Thursday, 22 December 2016

ThirstyBear Organic Brewery Releases 2 Christmas Casks

From brewbound.com

San Francisco, CA — It might not be a white Christmas in San Francisco this year, but there’s still plenty to celebrate with the holidays right around the corner. ThirstyBear Organic Brewery is 20 years deep into the annual tradition of brewing festive spiced ales to lift the winter spirits. Throughout the holiday season and well into January 2017, ThirstyBear releases two specialty Christmas casks of their TOLSTOY’S INKWELL (Russian Imperial Stout, 9.3% ABV) and GRIZZLY BEAR (Red Ale, 6.3% ABV).
The earliest versions of spiced ales were called “wassail,” a warmed mead (ale brewed with honey) that evolved to become a mulled cider made with cinnamon, ginger and nutmeg. It was used for “wassailing,” a Medieval English drinking ritual. With the American Craft Brewing renaissance, the rebirth of spiced ales came in 1975 with Anchor Brewing Company’s release of “Christmas Ale.”
Every year since opening in 1996, ThirstyBear has produced a spiced ale. For 2016, Head Brewmaster Brenden Dobel cask conditions two ales with a rich malty sweetness with hints of caramel and chocolate, along with some alcoholic warmth. Cask conditioning allows ales to undergo a secondary fermentation inside the cask (i.e. the firkin) from which it is dispensed along with dry-hopping. For these specialty casks, Dobel “dry-hopped” the brews with ground whole cinnamon, nutmeg, allspice and clove.
TOLSTOY’S INKWELL has massive amounts of Dark Crystal, Chocolate and Black malts along with Roasted Barley for a robust bittersweet chocolate/ molasses/espresso character. It’s dry-hopped with English Fuggle hops to balance the malt character with an earthy and cedar like quality.
GRIZZLY BEAR is brewed with Munich, Wheat and Special B malts, the latter of which provides a dried fruit/raisin character that interacts well with the Christmas spices. It is hopped with the great American hops of Cascade, Centennial and Chinook offering notes of citrus and pine.

https://www.brewbound.com/news/thirstybear-organic-brewery-releases-2-christmas-casks

Wednesday, 23 November 2016

Beer Me: Fermented Honey

From dirtragmag.com

Mead is brewed from honey, which was probably the first sweetener used by humans and was almost certainly fermenting spontaneously in caves and trees long before hominids had even gained a taste for alcohol.
Our favourite bubbly beverage just may be beer. For other occasions—like when we’re feeling a bit more culinary or just want a faster kick—we often reach for wine, and together these forces of alcohol make our world go happily ‘round.
But there is another. It has been antiquated, almost forgotten entirely, but in the Middle Ages it ruled Europe almost as surely as gravity itself, and its name still sounds mysteriously among small circles of educated drinkers and historians: mead. It is brewed from honey, which was probably the first sweetener used by humans and was almost certainly fermenting spontaneously in caves and trees long before hominids had even gained a taste for alcohol. Bears and primates, perhaps, got drunk on such finds before mankind made a habit of happy hours and hangovers. Eventually, such elements became components of the human condition as we brewed and fermented to satiate our desires, and in northern Europe honey became the leading alcohol base in a region too cold to produce grape wine.
Mead was the foremost product of these far-north brewers, but as barley-based beer brewing took hold, malt, honey and hops sometimes landed in the same kettle. The results of such recipes were called braggots, or beers made in combination with honey. `with marmalade. The Special Reserve mead is the strongest in the bunch, and at 16 percent ABV has a warming effect in the mouth. Its flavours are flowery and even a bit starchy on account of the buckwheat honey in the blend. Russ also ages the Special Reserve two years in oak barrels before bottling the mead, a process that leaves its mark in flavours of faint whiskey and rich butter. The Ginger-Apricot Honey Wine tastes crisp as freshly chewed ginger root, the spiciness lingering long and hot after just a sip. Like all the rest we tasted, the flavours of honey underscore the other elements.
Many if not most mead-makers began their careers as beer brewers, merging into mead-making by dabbling and experimentation. Russ began making mead by this progression. So did Mike Faul. So did Brad Dahlhofer, founder of B. Nektar Meadery, another major mead producer in Detroit, whose brews include an apple cyser aged in bourbon barrels and a vanilla-cinnamon mead. Other brewers are sure to join the game, which now includes over 100 commercial mead-makers nationwide.
On the West Coast at Bison Brewing Company in Berkeley, for example, brewer Dan Del Grande has just entered the braggot ballgame by adding a dollop of honey to a light pale ale, plus fresh basil. The bottled brew—as savoury as pesto—is marketed as a honey-basil “beer,” since it contains not enough honey to qualify as a braggot.
Not that the word would sell the product, anyway. Faul at Rabbit’s Foot once tried marketing his braggots to several Bay Area beer bars as “braggots.” They wouldn’t take them, claiming that beer drinkers wouldn’t understand. Faul, today, agrees.
“Because no one has a clue what a braggot is, and it’s the same with cysers,” he says. “If you call these anything but a ‘cider’ or ‘beer with honey,’ it won’t sell.”
He has, in fact, given up on using the words melomel, cyser and braggot, relegating them to the recycling bin and the annals of history. In the craft brew aisle, however, honey beers and honey wines still live on.

http://dirtragmag.com/beer-me-fermented-honey/

Sunday, 20 November 2016

Grantham beer festival at St Wulfram’s Church to feature 50 ales, ciders and mead

From granthamjournal.co.uk

The first-ever beer festival to be held at Grantham’s St Wulfram’s Church takes place next week.    The festival, called Land of Hops and Glory, will offer visitors a selection of 50 beers, ciders and mead.
The festival starts on Thursday and continues daily until Saturday, November 26. Among the beers are two specifically brewed for the festival called ‘St Wulfram’s’ and ‘Fr Stuart’. Rector Father Stuart Cradduck said: “We are delighted to inform everyone that plans are going very well indeed and we are so grateful to our friends at Grantham CAMRA who have worked so hard in producing a fabulous selection of 50 beers, ciders, mead.
“Some of the amazing guest ales will feature Devils Elbow, Fallen Angel, Better the Devil you Know, Heavenly Blonde, and two new commissioned beers, a St Wulfram’s ale and a Fr Stuart – which we are told is quite dark and bitter – and many, many more! To accompany the ales there will be music. Fr Stuart added: “We have a fabulous line-up on Thursday night which will be all folk music, with a wonderful eclectic mix of dance and music. Friday night we have ‘Gladness’, a party band, performing many well-known covers. And on Saturday we have a jazz ensemble from King’s School, and the much acclaimed Dennis Hannant.
“It’s quite simply going to be the event of the year, St Wulfram’s showcasing itself in a way unknown of before, celebrating the skills of local brewers. Entry is paid on the door. Admission between noon and 7pm is £3 (£1 for CAMRA members) and between 7pm and 11pm is £5.

http://www.granthamjournal.co.uk/news/grantham-beer-festival-at-st-wulfram-s-church-to-feature-50-ales-1-7687373

Friday, 21 October 2016

First Coast Brews: Mead all about it!

By Stephanie Danley

You might have noticed it in shops or even coming soon to our local breweries (Wicked Barley and Engine 15), the trend in craft brewing is  moving to Ciders and Meads.  The craft beer industry is resurrecting an old style and injecting it with new ideas.  I'm always amazed at the creativity in the industry.
This past week I attended an introduction to Mead held at Total Wine.  I've just recently discovered the events and classes there and this was my first event.  I'd suggest checking them out. They have classes and events for nearly every kind of alcohol available in the store.  Costs are minimal, I paid $5 for the Mead class.
The stars of this class are the brewers/owners of B. Nektar Meadery, Brad and Kerri Dahlhofer and Paul Zimmerman and Florida sales rep Mark Houdeshell.  This Mead specific brewery is based in Ferndale Michigan and is the largest Meadery in the country. Brad Dahlhofer said that the output of the Meadery is probably smaller than Cigar City or Funky Buddha, but as far as Meaderies go, they are the largest.  They also occupy a spot on the Worldwide Top 100 Breweries list put out by RateBeer.com.
As an introduction, Brad explained that Mead is simply honey, water and yeast.  Where beer gets its fermentable sugar from grains and wine from grapes, Mead uses honey.  Brewing Mead can take as short as a couple of months (for low alcohol yields) or over a year for higher ABV content.
Brad is VP of the American Mead Maker Association. He said there are very strong restrictions regarding Mead.  Currently there is a bill in Congress called The Mead Act, that would do a multitude of things including changing the definition of what makes a Mead and making it easier for Mead to be produced.
Mead is possibly the oldest alcohol in existence.  It is thought that ancient man transported honey home and in whatever container it was carried, water leaked in, wild yeast from the air took over and Mead was created.  Archeologists have found traces of honey in ancient alcohol, lending some credibility to this.
Meads can be still or sparkling, which would make you think of them more as wines.  But today's brewers are far more adventurous and the fit is better with craft beer.  After having sampled five of B. Nektar's products I have to agree, it was very easy to think of Meads as craft beer.
Our first sample of the evening was Zombie Killer, technically not a mead, but a cider with honey and cherry juice.  Kerri, Brad's wife, is a graphic designer and explained how this first flagship brew created their entire brand.  They are very pop culture based, Zombie Killer came from one of the employees, who was into a little graphic novel called The Walking Dead.  Kerri designed the zombie (apple) being killed by the cherry.  Each label is a work of art and I'd encourage you to read the descriptions.
I enjoyed the tart apple notes of Zombie Killer, the cherry added tartness, but the honey was very present.  It is a smooth sweet drink, slightly pink and would be perfect to toast the return of a certain show.
Keeping in the pop culture, NecroMangocon is a tribute to Michigan natives Sam Raimi and Bruce Campbell, and their Evil Dead franchise.  Both are native to the area around B. Nektar. This is a true mead, with Mango Juice and Black Pepper added.  Interestingly Saison yeast was added to this mead.  If you like that funky flavour from good Farmhouse style ales, you'll like this too.
Grinding all the peppercorns needed for Necromangocon, turned into a problem for them.  They were destroying spice grinders and food processors.  Eventually they found a commercial coffee grinder (like the ones you see in grocery stores) to grind the pepper.  
I personally loved this Mead.  The Mango flavour was present, but that kick of black pepper tempered the sweetness.  I found myself sipping it over and over again, actually swirling it like it was wine.   I will definitely be keeping this around!
Next we moved on to Vampires and Black Fang.  Kerri is very fond of Vampire lore, this is a favourite of hers.  Originally she wanted to call it Fang Bangers, after the humans who love vampires from True Blood/Sookie Stackhouse novels.  HBO has that copy written, so Black Fang comes from the colour of this mead.  It contains Blackberry, clove, orange zest and the honey is wildflower.
Cloves are very forward in this dark red brew.  If you like mulled wine or other warm winter concoctions, you will love Black Fang.  And make sure you check out Kerri on the label, she merged a Nosferatu with a photo of herself to create this label.

Dwarf Invasion, is partially inspired by a Michigan folk tale of Nain Rouge, a red dwarf of mischief.  There is also a metal song, Dwarf Invasion, YouTube it if you like.  Such a great evening, with entertaining people.
Dwarf Invasion outside of the Nain Rouge and metal music, is a wildflower honey, Balaton cherry and Styrian Golding hops brew.  They were influenced by Belgian beer for this mead.  The hops are perfect in here and truly gives the essence of Belgium.  I could drink a lot of this.
We finished with a Special Release Mead called Devil's Juice.  This is a powerful drink, both in ABV (15.5%) and flavor.  They smoked pineapple (originally 665 pounds, but the crew made it 666 in honor of the name) and added Serrano, jalapeno and ghost peppers to the mix.
I'd suggest only trying this is you love spicy food.  A lot.  I could taste the pineapple and some smoky notes, but the pepper is in your face.  Brad said they also have a very limited run of basically Devil's Juice brewed with Carolina Reaper peppers, which are the hottest pepper.
They have fun with their brews and sometimes happy accidents happen.  They took Zombie Killer and aged it in Rye barrels, calling it Zombie takes Manhattan.  They had a funky batch of Killer Zombie that they intended to mix otherwise and it ended up being mixed with the Manhattan...so instead of tossing it, they tasted it and it was good, creating the Mutant Killer Zombie Manhattan Project Thingy.  In an ode to South Park they have Zombie Killer mixed with spices and they call it Oh My God They Killed Zombie!
Total Wine has a display of B. Nektar's meads available and Beer :30 Riverside and Kickbacks did have some on tap as well.  Until our locals get mead out, I'd encourage you to try B. Nektar.  At least read the labels. 

http://www.firstcoastnews.com/life/food/first-coast-brews/first-coast-brews-mead-all-about-it/336071123

Sunday, 16 October 2016

1066 and all that: a fateful taste for ale

By Rupert Millar

In one long, bloody but decisive day the era of a purely Anglo-Saxon England was brought to an end and the rule of the Normans began.
The invasion of 1066 was the last great invasion of England and shifted the focus of subsequent English history away from Scandinavia and towards the much closer continent across the Channel.
The coming of the Normans changed the English language, introduced new names (William, Henry, Robert, Alice and Margaret) and their aggressive policy of expansion (which was not consigned solely to Britain) began the process of closer union between the nations of these isles.
But did the Anglo-Saxons lose the battle because they over-indulged in ale the night before the battle?
A clever Guinness campaign for the 900th anniversary of the battle in 1966. Bishop Odo hands William the Conqueror a reviving glass of stout. As William of Malmesbury tells us of course, the Normans were very abstemious.

Even before the coming of the Normans the Anglo-Saxons were renowned for their taste for booze. Beer and mead would have been the principal drinks for most people both before and after the conquest. Wine would not have been unknown in Anglo-Saxon England but would have been principally drunk by the nobility and high-ranking clergy and not in great quantities. Imported from the continent it would have been an expensive luxury.
Beer was not and the English already had a reputation for their brewing skill which continued after the conquest. Low in alcohol, clean and refreshing, English ale was in the wagon train of gifts Thomas Becket took to the king of France on a diplomatic mission in 1158. The French courtiers are said to have wondered at “such an invention, a drink most wholesome, clear of dregs, rivaling wine in colour and surpassing it in flavour,” as a contemporary chronicler related.
It was plentiful too; the average monk had a daily allowance of around three gallons a day and the numerous festivals held throughout the year provided ample opportunity for drinking copious amounts.
The Anglo-Norman bishop John of Salisbury noted in the 1170s: “The English are noted among foreigners for their persistent drinking.”
This taste for booze was perhaps the Saxon’s undoing on the fateful night before the Battle of Hastings. As is well known, King Harold and his men had fought and won a crucial engagement against an invading Danish army led by Harald Hardrada at Stamford Bridge on 25 September.
Three days later, Duke William of Normandy landed at Pevensey and Harold had turned his army south, marching the 200 miles from Yorkshire to Kent in under three weeks, a fast pace for the time.
On 13 October the English army took up a strong position on Senlac Hill. the Normans and their Breton and Flemish allies camped below them. Foot sore and weary the English army apparently geared itself up for battle by staying up late into the night drinking ale and singing songs.
The chronicler William of Malmesbury, writing some 50 years after the battle, says: “The courageous leaders mutually prepared for battle, each according to his national custom. The English, as we have heard, passed the night without sleep, in drinking and singing, and in the morning proceeded without delay against the enemy.…On the other hand, the Normans passed the whole night in confessing their sins, and received the communion of the Lords body in the morning.”
Malmesbury was half Norman and while we need not dismiss his claim the English spent part of the night drinking as an outright slur (he clearly refers to both Harold and William as “courageous”), as a Norman and a churchman it is likely he considers the English taste for alcohol and their neglect of prayers as vital to their defeat. The pious Normans meanwhile who honoured God and confessed their sins were thus given victory.
He continues that the English prior to the conquest had wandered far from the path of righteous Christianity and the lords fallen into the lap of luxury and wantonness. He writes: “Drinking in parties was a universal practice, in which occupation they passed entire nights as well as days. They consumed their whole substance in mean and despicable houses, unlike the Normans and French, who live frugally in noble and splendid mansions. The vices attendant on drunkenness, which enervate the human mind, followed; hence it came about that when they engaged William, with more rashness and precipitate fury than military skill, they doomed themselves and their country to slavery by a single, and that an easy, victory. For nothing is less effective than rashness; and what begins with violence quickly ceases or is repelled.”
It is a motif one sees throughout medieval history. Almost 400 years later at Agincourt, chroniclers make great pains to point out that the English army spent the night at prayer and confession and were thus victorious against the French who, in their hubris, passed the night drinking and toasting the battle they believed was as good as won.
Divine will or not, lack of sleep and alcohol could very well have contributed to the Saxon defeat as Malmesbury says it did. Although the exact weather conditions for the 14 October 1066 are not recorded, it was apparently “unusually bright”. This is the time of the ‘Medieval Warm Period’ and it is possible the day was quite hot. The battle raged from 9am to dusk we are told and although there were pauses in the fighting as both sides drew breath, standing all day under the bright Sun and seeing off Norman assaults; exhaustion and dehydration must have taken their toll on the Saxons.
Towards evening, with the Normans having lured groups of Saxons down from the hill with their famous ‘retreats’, the English shield wall began to weaken. The Norman cavalry began probing for the weakest points, found them, exploited them and the Saxon line evaporated. Harold and his bodyguard, his huscarls, were isolated and cut down in a bloody heap. Perhaps already wounded by an arrow in the eye, Harold was likely singled out by several Norman knights who surrounded him and hacked him to death. His two brothers, Leofwine and Gyrth, also perished and with them the royal house of England.
The start of Norman rule was brutal. William, now king and ‘Conqueror’, laid waste to the north of England so terribly he later confessed it on his deathbed with shame. Anglo-Saxon lords were disinherited and their lands given to Norman barons. Feudalism and serfdom were introduced and Anglo-Saxons became second-class citizens. In the end, arguably, Englishness won out. The Norman and then Anglo-Norman aristocracy retained French as their first language for several hundred years but, gradually, they adopted English and proudly, albeit a tongue by then much altered by the injection of Latin French. Old Anglo-Saxon law also reappeared. Magna Carta, although initially designed to protect the rights of the barons not the common people, was largely based on the old English laws with respect to the protection of private property, individual liberty and the right to justice.
Some of our most celebrated folk heroes are also Saxons taking on the Norman invader, Ivanhoe and Robin Hood have both become champions of English liberty against an oppressive regime.
The drinks landscape of England also changed. Although it is a subject much debated it seems the Normans were largely responsible for bringing cider apples to England. There were Bretons in William’s army too and of course Normandy and Brittany are the home of French cider making so it’s possible the invader’s influence encouraged and enhanced a native English cider industry even if it did not completely introduce it.
The Normans did though have an important impact on wine in England. The Romans are said to have tried to introduce vines to England but without much success. In 282 AD the Emperor Probus, in overturning Domitian’s decree of AD 92, is said to have authorised the planting of vines in England but viticulture clearly did not take off. There may have been some vineyards in England in 1066, perhaps attached to monasteries but plantings certainly grew post-1066. In the Domesday Book of 1086 some 40 vineyards are chronicled, the furthest north being those at Ely. Yet the wine produced in England seems to have been considered inferior to that of France. In 1152 with Henry I’s marriage to Eleanor of Aquitaine huge vineyards in the Loire and Gascony provided England with cheaper, higher quality wine and local production withered.
Until now of course, English (and Welsh) wine is enjoying a renaissance and the number of wineries now reaches over 500, with 4,500 acres under vine.
So if you feel like raising a glass to the Conqueror’s victory or perhaps mourn the death of Godwinson here are some ideas:
Beer:
The natural drink of the Englishman. Battlefield Brewery in Shropshire has two beers that are right for the occasion, ‘Saxon Gold’ (named after a Saxon mint located in Shrewsbury) and ‘1066’. Ridgeway Brewing meanwhile has a beer called ‘Ivanhoe’ for those that want to celebrate some English pluck and one is rather spoilt for choice when it comes to the sheer array of Robin Hood-themed ales.
Hastings itself has many breweries and Kent and Sussex are the home of English hops so in a pinch just about anything from these southern counties will more than suffice.
Mead:
A special drink in Anglo-Saxon times and one in the middle of a comeback as those terrible ‘hipsters’ continue their quest for authenticity and cool retro things. Chefs René Redzepi and Simon Rogan are among mead’s high-profile fans. The Cornish Mead Company has been flying the flag for the drink since the 1960s, Gosnells London Mead was founded in late 2013 and Lurgashall Winery in West Sussex is also a top mead brewer. So make today a chance to try some mead, wassail heartily and discover the honeyed delights of this ancient northern European brew.
Cider:
Where to begin with cider, yet another drink that has surged in popularity in recent years and offers the discerning drinker a wealth of choice. Kent and Sussex ciders are often sweeter and more like their Norman and Breton cousins than the cloudier, perils of West Country brew. Pick wisely.
Wine:
Normandy no longer has much of a wine producing industry, although one winery, Arpents du Soleil, does exist. So choose something English. Most English wineries are based in Sussex and Kent which makes them conveniently close to the site of the battle. Still or sparkling it doesn’t matter, English wine has never been better and with many producers saying 2016 could prove an exceptional vintage there’s every reason to hope there’s more to come.

https://www.thedrinksbusiness.com/2016/10/1066-and-all-that-a-fateful-taste-for-ale/


Saturday, 18 June 2016

Beer Brewing Vocabulary and Abbreviations

By Pat McLoughlin

There are several words that you will be introduced to when brewing beer. Some of them are probably things that you have heard before such as pH, Ale, and Lager. This article will give a more in depth description of these terms as well as give you a variety of new homebrewing vocabulary that you may not have heard yet.
ABV - Alcohol by volume
ABW - Alcohol by weight
Airlock - a plastic top that lets carbon dioxide be released during fermentation without contaminating your brew.

Ale - top fermented beer
Carboy - glass fermenter
Conditioning - Adding sugar to your beer before bottling. This makes the left over yeast react with the sugar to create carbonation.
DME - dry malt extract
Dry hopping - adding hops during the fermentation stage
Fermentation - the time in the brewing process where your beer is sitting in a container and reacting with the yeast. This usually takes a couple weeks and is done before bottling your beer.
FG - Final gravity (the gravity of the beer taken at the end of fermentation)
Gravity - denseness of a liquid (used to determine the amount of alcohol)
Hydrometer - tool used to determine gravity
IPA - India Pale Ale
Lager - bottom fermented beer
Lautering - mash separated into the wort and leftover grain

Malt - Grain (either barley or wheat) sometimes in a malt extract form which is a syrup
Mead - fermented honey
OG - Original gravity (the gravity of the beer taken at the beginning of fermentation)
pH - percent Hydrion
Pitching - pouring yeast into your beer
Sparging - filtering water through grain to get the sugar out of the grain
Wort - What you call your brew when you have finished boiling before adding it to the fermenter.

http://ezinearticles.com/?Beer-Brewing-Vocabulary-and-Abbreviations&id=3597420

Wednesday, 1 June 2016

Record-breaking Cambridge Beer Festival not likely to grow much bigger, organiser says

By Chris Elliott

Organisers of Cambridge's hugely successful Summer Beer Festival are soberly keeping their feet on the ground – and steering clear of predicting another record-breaking year in 2017.
As the News has reported, CAMRA says this year's festival clocked up an all-time high of 41,000 customers, who sank 86,000 pints between them, as well as 13,000 pints of cider and perry, 9,300 pints of foreign beer, and 1,600 bottles of wine and mead.
They also munched their way through about a tonne of cheese, the weight of a small saloon car.
The event raised more than £10,000 for Addenbrooke's Charitable Trust, which supports patient care at Addenbrooke's and the Rosie.

Festival organiser Bert Kenward told the News: “It was our largest ever festival. I think this shows the interest in real ales, perries and ciders."
Speculation has mounted about just how big the festival could get, with real ale now said to be the height of fashion among trend-chasing 'hipsters'.
Asked if it could break the 50,000 mark, Mr Kenward said the numbers were limited by the size of the venue on Jesus Green.
He said: “I think we're operating pretty much at the right size for the location, and also for the number of volunteers we have helping to make it all happen. We had 400 this year, whom I'd particularly like to thank, and we always need more."
Next year's festival is scheduled for May 22-26, and selection of the beers and ciders for that event will begin in January.
Mr Kenward said: “It's not quite as glamorous as people might think. We don't do tastings of every beer – we use our experience of the breweries involved to make the choices."
Cambridge CAMRA's competition to find the best drinks on offer at this year's fesival produced joint winners in the beer category: Cambridge Brewing Company's Chicken Porter and Harvey's Prince of Denmark, with third place going to Siren Broken Dream.
Best cider was judged as Simon's COX!!!, the best perry was Apple Cottage Pyder Buldock, and the best mead was Rookery Spruce Mead.
The next Cambridge CAMRA festival is Octoberfest, at the University Social Club, October 14 and 15.

http://www.cambridge-news.co.uk/Record-breaking-Cambridge-Beer-Festival-likely/story-29342736-detail/story.html

Saturday, 7 May 2016

Dogfish Head Ancient Ales

By Marc Bayes

In 1999 Dogfish Head, a small microbrewery from Delaware, decided to start a new series of beers; something that has never been done before. They wanted to reconstruct ancient recipes long lost and forgotten and show the world what some of these carbonated beverages would have tasted like. There are many old and very traditional styles of beer that are close to extinction that has seen a resurgence in the past few years. This series of beer from Dogfish Head however are not those styles. They are extinct and were lost. This series of craft beer was appropriately named the Ancient Ales series.
With the help of Dr. Patrick McGovern, a biomolecular archeologist at the University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archeology and Anthropology, and one of the worlds most leading experts on ancient fermented beverages, they began to delve into the past of ancient brewing and resurrect the past. A tomb was found in Turkey which is thought to have belonged to King Midas. In this tomb Dr. Patrick McGovern found a drinking vessel that dates back 2700 years! Using modern technology they determined that the beverage within the drinking vessel was a beverage somewhere between wine and mead. Deeper analysis revealed that this beverage was made using white muscat grapes, saffron, and honey.
Midas Touch was the first Ancient Ale to be reconstructed. Dogfish Head liked the beer so much and the ingredients were easy enough that they decided to make this a year around beer available four packs of twelve ounce bottles. This beer is pretty incredible all around. Aside from the fact it's a beverage once enjoyed by King Midas it definitely speaks volumes for how similar beer and wine can be.
The next of the Ancient Ales takes place 9000 years ago. Dr. Patrick McGovern had the opportunity to inspect a preserved pottery jar from the Neolithic Village of Jiahu. Jiahu is in the Henan province of Northern China. This pottery jar showed evidence that a fermented beverage containing honey, rice, and hawthorn fruit was being produced ages ago. Right around the same time as this beverage was being made fermented beverages using grapes and barley were being produced in the Middle East.
Chateau Jiahu was the reconstruction of the ingredients found in the pottery jar of Jiahu. In 2005 Dr. Patrick McGovern teamed up with Dogfish Head to recreate the oldest known fermented beverage in the history of mankind. In order to keep with the traditional aspects of this beverage Dogfish Head brewed Cheateau Jiahu using brown rice syrup, Orange Blossom honey, Muscat grape, barely malt, and Hawthorn berry. The wort, mixture of all the above heated to a boil and then it's fermented using sake yeast for one month before being bottled. This Ancient Ale is one of the most coveted by beer connoisseurs and aficionados across the globe. This ale is released in July.
In 2008 Dr. Patrick McGovern made another very interesting discovery. Pottery fragments from Honduras were found and using chemical analysis they discovered something very unique. The beverage that was held in these pottery fragments contained the earliest known alcoholic chocolate beverage known to man. Early civilizations used this beverage to celebrate special occasions. These pottery fragments dated back to 1200 B.C. Dogfish Head teamed up with the doctor again to recreate the past.
Theobroma translates to Food Of The Gods. To reconstruct this Ancient Ale Dogfish Head stuck with the data from Dr. Patrick McGovern and used Aztec cocoa powder and cocoa nibs from Askinosie Chocolate; award winners of Sofie medals and leading craft chocolate producers. They brewed the beer using ancho chilies, honey, ground anatto seeds (fragmented tree seeds). The beer itself pours a bright honey gold with little to no head. The aroma is bready and full of honey. The first sip reveals the flavor of honey, bready malts, and slight spice and earthiness on the finish. Pouring a bright gold this is a very different beer than just about any chocolate beer out there. Having tried this beer just the other day I would love to save a bottle and sip it on the steps of a Mayan temple on Dec 23, 2012. They release this beer in June.
The next installment of the Ancient Ales series comes from a 9th century Finnish proto-beer. A proto-beer is a fermented and carbonated beverage that is similar to beer as we know today but not made in the same methods. Before modern industrialization of the beer industry the beverages being brewed has to be heated using hot rocks. There were no copper or steel fermentation tanks only wood. Add hot rocks to wood and you now have a fire. Instead the early forms of brewing boiled the wort using river rocks that were heated to a blinding hot white. They would then drop these rocks into the wort in order to caramelize the wort. Sah'tea, the fourth installment to the Ancient Ales was done in the same method.
Before brewing began Dogfish Head made a black tea of sorts. Blending cardamom, cinnamon, ginger, cloves, and black pepper they created this tea and blended it with rye and juniper berries which were picked from Finnish country-side. This became the wort. From here they heated river rocks till they were white hot. Placing them into metal wire buckets they dipped them into the wort and created a boil and caramelized the wort. For fermentation they used traditional German Weizen yeast. Weizen beers typically have a banana ester qualities on the nose and palate. They named this beer Sah'tea and it's released in May.
This beer is ridiculously good. This Ancient Ale pours the same as most Weizen beers. Pale straw gold and slightly hazy with great carbonation. The aroma is that of cloves, cinnamon, and peppery spice. The beer tastes outstanding. Juniper, clove, cinnamon, and mild banana esters. Overall it's very light in body and doesn't weigh much on the mouth. Sah'tea is very drinkable and perfect for a great summer day.
The last of the Ancient Ales from Dogfish Head is Pangaea. Pangaea was first released in 2003 and it's a fall release for the brewery. While this beer isn't from an ancient recipe or a reconstruction of ingredients found from historic civilizations, it is however a beer made using a different ingredient from every continent across the globe.
Using crystallized ginger from Australia, basmati from Asia, muscovado from Africa, quinoa from South America, maze from North America, yeast from Europe, and last but not least, water from Antarctica. The idea behind Pangaea was to make a beer that spanned the globe. Each ingredient is vital to the flavor and aroma of the beer.
Overall this Ancient Ale is a spiced ginger beer. The predominate flavor is the ginger. There's hints of sweetness that comes from the muscovado and basmati rice. The maze smoothes out the beer and adds a creaminess and the quinoa adds interesting spice notes. Overall this is an amazing beer that would pair perfectly with grilled vegetables on a summer day.
The Ancient Ale series is something so unique that there really is no category for these styles of beer. Each beer is released once a year and the allocation is very high. The demand for these beers far exceed the production rate. When these ales hit the shelves they sell out within the day if not the first few hours. For me the Ancient Ale series is a window to the past. It allows us to experience and enjoy what earlier civilizations were drinking. It's a connection to something long lost and forgotten. Above all they are fun and that's exactly what craft beer is all about; having fun.

http://ezinearticles.com/?Dogfish-Head-Ancient-Ales&id=6350163

Tuesday, 3 May 2016

Phantom Ales' Cranberry Pomegranate Mead, Our Beer of the Week!

By Robert Flores

Before beer, wine, and bourbon came mead. It's the OG of alcoholic beverages. Made with honey, water and yeast, the term "honeymoon" allegedly came from the tradition of drinking mead for the first month of marriage to encourage fertility—BOING!
Phantom Ale, the latest addition to Anaheim's growing roster of micro-breweries, brews some fine craft beers, tasty and potent meads and and a good batch of ciders. But they're not greedy about getting all your business: they host a craft beer supply store with all the supplies you need to brew your own suds, and offer classes and weekly home brew wars where you compete with other hopheads for the title of best bathtub brew—BOOM!
The tasting room is set up with long tables, a couple of big screens, and plenty of board games. Their kitchen is already cooking up some good-greasy beer grub (pulled pork sandwiches, wings, fish and chips, bulgogi tacos, among others). But you want drink info, and here's the best:
Flying Brick is an American DIPA 8.2% ABV, very hoppy but not bitter and smooth for a Double IPA. Pacific Fusion 7.7% ABV is a traditional IPA with plenty of tropical fruit notes, mango being the most prominent.
The cider I had was Passion Fruit and Mango Tea 6.9% ABV with flavors that popped. But those meads! Three on tap right now: Sour Cherry , Peach Daiquiri and my favorite, Cranberry Pomegranate! With a 12%ABV and refreshing, tangy, you'll feel like King Arthur and pull out your Excalibur.

http://www.ocweekly.com/restaurants/phantom-ales-cranberry-pomegranate-mead-our-beer-of-the-week-7159570

Sunday, 24 April 2016

Shakespeare sure did love his ale

By Michael Cheang

One of William Shakespeare’s lines in Henry V goes, “I would give all my fame for a pot of ale”.
While we certainly don’t think that Shakespeare meant that he would personally give up his own fame for some booze, it certainly does indicate that he was familiar with alcoholic drinks. Perhaps a little too well too, judging from this line in Macbeth, which goes “Drink sir, is a great provoker of three things … nose painting, sleep and urine. Lechery, sir, it provokes, and unprovokes; it provokes the desire but takes away the performance”.
Er, ok, whatever you say, sir.
Anyway, almost every single one of Shakespeare’s plays contained a reference to alcohol, and some of his most famous characters – Falstaff from Henry V, Mercutio from Romeo And Juliet – are also infamously known to be quite fond of a tipple or five.
So, we know that Shakespeare is pretty familiar with his drinks. The question now is, what sort of drink would he have drunk back then?
Well, in the Elizabethan era, ale would have been the dominant style of beer – not the pale lagers of today, so it stands to reason that Shakespeare would probably have partook a pint of ale or two back in the day. In fact, almost everyone at the time drank ale or beer – the water was simply too contaminated to drink.
According to Shakespeare Online, Shakespeare’s father was an official ale taster in Stratford, a job that entailed, well, tasting ale and monitoring the ingredients used by professional brewers, and also making sure that the ale was sold at the correct, regulated prices.
Besides ale, chances are the honey-fermented wine called mead was quite widely brewed at the time as well. Shakespeare mentions a style of mead called metheglin (made from water, yeast, honey, and various herbs) in a couple of his plays, including Love’s Labour’s Lost and The Merry Wives of Windsor.
Shakespeare also mentions wine a lot in his plays, especially those imported from other countries like France and Spain. Sack (white fortified wine), in particular, is mentioned in Henry V, where Falstaff, a great devourer of sherris sack (now known as sherry), dedicates an entire monologue to wax lyrical over the benefits of the beverage, which he concludes with “If I had a thousand sons, the first humane principle I would teach them should be, to forswear thin potations and to addict themselves to sack”.
Malmsey (a sweet fortified wine from Madeira) plays an infamous role in Richard III – Richard’s brother, the Duke of Clarence, is drowned in a cask of malmsey by assassins. Another sweet fortified wine called “canary” from the Canary Islands, is mentioned in Twelfth Night and The Merry Wives of Windsor.
While ale, beer, sherry, wine and mead still exist today, they would be vastly different from what their Elizabethan ancestors were. But there is little doubt that if Shakespeare were alive today, he would probably have approved of the vast improvement in terms of quality and flavour in today’s beverages, though he probably would also approve of the various “drink responsibly” campaigns out there as well. After all, he was also the one who wrote, in Othello: “Good wine is a good familiar creature, if it be well used”.

http://www.star2.com/food/food-news/2016/04/23/what-did-shakespeare-drink/

Sunday, 13 March 2016

Field Museum's Wari Ale the Latest Homage to Ancient Brews

By Dirk Lammers, Associated Press

Fourteen years ago, University of South Dakota anthropology professor Matthew Sayre unearthed pepper tree seed from the southern tip of Peru, unaware he'd stumbled upon a spent ingredient from a small 1,000-year-old brewery.
That discovery evolved into a team from Chicago's Field Museum team excavating a larger 500-gallon batch operation at Cerro Baul and the issuance of an ale inspired by the ingredients and brewing practices of the ancient Wari people.
In the recent craft-beer booms, brewers have turned to ancient civilizations' obscure, millennia-old recipes using corn, rice, peppers and berries to set themselves apart from their colleagues' beers as well as the vast majority of modern beer, which is brewed primarily with barley, hops and yeast.
"They started spreading out and trying other things, and it turned out that ancient people were doing the same thing," said Patrick McGovern, an ancient beverage expert at the University of Pennsylvania Museum in Philadelphia. "It takes us back to our roots."
Wari Ale, the latest offering that taps ancient cultures for inspiration, carries the sourness of a corn mash with a late-breaking, delicate hint of sweetness from the pepper, said Patrick Ryan Williams, the museum's associate curator and head of anthropology.
"It's very refreshing, clear, summer ale type," Williams said of the purple beer, which was made by Chicago's Off Color Brewing. "Maybe like a shandy."
Delaware-based Dogfish Head Craft Brewery was among the first to tap into ancient beers market in 1999 as part of collaboration with McGovern. The recipe for the beer-wine-mead hybrid brew Midas Touch — honey, barley malt, white muscat grapes and saffron — came from molecular evidence found in a Turkish tomb believed to have belonged to King Midas.
Inspirations for later Dogfish Head ancients, which McGovern will be chronicling in his upcoming book "Liquid Time Capsules," include a 3,500-year-old Danish drinking vessel, 3,400-year-old pottery fragments found in Honduras and a 9,000-year-old tomb from Neolithic China.
A 2009 batch of the traditional Peruvian chicha replicated the ancient act of milling and moistening the corn in Dogfish brewers' mouths before adding it into the boil. Attendees of the Great American Beer Festival couldn't wait to try it, McGovern said.
"The line of people across the Denver Convention Center was unbelievable," he said.
Sayre's seed discovery, which he quickly connected to berries growing nearby, came along with evidence of many smaller sites that were home probably breweries, he said, but the giant operation unearthed by Field Museum anthropologists was much larger than the ones he found.
"When it was brewed in large amounts, that was probably for big feast events," Sayre said.
To map out a process for a modern take on chicha, Williams and a team of researchers brewed experimental batches in Peru using locally grown corn and pepper berries.
"We used reproduction ceramic vessels of the boiling jars and we did it over an open fire using natural woods and fuel," Williams said. "We really wanted to understand how the brew was created."
The batches gave the scientists a pretty good idea of how the brew should taste, and then the museum took its information to Off Color Brewing.
To be called a beer in the U.S., breweries must use barley and hops, so those ingredients were incorporated into the recipe.
"So it's not an exact recreation," Williams said. "It's a chicha de molle-inspired ale.
Off Color co-founder David Bleitner brewed some small batches until settling on a method that would work for a large-scale replication, overcoming logistical challenges such as finding an importer to source the purple corn from Peru.
"We've never done anything like this before," Bleitner said. "This was probably the most work I've ever put into concepting and making a beer."

http://abcnews.go.com/US/wireStory/field-museums-wari-ale-latest-homage-ancient-brews-37601464

Wednesday, 24 February 2016

The Secret Art of Mead Making Revealed

By Will Kalif

Mead is wine fermented from honey rather than the traditional way of fermenting with grapes. Nobody really knows for sure how old the art of making mead is. This information has been lost to history. But it may very well be the oldest form of brewing known to man. And it is an art that is not part of the main stream of brewing. Here are some tips and secrets revealed.
It is theorized that the mead was discovered under a tree and it makes a lot of sense. The theory goes that a beehive either overflowed or was damaged and the honey dripped down into a pool of water. To turn this into a fermented beverage all we need to add to this honey and water mix is some yeast. In an open environment a natural yeast will grow in the honey water and this is enough for it to ferment.
And this concept of natural yeast growth was followed for many centuries. An early book on Mead making written by Sir Digby in the 17th century explains just this process of adding a few basic materials to a honey water mix then covering it and letting it sit.
This process was a bit of a risk because you couldn't be sure that the right yeast would grow in your mead. You were subject to the whims of the local environment. But today there is a whole host of packaged yeasts you can put in your mead to get a great batch of the sweet honey wine.
The Simplicity of Mead Making
Mead making, while a secret, is actually very easy to make. You simply add about three pounds of honey to one gallon of water. You then add about 5 grams of yeast and you are done! The hard part is in the waiting. This will take a minimum of three to four months before it becomes drinkable and another three or so months before it becomes delicious.
Making sure you do it right
While the process is basically very simple there are some things you need to do to insure things go well. I talked a little bit about yeast and unwanted yeast and this unwanted yeast is the most important factor in determining if your mead will come out good. You absolutely have to sterilize all the equipment and containers you will be using for your mead making; and this includes any spoons or tools. This is to make sure no unwanted yeast or bacteria take hold and grow in your honey water. You want only your chosen yeast to grow and nothing else.
Also, a very important yet inexpensive thing you need to do with your fermenting mead is to add an airlock. This is a little plastic device that will allow gases to escape out of the ferment while preventing anything from getting in. Your fermenting mead will cause a large amount of gases and you want these gases to escape easily from your jug or bottle. If this gas isn't allowed to escape it could cause the jug to rupture or the cap to blow off with force.
The Weakness of Honey as a nutrient
Honey is actually rather poor in the nutrients yeast need to make mead. And it can cause a rapid growth in the yeast that only lasts a short period of time. The yeast then dies out and your fermenting process can slow or even stop. This lack of nutrient can be corrected by adding raisins, orange peels, tea leaves, or commercially available wine nutrients and energizers (Which cost only two to three dollars).
The Real Beauty of Mead
Using these guidelines I have here gives you plain and traditional mead. This is terrific but the real beauty of Mead is in its ability to be a blank canvas for an extraordinary wide range of flavors and tastes. Mead is perfect for adding things like raspberries, oranges, cinnamon, pears, plums, peaches, or just about any type of fruit or spice. And this is where it really gets exciting and it is also where the big secret lies. To get good at mead making you have to experiment with fruits and spices. You have to try different quantities and let them ferment for different periods of time.
One of the biggest reasons for the secret of mead making is that it is a very slow process and it can take up to a year or more before you are sure a recipe is good. So it can generally take years before a person gets good at it. But the internet has done a lot to change this and you can now find thousands of recipes online created by all sorts of mead makers.
Mead is a beautiful drink that has been shrouded in secrecy for thousands of years but its time has now come.

http://ezinearticles.com/?The-Secret-Art-of-Mead-Making-Revealed&id=1338216

Tuesday, 23 February 2016

Mead makes debut in downtown Irwin

By Joe Napsha

Mead has made it into downtown Irwin, thanks to the Laurel Highlands Meadery's new tasting room for its version of the honey-based wine with a history that goes back thousands of years.
Matt and Mandy Falenski, who make the mead in a converted barn on their Sewickley Township property near Herminie, opened the tasting room in a building on Fourth Street. The small meadery with a few tables and a bar offers glasses of its honey wine for $6 and bottles for $17 and $18.
Falenski, 45, said he began making mead in 2007 after dabbling in home beer brewing for about 20 years.
“I won some competitions and got some encouragement to go forward,” said Falenski, who is a network administrator for a North Huntingdon company.
He makes his mead with honey, filtered water and yeast, then allows it to ferment for up to a year in stainless steel brewing tanks, ranging in size from 60 to 200 gallons, or oak barrels, which adds a different flavor.
“We've been slowly ramping up” production, Falenski said.
The Falenskis are becoming more commercial at a time when meaderies are growing in popularity. In the past three years, the number of meaderies in the United States has grown from 40 to 300, according to the Ale Street News, a trade publication based in Maywood, N.J.
 
“It's an extension of how craft brewing has become more popular,” said Tony Forder, publisher and editor of Ale Street News. “Mead is the most ancient of fermented beverages, and it is being rediscovered.”
Mandy Falenski said they looked at other communities, but found Irwin the ideal location for their business, which was incorporated in 2010.
“They have so many events that bring people into town,” she said.
The couple had a “soft opening” on Feb. 11. Jackie Zoglmann of Pleasant Hills — who said she prefers a dry wine — attended and was pleasantly surprised.
“I didn't think I would like it. It was sweet, but not too sweet,” Zoglmann said. “I liked it a lot.”
Laurel Highlands offers several varieties of mead: Traditional honey-based; bochet, which is made by roasting honey over a fire to produce a marshmallow and caramel flavor; one with the bitter taste of hops added; and another made with maple syrup from Western Pennsylvania.
The couple's products are available at All Saints Brewing Co. in Hempfield, Four Seasons Brewing in Unity, and Piper's Pub on Pittsburgh's South Side.
 

Thursday, 18 February 2016

Beowulf and the Mead Hall

By Tony A Grayson

Beowulf is the title of a poem written in England between the 8th and 11th centuries. Beowulf is also the name of the main character, a hero of a Scandinavian tribal people known as the Geats. The story pits Beowulf against a merciless monster known as Grendel, who breaks into the mead hall of the King of the Danes to wantonly maim and kill members of King Hrothgar's court. In 2007, this story was told in a popular techno-animated film. I wondered, what is a mead hall?
Mead is an alcoholic beverage made from fermented honey, combined with water, grains, hops (also used in beer), and there might be a few other ingredients like fruit. This drink traces its history back to Asia, Africa, and Europe. Evidence of it has been found in jars dated to 2800 BC. I have not been able to determine why the art of fermenting the sugars of honey was attempted. The fermentation of the juice of grapes traces back at least 9,000 years.
Nevertheless, mead as a social beverage was very popular throughout many cultures. It was the national drink of ancient Greece. It was the preferred drink of ancient Rome. It figures prominently in Celtic and Germanic epic poems. I wonder why we don't readily see it in use today or when it was that it fell out of public favor.
A mead hall was a place suitable for a king to meet with his warriors and with important dignitaries. It was his court, if you will, and by calling it a "mead" hall, the king informed all who came that they would be treated with feasting and the fermented beverage. I have seen a reconstruction of one of these mead halls. It looks like a sagging barn. I think that a mead hall must have been a forerunner of an old English tavern, but I cannot confirm that.
Mead is still out there. Just as there are craft breweries springing up here and there, folks have revived the art of crafting mead and they loosely cooperate with one another as they seek a market for their product. You are more likely to find a local source for mead by contacting a bee keeper. You may want to ask about its transportation and any special storage needed to preserve its shelf life. I am pretty sure that Beowulf took Grendel out of the picture, so you won't have to worry about that.

http://ezinearticles.com/?Beowulf-and-the-Mead-Hall&id=9301317

Tuesday, 16 February 2016

Drink: Mead, mead and more mead

From: NEXT Pittsburgh

A few years ago, mead was pretty easy to ignore. Perhaps it would come up when you were browsing Viking folklore or pregaming for a Renaissance fair, but it more or less lived in obscurity otherwise. And you certainly wouldn’t see mead on tap at your local bar.
Nowadays, mead is where cider was a few years ago: still somewhat uncommon but rapidly gaining a following. In the Pittsburgh area, much of that growth can be chalked up to Carnegie’s Apis Mead & Winery, which has been producing a wide array of mead (including nontraditional flavors like Hopped Passionfruit) since mid-2014. But Apis isn’t the only one getting in on the mead game. This past weekend, Laurel Highlands Meadery opened a tasting room in Irwin, where guests can sample and purchase traditional and flavored meads. And Wigle Whiskey recently announced the launch of Threadbare Cider, a cider house and meadery that will open on the North Side later this year.
All this talk about mead may have you wondering: what the heck is it? Simply put, mead is honey wine. Fermented grain becomes beer, fermented grapes become wine and fermented honey becomes mead. The strength of mead is closer to wine than beer, usually clocking in somewhere between 10 and 20 percent ABV. The flavor of the finished mead can vary widely depending on the type of honey used, and many mead makers will add fruits, spices or hops to create additional layers of flavor. And though it’s made from honey, mead is not necessarily sweet; like cider, mead can be quite crisp and dry.
Everything old is new again, and in mead’s case, that means really, really old. Some historians believe it’s the oldest alcoholic beverage in the world, and references to mead-like concoctions have been found in the writings of numerous ancient cultures. So if you’re feeling pretty cutting-edge when you order that mead on draft, just know that you were beaten to the trend by about 30,000 years.

http://www.nextpittsburgh.com/eatdrink/eat-drink-do-tako-opens-at-consol/