the second round, i quite enjoyed the anniversary ale – its a delicious little ale!  the black widow was very much like a black ale as opposed to a stout, not thick and creamy.  it was quite complex and delicious and i would happily have it again should it appear on the menu.
i appreciated that my server suggested these last two to me, as they were not on the menu and therefore were not on my radar at all.  great suggestions and i was a very happy camper!

on her search to figure out which stouts it is that she enjoys, lara tried the st. augustine’s stout.  she says “i like this very much.  i would order it again absolutely!”  aha!  she does not like the coffee and chocolate notes, she prefers her stouts to be old school.  good to know!

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!

bottled beer

rather than sampling too many beers in one night, tippling at st. augustine’s the other night featured a few bottle or pint choices after a single sampler each.

the thought was to try four beers we weren’t sure we’d want a whole pint of, or were already in love with.  then follow those with choices we were sure we’d want a whole pint (or bottle) of.  and it turned out to be a sound plan!

alison was the smartest about this method – she got them to let her have a sip of her choices first, then ordered the pints.  she had the r&b red devil ale and the tin whistle killer bee dark honey ale.  she’s in love with both of these so much that she went to the beer store last night to buy herself bottles for home!  of the red devil she said:  “nice hop – really not sweet… great depth.  keeps on going.”  of the killer bee she said “i’m a killer bee!” (yes, we were a bit tipsy by this point in the evening) and inspired by the mohammed ali documentary on the screen above her head, i replied “float like a nut brown, sting like a honey bee”, which sounded far wittier at the time!  seriously though, i found my sips of the killer bee to taste like a nut brown ale with a bit of honey flavour.

r&b’s website says:  “R&B’s Red Devil Pale Ale is an English-style pale ale with a coppery red hue. Not to be confused with typical red and amber ales, Red Devil is crafted with the palate and bouquet in mind. A mix of 2-Row and C-75 malts are accentuated by the addition of Crystal, Fuggles, and Whitbread Goldings hops at three different stages in the brewing process. In keeping with English tradition, this little devil has a hoppy floral aroma and malty sweetness, which are followed by a slightly dry and very refreshing finish. The perfect companion to a game of footy down at the local pub. (28 IBU, 5.2% alc/vol) Available in bottles.

Awards
Silver – 2007 Canadian Brewing Awards
Bronze – 1008 Taste of B.C.
Silver – 2009 Taste of B.C.”

for her pints bridget had her favourite backhand of god stout by crannog, and then let me talk her into trying a bottle of anderson valley’s barney flats oatmeal stout.  i didn’t take any notes of her impressions, and i know i tried the barney flats, but can’t actually remember what i thought of it!  doh!  in trying to avoid sampling too many beers in one night by switching to bottles, i forgot to take into account that i was going to at least take a sip of everyone else’s choices and i can’t properly distinguish my memories of all the tasty mouthfuls.  must take better notes! 

after enjoying the anderson valley ipa at a tasting, i decided that my first bottle at st. augustine’s was going to be their boont esb.  st. augustine’s says:  “6.8% The abundant hopping in this four-time gold medal winner creates arousing aromatics, accompanied by pleasantly bitter bite.  Boont Extra Special Beer is deep gold in colour, with a spicy hop aroma.”  yup, i agree.  after a violent pour, it took quite a while for the head to simmer down enough to drink it.  lovely hop nose and bitter finish.  i’d definitely buy this one again.

my next choice was bear republic racer 5 ipa – the one that they sued central city over.  but st. augustine’s was out of it, so that will have to remain on my list to try another time.  instead i went with their hop rod rye. st. augustine’s says:  “8.0% A high gravity IPA brewed with 18% rye malt, Hop Rod Rye has a floral hop aroma and subtle caramel notes with a slightly earthy and spicy rye character.”  yup, true, true.  i enjoyed the play of hops and rye.  i want to try this one again when its the first beer of the day and not the last in a long line.  i think there’s a lot there to appreciate.

from the anderson valley website:

“Barney Flats Oatmeal Stout Takes Bronze at World Beer Cup® in Chicago
AVBC’s already award-winning Barney Flats Oatmeal Stout took the Bronze Medal at the 2010 World Beer Cup® in Chicago. Entered in Category Number 63 -Oatmeal Stout, Barney Flats beat 31 other entrants to take home a medal. The beer was taken directly from the packaging line. It’s the same beer that can be found in your 6 pack at home which is not just shy sluggin’ gorms neemer.

For more information on the World Beer Cup® and this year’s winners, visit http://www.worldbeercup.org/

Boont ESB:  “The abundant hopping in this four-time gold medal winner, creates arousing aromatics, accompanied by a pleasantly bitter bite. Boont Extra Special Beer is deep gold in color, with a spicy hop aroma. Starts with a big, malty backbone and finishes with a refreshingly bitter bite. Boont Extra Special Beer is excellent alone or as an accompaniment to your favorite well-seasoned meals (such as Mexican, Korean, Chinese, Indian, or Thai, cuisine).

Boont ESB was named the Regional Champion in the 2003 US Beer Tasting Championships, in the Bitter/ESB category, has won two Gold Medals at the Great American Beer Festival, and has several other medals, as well.

As with all of our products, Boont ESB is never sterile filtered nor heat pasteurized, and should be stored in refrigeration. However, to fully enjoy its rich and complex flavor, it should be served between 40° and 45°F.  6.8 % Alcohol by Volume.  61 IBU.  “It’s aplenty bahl steinber horn.””