tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-33250276173336304432024-02-22T05:51:50.344-08:00Pacific Brew News Authoritative commentary on the West Coast beer scene. Unknownnoreply@blogger.comBlogger443125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3325027617333630443.post-72780752305154503712012-06-12T21:21:00.000-07:002016-08-14T21:23:46.544-07:00The Rebirth of Steam Beer<div style="box-sizing: border-box; color: #141412; font-family: 'Source Sans Pro', Helvetica, sans-serif; font-size: 16px; line-height: 24px; margin-bottom: 24px;">
When you think of Steam Beer today, you’re most likely inclined to think of the beloved Anchor Steam out of San Francisco. This is for a few reasons, but first and foremost because the brewery trademarked the used of “Steam Beer” so other brewers cannot use the term. Make no mistake, however, that Steam Beer existed in California well before Anchor. In fact, Steam Beer was a California commodity from back in the gold rush days and could be found at any number of breweries that dotted the old time landscape.</div>
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In fact, Sacramento seemed to be home to a large-scale Steam Beer brewery at the turn of the 20th Century, as seen in the California State Board of Agriculture’s Statistical Report from 1901.</div>
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There are two large breweries in the city [Sacramento]. The City Brewery manufactures steam beer and in 1901 produced 50,000 barrels that were disposed of all over California Nevada and Oregon.</div>
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Today Steam Beer, or California Common as it is currently referred to, is a beloved product of fine quality. However, it was not always the case. In fact, looking back in literature from the late 1800s and early 1900s you could assume a few things about Steam Beer: 1) It was cheap and of poor quality; 2) It was associated with the rough-and-tumble of our society. In fact, after reading a few texts of old, it seems like an effective way to describe a person of poor character was to point out his affinity for Steam Beer. Fact is, the oldest references I could find about the beer style had very little good to say – save for the fact it was cheap.</div>
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Here are a few excerpts from old text that mention Steam Beer – for your reading pleasure. We’ll start with this excerpt from – “A Poor American in Ireland & Scotland” by Ben Goodkind, published 1913.</div>
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We soon learned that the drinking water of Sacramento was not of good quality, for it is taken from the Sacramento River and is impure, therefore we took to drinking Sacramento steam beer straight and found it good.</div>
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That’s about as good as the reviews got for Steam Beer, which in this instance was made in Sacramento. How about the less savory mentions? This one is lifted from ”The Nerve of Blaze McGee” by Mortin Parker, published in Boy’s Life in May 1923.</div>
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Barlow’s drink dispensary occupied the corner. In days gone by, within the long barroom, had been fought gun duels innumerable. Cattlemen, rustlers, gamblers, Mexican smugglers had come and gone through those swinging-doors. Musty with age, the saloon had succumbed to the great drouth. “Lager” and “Steam Beer” had bleached out completely from the wooden sign over the door.</div>
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Then there’s this gem plucked from Overland Monthly and the Out West Magazine, published in 1868.</div>
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But he ruled merely by means of ability and not affection. Not like McManus was he admired. The latter was “the whole thing” in the saloons in the Barbary Coast, down where the worst beer flows, where they like everything big and strong and cheap-big schooners of steam beer, big men, big fleas, big watches, heavily gilded, and meals at ten cents, including a big dose of second-class burnt chicory, steaming hot, miscalled coffee.</div>
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Still more, this comes out of “Michael, Brother of Jerry” written by Jack London, of all people, in 1917.</div>
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In his desperation Daughtry hit upon an idea with which to get another schooner of steam beer. He did not like steam beer but it was cheaper than lager.</div>
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Regardless of the checkered history, Steam / California Common beer is of great importance in the overall history of California brewing. In fact, (and this is just an odd reference to me) the California Alcoholic Beverage Control (ABC) has an interesting tidbit related to the Type-23 Licence (Small Beer Manufacturer – I.E. craft brewers).</div>
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This license formerly related only to Steam beer. “Steam” beer is made by fermentation at cellar temperature rather than near freezing as is the case with other beers. It is made using only one type of malt–malted barley. It contains no corn, rice or other cereal grains as regular<br style="box-sizing: border-box;" />beers normally do. The method of carbonation is entirely natural and involves a process known as Krausening. This process requires taking beer which has been completely fermented and adding to it beer which is still fermenting. This causes a second fermentation to occur. The Krausening process in beer corresponds closely to the “bulk process” in making some types of sparkling wines.</div>
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Yes, it would appear that the craft brewery license in California was originally intended for Steam Beer brewers. By the way, how about that description of Steam Beer brewing? Not bad for government work.</div>
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Today Anchor Steam is rightfully considered a premium beer, and there are a growing number of terrific examples of the California Common style. It is telling to me just how far we have come in our brewing practices, not just here in California, but globally. Surely there were inferior beers throughout the land in the 19th Century – hell, there’s plenty around today, even with all of our scientific and educational advances. That said, I am truly happy (as a fan of Anchor Steam and the California Common style) that through the bad years this style was able to make it. We no longer associate this beer with anything negative – in fact, this style is the foundation of the modern American craft beer movement. That right there, that says a whole hell of a lot.</div>
Unknownnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3325027617333630443.post-80628090509701420462012-05-21T21:24:00.000-07:002016-08-14T21:25:31.947-07:00How to Pour Beer - A Call for Service <div style="box-sizing: border-box; color: #141412; font-family: 'Source Sans Pro', Helvetica, sans-serif; font-size: 16px; line-height: 24px; margin-bottom: 24px;">
I’ve been to a handful of classes and seminars that are supposedly geared toward beer servers, and have also read many more posts online on the subject. These classes & posts are rather predictable in their format – tilt glass, pour, straighten glass, leave a nice little crown. Now, while I agree this is a pretty important part of beer service, it completely misses the boat on what makes an actual beer server. Nowhere was this make more apparent than at the Heineken campaign “Passion for Beer” campaign hosted around the country last year.</div>
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At this seminar (I went to the San Francisco offering) the class titled “The Perfect Pour” seemed like a yawner – I mean, really, I could rattle off the above-mentioned technique in my sleep. I was more than a little impressed when the instructor, Franck Evers, began with the most basic element of proper beer pouring – eye contact.</div>
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You see, beer service has trended to the brainy aspects of the liquid – styles, history, ingredients and whatnot – while giving very little attention to the actual act of service, which begins with a smile and eye contact, maybe a hello if the bar isn’t slammed. From here, you can take the patron’s order, then promptly pour into a beer-clean glass before returning the beer to the patron, again with eye contact and acknowledgement of their order (repeating back their order as you put the glasses on the counter, or a simple ‘thank you’ usually does the trick).</div>
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For all you aspiring beer servers, regardless of the certificate you hold, remember that service is as important as the beer. It doesn’t start at the tap, or the glass, it starts when you greet your customer and ends when they leave. Yes, it’s important (very important) to maintain clean beer lines, beer-clean glasses and have a working knowledge of the beers you serve. That said, all this technical information is pretty useless if you fail at the most basic point of service – the customer interaction.</div>
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A Quick Aside</div>
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Anyone that frequents bars knows that this sentiment isn’t just shared among beer fans, but in any specialty market. Look at your hipster hangouts like artisan coffee shops, cocktail bars and even upscale grocers. We have today an immense level of information about the products we sell. We can rattle off the details of history, regional differences, ingredients without effort. More and more, however, all this seems to come at the cost of service. It doesn’t have to be this way.</div>
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Please note this entry in the 1882 edition of “The New and Improved Illistrated Bartenders Manual” written by Harry Johnson.</div>
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When waiting on customers at any time it is of the highest importance for a bartender to be strictly polite and attentive in his behavior and especially in his manner of speech giving prompt answers to all questions. As far as lies in his power he should be cheerful and have a bright and pleasant countenance. It is of very great importance to be neat clean and tidy in dress, as that will prove more to the interest of the bartender than any other matter. He should be pleasant and cheerful with everyone this will not only be pleasing to customers, but also prove advantageous to the bartender serving them. It is proper when a person steps up to the bar for a bartender to set before him a glass of ice water and then in a genteel and polite manner find out what he may desire. If mixed drinks should be called for it is the bartender’s duty to mix and prepare them above the counter and let the customers or parties see them and they should be prepared in such a neat quick and scientific way as to draw attention. It is also the bartender’s duty to see to it that everything used with the drinks is perfectly clean and the glasses bright and polished. When the customer has finished and left the bar the bartender should clean the counter well thoroughly so that it will have a neat and appearance again and if time should allow bartender to do so he should clean the glasses in a perfect manner at once so as to have ready again when needed. As regards the bench, which is an important branch in managing a properly, it is the bartenders special duty to his bench cleared up and in good shape at all times he will find it to his advantage if done properly.</div>
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Clean, gentile and attentive – if you miss these subtle attributes, you’ve missed out on how to properly pour a beer.</div>
Unknownnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3325027617333630443.post-46982869471958788672009-06-15T12:16:00.000-07:002009-06-15T12:19:01.696-07:00Site UpdateWell, we've done it now... we've migrated Pacific Brew News to Wordpress. That means we're soon going to stop blogging here and put all of our content on our own site. We've migrated all the content on this blog and in a few months - after folks have gotten used to the new site - we're likely going to delete this blog. To see the updated site, which is still a work in progress, simply check out www.pacificbrewnews.com.<br /><br />Thanks for your patience,<br />- The PBN CrewUnknownnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3325027617333630443.post-76058675327418558992009-06-15T03:05:00.000-07:002009-06-15T03:05:00.404-07:00Happy 2nd Anniversary Auburn Alehouse<a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="http://auburnalehouse.com/images/stout_nitro.jpg"><img style="margin: 0pt 10px 10px 0pt; float: left; cursor: pointer; width: 266px; height: 400px;" src="http://auburnalehouse.com/images/stout_nitro.jpg" alt="" border="0" /></a>One of Pacific Brew News' favorite establishments is turning two in June - Auburn Alehouse. Longtime followers of PBN may remember us imbibing fine IPAs in the brewery whilst it was still under construction. We also recorded a podcast on the patio and talked extensively with owner/brewmaster Brian Ford. Now, we've been invited back by Brian to sit with him and celebrate his two amazing years in business.<br /><br />Just how amazing? If you haven't yet been there, it may be hard to put into words. The place is busy night after night. Food there rocks and the beers - oh my - the beers are top-notch! In 2008, just months after opening, Auburn Alehouse won the People's Choice Award at the Raley Field Beer Fest - beating out 47 other NorCal brewers! The mayor of Auburn has brewed a batch of beer. The long-time brewmaster of the now-closed Elk Grove Brewing Company, Bill Woods, is now brewing there (and his Dead Man Red was brilliant!). In every way measurable, Auburn Alehouse has succeeded beyond anyone's expectations.<br /><br />So, clearly, there's a lot to celebrate. We hope you'll join us and the AAH crew as we enjoy the second annivsary brew - Unobtainium (a big, west coast double IPA) - along with all the other festivities of the weekend. We hope to see you there.<br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;">When</span>: June 21st<br /><span style="font-weight: bold;">Where</span>: Auburn Alehouse | 289 Washington St, Auburn Ca<br /><br />More Info<br />www.AuburnAlehouse.comPacific Brew Newshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01060666071335876035noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3325027617333630443.post-71104966525657753172009-06-13T02:57:00.000-07:002009-06-13T02:57:00.285-07:00SacBrew's "IPA Palooza"<a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEi6lo0IkaSCfGrMgwwb4qsLQ2xIQhprNQj40kfGL1mMXJBYBF_Q5xiHQkT90lZJTshpBmiPLCLtgEDoMXcgMgpHHomHL9JhFD0wrIz3Dt3Qf_jsduFZrN4dx7wZtU9CaP4iOJKbdIgpwe2u/s1600-h/DSC_0030.JPG"><img style="margin: 0pt 10px 10px 0pt; float: left; cursor: pointer; width: 200px; height: 133px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEi6lo0IkaSCfGrMgwwb4qsLQ2xIQhprNQj40kfGL1mMXJBYBF_Q5xiHQkT90lZJTshpBmiPLCLtgEDoMXcgMgpHHomHL9JhFD0wrIz3Dt3Qf_jsduFZrN4dx7wZtU9CaP4iOJKbdIgpwe2u/s200/DSC_0030.JPG" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5346697186390799410" border="0" /></a>This is a quick update to let you know that Sacramento is going to be THE place for hop heads to be on July 22nd when Sacramento Brewing Co. hosts the first-ever IPA festival - IPA Palooza. Talking with Peter Hoey, SBC's Brewmaster, we've been assured you can expect to find beers not previously available in Sacramento. For certain all 24 guest taps will feature an IPA or Double IPA, on top of SBC's own Half Pint DIPA, Independence DIPA, Belgian IPA and house IPA! That's AT LEAST 28 high-hopped beers that will be flowing under one roof, right here in Sacramento.<br /><br />As we learn more about the beers that will be available, we'll let you know.<br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;">When</span>: July 22nd<br /><span style="font-weight: bold;">Where</span>: Sacramento Brewing Co.<br /><span style="font-weight: bold;">Price</span>: Pay per drink | Samplers also available<br /><br />More info<br /><a href="http://www.blogger.com/www.sacbrew.com">Sacramento Brewing Co.</a>Pacific Brew Newshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01060666071335876035noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3325027617333630443.post-13688528632335318512009-06-12T15:28:00.000-07:002009-06-12T15:43:33.468-07:00UPDATE: Bruery Night at SacBrew<a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="http://www.thebruery.com/images/barrel_front2.jpg"><img style="margin: 0px auto 10px; display: block; text-align: center; cursor: pointer; width: 406px; height: 203px;" src="http://www.thebruery.com/images/barrel_front2.jpg" alt="" border="0" /></a>Peter Hoey at SacBrew has confirmed The Bruery beers that will be on tap for Monday's event, along with a few more details.<br /><br />First, Patrick Rue (owner/brewer) will be on hand at 6:00pm for the Meet the Brewer aspect of the show. If you want to say hello, get there around that time.<br /><br />Second, the first THIRTY customers to order the complete sampler set can claim a Bruery class to take home - as shown in the image above. This is a wow glass to be certain.<br /><br />Finally, the beers! Below are The Bruery beers that will be on tap on Monday.<br /><ul><li><span style="font-weight: bold;">Black Orchard</span> (<span style="font-style: italic;">Belgian black wheat beer, or black wit</span>)<br /></li><li><span style="font-weight: bold;">White Zin </span>(<span class="beerfoot"><i>Cuvee Juene with our Zinbier, a Belgian blonde fermented with almost 1000 lbs of zinfandel grapes)</i></span></li><li><span style="font-weight: bold;">Virgin Papier </span> (<span class="beerfoot"><i>non-barrel aged version of their forthcoming anniversary ale)</i></span></li><li><span style="font-weight: bold;">Batch #1 Levud's</span> (<span class="beerfoot"><i>Belgian-style Golden Strong Ale)</i></span></li><li><span style="font-weight: bold;">Hottenroth Berliner Weisse</span> (<span class="beerfoot"><i>German-style Berliner Weisse with lactobacillus and brettanomyces to sour this very unusual, low alcohol wheat beer)</i></span></li></ul>There will also be some bottles available for purchase to enjoy at SBC.<br /><br />More Info<br /><a href="http://pacificbrewnews.blogspot.com/2009/06/bruery-comes-to-sacramento.html">Original Post</a>Pacific Brew Newshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01060666071335876035noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3325027617333630443.post-32823443091700814522009-06-12T14:45:00.000-07:002009-06-12T14:57:14.612-07:00The Bruery Comes to Sacramento<a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="http://www.thebruery.com/images/barrel_front2.jpg"><img style="margin: 0px auto 10px; display: block; text-align: center; cursor: pointer; width: 378px; height: 189px;" src="http://www.thebruery.com/images/barrel_front2.jpg" alt="" border="0" /></a><span style="font-weight: bold; font-style: italic;">The Bruery</span> just celebrated its first year in business, which is based in Orange County, California. In that year the brewers have been praised roundly for making stunning Belgian-inspired brews like Orchard White and Saison Rue. To bring in the brewery's second year in business they're expanding the distribution of beers to include the Sacramento area!<br /><br />An official release party is scheduled for this Monday (June 15th) at <span style="font-weight: bold; font-style: italic;">Sacramento Brewing Company</span>, on the corner of Fulton and Marconi. The Bruery's owner and brewmaster, Patrick Rue, will be on hand with some special beers. If you're in the region, you're gonna wanna join the party and try some truly amazing beers. Now, here's the details.<br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;">When</span>: Monday, June 15th 2:00pm-10:00pm<br /><span style="font-weight: bold;">Where</span>: Sacramento Brewing Co. (<span>2713 El Paseo Ln.)<br /><span style="font-weight: bold;">Cost</span>: Variable, depending on what you buy. No fixed menu.<br /><br /><span style="font-style: italic;">More Info</span><br /><a href="http://www.blogger.com/www.sacbrew.com">Sacramento Brewing Co.</a><br /><a href="http://www.blogger.com/www.thebruery.com">The Bruery</a><br /></span>Pacific Brew Newshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01060666071335876035noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3325027617333630443.post-512388914721861982009-06-07T21:21:00.001-07:002009-06-09T20:35:50.221-07:00PETE'S BRASS RAIL & CAR WASH<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhyikGxxn9mfKQmLYm-oC1JHkeetWAosqIVmnHQO2JI9M8aIgTVHYVj0_jUPpQi2mMQNyvBGGE1700jjzeBOFz9QlRsKFGpTt5mvi8bpgNnr9OV7e93BI46WLcMsfu6wowb5Fq7cKwtLT6P/s1600-h/PetesFace.gif"><img id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5344807379720582226" style="FLOAT: left; MARGIN: 0px 10px 10px 0px; WIDTH: 273px; CURSOR: hand; HEIGHT: 398px" alt="" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhyikGxxn9mfKQmLYm-oC1JHkeetWAosqIVmnHQO2JI9M8aIgTVHYVj0_jUPpQi2mMQNyvBGGE1700jjzeBOFz9QlRsKFGpTt5mvi8bpgNnr9OV7e93BI46WLcMsfu6wowb5Fq7cKwtLT6P/s400/PetesFace.gif" border="0" /></a><br /><div>Well...apparently the joke is pretty much on anyone and everyone that ever steps foot into <a href="http://petesbrassrail.com/">Pete's Brass Rail and Car Wash</a> located at 201 Hartz Avenue, Danville California. Pete's (there is no Pete) is a nice midsized neighborhood bar with 20 taps of all craft beer goodness and a full menu of typical and not so typical pub fare.<br />Terri and I stopped in at around noon on Sunday and found a couple seats at the bar. We pulled out our bar stools, she hung her purse on the conveniently placed hook under the bar top as I lifted my foot up to place it on the brass rail......nope....no brass rail either.....<br />The two bartenders were quick to throw us the food and beer menus claiming that "Looking at the tap handles won't tell you what's pouring".<br />They were right....The Stone IPA handle was actually hooked up to a Stone Pale Ale keg, The Speakeasy Big Daddy IPA was dispensing Speakeasy Untouchable Pale Ale and the Deschutes Mirror Pond handle filled a glass with Mirror Mirror Barleywine.<br />I stuck to reading the beer menu after that. Drakes IPA, Pliny the Elder, Red Rocket, Racer 5 stood out as did Pyramid's Imperial Hefeweizen, Russian River Damnation and surprisingly Rubicon's Purple Mia Bock. There were also tap handles for Tied House, Napa Smith, Widmer, Sierra Nevada and a couple more Drakes products.<br />I tried the Ale Smith Pale and Terri went straight for the Racer 5. As we sipped our first beers of the day we couldn't help notice how busy the place was becoming. The bartenders were trading jabs and insults between watching the A's and Giants games whilst simultaneously concocting some killer looking over-the-top spicy Bloody Marys. I asked if the place was always that busy and the bartender gave me a blank stare and said "It's slow so far".<br />We eventually had to nibble something and ordered a batch of garlic fries. The best part of those fries is that they're served with a little tub of Cayenne Mayonnaise which is apparently a house specialty. Creamy with a nice kick. Excellent.<br />After another couple of brews I finally found a little note on the bottom of the food menu that read "There is no Brass Rail, there is no car wash and who the hell is Pete?"<br />By then of course it seemed to all make at least as much sense as all the patron's names that were printed from top to bottom on the wall opposite our seats.<br />All the names represented customers that have tried at least 500 different pints of Pete's offerings over the years....... Deschutes Red Chair IPA was the latest beer to make the list...coming in at #1342. Only 496 more pints and I get my name on that wall. I wonder if there are any jobs and affordable housing available in the Danville area. </div>Unknownnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3325027617333630443.post-24036391270257366732009-06-02T10:20:00.000-07:002009-06-02T10:21:53.215-07:00Gueneville/Santa Rosa Beer TastingOur PBN friend and fellow judge, Todd, was in Guerneville and Santa Rosa a few days ago and sent back this update from his fact-finding mission – if anyone will be traveling in that area, looks like there are some great beers on tap as always:<br /><br />The Beer Geek<br /><br />Hello PBN:<br /><br />I was lucky enough to squeeze in a 2 hour tasting at Stumptown Brewery in Guerneville and lunch on the way home at Russian River. Check out www.stumptown.com.<br /><br />Stumptown was very unique and interesting. I met the brewer Peter and got a chance to sample a few of his beers. Here’s what they had:<br /><br />1) Black Lager – Black color. Persistent tan head. Very smoky and roasty. Light body. Low hop bitterness, finishing a little wet. Interesting having such a strong aroma and flavor while still light and easy drinking.<br /><br />2) Pale Ale – Made like a steam ale. Very creamy and smooth. Floral/citrus hop aroma. Won at CA State Fair in 2004.<br /><br />3) Blackberry Wheat – Nice tart flavor with all the esters of a good wheat beer. Banana, spices, blackberry go well together. Refreshing beer while we sat in the sun.<br /><br />4) XPort Ale – Made with a so-called “Strain 108” yeast from some Cal Poly professors. It was a Scottish Ale. Very sweet and malty. Yeast added banana and spices. Floral/citrus hops in there too. Very complex and very enjoyable.<br /><br />They also had Racer 5 and a couple guest taps, but I stuck with the house brews.<br /><br />At Russian River they currently had 12 beers on tap and I sampled them all:<br /><br />1) Pliny the Elder<br />2) Blind Pig<br />3) Damnation<br />4) Salvation<br />5) Perdition<br />6) Little White Lie<br />7) Russian River IPA<br />8) Aud Blonde<br />9) Hop 2 It<br />10) Consecration<br />11) OVL Stout<br />12) Redemption<br /><br />I brought home growlers of Pliny and Blind Pig. Need to get together for a pint since these are in high demand!<br /><br />Cheers,<br />ToddUnknownnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3325027617333630443.post-28539691094394974162009-06-01T10:10:00.000-07:002009-06-01T10:51:22.319-07:00Chef's Table opens in RosevilleWritten by Jeff Barber<br /><br />There's now more hope for good beer in Roseville. The Chef's Table (www.chefdavidstable.com), located at 6843 Lonetree Blvd in Rocklin (right on the edge of Roseville) in the strip mall where Fitness 19 is located., opened last week. While created as a wine bar with small plate type food, it is owned and operated by David Hill, the former chef who provided the appetizer menu at Vino's. This is going to be a great place. As mentioned, food is served in small plates and currently covers a range of tastes such as scallops, calamari, spring rolls, and a charcuterie plate. Plans are for the menu to change as seasonal ingredients change. Wines are served by the taste, full glass, or bottle. And he has good beer! Currently on tap are Bear Republic Racer 5, Auburn Alehouse Scarlet Harlot, Deschutes Red Chair IPA, Anderson Valley Boont Amber, and Lost Coast Tangerine Wheat. The large refrigerator, still on the way to being fully stocked, is off to a good start with Russian River Pliny the Elder and Blind Pig IPA.<br /><br />When I was there last Friday, I was able to enjoy a few beers with Sean, the original owner of Vino's, a good friend of David's, and current owner of Kona Café next door. Plans are starting to be talked about again for a pub crawl (Sean allways wanted to get one going), possibly pint nights, and other events.<br /><br />It's been awhile since the closure of local favorite, Vino's, created a hole in the Roseville beer scene. The Chef's Table is off to a great start towards filling that hole. It will be great to know the Owl Club isn’t our only option for a small local "pub" with good beer. If you are looking for a place to have good beer while wine enthusisasts in your group enjoy good wine, uou have to check this place out!Unknownnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3325027617333630443.post-28296437406463187822009-05-29T15:00:00.000-07:002009-05-29T15:03:44.737-07:00Rubicon Brewing's Maibock Festival 5/23Written by Jeff Barber<br /><br />I had the opportunity to join the Beer Geek last Saturday for a visit to Rubicon Brewing in Sacramento for their annual Maibock Festival. Although not as many choices were available as last fall's IPA Festival and there were some bocks and doppelbocks mixed in, there were some very good beers to enjoy. The Beer Geek, having lived in Germany for several years, is very familiar with how a true Maibock should taste so tasting these beers with him made it even more enjoyable.<br /><br />5 oz tastes of each beer could be tasted for $1.25 each and there were 8 beers available to try. After organizing our plan of attack, we moved quickly on to our Maibock adventure!<br /><br />First off, was the Sierra Nevada Pale Bock. Not truly a Maibock, this beer had a lingering hop taste as well as sweetness and a slight alcohol burn. Thin for a bock, it was enjoyable but not a favorite. Next we tried the Mendocino Bock. Again not a Maibock but this beer had sweetness up front with some noticeable hop presence that didn’t linger. We also noticed a slight fruitiness as well. Very tasty.<br /><br />Our third beer was also our first Maibock. Schooner Maibock, out of Antioch, CA, had a peppery character to it and was a little hoppier and had a little too much alcohol taste for a classic Maibock. Decent but not great. Following this was the Sudwerks Maibock from Davis, CA. Sudwerks has a reputation of doing German beer styles very well and their Maibock was no exception. Sweetness up front, only moderately hopped to balance the sweetness, this was a very good Maibock. True to style. Following Sudwerks, we tried the Great Basin Rock Maibock from Reno, NV. This was a little on the thin side but still tasty. It had a little less sweetness than the others and was slightly bitter in the finish. A little on the dry side too. After the Great Basin we moved on to Rubicon's Purple Maibock.This was sweet up front and slightly bitter in the finish. It was very creamy and the 6.8% ABV was well hidden. A fruity note was tasted as well. This was very good.<br /><br />That was it for the Maibocks but two beers remained. The next beer we tried was the Anchor Brewing Bock. Dark in color with a burnt caramel aroma and a strong caramel taste, this was an excellent beer. Very enjoyable. Our final beer was the Weihenstephaner Doppelbock from Germany. This had a great caramel malt aroma and a tangy, tart taste from the yeast. Slightly bitter in the finish, there was some great lacing that lingered on the glass as we savored this classic beer.<br /><br />All in all, we thoroughly enjoyed this event and look forward to it again next year. Rating the Maibocks only, by top beers were Rubicon and Sudwerks. If I rated all the beers together, I'd have to go with Weihenstephaner, Anchor, Rubicon, Sudwerks, and Mendocino.Unknownnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3325027617333630443.post-70475105474838564812009-05-28T22:43:00.000-07:002009-05-29T09:09:11.925-07:00Rick RocksOK dammit....sure I know I might be a bit inebriated ....but that's not really the point here ...The point of these words is my good buddy Rick. As a number of you already know he brewed a beer in Chico at Sierra Nevada Brewing several many weeks ago ...not just any old beer...but a brew worthy of all us beer types. (He wrote a beautiful piece on the process for Draft Magazine)<br />This evening at the ever-lovin Owl Club Rick's brew was offered up for the Pint Nite special under the very interesting and somewhat thought provoking name of IDEA!!<br />Rick (and perhaps others) will be somewhat annoyed that in a nut shell I would refer to this concoction as basically a very hopped up Porter; BUT... honestly it is much more than that... with IPA, Stout AND Porter characteristics it came on as a beer that defies categorisation.... which ultimately may be the coolest thing of all........<br />So ya...I'll shut up now.....or almost ....just go seek it out (I hear they have it in Virginia!) and let us know what you think ....because as you all must be expecting at this point....It doesn't suck.Unknownnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3325027617333630443.post-81099630129725957582009-05-20T11:52:00.000-07:002009-05-20T11:53:48.835-07:00Belgian Beer Tasting & Dinner at BJ's in Roseville June 2ndWritten by Jeff Barber<br /><br />Don’t think there are enough special beer events in Roseville? Well on June 2nd, BJ's Brewhouse will be holding a Belgian Beer Tasting & Dinner. If this is anything like the Winter Beer Dinner, they had it will be an event worth attending. For only $30, you get a 5 course dinner paired with the following beers.<br /><br />Brugse Zot (Brouwerij de Halve Maan)<br />Nit Wit (BJ's)<br />Monk's Café Flemish Sour (Brouwerij Van Steenberge)<br />Petrus Aged Pale (Brouwerij Bavik)<br />Popperings Homel (Brouwerij Van Eecke)<br />Gulden Draak (Brouwerij Van Steenberge)<br />Troubador Obscura (Brouwerij de Musketiers)<br /><br />Should be a good event. Let's get out and support this effort!Unknownnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3325027617333630443.post-31633197120216432062009-05-19T09:38:00.000-07:002009-05-19T09:40:03.480-07:00West Coast Brewfest (review #2)Posted by the Beer Geek<br /><br />Well folks, here’s my quick review of this year’s West Coast Brewfest… the bottom line: a fun brewfest with lots of great beer. Yup, it was hot again (pushing 100 - we always seem to get a hot day for this event), but Sacramento’s Miller Park has plenty of shade, so it was doable. Seemed to be a few less breweries this year and another big crowd, so some of the lines were a bit long – but the folks pouring worked as quickly as they could and did a good job.<br /><br />The great thing about beer festivals is being able to roam around and try beer you might not find in your area or might find only occasionally. So roam around I did… the BOS beer for me was Red Chair IPA from Deschutes… truly a delicious beer. Seemed like a ramped up Hop Trip – great aroma, full bodied, superbly balanced – a wonderfully “soft” IPA. This beer turned a lot of people - who thought they weren’t IPA drinkers - into IPA drinkers!<br /><br />North Coast had their Le Merle Saison and Old Rasputin (on nitro) – both were superb; the Rasputin was very smooth and creamy – hard to believe it’s an imperial stout with such a high ABV.<br /><br />Jever made its first appearance – a crisp, dry, hoppy pilsner that IPA drinkers might enjoy when they need something light and refreshing. Nice bitterness – typical northern German pils.<br /><br />I also enjoyed Sudwerk’s Maibock (dang, I missed Great Basin’s Maibock – I hope they’ll be at the Rubicon Maibock festival next weekend), and when I needed to cool down with something light, Pyramid Curveball, Kona Longboard, and Lost Coast Great White all hit the spot nicely.<br /><br />As Jeff mentioned, Sac Brew had a unique Belgian Quad (aged in port barrels) which was quite interesting indeed… we’ll have to keep an eye out to see if any becomes available at the brewery anytime soon.<br /><br />As always, there were styles to make everyone’s palate happy. As usual, I’d concentrate on a particular style and go from tent to tent for head-to-head comparisons. I started with wit beer, then started climbing the ladder of hops and malt until I arrived at the strong ales. Every comparison was interesting. By the end of the day, I do have to admit going back to the Red Chair IPA a few times… this brew was recommended by The Hop Hunter, Big Mike, himself, after one of his recent fact-finding missions to Oregon – great recommendation - what a beer!<br /><br />Finally, I also had a chance to chat with some of the other festival-goers and was surprised to hear that people were visiting from other parts of California as well as from out-of-State. I spoke with beer lovers from as far away as Oklahoma and Minnesota – comparing notes with them was a lot of fun.<br /><br />Hope to see everyone at the next brewfest!<br /><br />Cheers,<br /><br />The Beer GeekUnknownnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3325027617333630443.post-73881767327415473452009-05-18T11:48:00.000-07:002009-05-18T11:49:58.356-07:00West Coast BrewfestWritten by Jeff Barber<br /><br />West Coast Brewfest – Miller Park – May 16<br /><br />Last Saturday was the West Coast Brewfest at Miller Park in Sacramento and I felt like I was having some sort of déjà vu experience compared to last year. Great beer but way too hot and way too crowded to be truly enjoyable. They’ve had truly bad luck with the weather the last two years as both days have been over 100 degrees but the organizers need to do something with the layout, or limit the number of people, to make this an enjoyable event. Lines, even for some of the lesser known breweries were often 6-8 people long, or longer. <br /><br />Heat and crowds aside though, on to the beer. Given the high temperature I planned to focus on some the the lighter, summer weather beers so I never tried any of the stouts, etc., that were being poured. I did taste some excellent beers however. I truly didn’t have a bad beer all day. Some were better than others but none were bad. I also was limited to about two hours as my other responsibility as a dad required me to be at home for my daughter’s 12th birthday party later in the afternoon.<br /><br />My BOS for the day had to be the Whoop Ass Wit from Great Basin Brewing. Matt, the brewer at Great Basin, said they were trying for a classic wit and didn’t add any additional spices like seeds of paradise, etc. He did a great job with this wit though as you could clearly taste the spice from the coriander as well as the citrusy orange taste. He also said that the most difficult job in making this beer was zesting all the oranges they used since they went with fresh orange rather than dried orange peel, etc. It was worth it Matt. Great job!<br /><br />Honorable mention went to Sam Adams for their Imperial White, a beer that had both a Belgian dubble or tripel character to it, as well as the spicy wit character. At 10.3% ABV, definitely not a session beer.<br /><br />My other honorable mentions had to go to Blue Frog (Fairfield) for their Frog in the Rye which had an excellent spiciness and full body from the rye, and Deschutes (Bend, Ore) for their Red Chair IPA, which had lots of hops in the aroma and initial taste but carried enough malt to make it well balance and drinkable. <br /><br />Other beers I tried were as follows:<br /><br />Alaskan White-very refreshing and clean but not much spice<br /><br />Lost Coast Great White-again very refreshing but not much expected spice notes<br /><br />North Coast LeMerle-very tart and an excellent example of a saison. Great summer beer.<br /><br />Coney Island Albino Python-a spiced white lager, this had noticeable spice but a very dry finish<br /><br />Great Basin Rock MaiBock-sweet maltiness with a definite hoppy finish. Very good.<br /><br />One regret was that I missed Peter Hoey from Sacramento Brewing’s Belgian Quad. It was poured during the early VIP hour and I missed it. I heard it was outstanding however. Another regret was that by all time favorite Hefeweizen, from Blue Frog, wasn;t being poured. Typically a medal winner, it didn’t win this time. I’ll have to go to BevMo to stock up.<br /><br />Again this has the possibility of being a great event. With less people or a more spread out layout, and less heat, this event could be memorable.Unknownnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3325027617333630443.post-36911535298815488042009-05-08T12:51:00.000-07:002009-05-08T13:27:54.971-07:00WEST COAST BEER FEST JUDGING RESULTSPosted by <a href="http://www.thehophunter.blogspot.com/"><em>The Hop Hunter</em></a><br /><br />Just in - the 2009 <a href="http://www.matsonian.com/wcbf/home.html">West Coast Beer Fest</a> results. The event is next Saturday, 5/16 at Miller Park in Sacramento.<br /><br />1. Light Lager<br />1st - Blue Paddle, New Belgium<br />2nd - Longboard, Kona<br />3rd - Double Aught, Bear Republic<br /><br />2. Dark Lager<br />1st - Oktoberfest, Sam Adams<br />2nd - Longshot Bock, Sam Adams<br />3rd - Double Bock, Sam Adams<br /><br />3. Amber Ale<br />1st - Irish Red, Sam Adams<br />2nd - Red Rocket, Bear Republic<br />3rd - Green Lakes, Deschutes<br /><br />4. Light Ale<br />1st - Cascade, Deschutes<br />2nd - Hefeweizen, Widmer<br />3rd - Curveball, Pyramid<br /><br />5. American Pale Ale<br />1st - California Pale, Firestone Walker<br />2nd - Mighty Arrow, New Belgium<br />3rd - XP Pale, Bear Republic<br /><br />6. English Pale Ale<br />1st - Double Barrel, Firestone Walker<br />2nd - Best Bitter, River City<br />3rd - English Pale, Sam Adams<br /><br />7. India Pale Ale<br />1st - Racer X, Bear Republic<br />2nd - Racer 5, Bear Republic<br />3rd - Union Jack, Firestone Walker<br /><br />8. Brown Ale<br />1st - Downtown Brown, Lost Coast<br />2nd - Brown Ale, Sam Adams<br />3rd - Peters Tribute Brown, Bear Republic<br /><br />9. Porter<br />1st - Smoked Porter, Alaskan<br />2nd - Pugsley’s Imperial, Shipyard<br />3rd - Black Butte, Deschutes<br /><br />10. Stout<br />1st - Obsidian, Deschutes<br />2nd - Double Chocolate, Wells & Young<br />3rd - Big Bear, Bear Republic<br /><br />11. Wheat<br />1st - White, Allagash<br />2nd - Mothership Wit, New Belgium<br />3rd - White, Alaskan<br /><br />12. Fruit Beer<br />1st - Raspberry Brown, Lost Coast<br />2nd - Orange Blossom, Buck Bean<br />3rd - Cranberry Wit, Sam Adams<br /><br />13. Strong Ale<br />1st - Abyss, Deschutes<br />2nd - Barley Wine, Alaskan<br />3rd - Scotch Ale, Sam Adams<br /><br />14. Mixed<br />1st - Summer Ale, Alaskan<br />2nd - Boston Ale, Sam Adams<br />3rd - Alaskan Amber, Alaskan<br /><br />15. Belgian Ales<br />1st - Dissident, Deschutes<br />2nd - Abby, New Belgium<br />3rd - Tripel, New Belgium<br /><br />16. Cider<br />1st - Pear Cider, Fox Barrel<br />2nd - Mulled, Fox Barrel<br />3rd - Gravenstein, Two Rivers<br /><br />17. Other<br />1st - Albino Python, Shmaltz<br />2nd - Green Citrus, Sam Adams<br />3rd - Backyard Batch, Sam Adams<br /><br />18. Imports<br />1st - Wee Heavy, Belhaven<br />2nd - Barbar, Lefebvre<br />3rd - Mahleur 12, De LandtsheerUnknownnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3325027617333630443.post-70392226324209143992009-04-28T22:34:00.000-07:002009-04-29T22:47:12.757-07:00Sad DayThe rumors in my part of the world have been swirling for some time. Weeks ago I heard they stopped brewing. Then I was told by the brewer to come by to make sure I tried a special beer. A few days back I was there and saw a line of empty fermentation tanks and a brewery that looked more like a stage that had gone dark. Tonight the inevitable news came that my local brewery, Beermann's Beerwerks, was closing at the end of the week.<br /><br />I must admit the news hit me pretty hard, not because it's surprising or unwarranted, but because this is the place I cut my teeth on with craft beer. It was at Beermann's where I met some of my closest friends. People at Beermann's taught me to homebrew, introduced me to the BJCP and in general opened the doors of the beer world to me. In a life where I now work full time around craft beer, you can say I owe a lot to this local brewery.<br /><br />Add to that some of my favorite folks spent time working at Beermann's, people like my BJCP teacher and friend David Teckam, owner and brewer at Auburn Alehouse Brian Ford and two of the coolest cats I know - Andy Armstrong and Tim Spinelli. The place oozed with character, some good and some questionable. The beers were always good, albeit inconsistent. The people were always fun and you couldn't help but love seeing birthday boys and girls drinking a yard of beer on Besty, the brewery cow. There were nights of debauchery, evidenced by the panties still hanging on the antlers of the stuff dear head on the wall (as well as scandelous photos pasted on the wall). I also spent several nights that turned into early mornings with the brew crew, playing dice and drinking a month's supply in one sitting. God, those were great times.<br /><br />The place was bigger than the building, too. When I worked for a major computer manufacturer they came by several times a year to pour beers for us cubical workers. They were at fund raisers, fairs and just about anywhere the community gathered - this was OUR brewery in Roseville. Man, just thinking about the gaping holes here makes me need another sip.<br /><br />I don't know. The whole thing stinks! Andy and Tim are both stand-up individuals, passionate and personable. I sincerely hope they find work at another brewery sooner than later - closer than further. They've done the dirty work for years, have proven to be capable - they belong in the beer industry.<br /><br />On a bigger scale, the local brewing scene seems even worse. The BJ's Brewery in Roseville has, for lack of a better word, shipped out the brewery operations to Reno and beyond. Citrus Height's Oasis closed. Roseville's Greenhouse organic brewery closed. Now we lose the one brewery that seemed most appropriate for Roseville, Beermann's. Hopefully the closures stop here and I'm happy we still have Mary's Pizza Shack and apparently Basic in the coming weeks.<br /><br />To the folks at Beermann's - thank you! From all of us here at Pacific Brew News, thank you! You've been so kind to us all these years, kept us in good supply whenever we needed and always made us feel at home. Your loss is our loss, and when you close your doors on Friday there will be a whole mess of people that will miss everything you represent, everything you gave to us over the past decade. We wish you the best.<br /><br />Some Stuff:<br /><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3594/3322258994_e83eb939ee.jpg?v=0"><img style="margin: 0px auto 10px; display: block; text-align: center; cursor: pointer; width: 500px; height: 332px;" src="http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3594/3322258994_e83eb939ee.jpg?v=0" alt="" border="0" /></a><br /><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3648/3321426981_02c41faf11.jpg?v=0"><img style="margin: 0px auto 10px; display: block; text-align: center; cursor: pointer; width: 500px; height: 332px;" src="http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3648/3321426981_02c41faf11.jpg?v=0" alt="" border="0" /></a><br /><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3628/3322257776_06c4627a11.jpg?v=0"><img style="margin: 0px auto 10px; display: block; text-align: center; cursor: pointer; width: 500px; height: 332px;" src="http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3628/3322257776_06c4627a11.jpg?v=0" alt="" border="0" /></a><br /><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3642/3321427599_0a68f7de99.jpg?v=0"><img style="margin: 0px auto 10px; display: block; text-align: center; cursor: pointer; width: 500px; height: 332px;" src="http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3642/3321427599_0a68f7de99.jpg?v=0" alt="" border="0" /></a><br /><br /><object height="225" width="400"><param name="allowfullscreen" value="true"><param name="allowscriptaccess" value="always"><param name="movie" value="http://vimeo.com/moogaloop.swf?clip_id=606575&server=vimeo.com&show_title=1&show_byline=1&show_portrait=0&color=&fullscreen=1"><embed src="http://vimeo.com/moogaloop.swf?clip_id=606575&server=vimeo.com&show_title=1&show_byline=1&show_portrait=0&color=&fullscreen=1" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" allowfullscreen="true" allowscriptaccess="always" height="225" width="400"></embed></object><br /><a href="http://vimeo.com/606575">Brewery Tour | Beermann's Beerwerks</a> from <a href="http://vimeo.com/user340364">Rick</a> on <a href="http://vimeo.com/">Vimeo</a>.Unknownnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3325027617333630443.post-2265708372954058252009-04-24T10:15:00.000-07:002009-04-24T10:20:29.470-07:00Mirror Mirror at Pint Night at the Owl ClubWritten by Jeff Barber<br /><br />How good is Mirror Mirror, a barley wine from the Reserve Series at Deschutes Brewing? Judging by the comments, as well as my own opinion, I heard at the Owl Club on Thursday night, it’s outstanding. <br /><br />Given a chance to taste Mirror Mirror from the only keg in Northern California prior to the official release date of April 27, beer lovers were out in force for the Owl Club’s pint night. Last bottled in 2006, Mirror Mirror, aged for 10 months in oak barrels, is really a 1st class barley wine. The aroma is defintely malt forward although there are some citrusy notes as well. With a slightly sweet taste up front followed more malt and finishing with a blast of hops, this beer is extremely well balanced. The 11.5% ABV is very well hidden (and dangerous). I didn’t really start noticing the alcoholic warmth until my second beer but by the end of that beer, I could feel the effects. One of the patrons was on his fifth Mirror Mirror and it was hard to believe he was still lucid and standing.<br /><br />I only heard glowing comments all night about this beer and consider it to be one of my top five favorite beers of the past year. The Reserve Series at Deschutes, with Abyss, XX Porter, and Dissident leading off, sets a very high bar for beer quality. Mirror Mirror clearly continues with the tradition.<br /><br />I also wanted to compliment Bianca at the Owl Club for continuing to bring in excellent beers for us to try. Pint Night on Thursdays has become a local favorite as she continues to get early releases and rare kegs for us. Pliny the Elder, Abyss, and now Mirror Mirror are just a few examples. If you’re near Roseville on a Thursday night, check out the Owl Club. The pint night special, and her dozen or so other taps, won’t disappoint you.Unknownnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3325027617333630443.post-67547739313478532952009-04-18T15:57:00.000-07:002009-04-18T21:46:57.256-07:00Merely a skirmishWritten by; Mike Sober (The Hop Hunter)<br /><br />Thursday night I found my way to the local Bijou to watch the premier of Anat Baron's documentary <strong><em><a href="http://beerwarsmovie.com/">Beer Wars</a>. </em></strong><br /><br />The basic premise of her movie is to reveal the goings-on behind the beers that occupy the shelves of American Supermarkets and the tap handles of your favorite local pub or bar.<br />The movie delves into the big Macro Brewers efforts to continue to dominate those spaces verses the more localized Craft brewers struggles to bring their products to the ever more curious and educated beer drinking public.<br /><br />Another version of David vs Goliath..... and dare I say Good vs Evil?<br /><br />Well it isn't really that clear....depending upon one's taste BUDs I assume ...pun nervously intended.<br /><br />I'm uncertain when this movie will be available again for public consumption or if it's bound to go straight to the Discovery channel or DVD but when it does it will certainly be worth a look.<br /><br />I found it educational and interesting throughout despite it's strange and somewhat creepy tendency to dwell too long into the everyday lives of a couple of the main characters.....Dogfish Head Brewer Sam Calagione and beer/caffeine entrepreneur and former Boston Brewing executive Rhonda Kallman.<br />I could go on and on about the film but considering I'm inherently lazy and I was in the theatre sitting next to <a href="http://http//news.draftmag.com/2009/04/17/draft-staff-respond-to-beer-wars/">DRAFT Magazine </a>Beer Director and good buddy Rick Sellers (who was of course taking copious notes throughout the feature in his usual hard working manner)....I would rather direct you to the DRAFT Magazines News area for Rick's far superior and much more detailed account of the movie.<br />Really.... check it out ......off you go now......Unknownnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3325027617333630443.post-54025083297576362342009-04-15T14:44:00.000-07:002009-04-15T15:34:25.416-07:00Portland Spring Beer and Wine FestWritten by Jeff Barber<br /><br />Portland Spring Beer and Wine Fest<br /><br />While visiting Portland last weekend, I had the opportunity to visit the Spring beer and Wine Fest at the Portland Convention Center. This event, as it says in the title, is more than just a beer fest. With 44 breweries, 22 wineries and numerous seminars and cheese stands, there was something for everyone.<br /><br />Kudos also go to the organizers as even though the line to get in looked daunting, it moved quickly and we were soon tasting beer. Costs were reasonable as I paid $5 for a tasting mug and $15 for 15 tasting tokens. This turned out to be more than enough as we were only there two hours and the tastes were poured generously.<br /><br />Anyway, on to the beer. Having scoped out the map and list of beers being poured, my brother Mike, a beer enthusiast but first time brew fest attendee, started out with a couple of fruit beers.<br /><br />First off, was the Lost Coast (Eureka, CA) Tangerine Wheat. This beer had a noticeable orange aroma, as well as a good citrusy wheat beer taste and a definite orange (but not too sweet) finish. This beer was enjoyable and would be great on a hot summer day.<br /><br />Our second beer was New Belgium Mighty Arrow. A pale ale with honey malt and Amarillo and Cascade hops, this beer was kind of ho hum. Not bad but it didn’t stand out in either flavor or aroma.<br /><br />Our third beer was supposed to be Lang Creek Brewing (Marion, MT) Mandarin Hefeweizen but they had all ready run out of this beer. Since they were pouring their Huckleberry and Honey Ale we decided to try it. This was a great tasting beer as the honey helped round out the flavor of the huckleberries. A little on the sweet side with a noticeable berry aroma, this beer finished dry and is only 3.2% ABV so several could be enjoyed in one sitting.<br /><br />Next we moved on to Widmer’s Nelson O’Rye’lly. Since I am a fan of rye beers, I had high expectations for this one and we weren’t disappointed. This beer was billed as an IPA with rye. There was noticeable grapefruit from the hops but the spicy dry finish of a rye beer. Very good.<br /><br />Next up was Calapooia rIPArian IPA-Albany, Or. I found this to be closer to a pale ale than an IPA. Again, another beer that was good but not great.<br /><br />We moved on from there to the Ft. George-Astoria, OR., Quick Wit. The wit beer is one of my favorite styles and I found this to be a good example of the style with noticeable coriander in both the aroma and flavor. A little more bitter orange would have made this a truly memorable beer but it was quite refreshing.<br /><br />Next was the Laurelwood Saison. After really enjoying the Laurelwood Workhorse IPA the night before, I looked forward to trying this beer. Saisons can be great beers with lots of tartness, earthiness and noble hops. Unfortunately, I found this beer to unexciting with little of the character I’ve had with other saisons.<br /><br />Following the saison however, we had probably the most unique beer of the day. Duchese de Bourgogne is a Flemish Red Ale. My brother didn’t care for this beer which can be an acquired taste, but I found it to be quite good. Noticeable vinegar and sour apple followed by some sweetness, this was truly a complex beer with an excellent full mouthfeel.<br /><br />Coming down the homestretch of our visit, we decided to search out a beer from a brewery I had always heard of but never tried anything from. Big Black Homo from Walking Man Brewing in Stevens, WA., turned out to be my best of show. A black Imperial IPA this beer was truly outstanding and one that made me think of the great hop hunter, Big Mike from PBN. At 100 IBUs, this beer had plenty of hoppy bitterness to it but was also combined with chocolaty malt. Unique but outstanding.<br /><br />From Walking Man, we moved on to Bridgeport, one of Portland’s original breweries, for their Fallen Friar. This beer is a Belgian triple but combines pilsner and Pacific NW malt with Belgian yeast for a great version of the triple. Aged in bourbon and red wine barrels, and 8.2% ABV, this beer would be great on a chilly Portland night.<br /><br />Our final beer was Astoria Brewing’s Bitter Bitch. This beer is an Imperial IPA and at 99 IBU, the hops didn’t disappoint. There was very little sweetness that can sometimes be found in lesser Imp IPAs but lots of citrusy flavor from the hops (mostly orange and grapefruit). Some pine notes were also noticeable.<br /><br />My top beers of the day in order were Walking Man’s Big Black Homo, Bridgeport’s Fallen Friar, and Widmer’s Nelson O’Rye’lly. My brother Mike’s favorites were the Fallen Friar, the Lost Coast Tangerine Wheat and the Lang Creek Huckleberry and Honey.<br /><br />All in all, this was a great event. It was well organized and in a venue large enough for the number of people attending. After last year’s heat and crowds at the California Brew fest, it was truly a welcome change. It was an event worthy of Portland's beer reputation!Unknownnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3325027617333630443.post-34295867791830579462009-04-04T18:35:00.000-07:002009-04-04T19:54:31.170-07:00The Shack<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgZ35s8p4_VGxxt4m89VCJhLdmRprpNG0r9Omw6XH_VAqwoEfA6l6EQEoVO8wmTPYE7isZi2Yo_IMZQuEmqxK5EhlsO2sO2zf8gDtF4CoboqKzRuW-UTBK6oj_IA7XfuDsSNLC_-SmHcWcq/s1600-h/The+Shack.jpg"><img id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5321016059815361602" style="FLOAT: left; MARGIN: 0px 10px 10px 0px; WIDTH: 400px; CURSOR: hand; HEIGHT: 266px" alt="" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgZ35s8p4_VGxxt4m89VCJhLdmRprpNG0r9Omw6XH_VAqwoEfA6l6EQEoVO8wmTPYE7isZi2Yo_IMZQuEmqxK5EhlsO2sO2zf8gDtF4CoboqKzRuW-UTBK6oj_IA7XfuDsSNLC_-SmHcWcq/s400/The+Shack.jpg" border="0" /></a><br />Typically traveling the freeways of Sacramento during weekday rush hours is a slow and painful proposition and last Thursday was certainly no exception. So naturally I did what any responsible beer enthusiast would do in that situation.....I found a good watering hole and waited out the gridlock.<br />Following a marvelous text tip from PBN founder and good buddy Rick my lucky destination turned out the be <a href="http://eastsacshack.com/">THE SHACK</a>; which is located at 5201 Folsom Blvd in a vintage area of Sacramento just East of where the Business 80 and Highway 50 cross. According to Owner/Beer host Gary Sleppy this 193o's era building is the second oldest continuously running restaurant in all of Sacramento. Despite the somewhat garish Reggae inspired motif I immediately felt comfortable and at home in what is obviously a very popular destination for the local inhabitants.<br />The Shack's menu offerings includes the usual solid pub comfort food as well as gourmet dinner offerings that range from Rib eye steak to mussels, squash Ravioli, several salads and a very interesting and popular dish called Porky Pear. A sage and bacon wrapped pork w/Asian Pear pan sauce.<br />But of course it is the beer selection that impressed me most about the place....that along with Owner Gary's infectious enthusiasm, obvious beer appreciation and overall knowledge of his extensive inventory. <br />The Shack has 8 tap handles for draft beer and a walk in 'beer fridge' full of dozens of other styles from across the beer spectrum. The taps included...<br />Speakeasy <em>Prohibition</em><br />Rubicon Brewing <em>IPA</em><br />Oskar Blues <em>Gordon</em> <br />Grimergen <em>Belgian Abbey</em><br />Green Flash <em>West Coast IPA</em><br />Sudwerks <em>Pilsner</em><br />Pabst<em> Blue Ribbon</em><br />The bottle selection is far to extensive to list here..but some of the notables for me were<br />Russian River Pliny The Elder<br />Lagunitas Hop Stoopid<br />North Coast Brewing Old Rasputin<br />Alaskan Brewing Smoked Porter<br />Fire Stone Walker Union Jack IPA<br />Sierra Nevada Brewing Torpedo and Celebration<br />As well as the huge list of Belgians, German Hefeweisens, Doppelbocks and Octoberfests.<br />By the time I decided I'd better go check on the traffic situation and make my way home there was no more traffic....or sunlight left in the day.<br />I soon realized I'd spent over three hours on that bar stool, trading beers with Gary, talking to at least a dozen friendly patrons and enjoying the beer board above the entrance to the bustling kitchen area.<br />To say I recommend a visit to The Shack would be a gross understatement...I personally can't wait to take my wife Terri for a visit to soak up some local Sacramento neighborhood hospitality and suffer the beauty that is trying to figure out which beer I want next.<br />Of course.... like a lot of The Shacks customers......I could always just ask Gary.....he's sure to have some helpful recommendations.<br /><br /><br /><br /><em></em><br /><em></em>Unknownnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3325027617333630443.post-42343245163605943542009-03-27T11:03:00.000-07:002009-03-27T11:06:36.831-07:00Beer Tasting at WineStyles?Written by Jeff Barber<br /><br />On Thursday, March 26th, WineStyles in Rocklin held their first beer tasting event. While attendance can be improved, it was well-received, good beers were poured, and it hopefully was the start of something new for the WineStyles monthly calendar.<br /><br />Originally planned as a spring/summer beer event, the final lineup of beers was changed slightly based on distributor availability. A good variety of beers were still offered however.<br /><br />The first beer we poured was Boulder Brewing Buffalo Gold. A lightly carbonated, easy drinking, golden ale, this was a good beer for those making the transition from macros to microbrews or maybe while mowing the lawn on a hot summer day.<br /><br />Next up was the world-renowned Double Trouble Hefeweizen. Actually, this was my homebrewed hefeweizen, brewed in the German style with noticeable notes of clove and banana. As a home brewer, it was good to see people enjoying my beer.<br /><br />Third was Sierra Nevada’s ESB. This was another solid entry from Sierra Nevada, meant to simulate the British extra special bitter style, it is brewed with both US and British hops and is unfiltered resulting in an enhanced aroma of malt and mouthfeel.<br /><br />Next in line was Rogue’s Dead Guy Ale. This beer has always been a personal favorite and is brewed in the German Maibock style. Although an ale, instead of a lager, as true maibocks are, this beer has a prominent malty aroma and hearty flavor. A good mix of malt and hops with a slightly increased level of alcohol at 6.5% ABV.<br /><br />Our fifth beer was our first entry from Mendocino Brewing, Red Tail Ale. This is an excellent example of an American amber. Full bodied with Cascade and Cluster hops, a slight citrus flavor is noticed. Personally, I prefer this amber over the more well-known, Fat Tire, as it has more flavor.<br /><br />We then moved on to a unique version of an amber ale, Hazed and Infused by Boulder Brewing. This amber is both unfiltered and dry hopped. I really enjoyed this beer, especially the aroma, but heard some comments from some of the tasters that this beer was too bitter or hoppy. Hoppiness is an acquired taste.<br /><br />Our next to last beer was Mirror Pond Pale Ale by Dechutes Brewing. One of the classic pale ales with lots of grapefruit and pine from the NW hops, this is a great beer for hop lovers. At 5% ABV, it’s also one that can be enjoyed almost as a session beer.<br /><br />Our final beer was our only selection approaching a big beer. Eye of the Hawk from Mendocino Brewing is 8% ABV with a strong caramel malt flavor, a big mouthfeel, and enough hops to balance. It also is bottle conditioned resulting in natural carbonation and some richer flavors. This beer was the favorite of most of the people I asked.<br /><br />This was a very enjoyable event that according to Francis, owner of Winestyles, will be repeated. It’s a good example of WineStyles efforts to expand their beer offerings. Their regular lineup is small but good with offerings such Sierra Nevada Celebration (almost gone), Bear Republic Racer 5, and Lost Coast Great White. When you get a chance, make sure and stop by and make sure you tell Francis you appreciate his efforts to make good beer available.Unknownnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3325027617333630443.post-22625757006917621262009-03-12T22:31:00.000-07:002009-03-12T22:52:53.503-07:00Airport Beer GuideAlthough it is proving extremely difficult... I sorta promise I will attempt to refrain from making any poor taste stereotypical cracks about airline pilots despite the following information.<br />For people that spend anytime at all in airports or flying about the country there is now a guide to help you endure all those delayed flights and boorish tourists.<br />Cheapflights has created the free <a href="http://marketing.cheapflights.com/guides/beerguide.pdf">Airport Beer Guide </a>to help you locate a decent brew in some of the larger U.S. airports. And of course new meaning to Twelve O'clock High.....oh damn.....sorry.Unknownnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3325027617333630443.post-46722736011412024962009-03-03T12:06:00.000-08:002009-03-03T12:10:10.365-08:00"Big Beer Fest" at Beermann's in Roseville<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjYq6ViuPHRe9BH3DDshoUyrO3qIEGBExD8M6NRP3S94USjN4HlPOVHAeTUU_KeV6_v_TSSGnfpFZ2gL6d1x4rGR_GHutipgbwm5j2g9qvYUih66WCSb1f59xowhNTn9a6YJVzsNAnLmRI/s1600-h/beermanns.jpg"><img style="float:left; margin:0 10px 10px 0;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 320px; height: 213px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjYq6ViuPHRe9BH3DDshoUyrO3qIEGBExD8M6NRP3S94USjN4HlPOVHAeTUU_KeV6_v_TSSGnfpFZ2gL6d1x4rGR_GHutipgbwm5j2g9qvYUih66WCSb1f59xowhNTn9a6YJVzsNAnLmRI/s320/beermanns.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5309056301973739250" /></a><br />Written by Jeff Barber<br /><br />On Saturday, February 28, a truly outstanding beer event was put on by Beermann’s in Roseville. Years in the planning and now commemorating the exit of Beermann’s head brewer, Mike Sutherland, a lineup of aged barley wines and other big beers were put out for everyone’s enjoyment, some aged since 2002, and they were enjoyed by all. In some cases, previous brewers at Beermann’s who had moved on, came back to enjoy barley wines that were brewed before they left such as with Brian Ford, now with the Auburn Alehouse.<br /><br />Beermann’s is a small brewery that opens on Thursday and Friday afternoons for informal happy hours. The atmosphere is casual and often feels like you’re enjoying beer over at someone’s house. Saturday was no exception.<br /><br />Where to start? Where we started was with the 2002 barley wines made with fruit. The first was brewed with raspberries. What was most surprising about this beer was that after 7 years, the aroma still had a noticeable smell of the berries. There was also tartness still present in the flavor and I thought I picked up some sherry character as well. This was a great beer and started the adventure off right<br /><br />Up second was what turned out to be my favorite of a bunch of truly great beers. The 2002 Bourbon Barrel barley wine was brewed with cherries. The fruit provided some sourness and dryness to the beer but the malt provided great balance. While the cherries and barrel aging provided a great flavor, the lack of sweetness was unique to this offering. I found later that I was comparing the other beers I tried to this as my gold medal.<br /><br />Following the 2002, we moved to the 2003 Strong Blonde aged in oak. This beer was dominated by the oak aging in both aroma and flavor. It was thinner than most of the others with noticeable alcohol but I enjoyed the variety, and in fact liked this beer quite a lot.<br /><br />In order to be able to remain standing at the end, I chose to skip their 1000th brew, a double IPA, and their 2004 triple IPA. According to others I talked to, the Triple was outstanding but the double was still young (brewed a couple of months ago).<br /><br />We then moved on to the 2006 version of their Bourbon Barrel Barley wine. This beer had a noticeable sweetness to it with some notes of vanilla from the bourbon barrels and a possibility of hazelnuts. A very good version of their barley wine,<br /><br />After the 2006 Bourbon Barrel, we had the 2005 version. Heavier, with more vanilla from the barrels than the 2006, I preferred this version. There was a slight citrus note as well. Not a beer to drink several of but an outstanding barley wine!<br /><br />Next up was the 2004 barley wine, Mr. Big. The version was never put into wood barrels and as a result, didn’t have the vanilla notes and wasn’t as sweet as the other two. Roasted malt was more noticeable in this version as well. This was another great example, especially for those who favor un-oaked barley wines.<br /><br />We soldiered on and moved to the 2002 Bourbon Barrel Barley Wine. This beer was proof that the right beer can be aged for multiple years. Right up there in enjoyment with cherry version, this beer was more subdued than the others but still complex, as a good barley wine should be. Still sweet but more caramel-like than vanilla, this beer was exceptional.<br /><br />This was great event enjoyed by all and well worth the $30 entry. People truly enjoy a lot of small breweries around the states and events like this are why. Rumors have it that Beermann’s is being sold. Here’s hoping the new owners keep up the good work done by Mike and his staff.Unknownnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3325027617333630443.post-16933455604363615522009-02-09T17:24:00.000-08:002009-02-12T21:59:05.337-08:009th Annual Bistro Double IPA Fest<span style="font-size:85%;">By Mike Sober (AKA The HopHunter)</span><br /><br />For the better part of the last decade <a href="http://the-bistro.com/">The Bistro </a>in Old Town Hayward California has been THE place for hop lovers to congregate on the first Saturday of every February. This years 9th Annual Double IPA Festival was the biggest and best ever and one can only imagine how next years version can hope to top it. But I'm getting ahead of myself......something very easy to do at an epic event of this scale.<br /><br />The inaugural Double IPA fest in 2001 featured barely a dozen total entries and was held indoors in the Bistro's everyday bar area. This years extravaganza completely shut down the street South of the bar and included no less than 46 double IPA's.<br /><br />As per tradition at this world class kickoff to <a href="http://sfbeerweek.org/">San Francisco Beer Week </a>all the beers are judged prior to the noon start and the winners announced half way through at 4:00pm or so.<br /><br />When you sign up and pay for your taster glass and drink coupons you also get a double sided 8-1/2"x11" printout with every Brewery/Beer/Location/Brewer/ABV and IBU's listed in alphabetical order.<br /><br />Every year I take notes, chart and evaluate all the beers I tried and in what order I drank them.....and every year I look back on it and marvel at how selective I had to be in my choices and how small a dent I put in the total.<br /><br />This year I sampled 24 brews, a couple of them twice....which barely covers half of the field. These my friends are just some big ass beers.<br /><br />I had my own favorites of course but ...... The official winners for 2009 were<br /><br />GOLD - Pizza Port "<em>Poormans IPA</em>" - Carlsbad CA<br />SILVER - Triple Rock "<em>IIMAXX Imperial IPA</em>" - Berkeley CA<br />BRONZE - Bear Republic "<em>Apex</em>" - Healdsburg CA (A repeat medalist)<br />PEOPLES CHOICE - Russian River "<em>Pliny the Younger</em>" - Santa Rosa CA (For the second consecutive year)<br /><br />My personal favorites included (in alphabetical order)<br />Auburn Ale House "<em>Isotope PU240</em>" - Auburn CA<br />Beach Chalet "<em>The Baron</em>" - San Francisco CA<br />Big Dogs "<em>Hop Harvest Ale</em>" - Las Vegas NV<br />Fifty/Fifty "<em>Landslide</em>" - Truckee, CA<br />Lagunitas "<em>Hop Stoopid</em>" - Petaluma CA<br />Pizza Port "<em>Lou P Lin</em>" - Solano Beach CA<br />Rogue "<em>XSIPA</em>" - Newport OR<br />Rubicon "<em>REX IPA</em>" - Sacramento CA<br />Seabright "<em>Hopnoxious</em>" - Santa Cruz CA<br />Sierra Nevada "<em>Hop Secret 393</em>" - Chico CA<br />Stone "<em>Sublimely Self Righteous Ale</em>" - Escondido CA<br /><br />I suppose not mentioning Hopsickle, Hop 15, Torpedo,White Knuckle, Pliny the Elder,Double Daddy, Ruination, Double Trouble, Pure Hoppiness, Mach 10, 90 & 120 minute IPA, Denogginizer, Double Dog, Imperial IPA, Casey Jones Double, Quasar, Promised Land, Ale to the Chief,The Big DIPA, Steelhead Double, Moylander, Gordon, Hop Henge Experimental,Jersey Giant, Firkin Chico, and Bittersweet Lanny's RIPA would seem a bit of an oversight.....but nothing could be further from the truth........well maybe something could be further from the truth...like telling you I could drive home after all those beers. They tell me I had a good time and I know they're correct. I absolutely cannot wait for the first weekend of February in 2010.<br />Check out a few photos and judge for yourself......<br /><br /><br /><br /><img style="DISPLAY: block; MARGIN: 0px auto 10px; WIDTH: 441px; CURSOR: pointer; HEIGHT: 280px; TEXT-ALIGN: center" alt="" src="http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3490/3270199376_d2465205b1.jpg?v=0" border="0" /><br /><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3391/3269378263_94f6637dc1.jpg?v=0"><img style="DISPLAY: block; MARGIN: 0px auto 10px; WIDTH: 500px; CURSOR: pointer; HEIGHT: 332px; TEXT-ALIGN: center" alt="" src="http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3391/3269378263_94f6637dc1.jpg?v=0" border="0" /></a><br /><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3431/3270373152_a6d94d9d94.jpg?v=0"><img style="DISPLAY: block; MARGIN: 0px auto 10px; WIDTH: 500px; CURSOR: pointer; HEIGHT: 332px; TEXT-ALIGN: center" alt="" src="http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3431/3270373152_a6d94d9d94.jpg?v=0" border="0" /></a><br /><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="http://farm2.static.flickr.com/1292/3270370192_283e567785.jpg?v=0"><img style="DISPLAY: block; MARGIN: 0px auto 10px; WIDTH: 500px; CURSOR: pointer; HEIGHT: 332px; TEXT-ALIGN: center" alt="" src="http://farm2.static.flickr.com/1292/3270370192_283e567785.jpg?v=0" border="0" /></a><br /><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3526/3269555423_d80fedcd4b.jpg?v=0"><img style="DISPLAY: block; MARGIN: 0px auto 10px; WIDTH: 332px; CURSOR: pointer; HEIGHT: 500px; TEXT-ALIGN: center" alt="" src="http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3526/3269555423_d80fedcd4b.jpg?v=0" border="0" /></a>Unknownnoreply@blogger.com