Tuesday, March 9, 2010

Ska Brewing "Belgian-Inspired Sour Pale Ale"



I came out to CO to visit my cousin and picked one up from the store yesterday. Sitting here now enjoying it as the snow is falling. As peaceful as it is outside, I can't say the same for what's in my glass. I totally agree with another blogger's comment on the bitter & sour being at war. Even with the lengthy finish, I still sense the battle between the two. I'm not a huge hop person, and can rarely do ipa's unless I'm eating food, although I always thought Avery's ipa was pretty good. Anyways, I love sours i.e. flemish.. or even a Monk's Cafe (yum). This, not even close (I know they're not trying to assimilate). It seems as if I'm just going to have to keep hoping for a domestic brewery to not over-hop everything. haha hope-hop.. I'm sure I could come up with some sort of play on words there. Shoot, if a domestic brewery that was crazy about hops (ahem, Lagunitas) would dare to do something less aggressive with em, that'd be a GREAT name HOP(e)-less. Where's my dedication beer?! Anyways, it didn't say abv on bottle so I googled to find that it was 6% before I drink this whole sucker. I concur with another beer blogger with his the C+ rating... drinkable, but let down that this "belgian-inspired sour" isn't even close to my expectations. The hops just get in the way of all those great sour flavors. I say if you're going to take the time and effort to do a beer like this, outside of your comfort zone.. then don't bring the extra hops, focus on that sour yeast! Although, now that I think about it... it is pretty unique in that sense.


...more about Brettanomyces and how it relates to sour beers.

oh... and I did come across my new favorite pilsner. Already planning on stocking tons for Chicago summertime.

this also managed to impress the heck out of me!

a local brew from Del Norte has created this "Mexican-Style Lager" with SO much more to it than it's counterparts south of the border. read BTI's tasting notes here.

Wednesday, March 3, 2010

¡tiempo para la tierra!

I recently began my research to live & work on an organic/bio-dynamic farm sometime next year. While I've made some connections in Austria and have lots of insight and inspiration from my colleagues, I can't seem to get Spain out of my head. Something very powerful is drawing me there, and of course my main interest is wine and grape harvest, I want to learn more about growing food too, not to mention become more fluent in Spanish. It's one of my longterm goals to eventually have land and grow a lot of my own organic food, hopefully supplying my restaurant and a small community with delicious vegetables. The trip could happen as early as this fall, mostly for the sake of working a grape harvest, but I might just shoot for next year so I can prepare to be there for 4-5 months. I've started the process by reading more about WWOOF (world wide opportunities on organic farms), but plan on reaching out to as many people as possible for advice. If anybody reading this has any insight or connections, I'd love to hear about it! Basque Country, Galicia, even Jerez in the South are all coming up on my radar.