Addendum: I had a couple of other new-to-me bottled microbrews when we got back to Tampa worth noting as well. I had them both at the fabulous Z Grille which had a beer list almost as good as their food.
Monday, February 15, 2010
Western CaribBEERean
Addendum: I had a couple of other new-to-me bottled microbrews when we got back to Tampa worth noting as well. I had them both at the fabulous Z Grille which had a beer list almost as good as their food.
Saturday, January 30, 2010
Virginia Beer Tasting....and beyond
Saturday, January 2, 2010
Virginia is for Lagers
Now, on to Virginia which as their tourism catch-phrase says truly "is for lovers"...beer lovers, that is. We stopped in Charlottesville for the night since it was about half way home and because it's the home of Starr Hill Brewing, one of my favorite new microbrewers in the Southern region. We were able to take a tasting and a tour of their modest facilities now housed in a section of a former chicken-processing plant in the nearby hamlet of Crozier, VA. Starr Hill, named after a Charlottesville neighborhood where it was conceived, got its start originally in Charlottesville as a downtown brew-pub and has seen enough success over the last few years to expand to the Crozier location. They now distribute to six states (including Tennessee. Thank you!) and recently signed a distribution contract with Anheiser-Busch which should s
ee further expansion in the near future. Keep in mind this is a distribution-only contract, not a brewing contract. All Starr Hill products are still hand-produced from high quality ingredients (left) as our tour-guide, Shelley, mentions in a minute or so of his spiel in the video below.
As for the tasting my wife and I tried seven different brews. The Jomo Lager which I had already tried and had incidentally bought for our Christmas party and decorated my Beer Tree with (see previous blog). The Amber Ale which I had not tried but found to be good. The Love which was new to me. It's their wheat beer and I have to say was one of the best I have had and I am admittedly not the biggest wheat fan. Dave, who was pouring for us, shared a great hint with us to hold our nose before taking a sip, then swish it around and swallow whle releasing your nostrils. What happens? A wonderful taste of cloves and a hint of bananas. Are either of those tastes added to The Love? Heck, no!! Amazing! Next up was The Gift, a limited-edition holiday German bock.
Delcious. Next up was the reason I started to love Starr Hill, their Northern Lights IPA. This is one of my favorite regional IPAs holding a very close second in my heart to Sweetwater IPA out of Atlanta. Incredibly hoppy without being overly bitter. A true masterpiece. Fnally was the Dark Star Porter which I had before and thought was OK, but it was just a sample from a bottle. This sample I got on draught was much, much better. Not overly smokey like a lot of porters and actually quite light in body. Even my wife, Ashlee, was impressed with this one and dark beers are not her thing. Finally, after learning how far we had driven and still had to drive, our new friend and pourer, Dave, let us in on a little secret. From a tap with no handle on it he gave us two pours of their Tripel - a Belgium-style beer that is lightly sweet and sweetly light. What a great, great beer. Well done, Starr Hill, well done.

Sunday, December 20, 2009
Holiday Cheers
This year I went by the Mt. Juliet Beer Company Store and bought four six-packs to serve at our Christmas party. After popping the bottles in the ice bin for serving, it justed seemed appropriate to use the colorful, empty cartons as ornaments. From top to bottom there is the Backdraft Brown out of Pennsylvania, the Starr Hill Juno Lager out of Virginia, the Magic Hat Winter Ale out of Vermont and the Rogue Santa's Reserve Ale out of Oregon.
I also got a growler of Southern Pecan Brown Ale from Lazy Magnolia Brewing in Mississippi (don't let the Yazoo label on it fool you). I also placed a couple of other high-alcohol beers underneath which were bought in Chattanooga earlier this season. They were the Acme IPA (small bottle) out of California, and a pint oif Delirium Noel from Belgium (big bottle on the floor on the far right). Speaking of high-alcohol beer, I also received a four-pack of 10% ABV Dogfish Head 120-Minute IPA from my friend at work, Joy. My wife and I got a 12-pack containing six varieties of Flying Dog brews from our friends, John and Dorie. Then, my brother-in-law, Andy, got me two IPA growlers as well. One was Sierra Nevada and the other...he can't remember, but he will be investigating it again next week to get the name. Thank you so much, everybody!!
I will follow up this post in the next few weeks with a quick run-down of what I thought of all this beer. Gonna be a busy holiday season!!
Sunday, November 22, 2009
A Lone Star but A Lot of Beer
Saturday afternoon Johan took us out to Central Market which had an incredible beer section. Austinites are very lucky to be on the cutting edge of large supermarkets (they are the original home of Whole Foods which is now nationwide) that specialize in organic, fresh and unique products at reasonable prices... including beer. I selected two individual pint bottles to purchase with plans on having one later that afternoon and one on Sunday afternoon. The first one I picked up was Hop Stoo
We all attended a concert later that evening and dined at a local chain eatery beforehand called Opal Divine's. I was delighted to see that they carried a great beer selection including several products from Austin's own, Live Oak Brewing. I chose their IPA, of course, and it wasn't bad. I may have liked it more if I didn't still have the smooth taste of the Hop Stoopid Ale still in mind. The folks at Live Oak do a tour of their small microbrewery as well which I would like to check out next time I am down this way. The beer selection at the music venue was typical and boring, but I did get a kick out of having one my favorite "mass-produced" beers, Shiner Bock, for the first time in a can. All four of us actually toured the Shiner Brewery (in nearby Shiner, Texas) the
Sunday afternoon before our flight home I popped the cap on the second pint bottle I had bought at Central Market. This was was called Small Batch 471 Double IPA from Breckenridge Brewing in Colorado. Double IPAs as I mentioned above are my favorite style of beer and this was the first one I had gotten in a bottle and I have to say I was fairly disappointed. It wasn't a bad brew overall, but it really lacked the pure hoppiness of double IPAs I had tried in the past, and still had the coarse bitterness of an English-style IPA - totally different from American IPAs.
Thanks to Johan and Dianna for showing us such a great time and thanks to Austin for providing great opportunities to try really good beer in a great American city.
Wednesday, November 11, 2009
Getting Off the El for Some Ale
I was also able to try a glass of Goose Island Seasonal Winter Ale at the nearby Wicker Park Tavern while Ashlee and Joy did a bit of shopping. Goose Island is also produced in the Chicago-land area and their winter ale was strong and smooth with a beautiful copper color. Not a great aftertaste, but a good beer overall.
Sunday, November 8, 2009
A Long Hiatus...

As Nate had said, it is a pretty good little festival with 60 beers to taste (not all microbrews, but you take what you can get), 40 different bourbons and several choices of local BBQ. They had tasting stations set up in the bottom floor of Nashville Municipal Auditorium and the $25 entry price got you a tasting glass, a T-shirt and all the hooch you could down in a 6-hour span (the BBQ was extra). Most of the beer samples were poured from bottles although a few brewers had kegs on site for draught pours. There was also a tasting class offered by New Belgium Brewing out of Colorado that included three of their newer concoctions. These three, plus any new ones I tried at the tasting stations, are listed below in no certain order along with a quick judgement:
-McSorley's Irish Black Lager - OK, but not great especially compared to some of the great Irish brews I had recently on The Emerald Isle.