The Abyss 2015 x 3: Fresh Out of Adjectives

TPF
I had intended to write this post about the THREE(!) versions of Deschutes

Brewery’s “The Abyss” – that legendary, iconic American Imperial Stout that I have frequently called “the best beverage I have ever tasted” – Monday of last week. But when I sat down to write it, a strange thing happened. I normally let a subject for review marinate in my subconscious, think about it frequently, and work out any kinks in my reasoning. It takes hours, sometimes, days others. But then it just pops right out, almost on auto-pilot, because I’ve already done the thinking. The rest, as Truman Capote would say, is “just typing“.

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How to Make Beer Ice Cream

how to make beer ice cream

New Belgium Brewing and Ben & Jerry’s Ice Cream joined forces to bring the best of beer and ice cream together. New Belgium brewed an ice cream-inspired Salted Caramel Brownie Ale, while Ben & Jerry’s is working on an innovative ice cream flavor using this beer called Salted Caramel Brown-ie Ale.

But believe it or not, New Belgium and Ben & Jerry’s isn’t the first brewery-creamery team to pursue an ice cream that embodies the nuances of beer. Just take a look at I Scream, You Scream: It’s Craft Beer Ice Cream! featured on CraftBeer.com, which highlights some of the beer-y endeavors taken on by ice creameries and craft breweries across the nation.

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Beer Profile: Devil’s Backbone’s Danzig Baltic Porter

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Profiled by Ken Carman

Black as hell with some deep ruby highlights. Light tan foam head, about ½ inch thick. This looks quite dense, and deep. Slight ruby red highlights at the edges in a strong light. Can’t be seen through, other than that.

Aroma: nice deep roast, no hops, fresh smelling and a slight lager yeast sense. This bugger is packed with malts, and a lot of dark malts. But hard to pick them apart. No hop nose.

The magic here is in the mouthfeel and the taste. NOT aroma. DEEP , malt sense. Heavy gravity obvious. Thick. Chewy. Obviously tons of grain and slight lager yeast sense. Getting sulfur way in the background; very light. If not from the yeast, most likely, then water? Does not seem a defect, more just part of the lager sense. The malts are dark, yet not roasty in the same sense as one would get from a stout, or an out of balance Baltic. It’s more like a deep, debittered, dark malt sense.

This is one of the better Baltics I’ve had. It is Baltic, as one would expect from Devil’s Backbone which has several examples listed as a “classic of the style” on the 2015 BJCP guidelines.

85 BA. 97/90 RB.

4.5

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Welcome to the PGA beer rating system: one beer “Don’t bother.” Two: Eh, if someone gives it to you, drink. Three: very good, go ahead and seek it out, but be aware there is at least one problem. Four: seek it out. Five: pretty much “perfecto.”

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kYes, to the left is Ken Carman. Obviously Ken is a creature of 2 dimensions so he can slip in and out of breweries and sample their wares. He also has been known to sneak into WWE matches and pants the people in the ring just to underline how silly the farce called “pro” wrestling is.

Home Beer News Beer Reviews Beer Styles Breweries Events Beer Week Festivals Tasting/Pairing Features Dan’s Blog Four Brewers Franny Interviews Polls Sponsored Supporters Artisanal Brewing Ventures Acquires Victory Brewing, Merges With Southern Tier Brewing

(Downingtown, PA) – Having just marked 20 years in the craft brewing industry, Victory Brewing Company (Victory) proudly announces a landmark alliance with Southern Tier Brewing Company (Southern Tier) under parent company Artisanal Brewing Ventures (ABV). As the first major transaction of 2016 within the rapidly evolving craft beer industry, this union presents a new model for craft beer partnerships by preserving brewery independence while pooling deep collective resources.

Victory Brewing - Southern Tier - Artisanal Brewing Ventures

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Dogmatic Brewing (or, What Rudyard Kipling Can Teach Us About Beer)

Dogma (n.): a belief or set of beliefs that is accepted by the members of a group without being questioned or doubted. 

That’s the Merriam-Webster definition of “dogma,” and I never realized how much we run into this as brewers – until I started offering brewing advice to brewers.  We’re a pretty dogmatic bunch, it turns out.  Which sucks, because “Dogmatic Brewing” sounds like a pretty cool name for a brewery…

Since I started writing Beer Simple, I’ve offered in the Brewing posts a number of recommendations, suggestions, and commentaries on brewing.  Not that I expect that every one is a gem that needs to be adopted – far from it, in fact.  Brew your own way.  I heartily and happily acknowledge that I’m not a biologist, chemist, professional brewer, or metallurgist.  I like to think I’m just the friendly neighbor, chatting over the fence.  “Say, Bob, you ever think about putting that sprinkler on a timer?  Works well for me.”  Like that.

But often, the response isn’t just that someone isn’t interested in the advice (which is perfectly fine, of course – your beer, your rules!).  It’s that what I’m saying simply can’t be right.  But why not?  Shouldn’t the proof be in the Pilsner, so to speak?

DOGMATIC BREWING

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Talking Hops with the Women of Craft Beer

t’s 2016, and while there’s still plenty of progress to be made, the world of craft producing (and enjoying) is treating itself like less of a boys’ club. As of two years ago, Nielsen research found that women make up 32 percent of this country’s brew-crushing population, with 21 percent of stateside craft breweries having women in top positions according to a study by Stanford. Here are five incredibly creative and talented female brewers and/or owners, who are responsible for some of the United States’ most exciting ales and lagers…

Kerri Dahlhofer, Co-Owner of B. Nektar (Ferndale, MI)

Kerri Dahlhofer with her bottle label designs.
Kerri Dahlhofer with her bottle label designs.
Photographer: Kerry Trusewicz

Your primary flavor is mead — what has it been like since B. Nektar acquired its brewing license to craft beer?

We like to make meads that combine interesting flavors in a magical way and we apply that same philosophy to our beer. It’s a much bigger market to compete in and you have to differentiate yourself. Two of our best brews are the Sage Lime Wit and the Jasmine Green Tea Belgian IPA. They’re a hit but it’s hard to meet demand on a one-barrel [31 gallon] system. It feels like it did when we first opened. We were new, small and kept trying to keep up with the demand.

 

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Pictures at a Czech Beer Exhibition: Pilsen, Budweis, Český Krumlov

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Wooded hillsides, a hundred lakes mirroring the fleeting afternoon sunlight, emerald green pastures with the occasional dusting of snow. Stately Renaissance facades watching over magnificent squares and Gothic spires reaching skyward. Dimly lit train stations redolent of times past. Castle towns that drew artists like Egon Schiele away from the bustle of Vienna. The Vlatava (Moldau) winding its way languidly through České Budějovice (Budweis) and Český Krumlov.

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Budweiser Versus American Beer: The Heart of The Matter

What if a good friend wrote TPFyou a letter…and in this letter, your friend said that he or she needed your help; would possibly suffer without it? What if that friend was facing a profound injustice. Would you stand up with them and say, “This Far and No Farther!” What if it were even simpler than that? What if they just had their roof damaged in a big windstorm and you wanted to help. Would you grab that hammer, climb the ladder, lend them a tarp, bring a dinner plate so they’d know you’re there for them?

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U.S. surpasses Germany in hop production

Dan Wheat/Capital Press
A worker fastens trellis wire to poles about 15 feet above the ground for a new hop planting at a farm between Prosser and Benton City last March. The planting was postponed because of drought. Fields like this will be planted this year.
Germany usually leads the United States as the world’s top hop producer, but drought switch that around in 2015.

MOXEE, Wash. — For only the third time in the past 10 years, the United States bested Germany to lead the world in hop production last year, according to a final 2015 report by Hop Growers of America in Moxee.

The U.S. — overwhelmingly Washington, Oregon and Idaho — produced 80.2 million pounds of hops which was 42 percent of the world production, compared to Germany at 62.2 million pounds and 33 percent, according to the report.

 

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