Showing posts with label breweries. Show all posts
Showing posts with label breweries. Show all posts

Friday, August 22, 2014

Bent Brewsillery's Awesome New Digs


It’s finally here! Bent Brewstillery opened their new taproom Thursday, and the place is fabulous! I have been able to see the transformation from the beginning and was excited to see the finished product. So, Vicky and I went out on opening day for a couple beers to check out the new digs. Here are some of the things that make this taproom awesome.

(Cheers from Beerploma at Bent!)
First off, the taps. Bent hasn’t gone with taps on the wall or side of a cooler or even on the bar. At Bent the taps come from heaven... That’s right, they are suspended from the ceiling! How cool is that?!?! Inventive and unique, just like Bent’s beer!

(Curved bar and floating taps!) 

Another unique thing is the curved (or is it Bent.... he-he!) bar. This thing is pretty huge! It was made by owner Bartley’s son-in-law, and he did a damn fine job. The bar has plenty of places to sit as well as plenty of places to squeeze in to buy a beer quick without having to throw elbows.

The views of the actually brewery and distillery are pretty cool. From most seats in the house you can see the shiny tanks of the brewery. From the front of the bar you can see the big still right behind the beertenders. This really gives you an “awesome, I am in the middle of a brewery!” feel, which other than top notch fresh beer is kind of the draw to taprooms.



(Taps and the still in the background)
The bathrooms are beautiful! I might be biased a bit because my buddy Mark tiled them, but they are really nice with awesome fixtures. Maybe a seemingly small thing, but decent bathrooms are a pretty nice attribute to a taproom.



(Nice tile job, D-Boy!)
Seats are plentiful. That is a big deal to me. I have been to a lot of taprooms/tasting rooms where there are a few seats and then it’s pretty much standing room only (yep, looking at you Flat Earth! Great room, but get some chairs.). Bent has tons of tables of all different sizes, plenty of bar stools, and a really nice patio for the nice days. You can sit back, relax with friends, and have a cold one in comfort!



(Seating and a bit of the patio outside)
The best part of the taproom is the beers! They have a lot of taps, around 7 or 8 I think I remember counting, plus a cold pressed coffee on nitro! We had Acclivity (you can read about it here), a fruity summery version of Nordic Blonde called Lakeside Blonde, and an Australian Sparkling Ale called Rage On Wombat. All were great! I’ve come to realize that Bent Brewstillery just doesn’t make beers I don’t like.



(A few taps and the still)
Being unique is what, to me at least, sets Bent Brewstillery apart in their beers, and they definitely followed suit with the taproom. The place is customer focused with plenty of space, plenty of parking, plenty of seating, and plenty of top notch beer! Head over to Roseville and GET BENT!
(Soooooo good!)




P.S. If you enjoy our blog, please take a minute to click on the link at the top of the page and nominate Beerploma for best MN Beer Blog.... And of course Moe Pug wants you to name him the best MN Beer Writer, he just has a hard time typing with no thumbs....

Friday, July 11, 2014

Sand Creek Brewing Co. Pit Stop

On a recent road trip through Wisconsin (which between heading to the shack, driving to shows for my band, or heading to a beer event seems to be every weekend with me) we made a pit stop at Sand Creek Brewing Company. Sand Creek Brewing Company is Wisconsin’s third largest microbrewery! That is pretty impressive anywhere, but is even more impressive in the relatively small town of Black River Falls.
The brewery was built in the mid 1800’s for The Oderbolz Brewing Company. It’s a pretty cool old building with tons of history. After becoming several different businesses during and after prohibition, the building was hit by a fire that destroyed a couple of the top floors. You can even see the different bricks used to rebuild the damaged floors of the building. I love a brewery with some history to it!
The taproom itself was fairly small. But while it may not be the right size for a big city brewery, it was perfect for a smaller town. We had no problem getting a beer right away nor did we have any problems finding a place to sit down and take a load off while enjoying our beer.
And ohhhhhh the beer! Well I should say the beer and the hard lemonade. That is a fairly unique thing at a craft brewery, a craft hard lemonade. And actually they make two. They have a regular hard lemonade and a hard pomegranate lemonade. Vicky started with the pomegranate lemonade. It is great stuff! Fruity, tart, and refreshing, and tastes nothing like its corporate mass produced counterparts. It makes me think they could pour a mean shandy using one of their craft beers and their craft hard lemonades!
I started with a Noir. You beer snobs out there may get on me about this... I know, light to dark – light to dark... But I have a soft spot for barley wines. I love em. I must have them when I find them. And this time of year they can be hard to find, so I couldn’t help myself! Noir is a barrel aged barley wine. It was dark, sweet ‘n malty, with a nice hop presence. Good and drinkable for a big beer. I. Want. More!
Next up, a Wild Ride! Wild ride is an IPA made with Chinook and Cascade hops. It has a big hoppy taste paired with a nice smooth finish to it. It’s a nicely done IPA that I could drink all day!
After a couple beers we headed out as we had some ground to cover. It was then that we discovered the best part of this brewery. No, it wasn’t the shiny tanks or the popcorn machine with free popcorn... An old school Donkey Kong arcade game! And it was rigged up for free play!
Sand Creek Brewing Co. was a great stop. The building, the history, the great beer, the Donkey Kong game... I’ll for sure be back during my summer Wisconsin travels. It’s a great stop!




Thursday, June 26, 2014

Beers - Doggy Style!




Hola beer peeps! I’m Moe Pug. I hijacked Beerploma to let all you dog lovers out there know that we pups like to go out for beers too! Well, obviously we are too young to drink (evidently you humans refuse to acknowledge dog years at bars!), but we love getting all cleaned up and going out on the town with our beer lovin’ humans. So, my big brother Maverick and I hit the streets to check out some pawesome dog friendly patios where our mom and pop can get a tasty craft beer.

(Maverick and I hitting the streets!)

First we hit up 612Brew. They have a really pawesome patio with all sorts of different tables, a fountain thingy, and of course great beer! The patio is big enough so we were able to find our own table out of the way a bit from the other peeps. My humans each had a flight of beers. I didn’t know beers could fly! He-he... ok, back to it... All were great beers, but the one problem was that by the time they got to the last beer it was pretty warm. That ain’t the breweries fault though, it was like a gazillion degrees out! Next time, maybe a pint at a time. Or, papa could quit being a sissy and drink faster. Either way this is a great patio to bring us furbuddies to and they have great beers!

(612 Patio)


(612 Flight)

(Maverick on 612's Patio)
(Maverick and Papa at 612)

Next I decided to lead my pack over to Indeed Brewing Co. It was less than a mile walk from 612 with plenty of things for me to pee on along the way. When we got to Indeed’s patio this nice lady brought my brother and I each a bowl of tasty cold water. The bowls even had Indeed’s logo all over them, just like the pint glasses. Nice touch!

(Maverick having a drink at Indeed)


Papa and moms had a special beer at Indeed. It was a Mojito Shenanigans. They infuse Shenanigans, which is their summer ale, with lime juice, pineapple juice, and mint. Pretty refreshing on a hot summer day and a perfect patio beer! This stuff must have been pretty dang good cuz mama wouldn’t shut up about it!

(Mojito Shenanigans at Indeed)

On the way home Pops wouldn’t stop complaining about how hungry he was. So, I took him to The Happy Gnome in Saint Paul to shut him up... He can get a bit cranky if you don’t feed him when he is hungry. They have a really nice patio. In fact this patio was Maverick’s fav of the day, probably cuz papa gave him a french fry for being a good dog all day. The nice lady here gave us a bowl of water too, which was good cuz I did a lot of walking... Aaaand as you can see, I am a bit... well... let’s say plump.
(I needed a little drink in the shade)

The Happy Gnome has 76 craft beers on tap and a bunch in bottles as well! That is freakin huge! The food was tasty as well. Papa ordered poutine with wild game gravy and sweet and sour pork wings to go along with his Hell or High Water Mellon beer. I had one of the fries from the poutine... Dude, they are dang tasty!
(My brother kickin it at the Happy Gnome)

At this point I think we were all ready for a couch and some AC, so we hit Dennis Brothers Liquors in Cottage Grove for some beers to bring back home. The peeps here were really nice to me and Maverick. They gave us head scratches and we each got a cookie! This place has a boat load of top notch beers too. They are a member of Sidewalk Dogs, which is a great site to discover places to bring us pups. Papa made his selections with help from the pawesome staff and we headed home. 

(I wish I had thumbs so I could open the door to Dennis Bros!)

All and all a pretty durn good day for a pug like me! My brother and I got some exercise, some belly rubs, plenty of water, got to pee on all sorts of stuffs, and even got a french fry! And of course ma and pa got some fine craft beers. So next time you decide to go have some beers on a patio on a nice sunny day, don’t forget your furbuddy cuz we love doing that stuffs too!
Moe Pug OUT!!!





Friday, March 28, 2014

Road Trippin' to the Twin Ports Brewfest

(Twin Ports Brewfest in Action)

Last month, My friend Chris and I made the ridiculously icy trek from Saint Paul to Duluth for the Twin Ports Brewfest at the Black Bear Casino. It was cold and the roads sucked, but once we got there and the beer started flowing we had a blast!

One thing that struck me was the fairly small brewery turn out. I have been to a lot of beer events and this one had the least amount of breweries. Don’t get me wrong, there were plenty. And actually I am not sure this was a bad thing.

The smaller amount of breweries, while it limited variety a little bit, made it possible to actually hit every booth to sample every brewery. With most events having 30-70 breweries, this is impossible. Sometimes that leads to missing out on some pretty good beers. This time I was able to hit every booth and sample a beer from every brewery there.... although I didn’t hit up the wineries and of course skipped the Coors Light booth and the booth that had the Hard Mike’s and Hard Teas. What were those last two even doing there?!?!

It was nice to be out of town and trying some local breweries I haven’t tried before. Different area, different local breweries, right? One that stuck out, and actually was my favorite of the day, was Thirsty Pagan out of Superior, WI. They had one of only a few “special beers”, a sour! I love sours, and this one was good. Tart, a tiny bit funky, and not covered up with fruit. I like fruit sours, but I love a sour that can just stand on it’s own. This was my favorite of the event.
 
(Thirsty Pagan)

Chris’ favorite was the Apricot Wheat by Fitgers. Chris is somewhat new to the craft beer scene. It’s awesome when someone somewhat new to craft beer finds a beer that they say they could drink all day. This beer was a little malty, kind of fruity from the apricot, and really smooth. I swear he hit up that Fitgers stand so many times he was probably close to being on a first name basis with them by the end of the day!
 
(Fitgers)

There was a bit of a downer during the concert portion of the event. There was a small break where they got rid of all the brewery booths for the concert. The Dropkick Murphy’s totally rocked the house! But when we decided we wanted a beer, all they had for sale were a few national brands.
 
(Dropkick Murphys Rockin' Out)

It was the casino that was handling the beer and alcohol sales at this point. But seriously, this was a craft beer event! You have a huge room full of craft beer drinkers! After spending the day drinking awesome craft beers all you can offer me is a Bud or a Miller Lite? Ugh! We had mixed drinks instead.
 
(Crap Beer... C'mon Man!)

All in all this was a pretty fun event. A couple small tweaks and maybe another couple breweries and this event will be top notch. I’m always up for a road trip, so I am sure I will be back!

http://thirstypaganbrewing.com/
http://fitgersbrewhouse.com/
www.twinportsbrewfest.com
 

Thursday, October 17, 2013

Adventures of a Beginning Home Brewer

 

Big Beers Need Big Yeast!

I have started dabbling in bigger beers. Most recently an imperial stout which will be the makings of this year’s Merry Cherry Christmas Stout. But, big beers need big amounts of healthy viable yeast. The answer? A yeast starter!
 
(Yeast Starter Kit)

A yeast starter kit is basically just a glass flask and a foam stopper. What you do is make a very small batch of unhopped wort using water and dry malt extract (yeast food!). Then just pitch your yeast into this and give it a few days. The yeast eat and reproduce in a happy healthy environment. Then just pitch it into your fermenter on brew day. But what is the point?
Yeast starters have several purposes. First is that it increases the amount of yeast cells for pitching into your brew. A yeast starter can take a 100 billion cell packet of yeast and turn that into hundreds and hundreds of billions of viable yeast cells.
This is important for several reasons. Higher pitch rates make better beers because under pitching causes stress on the yeast. Too much work for a small amount of yeast cells causes this stress, I think we can all relate. When yeast get stressed they can produce an off flavor and aroma.
Higher pitch rates of healthy viable yeast also increases the tolerance for higher concentration of alcohol. That is pretty important for making higher gravity beers. In line with this is that lower amounts of yeast may cause the yeast to ferment slowly or incompletely. Basically if you want a big beer, you will need big strong healthy yeast and lots of em!
 
(Yeast Starter in Action)
Another reason to use a yeast starter kit is that it reduces the lag in growth of the yeast. The sooner actual fermentation of your beer starts the less likely it is to be contaminated. Eliminating any lag lowers the chance of contamination. A healthy beer is a happy beer!
Yeast starter kits can be purchased at any homebrew store for around 20-30 bucks, depending on what size you want. They also have stir plates that you can purchase for these, but they are kind of spendy. According to the directions I received with mine you can just give it a good swirl every time you walk by and you should be fine. Also, feel free to throw in a drop of FermCap-S to eliminate any chance of over foaming.
On a quick side note, Beerploma was nominated for Best Beer Blog in the Growler’s Kind-of-a-Big-Deal awards. Thanks to those who nominated us! If you like what you read here, please take a second to go to www.growlermag.com/vote  and vote for beerploma.blogspot.com for best beer blog.




Monday, June 17, 2013

Rise of the Beer Baron Pt 3.: Return of Craft Beer!

So when I last left off my friend Collin was turning 22 and my crew of friends were just starting to dip our toes into the alcohol scene.  Collin had a brother who lived out in California (one of the great starting points of the craft beer movement) and for his birthday signed him up for a beer-of-the-month club, and this was my first introduction to what would later become my obsession with craft beer.  I don't exactly remember every beer that was in there but I remember there being some Dog Fish Head and a beer called "Hempen' Ale" made out of hemp seeds.  For us the latter was more about the novelty of drinking weed:
 

I know that I didn't like most of the beers I drank, and when I think back on it it was probably because they challenged my perception of what beer was, namely it wasn't the beer my Grandpa drank.  To this day I regret not being more into beer, and not seeing past light American Lagers.  I held in my hand what was arguably one of the most prolific beers in Craft Beer History (referring to Dog Fish Head), and I didn't quite appreciate it as much as I would have today.  But life must go on, and so it did and I continued in my near ignorance of beer and started dabbling in 7 and 7 and other fruit based shots.

And that was how life was for my early to mid 20s. Now during my high school days I was your classic D&D/Boy Scout/Star Trek nerd.  Too this day a lot of those tendencies have not left my spectrum of interests. The only problem was in my workplace, a small ma&pa grocery store called D&K Foods, there were no other nerds to geek out with.  So I started taking in interest in their passions.  One meat cutter, named Paul, introduced me to professional football, and in specific his team:  The Green Bay Packers. 

Now I don't want to start a border war here, because this is about great local craft beer no matter where you are from.  I don't have any issues with the Vikings, they just aren't my team.  I love a good rivalry, but I think fans on both sides of the fence take it WAY too far.  So let me enjoy my team.

I started hanging out with a group of Packer fans, and we regularly went out to watch games on Sunday.  Now as a Packer fan, I couldn't just sit their and drink "fruity drinks" without being poked fun at by my fellow Cheeseheads.  So I started drinking Leinenkugels's Honey Weiss, and yes I took it with a wedge of lemon when offered.  Now I was officially a beer drinker!  So how did I become a "craft beer" drinker.  Well that took some cheese, and a doctor....

To Be Continued...



Monday, April 29, 2013

$ol Bock Revival

Saturday I went to the Sol Bock Revival event at Harriet Brewing. It was a beautiful day to be out and about. My friend and I drove to Minneapolis with the windows down. I finally could wear a t-shirt and I had my shades on. I was feeling great that after a long cold winter I could sit out in the sun and enjoy a good beer.
 
When I got to the brewery and hit the beer vending area I was disappointed, again, in a brewery event. $6.00 a beer! Now, in fairness, you could buy 4 for 20 bucks. But still, why the heck are they charging just as much, if not more, than a bar would charge for a beer they produced 20 feet away?
 
I am not an overly cheap dude. I am not asking for anything for free. But come on, man! There isn’t any middle man like a bar or a store trying to make a profit. There isn’t a distributor trying to get his money too. Heck, the guy checking IDs at the door even said the people pouring the beers were working just for tips, so no overhead there either. It is purely the brewery selling the product they made right at the place they are selling it. So why at brewery events do breweries feel like they need to charge beer prices that are starting to approach the prices for beer at major sporting events? I can’t answer that.
 
I always thought these types of events were great for the community, the brewery, and the beer consumer. The community gets some extra business in the area for the day. The brewery gets to spotlight their products and sell some beer. And of course the consumer gets to try some great beers at a brewery, which is always kind of cool. But if I can get the same beer for the same price or cheaper at a nice bar with a beautiful patio complete with plenty of chairs, a summery acoustic musician, and a server who will bring them to me, why would I bother standing in a hot parking lot with next to no places to sit and stand through TWO lines (one to buy the beer tickets and one ten feet away to actually obtain your beer) to purchase one beer for six bucks?
 
All in all it was a fun event. They had some cool art. The empanadas from the MidNord Empanada truck were spectacular. Dan Israel rocked the house with the perfect sunny Saturday afternoon music. And I will give it to Harriet Brewing that the Sol Bock was a great beer. I am sure the brewery would have wanted my last thought be “Man, great beer! I think I am going to have to get Harriet Brewing beers more often!” But as we walked back to my buddy’s truck my last thought was “Six bucks, really?!?”


Sunday, April 21, 2013

Dez's Brew'z Reviewz: While it was cold and snowing in MN...I was in Florida sweating...and drinking beer.

I've just spent a week in Florida, on a family vacation first and foremost, but with the hopes of getting my hands on some beers that I wouldn't normally see in MN. I had researched a few stores in the area we were staying in, only to come up way short...well lets just say the selection came up way short. After 5 stores I realized (there must be something going on with the distribution in this town...almost everything for sale was Budweiser/INBEV). My wife was on the hunt for Crispin Cider( owned by Miller Coors), after being told you couldn't buy it in Florida, we found it at the next store we went into. I bought a Rogue Irish Red and called it a night. Thankfully we took a side trip to the Gulf coast beach beauty of a town, Clearwater. It just so happened that The World Of Beer on Gulf to Bay Blvd
Clearwater was on the way (located directly across the street from THE ORIGINAL Hooters location). Here I finally found some real selection and someone 1) knowledgeable 2) friendly. As soon as I mentioned what nearby country I was staying in and how much trouble I was having finding anything other then Budweiser, he told me he hears this all the time. Apparently, a certain County Sherrif known for conservative values, and probably generous pocket filling, keeps tabs on who sells what, when and how. Ah the south. Now keep in mind this is second hand hearsay from an employee of a store...I've got no idea if this is true or not. I'm guessing there just aren't many distributors in this area...and what they've got just concentrate on what sells the most. (That was my disclaimer) At any rate, this is what I picked up at The World of Beer:

Cigar City Brewing : Florida Cracker White Ale, Hotter than Helles Lager
Terrapin “Moo-Hoo” Chocolate Milk Stout
Dogfish Head 90 Minute IPA
Orange Blossom Pilsner
Sea Dog Blueberry Wheat Ale

Both Cigar City's(Tampa, FL) Brews I tried were quite good. The white ale was light on the coriander and citrus, which maybe because it was Florida, I was looking for more of those flavors, but it was easy to drink. Hotter than Helles was also good, but not great. A little bit sweet, fruity and hoppy. This is definately an easy drinking hot weather beer. Next time I'm in FL I plan on hitting up the brewery and/or the tasting room and I recommend if your in Tampa, FL you do the same.

Terrapin Beer Co.(Athens, GA) Moo-Hoo Chocolate Milk Stout was also very good. I'm a huge chocolate stout fan, and despite the humid 85 degree day weather, this was very tasty. Right on par with many of the other Chocolate Milk Stouts out there, I'd just never seen Terrapin before ( not in MN)

Next, was something called Orange Blossom Pilsner. Now brewed by Thomas Creek Brewery in SC but was created by Tom Moench (in his garage in the 70's). Popular in Florida, made with orange blossom honey and won a bronze medal at the Great American Beer Fest in 2004.Moench is now working on opening his own brewery in the Orlando area. This is a pretty good niche beer, but not alot of punch to it. Light, sweet, very easy to drink. Think Corona or something similar.

Sea Dog Blueberry Wheat: This is a New England brand, so I was suprised to see it in FL, but apparently Sea Dog has expanded to open a couple of locations in Florida (Clearwater and Orlando). In the same vein as Sam's Cherry wheat...only not as good of course.

Last but not least, because out of this 6-PK it was by far the best:

Dogfish Head 90 Minute IPA. If I had drank this first, I wouldn't have bothered with any of the others. It pours dark caramel and thick almost syrupy. Smells and taste is sweet, a little hoppy, a little bit malty, strong and powerful but not overpowering. Smooth and slow like a good scotch ale or scotch or wiskey...my mouth waters now just thinking about it. Maybe one of the best beers I've had.  4 Stars-Brilliant !