Monday, May 17, 2010

American Craft Beer Week, and other happenings

Back at the blog, where have I been you ask, I have actually just been really lazy. Haha, sorry if you were checking for a new blog post. Even though I have not been updating this thing, that doesn't mean that we haven't been busy over at 747 Ale House. Since the last blog post both of our beers are done and are now being consumed on a daily basis. The first beer is our Stout. It was a brand new recipe for us and I think it turned out pretty well. With a few tweaks it will be a keeper. The second beer that we finished was our Black IPA. This one also turned out good, but a little underwhelming. I think we got some old hops so that punch in the face hop aroma just isn't there like in our older IPA. Don't get me wrong, both kegs are going to be drunk within a few weeks! Hopefully we can make this beer a little better next time too. There is still a decent amount left of both, so please hit me up if you would like to come by and see our little operation and try the beers.

I am proud to say that we finally made the step up from extract brewing (what we have been doing this entire time) to all grain brewing! This probably doesn't mean a thing to you all, so let me explain it really quickly. Basically extract brewing is a good start for beginning home brewers, and even though we are still beginners, we wanted to challenge ourselves a bit more. All grain brewing is essentially what professional brewers do, but we are just brewing at a MUCH smaller scale. It allows us to have more control over the whole process and hopefully it will turn out better beers. The new beer, which is actually a recipe we did with extract brewing before is going to be a 9% Double IPA and should be drinking in around 5 weeks or so. I am really looking forward to seeing how this one turns out.





Today marks the start of American Craft Beer Week. All over the US breweries and brew pubs and bars put together events and special tastings that celebrate all of the amazing beer being made in the States. Even if you are not going to go out and visit any of these events it doesn't mean that you can't have your own little celebration at home with friends.

If you have been reading this blog and still haven't ventured outside of your beer comfort zone, then my message obviously isn't getting across. This week is the perfect time to go to the store and grab something new, DO IT!!! If you aren't sure of what you like as far as styles go, read my first few posts and you will find some good links to help you figure things out. Another fun way to explore your local beer cooler is to start local. There are tons of amazing breweries in California so start there.

A quick list for those of you that are not familiar with local brews.

San Diego:
Ballast Point
Green Flash
Pizza Port (Port Brewing)
Lost Abbey
Stone

Fullerton:
The Bruery
Bootlegger's Brewery, (I haven't tried any of these yet, but have seen them at Cooke's)

Los Angeles:
Eagle Rock Brewery, (newer brewery, they are not bottling yet but look for their taps at local bars)
Strand Brewing Co., (Torrance, they are also a newer brewery with no bottles. Try their 24th St. Pale Ale at Naja's, Simmzy's or Manhattan Brew Co.)

North of LA: Instead of breaking down the rest by city, I will just list the rest as North of LA
Firestone Walker
Russian River
Marin Brewing Co.
Bear Republic (they make Racer 5, which some of you may know)
Sierra Nevada
Anderson Valley Brewing

The list goes on, but this should be plenty of information for you to get out there and try some new beers this week in honor of American Craft Beer week. If you have any questions or want some more specific suggestions let me know. It's good to be back on the blog, thanks for reading.

Cheers

Thursday, April 29, 2010

Homebrew update

Just wanted to give everyone a quick update on our latest home brew. If you have been checking out the blog consistently then you will probably remember that long ass post with all of the pictures in it, where we brewed a stout and a black ipa. The time is almost here to drink them both. The kegs are full and in the fridge. We are just waiting for the beer to carbonate. I also just ordered two new tap faucets, which may not sound like big news, but the 747 Ale House crew is stoked. The last time we had beer on tap our faucets started sticking so much we pretty much had to throw away a full beer worth of foam every time we pulled a pint from the keg. When you only have 10 gallons of beer, you need to savor every drop. When the beer is ready I will post my reviews of our finished product, and some pictures of what the beers look like. Let me know if you would like a sample.

Cheers

Great trip, without great beer

WOW.....this post has been way overdue. I can not believe that I have lagged this much on the blog. Hopefully there are still some of you out there that remember this blog exists.

I recently returned from a week long trip to Mexico and guess what the first thing I wanted was, even after a week straight of drinking? You guessed it, a craft beer! Luckily last night I was able to enjoy some great homebrewed ipas and a few great bottles from a close 747 Ale House friend, Rob. Needless to say, I was loving life last night. Great beer has become not a necessity, but a need in my life. This brings me to the topic at hand, what makes the beer great? Can a shitty beer seem amazing in the right situation?

During my Mexico vacation there were many beers to be drunken, all of which I would never spend my money on back home (except for on camping trips). The list is a familiar one to many, Coors Light, Tecate, Corona, Dos Equis, you know the "good" stuff. I hope you were able to grasp my sarcasm with the quotations, but in case you didn't, I do not like those beers. With all of that considered, there is something to be said for sitting on a beach, eating a crab taco and having a Corona with 10 friends.

As you get more into beer you will start to despise the beers you used to drink, trust me it will happen. Even though I would never drink a Mickeys 40 again, just thinking about one of those monstrosities brings back lots of good memories. Some goes for any other macro beers. I have been in countless situations where the beer itself does not matter, but the people I am drinking it with and the places where I am matter more. This does not mean that I do not love craft beer, but I can make due without any when the situation is just right.

So, did I not have fun because I was not able to drink the beer that I like, or did the situation and circumstances of the vacation allow me to drink such gross beer? You have probably figured it out by now, but I loved every minute of my trip! In a perfect world every trip, vacation or restaurant I eat at would come fully stocked with craft beer. Unfortunately this is hardly the case. Just remember, sometimes the beer is not the only thing memorable. The people you are with can turn something terrible into something you will remember for a long time. Now back to reality, and back to amazing craft beer.

Cheers

Friday, April 9, 2010

Random thoughts, with Chris Voegtli

This post is going to be a little different than any of my previous post, why you ask, because I just wanted to talk about some things.

Last night we brewed another batch of beer. It didn't turn out exactly as expected, but that is the fun part of home brewing. Maybe we just invented something amazing. We were going for a "Black IPA", which is a complete contradiction because that name implies something that is essentially both black and pale, (think Michael Jackson) but whatever it's just a name. How about we call it a Black Hoppy Ale.

It is Friday, so that means my month long tradition of having beers at Richmond St. Bar and Grill is back on tonight. Seriously do yourself a favor and go there. They always have 2 or 3 really good beers on tap, the food is awesome. Instead of fries they serve these homemade potato chips that are really good. As an added bonus, I will be there.

I finally started watching the 2nd season of Arrested Development this week, WOW! I wish I would have been into that show when it was still on the air because it is one of the funniest shows every made. If you have Netflix you can watch Season 1 and 2 instantly right now. While I am on the topic of TV, if you have not seen it yet find a TV and seriously start watching It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia, you can thank me later. How do I make this paragraph beer related? Hmm, how about you just watch these 2 shows and drink some beer.

Back to beer. Tomorrow I'm going to the LA Beer Fest from 1-4 pm. Unlimited 4oz. pours of beer for 3 hours equals a happy Chris Voegtli. According to the website there are going to be lots of really good breweries there. Hopefully all of the good stuff won't have like 2 hour lines because I will be stuck drinking at the Colt 45 tent. Apparently Billy Dee Williams likes the stuff though, so it can't be that bad.

http://www.talesofcolt45.com/lpa.aspx?returnurl=http%3a%2f%2fwww.talesofcolt45.com%2fdefault.aspx

If anyone is going let me know and we can try and meet up at the Fest for a mini glass of beer. Hopefully I will remember enough of tomorrow to be able to post some quick reviews about the Fest and in particular the beers that I drank.

Breweries to check out:
The Bruery (Placentia, CA)- They make really great Belgian inspired beers you can usually find a few of their beers at Cookes and Whole Foods.
Deschutes (Oregon)- Tons of good beers, really easy to find in local stores. Try Black Butte Porter for those of you who like dark, roasty beers. Their Mirror Pond Pale is nice too.
Pizza Port or Port Brewing- They have restaurants all over North County San Diego, plus they brew their own beer. Really great stuff like Old Viscosity if you like stouts and Hop-15 for IPAs.
Ballast Point Brewing Co.(San Diego)- Another great brewery from down South. They make tons of great stuff from Pale Ales to Barrel aged stouts. Best part is lots of their beers are available in 6 packs.

Sorry if I left your favorite off the list above, but I just wanted to throw a couple quick ones out there for some of you who are new to craft beer to try.

Have a great weekend, drink some good beer and eat some good food!

Tuesday, April 6, 2010

New batch of home brew

Disclaimer: This post is going to have some technical terms related to home brewing beer, so if it is too long or too boring for you, sorry. At least there will be some pretty pictures for you to look at, haha.


Last Saturday my roommate and I brewed our sixth batch of extract home brew. A quick explanation on extract home brewing. Basically instead of making the beer out of all grain, we skip a step in the process and use some grain plus a syrup (the extract) to make the wort. The wort is the sugary liquid that is the beginning of your brew. This is the kind of brewing that most home brewers begin with. We are hopefully going to transfer over to all grain brewing soon. For this batch we decided that we wanted to make a stout, this time with our own recipe. A few months back we made a pretty good chocolate stout, but we used a recipe for that one, so now it was time to test our recipe making abilities.

All in all it was pretty successful, even though we missed our original gravity reading by a whole point! So basically we use this website called beer calculus which helps us formulate all of our recipes. After we input all of the grains and hops we are going to use for the upcoming batch, the website spits out all of the vital information. It tells us approximate, alcohol by volume (abv), the color of the brew, the IBUs (international bittering units) which is a measure of how bitter the beer will be and it also tells us the expected original and final gravity of the beer. With these two gravity numbers we are able to estimate what the abv will be. So....back to the original point I had, the website told us that the original gravity should have been around 1.087 and in actuality we only ended up with 1.074, whoops! All this means is that we were not able to extract enough of the sugars from our grains, which will turn into alcohol during fermentation. Therefore our beer will probably only be in the 6.5%-7.5% range for alcohol content, oh well, as long as it still tastes good.

The first rule in home brewing is to always sanitize anything that will come into contact with the beer after it has been boiled. Before and during the boiling process you do not have to be as careful because the boiling will kill anything foreign that may get in to the beer. This first picture is just that, the primary fermenter (the white bucket) is filled with water and iodine and then everything else that needs to be sanitized goes in. This all sits until we need it.


The first step in all of this is extracting fermentable sugars from our speciality grains. The grains we used for this stout were chocolate malt, coffee malt, roasted barley and crystal 120. This was actually a pretty huge grain bill, especially since we also used about 10 pounds of dark extract.





In order to get the sugars we need out of these grains they have to steep them all in a pot of approximately 155 degree water for around 30 minutes. As you can see these grains almost didn't fit!


Once the steeping is finished we have to transfer the liquid from this pot into the other pot that contains more heated water. The second, larger pot, will be where we make our wort with the extract.




After all of these ingredients have been combined, it is off to the garage to start the boil. The reason we work in the garage is because the stove is not powerful enough to boil this larger amount of water in a quick time frame. Outside we have a turkey fryer with a propane burner that does the trick. The next step is to transfer our wort into the fryer pot. The reason why we are straining it is because we spilled some grain into the wort earlier. This is not a typical step in the process.


At this point it is just a waiting game, the beer must boil for 1 hour. Once this starts to boil we have two hop additions. Hops, for those of you that are not familiar, are what are used as the standard bittering agent in beer. Along with bittering ability, hops also provide flavor and aroma to the beer. For those of you that have ever had an IPA, you know of the floral, piney and sometimes citrusy flavors and aromas that hops can contribute. If hops were not used, the beer would not be as balanced as it should be, and could potentially be undrinkable. Since this is a stout and we do not want the hop flavors to be too overpowering, we used 2 ounces of Perle and 2 ounces of Willamette. The Perle were added as soon as it began to boil and the Willamette were added with 15 minutes left in the boil.

This is how the hops are shipped to us, vacuum sealed to keep freshness. Sorry I forgot to take a picture of what they look like, but I grabbed this one from the internet to give you an idea. This is a pellet form of the hops. The flower is compressed down to make these pellets, which are much easier to store and ship.


Unfortunately I did not take any pictures for the rest of the process, we were kind of in a hurry, but I will explain what we did. After the boil is finished, the beer needs to be cooled as quickly as possible to around 120 degrees. In order to do this we use a wort chiller. Basically it is a coil of copper tubing that has an input for a hose and an outlet for another hose. All you have to do is turn on your garden hose and let the water flow through the tubing, really simple. After the cooling is done the beer is transferred into the primary fermenter (the white bucket from the previous picture) and the yeast is added. Also, since this is extract brewing, we only brew 2.5 gallons of the 5 gallon batch. The rest of the liquid is just standard distilled water that we added directly into the fermenter. The yeast eats up the fermentable sugars in the beer and creates the alcohol. Right now the beer is being stored in our house, awaiting transfer to secondary fermentation and finally into the keg! This baby should be ready to drink in another 4-6 weeks depending on how all the flavors meld together. As the process continues I will keep you all updated with more blogs and more pictures.

Hope you enjoyed this exclusive look inside 747 Ale House, haha just kidding it's only our house, and a look inside the home brewing process. Sorry this post is extremely long, but it might give you something to read if you get bored at work!

Wednesday, March 31, 2010

Hefeweizen for all of you wheat ale fans out there

I haven't been on the blog since last week, yes I am a slacker, but the warm weather last weekend caused me to drink way too much and completely neglect this thing. Another thing the warm weather made me think of, which just so happens to be the subject of today's entry, are Hefeweizens, or wheat ales. I am personally not a huge fan of the style, but the 5 examples I am going to offer up are all very good.

First, a rundown of the look, smell and taste of a typical German Hefe beer. All of these things described below will be different, and better than the crappy American versions of this style. Remember, this is referring to the bad versions, like Pyramid, Widmer and especially that awful creation known as Bud Light Wheat!

German style Hefe beers

Look of the beer: "Hefe" means "with wheat", so you will typically see a beer that is very cloudy and unfiltered. Don't be afraid of the floaties at the bottom, it is just yeast and it is meant to be there.

Smell: The standard German wheat beer is going to have a much more pronounced aroma and flavor profile than the typical American version. Some of these smells will include: banana, cloves, wheat and yeast.

Taste: The tastes you will experience can definitely throw you off if you have never had a German Hefe and are used to the inferior American wheat beers. The yeast used in these beers is what gives them their characteristic flavors. These include: banana, cloves, some possible spiciness, citrus and in some cases bubblegum.

Too much information again. I am going to end another lengthy blog with 5 suggestions for German style Hefes that you can enjoy the next time it is warm out, or anytime for that matter. Hope you enjoy!

All of these should be available at either Cookes, Whole Foods or BevMo.
1. Franziskaner Hefe-Weisse
2. Weihenstephaner Hefeweissbier
3. Paulner Hefe-Weissbier
4. Sierra Nevada Kellerweis. (The lone American version on the list. This stuff is really authentic and is available in 6 packs!)
5. Schneider Weisse

Friday, March 26, 2010

Beer 101, first addition

First things first, thanks to my sole follower and my buddy for the kind words yesterday after checking out the blog. An idea I had for this blog is to have posts that offer up helpful tips so you can further enjoy craft beer for all it has to offer. These are not rules, but rather practices I picked up from other craft beer drinkers, websites such as Beer Advocate and from my own experiences.

1. In order to know what styles of beer you may or may not like you should do a little homework. This isn't the type of homework you are all used to, at least in this case you are "studying" in order to drink better beer! Check out www.beeradvocate.com (the link is on the side of the page) and go to the beer styles section. There is TONS of information about dozens of styles of beer being brewed today.

2. After you read some descriptions of new styles or ones you already know you like, the fun begins, it is time to go get some beer! Pick a local bar or just run over to Cookes or Whole Foods, if you are local to the El Segundo area. If you are confused, don't shy away from asking the store's beer buyers. They are there to help. You can also shoot me a comment or question and I can do my best to offer suggestions for tasty brews.

3. The next tip is sort of a disgruntled rant as well, so bare with me. If you ever find yourself at a bar, at home, at a friends house, etc. and you do not get a glass with your fine brew, stop and ask for one. Always, when possible, drink beer out of a glass. Drinking from a bottle severely limits your ability to enjoy the look and smell of the beer. Also, this glass should never be chilled, I repeat do not numb your taste buds with a 30 degree glass and beer. The reason why all of the macro brewed crap is served so cold is because they don't want you to taste how bad it actually is.

4. Enjoyment of beer should be an experience for all of your senses. Look at the color and head of the beer, smell the aromas of the beer, taste the beer and finally feel the beer in your mouth. To some of you this may seem like overkill right now, but trust me, the more you get into beer the more you will appreciate every aspect of it.

One last thing, obviously taste is subjective. To me a huge hoppy (bitter tasting) beer may be the best thing on Earth. While to you it could be a complete waste of money. All I am trying to say is, take everything you read on here with a grain of salt. If you are willing to risk a little money on a new beer, most of the time you will be pleasantly surprised. Enjoy!