legacy liquor store

new beers at legacy liquor store in vancouver:

New Belgium Accumulation White IPA – $17.55

Winter has settled in, and with all this cold weather come the winter beers. This New Belgium beauty is pale blonde in colour with a big hop bomb of a nose, with predominantly grapefruit, pine and other citrus fruits backing it up. Much like the nose, the palate is all about the hop, with grapefruit, pine, citrus and just a touch of sweet malt pulling through on the finish. Grab this Colorado brew and cuddle up next to the fireplace when it’s too cold to venture out.

Evan Doan | Beer Team | Legacy Liquor Store

R&B Brewing Auld-Nick – $7.80

From our friends located in the historic Brewery Creek district comes a significantly darker shade of beer that will warm you up all the same. A stunning shade of mahogany bursting with aromas of banana bread and buttery caramel that pull through on the palate accompanied by bitter licorice, molasses and dark fruit. A medium body and a lingering finish wrap this beer up as nicely as any present under your Christmas tree.

Chris Bonnallie | Beer Supervisor | Legacy Liquor Store

Parallel 49 Toques of Hazzard – $7.55

Bold and delicious by all means, this Imperial White IPA from our friends at Parallel 49 will definitely warm you up. This hazy amber-coloured beer is a sight to behold with a rich nose of tropical fruits (think pineapple, for instance) that gets you excited for the first sip. All those tropical fruits come into play again on the palate with a lovely mouthfeel that can be attributed to the flaked wheat. This brew will definitely make dreams of sugarplums dance in your head.

Joel Wilson | Beer Team | Legacy Liquor Store

legacy liquor

fabulous beers now available at legacy liquor store in vancouver:

Stillwater Artisinal – Beer Table Table Beer – $12.95An East Coast American Craft Beer you can really quaff. Brewed to meet all the imbibing desires of brewer Brian Strumke, this Belgian pale ale has a little bit of everything. Light and golden in colour with spice, pineapple, citrus and brett owning the bouquet, with malts and a touch of citrus rounding out the palate. A beer worth checking out.

Tasted by Chris Bonnallie – Beer Supervisor at Legacy Liquor Store

Parallel 49 – Hopnotist – $8.25
Happy Birthday, Parallel 49! Their gift to us is their Hopnotist single hop (Mosaic to be specific) Imperial IPA, appearing hazy amber in the glass with notes of tropical fruit and grapefruit to envelop the senses. On the palate more tropical fruits and citrus can be found, balanced with sweetness. The bottle is also 3D, which is amazing.

Tasted by Evan Doan – Beer Team

Phillips – Electric Unicorn – $7.45
You can thank the folks at Phillips for this perfect sunny day brew, a white IPA pouring hazy pale yellow with a bouquet of coriander, spice and orange zest. On the palate more coriander and orange are found, accompanied by floral hops and wheat, making for a quaffable and delicious beer.

Tasted by Conor Marshall – Beer Team

Parallel 49 – Humphrey Biere de Garde – $6.95This style of beer calls the Nord-Pas-De-Calais region of Northern France its home. Rosewater is used in the actual brew itself, a crystal clear amber that smells of flowers, cereal and biscuit, while in the mouth more floral presence and biscuit notes are found. A unique and tasty brew from East Vancouver.

Tasted by Evan Doan – Beer Team at Legacy Liquor Store

Stiegl Radler – $3.50
A tasty Austrian beer that is enjoyed by cyclists to refresh and replenish necessary electrolytes (believe it), it’s 50% beer, 50% grapefruit juice and 100% awesome. Hazy straw in colour with intense notes of grapefruit on the nose and more grapefruit pulling through on the palate paired with a light crisp finish. Yum!

Tasted by Aaron Morten – Office Liaison at Legacy Liquor Store

Lagunitas – Undercover Investigation Shut-Down Ale (6-Pack) – $20.25
This California brewery swings for the fences with all its beers and they connect every time. Hazy amber in colour with hard floral notes, sugar and spice on the nose followed by abundant malt, citrus (grapefruit in particular) and hop on the palate to ensure a thirst-quenching finish.

Tasted by Conor Marshall – Beer Team at Legacy Liquor Store

beer column

in case you missed me on the radio last night
here are my notes from my “spring beers” chat with stephen quinn:

The warmer weather makes you want to drink a lighter beer, to start putting aside those stouts and porters in favour of beers with crisper finishes and flavours that dance on the tongue. This is traditionally the time of year when lagers come to the forefront of beer consumption. I think the word of the season moves from “comforting” or “warming” to “refreshing”

There are two traditional beer styles that are associated with Spring.  Maibock, or May bock, which is brewed specifically for springtime consumption and Saisons which, before the invention of refrigeration, were brewed in the Spring to be consumed over the summer when weather got too hot to support brewing.

Maibocks are light in color with that refreshing lager crispness, but they have a heavier body and generally higher alcohol content than other light colored beer styles like Pilsner.  You’ll be hard pressed to find many Maibocks about, it isn’t a style we see brewed a lot on the West Coast.  Phillips brewed one back in 2010… If you really want to try one, Rogue’s Dead Guy Ale is an example of the style.

Saisons on the other hand, those you can find all over.  Saison used to be considered a dying style, but it has seen a huge resurgence in the past few years and saisons are now easy to find – both imported versions and locally brewed ones.

Originating in the farmhouse breweries of Wallonia, the French area of Belgium, saisons are a very versatile style – including blond and brown coloured ales, heavily bittered or refreshingly tart, well-hopped or gently spiced.  Each farmhouse had its own recipe and flavour twist, which has carried over into the saisons on offer today, so you’re going to want to try more than one to see if this is a style for you!  The highest rated imported saison is Saison Dupont, which you can find at private liquor stores.  Locally, some fine examples are Lighthouse’s Deckhand Belgian Saison and Driftwood’s Farmhouse Saison.
Other styles that have become associated with Spring are:

Kolsch, which is a light beer, sort of a cross between a pilsner and a lager, with a little spice character and a significant but not overwhelming bitter backbone.  Freya’s Gold from Odin Brewing in Seattle is on tap at St. Augustine’s right now.

Spiced Beer:  Wit beers from Belgium are spiced with coriander and orange peel, making them light and refreshing while still full of flavour, like Driftwood’s White Bark. Also ginger beers are zesty and refreshing, like Phillips Ginger beer. 

Fruit Beer:  Many breweries release seasonal fruit beers in the springtime, often based on wheat beer recipes, offering flavors from raspberry to peach to mango. When picking a fruit beer remember the fresher the better so pick one that was brewed nearby or, even better, fresh on tab at your local brewpub, like Granville Island’s Raspberry Wheat.

White IPA:  A new kid on the style block, this is a blending of two styles: belgian wit with indiapale ale. The white ipa is perfect for spring drinking as it tangy from all of those belgian spice characteristics, balanced out with ipa bitterness. Kind of like spring weather that’s sunny one day, cold and rainy the next, its a little bit of everything. A good example of this emerging style is the Deschutes Chainbreaker IPA.

Dopplebock:  which played an important role in one spring-time ritual – Lent. The story is that the monks of St. Francis of Paula of Munich originally brewed the chunky beer known as Salvator to provide them sustenance while they observed Lent by fasting. When the beer found its way to the general population it became known as double bock.  Again, not such a popular style in the Northwest and will be hard to find locally.

Several local breweries deliver their Spring seasonals to the usual craft beer establishments like the Alibi Room and St. Augustine’s, so you can go try them side by side in a taster flight, or commit to a whole pint of something extra refreshing.

CAMRA Vancouver also has a Spring Sessional event at the Portside Pub on May 4th that will feature many of the local breweries showing off their “sessionable” beers. Sessionability being measured by the beers being 4.5% abv and under. There are still tickets available for this event, but they are going quickly so if you want to attend, I’d buy those tickets asap! You can get more details about that camravancouver.ca

Also on the horizon is Vancouver Craft Beer Week – May 31 through June 8. Tickets go on sale on April 22nd. I’ll be talking about all the events on my next column in two weeks’ time

Some Spring beers that I love are:  Conrad, formerly of Steamworks’, ginger beer, so I hope that Steamworks will be brewing that again this Spring even though Conrad has moved on to Brassworks; and Iain Hill of Yaletown Brewpub’s raspberry wheat ale. That one is usually available in the summer though, and Iain assures me that if he can find the black raspberries for the ale, he’ll be brewing it again this year.

I am also looking forward to trying Tree Brewing’s new “Character” 12 can pack – it has two new brews that sound perfect for Spring drinking:  Groove Session Ale and Wild Ruby Raspberry Ale, alongside the established Beach Blonde Lager and Thirsty Beaver Amber Ale.  That launches this month so be on the lookout for it.

Beer Picks:

Moving on now to my beer picks, here are some spring beers that are currently available:

Parallel 49’s Hay Fever saison is on tap at several places around town, as well as in bombers available at the brewery and liquor stores.

Ninkasi Spring Reign Ale is often on tap at Portland Craft, and available in bombers at private liquor stores

Deschutes River Ale – on tap at St. Augustine’s

 

phillips

on the heels of their anniversary pandamoneum ipa brew, phillips is back with a fairy tale ipa

August 30th 2012: In appreciation of International Laser Month we are proud to follow up a giant lazer-eyed mutant Panda with this mono-horned electrically charged laser beast. But while both creatures can sizzle atoms with a glance, the Electric Unicorn White IPA is very different animal than its larger more destructive cousin.

This beer is a white IPA that treads delicately on the palate. Brewed with a generous portion of wheat, the bold hops of the West combine with corriander and a mystical yeast inspired from the East–from Belgium to be specific–to produce a taste that’s well balanced and loaded with plenty of Belgian-fruit character. Ditch reality and take this India pale fairy tale for a ride.

If you want your story to end hoppily-ever-after, be sure to grab your Electric Unicorn IPA quick because it’s only available for a limited time at finer craft beer stores.

green flash

new green flash and founders collaboration brew!

Green Flash has done it again! We have teamed up with another World Class Brewery, Founders Brewing Co. to produce a new collaboration, Linchpin IPA! Join the Green Flash team in the Tasting Room on Tuesday, May 1st for a special Release Party!

“There’s a lot going on in this beer with two yeast strains, copious amounts of wheat malt, and a big focus on ‘C’ hops to deliver a citrus explosion,” explains Green Flash Brewmaster, Chuck Silva. “In fact we lined up more than a dozen hop varieties in the brewery to select three hops with the biggest citrus character to dry hop the beer.

“This golden beer pours with beautiful, frothy white beer foam that lasts due to bottle conditioning. Gently rousing the yeast that settles in the bottle will result in a fuller texture and a more cloudy white appearance. The citrus aromas that jump from the glass are largely tangerine up front with other types of citrus notes that mingle with the Belgian yeast esters. Hop flavors of bitter orange zest dominate the brew and linger to the finish with a nice play of American and Belgian yeast combo.”

A beer with so many components can be held together with a “Linchpin”. The official “Linchpin” of this beer is the skillful collaboration between the two breweries to create a unique hop-forward brew. Linchpins are symbolic: two simple shapes that combine to strengthen a bond amongst many different pieces.