Cornucopia

I made my last post in the hope & expectation that it would propel me back into the habit of updating the blog. It’s been a busy couple of weeks or so since then. I’ll attempt to give the edited highlights for now & explicate later.

I started this compact journey of the soul drinking beer in Boston & commenting how English it tasted. IPA’s based on East Kent Golding & Fuggles rather than Cascade, Chinook & Centennial. Of course the irony of this is my well known love for the citrusy Pacific hops in these situations. Not that I won’t make an exception for 60 Minutes whenever the opportunity presents itself.

And then I arrived back in Britain. Where serving a pint involves a bit of elbow grease, or those of you Atlantically-challenged, the operation of a beer engine. At which point the beer in Boston tasted just like the beer in California. There is just some special about the way we serve beer in the British Isles, but especially the North. A hand pump is without doubt a better way of serving beer but it only fulfils it’s true potential when operated with a skilled hand & more contentiously a sprinkler. That little gadget on the end of a northern hand pump may look like the most miserly water-saving showerhead but it’s impact is closer to that of gravy on roast potatoes – it bring the flavour out.

I guess I still haven’t told you anymore of what I’ve drunk over the last few weeks or how it was but I think I’ve given you the ambience. And that first pint of Bushys was like finding an oasis after an eternity in the desert.

Episode IV – A New Hope

Forgive me Father, for I have sinned. It has been a year since my last confession.

The tricky thing with writing a blog is that the longer it is since you posted an update the harder it is to do. With Ealish & I now having arrived in Boston as part of cross-country move it seems the ideal kick up the arse to get things started again. So many new pubs & breweries to explore. Oh, it’s going to be so hard 😉

21st Amendment

21st Amendment is a cool brewpub\restaurant in San Francisco, a stones through from the PacBell Park (or whatever they’re calling it this week). It is named after the 21st Amendment to the US Constitution which famously (and thankfully) repealed prohibition. That is definitely something that deserves commemoration.

Nathan & Andy looking vacant outside 21st Amendment

By the time BART had delivered Nathan, Andy & I across the bay to the city we were all well ready for a pint along with some meat based sustenance. I had skipped the 21A IPA at the IPA festival as I thought I’d get one from the source but unfortunately they were out of it, along with their highly reputed Watermelon Wheat. Instead they had the excellent Russian River Blind Pig IPA which I has sampled at our previous stop. I did feel that I should try one of the 21A brews so after a glance at best designed beer menu ever seen I opted for the Amendment Pale Ale. I can’t rave about their beer board enough; a good description of the beer and it’s ABV is highly valuable but telling you how many IBU’s it has is the dog’s bollocks.

21st Beer Board

I’d given up on taking notes at this point so all I can tell you about the Amendment Pale Ale or the South Park Blonde that followed is that I enjoyed them both, as I did the nice big burger. Mmm, mmm, mmm, tasty.

Inside 21st Amendment

It was quite quiet (I thing that is the typing equivalent of a tongue-twister) as we were there mid-afternoon but if my first visit is anything to go by, it’s a great place with tasty beer & food. Well worth a visit.

The Bistro 9th Annual IPA Festival

On August 12th, I made it to The Bistro 9th Annual IPA Festival along with a couple of good buddies of mine, Andy & Nathan. The Bistro isn’t a big space so they commandeered half the street to fit in the 50+ IPA’s they had on tap. Even then it was pretty crowded as you can see.

Outside at the Bistro IPA Festival

It’s popularity was entirely deserved though as they had a hella lot of tasty beer. Teaming up the three of us made about half way through the list of beers, each of them a new favourite. Even though every beer was an IPA there was remarkable diversity of flavours. It must have been difficult work for the judges attempting to clear the palettes after every hop-bomb was dropped on their taste buds. Not that I feel bad for them of course.

After roughly 25 different IPA’s we took a look at the queue to buy more tickets in order to keep going and decided what we really wanted was to sit down somewhere & drink beers by the pint, not the 6oz taster. So off we headed to our next destination…

Specing The ‘Brewery’

I’m was planning on buying the kit to start brewing soon so I’ve been trying to decide what equipment I need to buy. You can pick up the most basic brewing kits for around $60 but they’re really only designed for the basic production of extract kit brews. If you want to brew ‘all-grain’ rather than from extract you require some type of mashing system to extract the sugars & other good stuff from the grain. Home-brew mashing system range from a plastic bucket with a false bottom through converted water coolers all the way up to brewing sculptures – miniature versions of industrial brewing systems. If you read the various online brewing forums, most of the old hands recommend starting with a basic system as part of your brewing apprenticeship but I’ve decided this is not for me and to go straight to the more advanced system. I’ll eventually need to upgrade to a brewing sculpture so it seems pointless to waste money on equipment that I’ll soon outgrow.

I’ve been checking out every homebrew equipment supplier I could find online to see what is available and a company called Beer, Beer & More Beer (aka B3) stands out as having the best kit. Luckily they’re a based in Concord which is only an hour away so last weekend Ealish & I took a trip up there to take a look at things. They’re a very friendly & helpful bunch and were happy to open up their workshop to show me some brewing sculptures under construction. I left Concord without buying anything but with a definite idea of what I wanted. Unfortunately I was so absorbed by what I was seeing that I forgot to get the name of the guy who was helping me.

Ealish & discussed things at home and on Tuesday I rang B3 to speak to their Brewing Sculpture guy James Cossart. After a brief discussion I put my name down on the list to get a B3-1550 system. I haven’t decided on all the options I’m getting yet, but unfortunately there is a two month waiting list at the moment so I can pop up there in a couple of weeks to spec it all out completely.

It’s frustrating that I’ll have to wait that long to get started but I guess in the meantime I can keep reading all the books on brewing that I’ve collected and studying the work of established micro-breweries. Especially the latter. In fact I must study some more right now.

‘Beer School’

Following on from Brewing Up A Business I continued my reading on the beer business. Beer School is written by Steve Hindy & Tom Potter, founders of the Brooklyn Brewery. Whilst still a business book it’s a lighter read than Brewing Up A Business with a more anecdotal writing style. Having faced visits from the mob & armed robberies they certainly have anecdotes to tell. Still, they use all their stories to illustrate business principles. Hindy & Potter are both good writers and their method of each chapter being written by one of them with the conclusion being added by the other works well.

The initial path that the Hindy & Potter chose of having their beer contract brewed for them is not the path I’d like to take. Whether or not it’s advantageous commercially or not I’d prefer to start smaller, initially brewing the beer myself and growing gradually. I also prefer the method used by many of linking the brewery to a brew pub. Twin revenue streams make financial sense and the ability to interact with your customers on a nightly basis is not only invaluable but should also be rewarding.

If you are reading from the beer business perspective then you should read both Brewing Up A Business and Beer School but if you’re reading purely from an interest in beer then you’ll probably find Beer School more a more fun read. Having just read two books from people who have succeeded in starting breweries I could benefit from reading about someone who failed but most people tend not to trumpet their failures.

Now back to the brew in front of me.

Half Moon Bay Brewing Company

Half Moon Bay Brewing LogoWith the Bay Area sweltering in 100 degree heat at the weekend, Ealish (official PlanetSeth wife) and I headed to the coast to cool down. We hoped to find a quiet spot with some shade where we could sit & read but fortunately it was so busy that we ended up at the Half Moon Bay Brewing Company.

My first pint was their current brewer’s special Summit Special IPA. This is brewed with the trendy hop of the moment, the Summit. It’s good, very good. It’s enticing copper appearance shouts drink me (well this one did at least) and the closer to your lips it gets the better it is. The rich floral hop aroma smacks you with a plethora of citrus notes and then the taste hits you. Gorgeous grapefruity, tangeriney hoppiness. I think I like the summit hop. A lot.

Feeling I should sample a range my second and unfortunately last pint was their regular IPA, the Pillar Point IPA. It was lighter both in colour and aroma than the Summit Special. It seemed closer to a Burton style IPA than to the American version. The hop character was more muted and though some citrus zing was noticeable some was the traditional Burton character. A tasty beer without a doubt but a bit of a come down from the peak of the Summit.

If you can get along to HMB Brewing before the Summit Special runs out I highly recommend you do. Highway 1 from San Francisco is still closed at Devil’s Slide but it is due to reopen August 4th. If you’re in the city it’s worth the extra effort you’ll have to make to get their.

Time to wean myself back on to my old friend the Cascade hop.