Saturday, July 25, 2009

National Homebrewers Conference (long overdue)


Though it was over a month ago, I'm finally getting around to writing about my trip to the National Homebrewers Conference in Oakland, CA at the end of June. The short story is: It was AWESOME! It was such an incredible experience to be in the presence of so much beer and brewing information for 3 full days. Without writing a 30 page thesis, here's a summary of what I did at the conference, the people I met, and the beers I drank:

Wednesday, June 17
I flew into Oakland, checked into my hotel, and without a minute to spare headed over to Pacific Coast Brewing for a bite to eat and my NHC inaugural beer (Pacific Coast's Ultra Yellow, a "double maibock" style beer). An interesting note on Pacific Coast is that they brew all the beers extract, not all-grain. I'm not sure the exact reason for this (extract is more expensive), but I suspect it has something to do with available space for a full brewhouse. After the Ultra Yellow, I tried their Leviathan Imperial Stout for a night-cap and then it was off to bed.

Thursday, June 18
First thing in the morning, I headed over to the registration table to get my conference credentials, tasting glass, welcome kit (a bunch of freebies from different homebrew supply companies), and commemorative conference beers (an IPA and a Saison brewed specially for the conference). I started off Thursday's festivities by stewarding at the National Homebrew Competition for the Specialty Mead table. I've never really tried meads before, so it was an interesting experience. Since this was the second (and final) round of the competition, there were some top notch meads there. Among some of the more unique varieties was a raspberry-chipotle mead with a distinct spicy/smoky characteristic and a mint-lime mead that was crisp and refreshing. After the morning of stewarding, the conference officially began with the Opening Toast. Among the speakers were Jamil Zainasheff (award-winning homebrewer, beer author, and Brewing Network brewcaster), Gary Glass (director of the American Homebrewers Association), and Charlie Papazian (founder of the AHA and the "godfather" of homebrewing"). Following the toast, there were two sessions of seminars--I attended Water Kemistry with Colin Kaminski (brewmaster at Downtown Joes) and Funkification: A 100% Brettanomyces Spontaneously Fermented Mind Dump with Vinnie Cilurzo (brewmaster/owner of Russian River). I'm not gonna go into detail about the seminars here because it'll take way to long. If you're interested, shoot me an email and we can talk. I also don't remember much, because during the entire conference we were served beer from 9am till bedtime. Drunken lullabies indeed. Thursday's evening event was Pro-Brewers Night, a 3.5 hour beer festival with professional breweries from all over the country--though mostly California establishments, since we were, well, in California.

Friday, June 19
Friday morning brought two more sessions of seminars. I hit up Extreme Fermentables with Sam Calagione (brewmaster/owner of Dogfish Head) and Making Better Beer II: Advanced Homebrewing & Science with homebrew gods Ray Daniels and Randy Mosher. Early that afternoon was the Keynote Address given by Ken Grossman, the founder of Sierra Nevada Brewing Company (and a beerlebrity in his own right). Following Ken's speech I attended two more seminars: Yeast: Taking It To The Next Level with Dr. Michael Lewis from UC Davis' brewing program and a Going Pro Panel that was moderated by Justin Crossley (founder of the Brewing Network). That evening was Club Night, a 4 hour homebrew extravaganza. Instead of professional breweries having booths, different homebrew clubs setup booths and served their members' beer on tap. Some clubs had over 20 taps going at once! Club Night was a lot of fun, especially because each club had their own theme going on (check out some of my pics--link at the bottom of this post).

Saturday, June 20
After barely recovering from Club Night, I made it to two more seminars in the morning: Troubleshooting Panel moderated by James Spencer (host of Basic Brewing) and The Equipment Geek with homebrewer and self-proclaimed equipment geek, Kent Fletcher. In the afternoon, there were three tracks of seminars--I only made it to two: Maintaining Ideal Yeast Health: Nutrients Yeast Need with Dr. Tobias Fischborn from Lallemand (a yeast company) and Chocolate and Beer, a delicious event with Timothy Childs of TCHO (a chocolate company) and Roger Davis (brewmaster at Triple Rock). I skipped the third seminar session that afternoon because nothing looked that interesting and I was thirsty--I headed over to The Trappist for a beer, an awesome Belgian beer bar near the hotel in Oakland. Saturday evening was the Grand Banquet, which meant at end to the conference. The banquet was a three-course beer pairing dinner prepared by Sean Paxton, the homebrew chef. Each dish was brewed with beers from Rogue and was paired with a specific Rogue beer during the meal. The highlight for me was when the chocolate mousse (made with Rogue Chocolate Stout) came out garnished with real crystal malt (a sweet, caramel-like malted barley used in brewing).

Overall, the conference was a great success...for my mind and my liver! I learned a ton of new information about beer and brewing, and I tasted a bunch of awesome beers. I will definitely be attending again next year (in Twin Cities, Minnesota) and hopefully I can drag some friends with me (here's to you Sully/Mose!). If you haven't seen them already, here are some photos I took at the conference: NHC Pics

I'll hopefully have some additional post(s) later this week about my visit to the Sam Adams brewery last weekend, my brew-day yesterday (I brewed a hefeweizen), and the homebrew competition I judged today for the NJ State Fair. Also, this coming weekend is Belgium Comes to Cooperstown, a Belgian beer festival and camping extravaganza at Brewery Ommegang in Cooperstown, NY...more on that later! Cheers!

Tuesday, July 7, 2009

Beer Article (that I wrote) in The Wyckoff Journal


Sorry for the lack of posts the last few weeks, but I've been working on an article that was recently published as a front page story in The Wyckoff Journal, a local online news site. The owners of the site also run The Oakland Journal and The Franklin Lakes Journal, where my article was also published concurrently. Here's the link to my specific article, which is sort of a sweeping overview and introduction to the world of craft beer: Beer. I'm not going to use the article as a post here, because they were nice enough to link to my blog from their site, so you should go there to read it. I hope you enjoy it, and thanks to Charlie at the Journals for giving me this opportunity!

On a side note, I'm hoping to have a lengthy post by the weekend regarding my recent trip to the National Homebrewers Conference in Oakland, CA. I met some world-class homebrewers and professional brewers, tasted some great beers, and got bombarded with some incredible beerformation. Here's some pictures of the event as a prelude to my update: NHC Pics.

Tuesday, June 9, 2009

Blog-O-Beer Happenings: A Long Overdue Update

I know it's been awhile, so this is gonna be a long one (that's what she said). There's been a lot going on lately in my wonderful world of beer, so this post is gonna be a huge clusterfuck of unrelated updates, but that's what Napolean invented lists for.

1. SAVOR: An American Craft Beer & Food Experience

About 2 weeks ago, I was down in our nation's capital (Washington, DC for you geography all-stars) for SAVOR: An American Craft Beer & Food Experience. The event was AWESOME to say the very least. There was somewhere in the range of 60 different breweries there, each with 2 beers each. This wasn't your ordinary beer festival though--every single beer was paired with a small appetizer. The food ranged from meat skewers to little shots of soup to mini-lamb burgers to chipotle chocolates. The pairings were really quite well done. Basically, the SAVOR organizers put together a large and varied menu of appetizers, cheeses, and mini-desserts, and then allowed the various breweries to select two of their beers to pair with items on the menu. In addition to the main event, I also had the opportunity to attend one of the "salons" (small 20-person pairing sessions led by the brewers/chefs themselves). For the last hour of the evening, I attended Paradox or Parallel - the Curious Matter of Craft Beer & Chocolate , a chocolate and beer pairing with Hugh Sission of Clipper City Brewing as well as Kim Rigby and Brenda Nelson of Parfections. I think this was definitely the highlight of the evening--it was incredible to see how well chocolate and beer complemented each other. I think most people could see how a rich stout or porter would pair well with chocolate, but what about an IPA? You wouldn't think it works, but it was really a tasty combination. If I remember correctly, the truffle paired with the IPA had an orange filling and was sprinkled with sea salt on top. The orange in the chocolate worked really well with the citrusy hops in the IPA, and the sea salt on top helped to cut the bitterness of the beer (in fact, sometimes you'll see people sprinkle some salt in their beer if it's too bitter for them--I call these people first-class pussies). And, now for the icing on the cake: I met Charlie Papazian (president of the Brewers Association and the "godfather" of homebrewing) and Ray Daniels (author of Designing Great Beers), who actually hosted my salon! These guys are true beerlebrities (just coined another word--write that down), and as J.T. can attest, I was a bit starstruck....yes, I'm a huge beer-dork and proud of it! Oh yea, that's J.T. and I posing for a "red carpet" pic at the event (I'm the sexy guy making a funny face on the left, and J.T.'s the schmuck on the right).

2. BUZZ Off 2009 Homebrew Competition

Last Saturday, I headed down to the Iron Hill Brewery & Restaurant in West Chester, PA to judge a homebrew competition hosted by BUZZ (Brewers United for Zany Zymurgy). In case you're curious, zymurgy is the scientific study of fermentation (not to mention the name of a kick-ass homebrew magazine published by the American Homebrewers Association). I judged the German Wheat & Rye beer category in the morning, where I tasted some Weizens, Dunkelweizens, and Weizenbocks--there were no rye beers (Roggenbier) entered. None of them were extraordinary in my opinion--I think our top beer in the category was under 40 points (out of 50), but apparently one of the Dunkelweizens went on to win Best of Show for the competition, which is slightly mind-boggling, but whatever. In the afternoon, I judged the Light Lager category, which was really interesting, because I basically had homebrewed versions of Bud Light and Heineken. The category includes Lite American Lager, Standard American Lager, Premium American Lager, Munich Helles, and Dortmunder Export. There were actually some pretty decent beers in this flight. One of the Dortmunder Exports was excellent--crisp and clean with a refreshing hop character. Believe it or not, light lagers are one of the hardest styles to brew, because there's no strong flavors to hide any mistakes or infections. It was a pretty fun day overall, and I came home with a nice bottle Iron Hill's FE 10 Anniversary Ale, a Belgian Strong Dark Ale, which I'm probably gonna save for the Fourth.

3. Independence Pale Ale & The July 4th Jockey Box
Speaking of the Fourth, I'm gearing up for another legendary July 4th in the Adirondacks, and got things rolling last Sunday with a long brewday. I brewed a clone recipe of the Lagunitas IPA, using 5 different kinds of hops (Magnum, Summit, Willamette, Centennial, and Cascade). The beer is fermenting strong right now and I'm going to move it to the secondary fermenter on Sunday, where I'm going to dry-hop it was 3/4 of an ounce each of Centennial and Cascade (I may just up it to an ounce so I don't have any leftover--the more the better!). The Independence Pale Ale, I've dubbed it, will sure to provide a Hoppy July 4th! Damn, that was awesomely corny. On top of getting the IPA ready, I've also been getting parts together to build a 3-tap jockey box (or draft box) to use with commercial kegs during the long weekend. Each keg will sit in its own bucket filled with ice, and the beer lines will feed into a 120qt cooler equipped with three 50 foot stainless-steel beverage coils, which will then feed into the faucets. I'm pretty confident that between the buckets and coil system, the beer will be Rocky Mountain cold when it comes out!

4. Upcoming National Homebrewers Conference

Finally, in less than one week, I'll be flying to sunny Oakland, CA for the National Homebrewers Conference. I'm heading out there on Wednesday next week and staying until Sunday. The conference will surely prove to be the ultimate beer event of the year (for me at least). On the schedule for the conference, I'll be stewarding at the National Homebrew Competition Judging on Thursday morning, followed by the "opening toast" in the early afternoon. There's also a couple of seminars that afternoon, of which I'm probably going to attend one on wood aging beer and one on brewing authentic German lagers. Thursday night is Pro-Brewers night (basically a regular beer festival with commercial breweries). On Friday morning, I'll probably go to seminars on extreme fermentables (with Sam Calagione of Dogfish Head) and one on advanced homebrewing science. The afternoon begins with the keynote address from Ken Grossman of Sierra Nevada, followed by more seminars (I'll probably go to one on yeast and a "going pro" panel). Friday night is Club Night, which means a beer festival with all homebrewed beer (different homebrew clubs have booths setup). Saturday means more seminars, and I'll probably attend a troubleshooting panel, one about equipment, one about quality, one about beer color, and another yeast seminar. Saturday evening is the Grand Banquet (a beer pairing dinner) and the awards ceremony for the National Homebrew Competition. I'm really excited about this mini beercation (there's one more; write that down), and I'll be sure to provide a detailed updated when I return. Until butter flies, drink your beer!