New Years Eve at Ye Olde Forge
December 31, 2010 by justin · Leave a Comment
What a great way to ring out a year, at Ye Olde Forge. With only 29 days left in my project things are still going strong and I got two tasty winter ales in before midnight.
I was so happy to see two beers I was interested in on tap, 21st Amendment Fireside Chat and Mikkeller Red/White Christmas, a nice strong ale.
I started with the Mikkler’s. It was as expected, a strong ale should have an almost liquor quality to it. Slightly viscus and sweet. Very nice
The Fireside Chat is a spiced winter ale and as I am not a fan of spiced ales i wasnt sure. I have loved all of the 21st Amendment beers so I figured Id give it a go and I had been hearing about this but had not even seen it in a can. Totally dig the name of this dark beer. The brewery describes it as “Like FDR’s Depression-era radio addresses, which were like a kick in the butt and a hug at the same time, our Fireside Chat is a subtle twist on the traditional seasonal brew.” It is an odd brew. It is actually almost porter like but tastes more like and English bitter. I totally dug the first few sips but after about 1/2 a glass I was not as big of a fan. Something was just not what I was looking for.
Happy New Year folks!
Dogfish Head Namaste
December 29, 2010 by justin · Leave a Comment
Ok, Love Dogfish Head, love this beer, mixed feelings about the name. While the word is a common greeting in India, and most Americans just think it is some weird word their hippy yoga teacher says at the end of an ass whipping class, according to Aadil Palkhivala from Yoga Journal, it actually means, “The gesture Namaste represents the belief that there is a Divine spark within each of us that is located in the heart chakra. The gesture is an acknowledgment of the soul in one by the soul in another. “Nama” means bow, “as” means I, and “te” means you. Therefore, Namaste literally means “bow me you” or “I bow to you.”
So when you name a beer Namaste what does that say? Does the beer bow to me?
Then, I read the reason they chose this name. Brewery 3 Fonteinen, in Belgium had a thermostat break and as a result, excessive heat ruined about 100,000 bottles of lambic and gueuze in storage – representing about a third of their annual revenue.
Sam Calagione says, “We decided to brew a beer together along with our lead brewer Bryan Selders and my wife Mariah that would be a tribute to 3 Fonteinen. We will be sending a portion of the profits to 3 Fonteinen but more importantly we wanted to use this brew as a celebration of the vibrant, creative Belgian brewing culture that, in our minds, 3 Fonteinen embodies. Our ultimate goal is that news of this brew and the production set-back will inspire beer enthusiasts to seek out 3 Fonteinen beers in which ever town and country they live in.”
Ok, so that is really cool. And this Belgian White rocks. It is sweet, but not overly so, and smooth and well just swell. Support 3 Fonteinen and Dogfish Head, they are good peeps.
Wolaver’s Alta Gracia Coffee Porter
December 28, 2010 by justin · Leave a Comment
Ok, I don’t know what other people are drinking. On Beer Advocate people are giving this a B. I thought it was crap. I LOVE Wolavers and really want to like this beer. So much so that I tried it twice. I thought, I must be wrong, maybe my glass was dirty. So, I bought a second bottle, took 2 sips and poured the rest out. I am so disappointed.
The beer looks ok, and even smells good. Coffee Porter, nothing big here. But the taste? It is wicked (Vermont slang) off. There is no noticeable coffee flavour and if they are going for a smoke beer they need to take some lessons from Brew Dog. It is kinda like the flavour of what rotting compost smells like.
Ok so Alta Gracia, what is that? It is way more interesting, trust me.
Alta Gracia is a village in the Dominican Republic where a factory pays living wages, radical aye?
According to the New York Times:
The factory is a high-minded experiment, a response to appeals from myriad university officials and student activists that the garment industry stop using poverty-wage sweatshops. It has 120 employees and is owned by Knights Apparel, a privately held company based in Spartanburg, S.C., that is the leading supplier of college-logo apparel to American universities, according to the Collegiate Licensing Company. For Knights, the factory is a risky proposition, even though it already has orders to make T-shirts and sweatshirts for bookstores at 400 American universities. The question is whether students, alumni and sports fans will be willing to pay $18 for the factory’s T-shirts — the same as premium brands like Nike and Adidas — to sustain the plant and its generous wages.
[...]
Santa Castillo agrees. She and many co-workers toiled at other factories for the minimum wage, currently $147 a month in this country’s free-trade zones, where most apparel factories are located. That amount, worker after worker lamented in interviews for this article, falls woefully short of supporting a family.
The Alta Gracia factory has pledged to pay employees nearly three and a half times the prevailing minimum wage, based on a study done by a workers’ rights group that calculated the living costs for a family of four in the Dominican Republic.
While some critics view the living wage as do-gooder mumbo-jumbo, Ms. Castillo views it as a godsend. In her years earning the minimum wage, she said she felt stuck on a treadmill — never able to advance, often borrowing to buy necessities.
Real living wages? Now that is something to drink to (not this beer but hey)
15 Beers of Christmas – Hibernator
December 27, 2010 by justin · Leave a Comment
On the fifteenth, and last, day of Christmas…
Hibernator is right. My whole break I have hibernated. With Snowzilla and all it has made sense, and I really needed the rest. I am about to come out of hibernatoon in a few days and I think that this beer is approperiate thinking of that. Overall, I spent 1/2 a month on Christmas/Winter Ales, what a blessing and treat.
The Long Trail Hibernator is a nice Scottish Ale. Redish orange in coulour and earth in its flavour. Slightly sweet and strong. Smashingly swell beer. I could drink this all winter long, which in Vermont and Western Mass is a long time.
14 Beers of Christmas – Winter Welcome Ale
December 26, 2010 by justin · Leave a Comment
On the fourteenth day of Christmas…
Ok, I just cant stop! I got these fab winter ales and I just need to tell you about them. This Winter Ale Christmas thing has really opened my eyes. I actually kinda dreaded it. I dont like spiced beers, harvert and winter ales are nutoriously spiced and I dread their season. This year though I have found some outstanding beers that lack spice and are very tastey. None of them have been all too special, well maybe the Yule Ale from Alse Smith, otherwise, soild beers.
Sam Smiths Winter Welcome is right there. Not special, just solid. In typical Sam Smith style this is a English style ale. You taste the toasted malt and some mild hoppyness. Very nice
13 Beers of Christmas – Reindeer Droppings
December 25, 2010 by justin · Leave a Comment
On the thirteenth day of Christmas… (WAIT… dude, there are only 12 days to Christmas. You have really fucked this up. First, you do the days before Christmas not after, then now you are adding days? Don’t you care about tradition?)
Well, I thought about all of that but really, “beers of Christmas” it isn’t a tradition, I can make it up as I go along!
All of that said, Merry Christmas Beer Lovers Everywhere!
This beer was fine, another ridgeway creation. Solid, nothing special. According to the label, it fell of the sleigh. Maybe, eitherway, it warmed up my holiday.
12 Beers of Christmas – Celebration Ale
December 24, 2010 by justin · Leave a Comment
On the tenth day of Christmas…
Celebration! A Christmas beer list cannot be complete without Sierra Nevada’s Celebration Ale. This American IPA is hoppy and sweet. The aroma is killer hops due to the dry hopping method used. I personally would prefer to be drinking this in early fall as it is so crisp and strong. I like it, just think it is more of a harvest IPA than a Christmas IPA.
12 Beers of Christmas – Adoration
December 24, 2010 by justin · Leave a Comment
On the ninth day of Christmas…
Ommegang’s Adoration is a beautiful beer. From the label to the last sip the best word is beautiful. Pop a cork on this one this Christmas and see what I mean. This Belgian Dark Ale is a russet redish colour and the aroma and flavour have hints of cherries and cardamom. The spices are barely present though, as it is not a fruit beer but a beer with hints of spice and fruit.
Adore this!
12 Beers of Christmas – Delirium Noël
December 24, 2010 by justin · Leave a Comment
On the twelfth day of Christmas…
Delirium Noël comes in the oddest colour bottle. It is like an opaque creamy off-white. I mention it cause it is kinda creepy. Maybe it isnt the colour of the bottle but the graphics on the bottle? Get past the odd bottle and find the love inside. Brought this with me to a nice chill Christmas Eve dinner with some friends.
Brewed by Brouwerij Huyghe this strong dark Belgain ale is tasty enough. It is crisp and ever so slightly sweet. I must say though, it isn’t really “strong” It doesnt knock you off your seat like some strong ales. It is just a solid beer in a funky bottle. Rock On.
