Monday beer links: Pubs, churches & lagers

BEER AND WINE LINKS, MUSING 07.30.18

Thoughts on deleting my Twitter archive.
This happens to come from a wine blog, which is not by coincidence (I subscribe to the Gray Report’s rss feed). But this is a truth that is relevant to all blogs and Twitter (a platform that has changed blogging): “It’s a less sociable world, and we’re all worse off for it. 2018 being what it is, even that statement is going to piss off some people. Even writing ‘piss off’ is going to piss off some people. To them, I say in the British sense, ‘piss off.'”

Sandor Katz
Walk on the Wild Side — How an Off-the-Grid Fermentation Revivalist is Changing Beer.
Would I link to this story if I hadn’t written it? Yes. So I am, without apologies. You can help me decide if makers of wild and sour beers should be labeled Post-Hansen or Pre-Hansen.

Freshly tapped: Allagash’s Little Brett.
A long, long read, but a story that is hard to put down (not sure how the print analogy works on a screen). This is not the primary point, but an important one from Jason Perkins, the guy in charge of brewing. “We could take classic ornery musician approach and say, ‘We make the kind of music we want to make, and we don’t care what other people think. And we certainly only make beers that we want to make, but we have so many beer ideas here. We’re not going to brew a beer that only appeals to a couple of people; it just doesn’t make sense.'”

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Ales Through the Ages (brochure included)

Sorry, this event has been canceled.

Questions about Ales Through the Ages II have popped up in various forums, so here is the speaker lineup again. You may download the brochure with the complete schedule and vital information here.

For a sense of what took place at the first Ales Through the Ages, read Martyn Cornell’s recap.

The speaker lineup this year:

FRIDAY, October 19
5:15 p.m. – Keynote presentation. Pete Brown.

SATURDAY, October 20
9 a.m. – From Caelia to Celctic Brews & Brigid to Benedict: Beer Beyond Roman Rule. Travis Rupp.
9:45 a.m. – The Sexual Habits of Hops: How They Changed Beer, and Changed It Again. Stan Hieronymus.
11 a.m. – British Fungus: Brettanomyces in British Brewing. Ron Pattinson.
2 p.m. – Messing About with Old Ale & Beer. Marc Meltonville.
2:45 p.m. – Pale Ale Before IPA: The Birth of a Legend. Martyn Cornell.
4 p.m. – Speakers Roundtable.

SUNDAY, October 21
9 a.m. – Gruit: Back to the Future of Brewing? Butch Heilshorn.
9:45 a.m. – Molasses Beer, Hops and the Enslaved: Brewing in 18th Century Virginia. Frank Clark and Lee Graves.
11 a.m. – Albany Ale: 400 Years of Brewing in New York’s Hudson Valley. Craig Gravina.
2 p.m. – The Nobel Failure: How Vermont’s Period of Prohibition Shape the Present Culture and Landscape. Adam Krakowski.
3:15 p.m. – Speakers Roundtable.

Monday beer links: The past, present and business as usual

BEER AND WINE LINKS, MUSING 07.23.18

End of prohibition drinking
We spent the weekend in Savannah on the Georgia coast — the city that Billy Sunday called the wickedest in the world. We had hoped to drink gin from a glass-sized bath tub at the American Prohibition Museum but it turned out they only serve it that way during evening hours. We did, however, spot a rare 1933 IPA bowl. Anyway, pardon the brevity this Monday and feel free to provide your own musing.

THE PAST

The Problem with Nostalgia.
“We don’t, as it happens, believe in the Good Old Days. Slops in the mild, buckets of sawdust and phlegm, and ladies only in the lounge, if at all? Fascinating, but hardly desirable.” Agreed, but there’s also this: “Nostalgia serves a crucial existential function. It brings to mind cherished experiences that assure us we are valued people who have meaningful lives.”

Thousands of Londoners pass through a historic brewery every day without realising it.
Technology makes easier to imagine what was in place before 19th century streets and buildings “were rubbed from existence like timetravellers who murdered their grandfathers.”

What did 17th century food taste like?
“Fried eggs don’t change the course of history. But taste does change history.” Bonus: Contains a recipe for “Snaill water.”

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A few disjointed thoughts inspired by the latest hop acreage report

US hop production 1971

Let’s call this the state of U.S. hops 0 BC (Before Cascade).

The chart is taken from The Barth Report 1970/71. The measure is hectares, one equaling 2.47 acres. U.S. hop farmers harvested almost 46 million pounds of hops in 1970 (compared to more than 106 million in 2017) and exported about 10 million. Between September of 1970 and April of 1971 U.S. brewers imported 13.6 million pounds of hops, 88% of them from Germany and Yugoslavia (since dissolved – about one third of the hop production was in what is now Slovenia). They used imported hops for traditional, classic, some say noble, aroma and flavor. They briefly thought Cascade might serve as a substitute.

The story about the birth Cascade has been told many times (by Mitch Steele in IPA: Brewing Techniques, Recipes and the Evolution of India Pale Ale and here). After verticillium wilt devastated the Hallertau aroma crop in the early 1970s, Coors Brewing offered contracts at then-lucrative prices to support growing Cascade. By 1975 farmers in the Northwest had planted more than 4,300 acres of Cascade, or 13% of the total crop. But brewers — let’s call them pre-craft brewers — soon discovered a) the aroma wasn’t quite why they expected or wanted, and b) Cascade does not store well. “The beer tasted OK, except when the beer drinker would have another bottle of beer . . . something would come up through the nose he wasn’t familiar with,” said Al Haunold, the USDA hop geneticist at the time. “We know now that it is geraniol.”

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Session #137 announced: Good in Wood

The SessionHost Jack Perdue has announced the theme for The Session #137 is “Good in Wood” and that the topic is “is deep and wide and meandering, romantic and historic, personal and professional.”

That’s pretty opened ended, but he has a few suggestions for those who crave more direction:

  • Historic uses of wood through a beer lens
  • Physical characteristics of wood and that relationship with beer
  • Professional and personal experiences such as wood-themed beer festivals or tours
  • A favorite wood-influenced beer style or experience, e.g. your first bourbon barrel-aged beer, a special Flanders red moment or why you don’t like a lambic

The Session #137 meets Aug. 3.