Enjoying Toronto
Aug/100
Not know when I’d make my next venture up to Toronto I took advantage of the fact that work was pulling me up there again. I decided to catch an earlier flight on Sunday so that I could roam around, visit my favorite spots, take some photos and enjoy the city during hours I normally can’t (since I’m in the office). It was probably one of my more enjoyable work trips to date.
I started my Sunday adventure by visiting Beer Bistro. It was rather hot inside as the restaurant is on the first floor of an office building and on the weekends they don’t cool the building as much since no one is there working. I started things off with a tasty weizenbock followed by the excellent Lagunitas beverage pictured above. I guy sitting at the bar a few seats down from my order a $80 bottle of beer (Angel’s Share). I had two Kobe beef tacos and went on my way.
Next stop was to Bier Markt on the Esplanade (not pictured). I don’t particularly like this place but they do have about 100 beer witha focus on representing a wide variety of countries. Not to be a beer snob or anything, they don’t have too many that are all that interesting. They did have Konigshoven quad on tap which is pretty excellent but I headed right for the back of the menu in the “last call” section of bottles. I had an excellent gueze followed by something else Belgian that isn’t coming to mind at the moment. By far the highlight was the poutine I ordered. It is a most excellent Canadian dish that I probably described previously. In case I didn’t, take French fries (they claimed them to be frites but they most definitely were not) and cover them in gravy and cheese curds. Simply amazing!
I feel like I’ve posted a picture before similar to the one above. It is my favorite seat at “my favorite bar in the world.” Ok, maybe not my favorite seat but I’ve been there about 6-7 times and I really love the place. Pretty much all local Canadian draft beer, interesting food, a chill atmosphere and a style that I’d mimic if I ever owned a bar. I had a couple brews and watched Mythbusters.
Ever trip up here I make it a point to visit this bar. A couple nights each week they feature local musicians and if I lived in Toronto I’d definitely be a regular. Oh yeah, the bar is named C’est What? I believe that roughly translates into casual inquisitive greeting of “Hey what’s up.”
Back when I was working in Manchester I drank a lot of Stella Artois. It was the go-to beer for some reason. The British called it “the wife beater beer.” I believe this was due to the fact that it was a little stronger than your average British session ale. That isn’t really saying much because Stella is about 5% ABV. Anyway, it felt like an appropriate night cap.
I don’t have any pictures from the other two nights but they were definitely good memories. On Monday we went for dinner at a highly regarded steakhouse named Barberian. I had a decent filet that was probably the rarest I’ve ever gotten meat at a restaurant. I asked for medium and this was very much medium rare. It was wrapped in bacon and delicious so I didn’t complain. I also enjoyed baked potato service. They sent a person to the table with this little rotating metal carrier of toppings for the potato. They also provided some excellent garlic bread and pickled veggies (including celery and leeks). I’d recommend it if you are in the mood for steaks. I think TripAdvisor has it as the #5 restaurant in Toronto right now.
Tuesday night was even better. We headed north on Yonge Street (formly the longest street in the world) to Bar Volo. They were closed on Monday due to a Canadian holiday and moved their $5 imperial pint night to Tuesday. An imperial pint is 20 ounces. In a very expensive city like Toronto this was much appreciated. The food was great. I had a burger made of veal which might have been the best burger I’ve ever enjoyed. The most interesting part of the place revolves around the elusive beers of the trappist brewery Westvleteren. I was unable to sway our waitress to sell me any but it was cool to know that they potential had some in the storeroom. Maybe next time and I shall be back.
Meat; Las Vegas; Apples
Jul/104
- This past weekend I was back home for the Selinsgrove Hops & Vines festival. Overall, I’d say it met my expectations. I drank samples of about 20 beers new to me and a handful of classics. The most impressive offerings came from a new brew pub outside of Lewisburg, PA named River House Brewing. They had a really decent Belgian-style dubbel and a mocha latte stout that was a hair too much coffee but impressive nonetheless. It was a little too hot for a festival which left us desperately wishing someone had a swimming pool.
- I went out to breakfast with my parents on Sunday morning after church to Bob Evans. I’m not a huge breakfast person but it seemed like a good idea. I ended up with a pretty terrific dish. Picture a bread bowl salad. Get rid of the salad and replace it with eggs, fried potatoes, tomatoes, green onions, bacon and cover it in Hollandaise sauce. Replace the bread bowl with a giant biscuit bowl. Incredibly unhealthy. Incredibly delicious!
- On Sunday night I met up with Erin for dinner. Her mother was passing through town and one of her mother’s best friends from the college days (and husband) happened to be in the general vicinity so they stopped by as well. We enjoyed some very nice wine along with an assortment of cheeses. Erin also put together a really cool appetizer that consisted of prosciutto wrapped around nectarines, grilled and drizzled with maple syrup (in the future I’d skip the syrup but the combo of the salty pork and grilled sweet fruit was awesome). For the actual dinner we went to the Northern Liberties section of the city to the bar/restaurant North 3rd. This place is on my Philly top 5. I love the atmosphere and the food is excellent (a few decent beers too). I had a pork loin that was simply amazing. It made me think of eating a great steak. It was like the white meat of steaks. The fact that it was rubbed in chili pepper and other spices certainly didn’t hurt either.
- We got hit with some serious thunderstorms tonight as I was driving home. This produced some really great looking rainbows. The coolest view was while I was driving. I couldn’t see it in the sky but it was reflecting of the soaked road and then in turn reflecting of the condensation rising from the road. Think the scene from Stars Wars where R2D2 projects the hologram of the princess and replace her with a rainbow. It was really cool. It was also really cool went I looked down on Conshohocken and you could see the rainbow ending on the roof of a building.

- I give credit to the Vitamin Water I drank on my way home tonight for the boost to go for a run. I got one with caffeine and it did wonders. I put in 5+ at a respectable pace and I felt pretty good. Listening to the band Dinosaur Jr. didn’t hurt either. I really haven’t been running enough lately but tonight was inspiration to keep at it. It also inspired me to finally sign up for the Las Vegas marathon.
- I’m on quest to find the best apple variety. This week I’m going to study the “pink lady” and “McIntosh.” Any guesses on what I’ll find to be the most enjoyable apple?
Open Mic Night
Jun/100
Last night Adam, Erin and I went to Victory Brewing in Downingtown for dinner and an open mic night. Adam suggested the idea last week as he’s been looking for places to perform his catalog of music. Being that it was Victory I couldn’t see how this would be a bad idea even if the “scene” wasn’t quite that great for his tunes.
After eating dinner and having a drink we ventured over to the area of the bar designated for the open mic night. We sat and listened to one girl play a bunch of Janis Joplin-esque music and she had a pretty good voice. When she finished Adam put our names on the list and we went to get our guitars. We listened to a few other performers ranging from decent to not so decent and we also discovered that you get a free beer for performing. What a good deal.
When our turn came we started things off with the classic Weezer song “Say It Ain’t So” which we easily played 100+ during the Kennedy Drive days. The hope was to connect with the limited audience. I thought we did it justice but I have no idea what the crowd thought though the 5 people clapping at the end was hopefully a extreme understatement of our effort. I then accompanied Adam on two of this original songs. I had to stop a few times because I couldn’t remember the right notes (as I had only played them a handful of times prior) but I think I made a solid contribution. Adam finished up with a 4th song completely solo. It sounded great in my opinion.
It felt good to be out and performing again even if it was just an event like this. I hope we can continue to do things like this and spread the good word about his music.
40% Different
Apr/102
Today I decided to pickup some supplies from a local homebrew supply shop. I normally feel like I’m overpaying when I visit the shop but at the same time I feel it is important to support local business. The support aspect is especially important in the craft/hobby industry. Being that it was Wednesday already there would be no time to make an online order (I would have needed to submit it by Sunday to receive it for the weekend).
I purchased 15 pounds of grain, 3 ounces of hops and 1 vial of yeast. This came to around $51. Considering that this will produce around 5 gallons of a nice pale ale at approximately 7% ABV, not too shabby. That’s is about $1 per twelve ounce beer produced.
I took the same exact ingredients and put them in the shopping cart at midwestsupplies.com which is my favorite place to order homebrew supplies. I even calculated the shipping. The total came to just about $36 which would be a cost of around 70 cents per twelve ounce beer produced.
This means that I paid 40% more than I really needed to pay if I had planned ahead. Convenience has its price I suppose.
Russian River – Supplication
Mar/102
I had the pleasure of enjoying an excellent beer today. So good, that it inspired me to write about the experience.
Supplication – definition – To ask for humbly or earnestly, as by praying
I happened to be walking down Pine St. in Philadelphia after a dentist appointment today. Ordinarily, this would just be another street. However, I was far enough east that my journey would take me right past a Philadelphia beer mecca known as The Foodery. If you strolled by briskly you could easily mistake it for your typical corner bodega/deli if it weren’t for the assortment of beer bottles on display in the windows. I love when I find myself in the neighborhood.
The store has the usual suspects in terms of the Belgians, a wide variety of American craft and a great selection of one-offs and randoms scattered around the back of the store. I saw the bottle of Supplication (style = Ameican Wild Ale) sitting by itself on a shelf and I knew I needed to purchase it. I gave up browsing at that point since I knew this one bottle would be a small fortune and worth every penny: ~$19.50 for 375ml/12.68oz.
I was planning to eat spicy chili tonight so I made it a point to enjoy this beverage fully before touching my dinner. Didn’t want to ruin my palate with such a great beverage ready to entertain my mouth.
I poured 90% of the beer into a Duvel glass and did a good swirl to capture the yeast (against the advice of the bottle) as I like to get the fully experience even if it means extra yeast flavors. The color was brown/cherry. Jumping ahead, as I drank the lacing was light but looked like it would never give up its grasp of the side of the glass. No real head on this beer.
The smell is sour but nothing pastoral or farm-like about it other than the fact that it makes you feel strangely relaxed much like being in the rural lands of central Pennsylvania. Who would have thought that sour is a smell? As you breathe it in you can almost taste sour without anything touching your lips. The smell is enhanced as you take the first sip.
Exactly what I hoped. Sour thought smooth at the same time. The liquid is thin and first but fills your mouth instantly with flavor that makes it feel a lot more heavy-bodied. I don’t know enough about the bacteria in this beer to say how they each contribute to the flavor but overall the wildness of it is enagaging but not overwhelming. It is not too wild (this beer was made by aging it in a pinot noir wine barrel and had four different wild bacteria added to it: brettanomyces, lactobacillus, saccharomyces and pediococcus). After drinking a sip and thinking about it for a minute the acting of licking one’s lips is a treat. It is a different sense of sourness. Speaking of sourness, on the grand scale of sour this really isn’t too bad. I’d give it a 6/10 on the sourness scale.
Overall, this is definitely an easy drinker which might be surprising for such an extreme mouth shocker. Equally shocking, the weight of the bottle. This is one heavy bottle for such a small volume of beer. Totally worth the price to try but I don’t think I’d penny up another $20 as I’d rather try other Russian River offerings first.
Brew House Efficiency
Mar/101
In the world of all grain brewing there is a concept known as brew house efficiency. Before I explain what that is and its significance to me, I should first explain what all grain brewing is. There are three primary methods of brewing beer: all grain, partial mash / specialty grain and extract.
In extract brewing you purchase either liquid or powder malt and dump it into your kettle of water. Malt is sugar extracted from grains – typically barley. This malt is the fuel for yeast so that they can produce alcohol and carbon dioxide. The sugary water is known as wort. You boil hops in the wort to add bitterness and balance out the sweetness from the malt.
In all grain brewing you go through a process of extracting the sugar directly from grains of malted grain. Malted grain is just plain old grain that went through a process where germination of the seeds got started and then stopped and dried before it actually fully sprouted into a new plant. To do this you soak the grains in a specific volume of water at a specific temperature for a specific period of time. After that time has completed you adjust the temperature of the grains by adding additional hot water of a specific temperature to stop the extraction process. That whole process is known as mashing. Once the mashing is completed you essentially wash of the grains with a specific volume of water at another specific temperature. You collect this washing and you have wort.
You can combined both processes by doing a small amount of mashing/sparging and adding malt extract to get your wort to exactly whatever sugar level you are looking for.
When you go through the mashing/sparging process you will never get 100% of the sugar extracted. However, you strive to get as much as you can to hit a target sugar level with the least amount of grain you can. Another term for sugar level is the gravity of the wort/beer. Getting a high efficiency depends on a ton of factors but grain type, grain crush (how finely crushed the grains are), mash temperature, mash thickness, sparge temperature and sparge time are some of them. Since there are so many factors it is tough to say what is actually a good yield since it depends on so much. However, 75% seems to be pretty common in examples of calculating it.
In my first batch I got about 71%. This weekend I managed 81%. Very exciting stuff.
6 Things That Bother Me About the Beer Industry
Mar/103
I was reading through the latest copy of Ale Street News when I found myself shaking my head at the “Points West” section. This section highlights what new things are happening at breweries around country. It is definitely interesting reading for a beer geek, but it also reminded me that I think the industry has some fatal flaws. Ok, they probably aren’t fatal but they do annoy me.
1) The abuse of alliteration. Why does everyone need to name their beers things like Bob’s Brown, Interesting IPA and Double Dutch Dunkel. Sure, you need to name the beer something but the use of alliteration is annoying and uncreative in my opinion. I would believe that a random and thought provoking name will bring you a better crowd even if your beer sucks such as Shiny Mud Puddle, Death by Hops and Sir Weinerschnitzel Dunkel. Three names that could present the same three styles of beer but much more enticing.
2) Breweries that only produce standard styles. I understand that breweries need to make a profit and you do that by selling volumes of beer. To sell large volumes you need people drinking a lot. To get people to drink a lot you need things that are of a style that makes them sessionable (you can sit down for a drinking session and have a lot of a particular beer – need to be simple and balanced) and the price needs to be right. Complex beers are expensive because they require extra time/materials to develop. Complex beers don’t tend to be particularly sessionable as they tend to push the palate. With that said, only producing the money makers is boring and shows a lack of interest in promoting the craft of brewing. A good brewer doesn’t need to produce 15% ABV quadruple-hopped coffee bombs but should produce styles that will encourage the drinker to try something new.
3) Breweries that only bring their most standard products to a festival. A festival is a great opportunity for a brewer to showcase their wares especially when they have only recently come to market in the location of the festival. I’m sure there are varying schools of thought on this one, but I would believe it is in the brewer’s best interest to bring at least one beer that will get people talking. Sure, your bread and butter might be some really crisp and tasty pilsners but if you produce a porter with coffee beans you import from Madagascar, you should bring that along as well. Your pilsner might be great and sell well in an established market but it will soon be forgotten by the drunken masses. That porter however will slip into many conversations and might even find itself being requested at the local beer bar by festival patrons.
4) Using your medals to demonstrate how good your product is. I’ve never entered a brewing contest so I can’t say how I’d feel if I won the bronze medal and the Mid-Atlantic Brewers Guild of America Californian IPA award (I just made this up but I wouldn’t be surprised if it exists). I’m sure it would be pretty exciting. However, just because one of my beers won said award doesn’t actually mean my beer is anything to write home about. I’ll be honest, I know little about these competitions but I do know that breweries seem to be really excited to celebrate their competition success. I say that you should let your sales and true differentiation do the talking. Marketing is certainly important but some medal that has no significance to the general public really can’t be that great. I’d love to see some data that proves me wrong.
5) Selling a pint but giving less than a pint. If you are selling a pint then give the customer a pint. I’m really not trying to be a beer snob here but if you order an American pint of beer (16 fluid ounces) then you should get that much beer. The head of the beer does not count and there are actually laws against under-serving (especially in Europe). I don’t care if the beer is Miller Lite or Founder Kentucky Breakfast Stout, I want what was advertised and what I paid for. It may seem trivial to the average reader but when you are paying $5-10 for a pint of some interesting craft beer the loss of product you pay for adds up over time. I understand that not every bar in the world gives two craps about whether they served you 15 oz or 16 oz. While they should, I focus my statement towards those who promote craft beer but shaft us. Get some imperial pint glasses or perhaps glasses that indicate the fill line and we won’t have this travesty.
6) Having 200 bottles of beer available but just 2 taps. I get excited when I find a new bar that has a mad selection of brews which means I’ll surely find something new to try. The problem with bottles is that unless you have an amazing ability for turnover, there will be bottles of this and that in the fridge that really aren’t meant for long-term storage. I did have a run-in with a bartender one time who found it amusing that he could get people to buy the old stuff from his huge selection. I understand that not every bar can serve 20 different awesome craft brews at any given time (and ensure high quality in the product and serving equipment). I wanted to make the arguement that a draft beer will give you a better experience than a can/bottle but alas, I don’t really have any solid grounds to make that statement (except maybe that draft beer will have had less exposure to light than bottles). Having a good rotating tap list is good for business both with your customers and your distributors. I think your average beer drinker would agree with me if they had a choice between a draft of something and a bottle the majority of the time they’d go with the draft. I also don’t have any data to back this but it would be a great marketing experiment.
The bottle line is that the beer industry shouldn’t be complacent. The customer is getting smarter and smarter and with that will come more stringent demands. Get ahead of the curve and start making little changes today to ensure that you are on the clear path to beer advocation.
Diner
Feb/101
I wonder if someday I’ll be old and gray and spend late nights sitting at a diner, drinking cups of coffee and reading the newspaper (if newspapers even exist). I don’t think I’d ever eat any of the desserts. From time to time I’d order a tuna salad sandwich with some extra pickles on the side. If I were so inclined to write a novel, it might be the perfect location to draft the story.
I’d probably drive back to the lake house. I’d sit out on the porch for a while, likely drinking a mass-produced though respectable lager by the can. The sound of the crickets would be soothing. Some nights I’d sit there until the sky showed signs of the morning creeping through. Eventually, I’d retire only to wake a few hours later and repeat another day.
Extreme Beer Fest 2010 – Part 1, 2 and 3
Feb/101
Part 1
I’m sitting on the couch anxiously awaiting the departure for Boston to attend Extreme Beer Fest 2010. Erin, Holly and Derrick took my car to get gas and coffee and I’m waiting for them to arrive. Oh! Here they are. Hooray!
Part 2
To make the drive more manageable we took a pit stop in Middletown, CT for lunch at a bar named Eli Cannon’s Tap Room. It was an eclectic divey place. Food was alright. Beer selection was pretty nice. Seemed like the type of place that would be a lot of fun at night. It was a worthy stop. With the stop, we completed the trip to Boston in about 6 hours and 30 minutes.

Friday night was pretty low key though it did include the ridiculous event I described in the previous post.
Saturday had an awesome plan. We headed to the Jamaica Plain section of Boston to tour the Boston Beer Company (Sam Adams). Derrick and Holly were staying at the Westin near Copley Square so we came from different directions. Our timing was a few minutes off but it afforded us the chance to grab a couple beers and pizza from a nearby restaurant while we waited for our tour time. We got to try and exclusive Sam Adams wheat beer served by the restaurant alone (Bella Luna). The tour itself was quite short but the tasting that accompanied it was great. We had a terrific guide and it was probably the best brewery tour I’ve ever done. Erin also took the opportunity to volunteer on the tour and was tasked at getting us to guess what beer ingredient she was acting out (she was hops and hopped in the air – very well done).

I took a short though must needed nap. I headed to the beer festival with a .00 blood alcohol level as measured by my new AlcoHawk Slim breathalyzer. Yes, that is correct, I made an amazing impulse purchase. It is not a toy! It is an instrument of science!
Part 3
Extreme Beer Fest was once again extreme and a great time. It was interesting being their with 5 other friends. Having the opportunity to discuss the beers with one another was half the fun of it. I personally took a sample of 29 different beers and took sips here and there from the group. Worst beer by far was Weyerbacher Idiot’s Drool which was some weird barrel-aged version of their normal beer Blithering Idiot. It was foul. The most interesting was a beer brewed with pickling spices from Wormtown Brewery. The best was a tripel from Allagash with Montgomery cherries. Interestingly enough, it was the first beer I sampled and I ended up having several glasses. There was some disappointment in the fact that many of the most obscure beers ran out well before the end of the night. All the same, I got to try a lot of winners that will never be in commercial production.
Wisely, we headed back to Mark and Kara’s to wind down for the evening. It was time for TV and pizza. Incidentally, we all took BAC readings and I took the prize at .18, Mark was .14, Kara was .12 and Erin (the responsible one) was .02. Science I tell you! The pizza was great and we had some really great laughs. I love Boston.
We took it easy on Sunday and followed the great tradition of visiting the Cactus Cantina for lunch. I had a tasty and freshly tapped Abita Jockamo IPA. We had a few last laughs before parting ways.
It took about 6 hours to get home which isn’t terrible. Another great trip to Boston.
Good Choice
Feb/101
Last week I gave Erin a really tough challenge. She was planning to stop at Whole Foods after work on Friday to pick up a few things including some beer. I asked her to try and find a beer she thought I had never tried before. She asked if she could reference my list and I invited her to browse and make the best of it (she didn’t end up actually using it). I think we made some sort of bet but I can’t actually remember what it was.
She delivered Affligem Dubbel in a 750ml brown glass bottle.
When I first saw the bottle I wasn’t sure who had won. I was familiar with the bottle and knew that I had enjoyed a few Affligem brews over the years. A really classic representation of Belgian beer. I consulted the list and she had succeeded. I was most impressed and enjoyed a healthy glass. Good choice.




