Monday, December 12, 2011
Lake Michigan Beer Tour Map
Just thought I would share this map I created in a cartography class. I tried to stay fairly close to the coast for the most part. I know there are a few I left out as well; those I either couldn't find any information on or they were chain breweries that I figured most people would not be interested in seeing if they wanted to do a geographically unique brewery tour. I wanted to include a wider geographic area, but there were already 55 on my list, so I left it at that. All of the data in the table I either took from personal experience or from what I could gather via their website and beeradvocate.
Thursday, August 25, 2011
Port City Optimal Wit
Belgian style white ale.
BA Score: B+
Port City is a microbrew in Alexandria, VA, just 15 minutes from my apartment.
Brewers description: Optimal Wit is brewed in the Belgian Wit Bier tradition. It is brewed with raw wheat and oats and steeped with coriander, orange peel and grains of paradise. This ale is a pale golden color with a bit of cloudy haze from bottle conditioning. This unfiltered ale offers layers of complex nuanced flavors that evolve in the glass. It finishes crisp and refreshes the palate.
It pours with about 1 finger of head (my 6 pack ranged from almost none to about 1 inch) and has a definite cloudiness (at first I though I had poured the sediment in on accident). You can definitely smell the coriander, orange, banana, and a host of unnamed spices. The best and worse thing about the beer is how much it changes. As is often the case for unfiltered microbrews, each beer is slightly different, and each sip can accent different flavors. I had 1 bottle with almost no carbonation, and 1 with a lot (beer flavored Sprite anyone?). But the complex of spices and fruit make it exciting to drink and before you know it, it's gone. The BA score is fair because there are some glasses that are an A- and some that are a C -- especially if some of the sediment is mixed in since it's unfiltered. It's not unique enough to be anybody's favorite Belgian, but it's good. And props for being a small time local brew.
BA Score: B+
Port City is a microbrew in Alexandria, VA, just 15 minutes from my apartment.
Brewers description: Optimal Wit is brewed in the Belgian Wit Bier tradition. It is brewed with raw wheat and oats and steeped with coriander, orange peel and grains of paradise. This ale is a pale golden color with a bit of cloudy haze from bottle conditioning. This unfiltered ale offers layers of complex nuanced flavors that evolve in the glass. It finishes crisp and refreshes the palate.
It pours with about 1 finger of head (my 6 pack ranged from almost none to about 1 inch) and has a definite cloudiness (at first I though I had poured the sediment in on accident). You can definitely smell the coriander, orange, banana, and a host of unnamed spices. The best and worse thing about the beer is how much it changes. As is often the case for unfiltered microbrews, each beer is slightly different, and each sip can accent different flavors. I had 1 bottle with almost no carbonation, and 1 with a lot (beer flavored Sprite anyone?). But the complex of spices and fruit make it exciting to drink and before you know it, it's gone. The BA score is fair because there are some glasses that are an A- and some that are a C -- especially if some of the sediment is mixed in since it's unfiltered. It's not unique enough to be anybody's favorite Belgian, but it's good. And props for being a small time local brew.
Wednesday, August 10, 2011
Favorite Breweries
Name your 3 most favorite breweries in order. I know it is tough, but if you could only drink beer from 3 breweries for the rest of your life what would they be?
Mine:
1) Founders (don't think I could live without their delicious stouts)
2) Two Brothers (love their wide array of styles they do)
3) Three Floyds (hate their distribution, but love their beer, anything they make is just delcious)
Wednesday, July 13, 2011
Lagunitas Lucky 13.alt Review
Hasn't been a beer review on here for awhile, so I thought I would post one that I put on beeradvocate earlier.
Lagunitas Lucky 13.alt
This is supposedly a blonde version of the normal Lucky 13 version (Large Mondo Red).
Poured from a 22 oz bottle into an English pint. Actually thought I was trying the other version at first (Large Mondo Red) and then realized that this is the .alt version.
Pours a sort of clear golden color with a slight amber hue. Not much of a head on there, carbonation seems prominent.
Aroma has sort of a sweet malt scent with a very distinctive kind of hops that I can't remember which one it is (Amarillo?). Some elements of citrus/grapefruit.
Hmm, taste is more complex than I was expecting. The hops hit you right away, citrus/grapefruit, with a little spiciness. This is followed by a sweet malty taste, which then has a little bit of a dry and bitter finish.
Mouthfeel is great, perfect carbonation, medium bodied. That sweet malty taste with a hint of the hops sticks to your mouth minutes after a sip.
Overall it is a pretty solid beer. This reminds me of all Lagunitas' beers. Above average, but nothing that blows you out of the water. Solid beer, would definitely drink again.
Pours a sort of clear golden color with a slight amber hue. Not much of a head on there, carbonation seems prominent.
Aroma has sort of a sweet malt scent with a very distinctive kind of hops that I can't remember which one it is (Amarillo?). Some elements of citrus/grapefruit.
Hmm, taste is more complex than I was expecting. The hops hit you right away, citrus/grapefruit, with a little spiciness. This is followed by a sweet malty taste, which then has a little bit of a dry and bitter finish.
Mouthfeel is great, perfect carbonation, medium bodied. That sweet malty taste with a hint of the hops sticks to your mouth minutes after a sip.
Overall it is a pretty solid beer. This reminds me of all Lagunitas' beers. Above average, but nothing that blows you out of the water. Solid beer, would definitely drink again.
Wednesday, July 6, 2011
Homebrew Belgian Tripel IPA
I now feel comfortable enough with my latest beer to write something about it. I took a recipe found elsewhere on the Internet and slightly modified it to match what was available to me.
One difference from that recipe was an extra 1/2 lb of candi sugar because it was sold in 1 pound bags and I didn't want any extra sitting around. The other was because I could not find Amarillo hops. I semi-arbitrarily replaced them with U.K. Challenger (somewhat similar AA%) hops, which worked out fairly well.
Since I was borrowing equipment and was limited in what was available to me, I simply fermented for 3 weeks in primary (bucket). I was able to get a separate bottling bucket from Tim when the time came, but in a fit of laziness ended up not using it and instead auto-siphoned straight from the primary into our bottles. The result is a significant amount of sediment, but that has settled out nicely and with a careful pour will mostly stay in the bottle.
Finally, a note on carbonation. I added priming sugar to the batch during the bottling process, but it has not seemed to kick it up much. It remains a little flat even after 3+ weeks in the bottle. Sadly, I suspect it will stay like this. Fortunately, I have noticed very, very slight carbonation build up on the walls of the glass for the last couple bottles I have had even though no head forms.
My main theory for this issue is a lack of healthy yeast survival to this point, and the beer could have used additional yeast at some point. 3 weeks in the primary and a high ABV (estimated 10-11%, but I didn't take readings) might have tired them out.
In the end, there are things I would change, but the flavor is there. This is definitely a very hoppy, high alcohol beer. Even with its problems, it tastes good!
One difference from that recipe was an extra 1/2 lb of candi sugar because it was sold in 1 pound bags and I didn't want any extra sitting around. The other was because I could not find Amarillo hops. I semi-arbitrarily replaced them with U.K. Challenger (somewhat similar AA%) hops, which worked out fairly well.
Since I was borrowing equipment and was limited in what was available to me, I simply fermented for 3 weeks in primary (bucket). I was able to get a separate bottling bucket from Tim when the time came, but in a fit of laziness ended up not using it and instead auto-siphoned straight from the primary into our bottles. The result is a significant amount of sediment, but that has settled out nicely and with a careful pour will mostly stay in the bottle.
Finally, a note on carbonation. I added priming sugar to the batch during the bottling process, but it has not seemed to kick it up much. It remains a little flat even after 3+ weeks in the bottle. Sadly, I suspect it will stay like this. Fortunately, I have noticed very, very slight carbonation build up on the walls of the glass for the last couple bottles I have had even though no head forms.
My main theory for this issue is a lack of healthy yeast survival to this point, and the beer could have used additional yeast at some point. 3 weeks in the primary and a high ABV (estimated 10-11%, but I didn't take readings) might have tired them out.
In the end, there are things I would change, but the flavor is there. This is definitely a very hoppy, high alcohol beer. Even with its problems, it tastes good!
Saturday, July 2, 2011
"Raging Bitch" to finally come to Michigan
Flying Dog's top-selling IPA can now be enjoyed in the Mitten!
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