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Showing posts with label Spring Beer Fest 2010. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Spring Beer Fest 2010. Show all posts

Friday, April 09, 2010

Spring Beer Fest Winners

One of the more interesting aspects to the Spring Beer and Wine Festival is the tradition of voting for a "People's Choice." The fest hands out ballots and people identify their first, second, and third-place votes. I find it fascinating because it tells you something about what the market for craft beer is. Folks who go to the Spring Beer Fest are self-selected craft beer fans, though they're not by and large fanatics like the people who read and write blogs. The last three years, they've chosen Astoria Brewing's Bitter Bitch, one of my least favorite beers in Oregon. It's visciously hopped and magnificently out of balance. (And if I worked for Astoria, I'd make barrels and barrels of the stuff.)

This year, Bitter Bitch slid to number two. The winner? Gilgamesh Brewing's Black Mamba, the hop-free beer made with Earl Grey tea and tangerine zest. Block 15 took the bronze with their succulent barrel-aged Pappy's Dark. Incidentally, as far as I know, these results haven't been released. I saw the post on Gilgamesh's Facebook page and asked Lani Radke if she knew who came in second and third. So consider these unofficial:
Spring Beer Fest 2010 People's Choice Winners
1. Gilgamesh Brewing, Black Mamba
2. Astoria Brewing, Bitter Bitch
3. Block 15, Pappy's Dark
What do these beers tell us? A few things. First, that people like novelty. A number of breweries sent their same old, same old beers, and people weren't rewarding them. And clearly, they appreciated Gilgamesh's effort to build a better mousetrap. Second, that they like hops. Bitter Bitch's run is pretty amazing. The last lesson, which is a little speculative, appears to be that while barrel aged dark ales are all the rage among hardcore beer geeks, they are a niche minority. Pappy's Dark is exactly the kind of product that gets intense love at places like BeerAdvocate and RateBeer. But at the Spring Beer Fest, it was on the outside looking in.

Congrats to Gilgamesh, who was properly rewarded for pushing the envelope. Let's hope it's the start of a trend.
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Friday, April 02, 2010

Spring Beer & Wine Fest - First Reax

(Note: A previous version of this post featured fest-inhibited grammar and language. It took a substantial overhaul, but I have done my best to restore it to the President's English.)

Although it may be too late for many of you to use, here's a brief wrap-up of the beers we tried at the press tasting. Thanks again to Laura and Lisa for setting it up. First, a general comment or two. 1) The feng shui of the SBF remains the same. It's a large industrial space filled with random vendors, some of which are brewers, vintners, and distillers, but some of which are vinyl-window sellers. Word to the wise. 2) This year's fest received a dose of excitement from newer breweries, and that excitement seemed to translate to a more exciting fest.

The past couple of years have seen the arrival of a whole raft of new breweries, and the SBF is a great showcase for them. I spoke at great length with Jeff DeSantis from Silverton-based Seven Brides (to whom I somehow managed to end up owing two pints of beer) and Nick Radtke of Gilgamesh Brewing. This is one of the only events you can go to and chat up the brewers--a longtime goal of the fest. Years and years ago, I had a similar experience with a young guy named Darron Welch. I ID-ed him as a brewer to watch and within a few years felt like a genius. So, if you go, look for the guys dressed in brewery-specific gear; these are likely folks associated with the brewery, and they'll love to talk beer with you. (The volunteers wear Spring Beer Fest shirts.)

Okay, to the beer, in the rough order I tried it):
  • Lompoc Saison the Beach. This was made with the saison yeast that will be featured in a month at Cheers to Belgian Beers. It was a mild ale, 5.5%, brewed with peppercorns and candied ginger. I found it a little simple. It was fresh and quite drinkable, but had little in the way of complexity (the peppercorns and ginger were, if anything, only suggested). My guess is that people will relate to it like a pale ale. It was still a bit wet; maybe a month's age will allow it to dry out and expose some more complex flavors.
  • Collaborator X and Bitter. Neither of these beers floated my boat. The X was minty and alcoholic, but otherwise not so notable. The bitter (and keep this in mind--I love bitters) was a bit wet and undistinguished. I would have liked to see both more hop and malt quality.
  • Howe Sound Stout and Beaver IPA. My fave beer was this stout. I don't know what it is about BC--the dark and rain, perhaps--but they brew great stouts there. This one is a session oatmeal (5%). It has an amazingly lush, bready and slightly roasty nose, and was dense and creamy as a mocha. I could drink it all day. The IPA was more like a Portland pale--sweetish, not super hoppy. Darker than usual for and IPA. I liked it, but others found it wanting.
  • Gilgamesh Black Mamba and IPA. Okay, now we get to the fun stuff. The Black Mamba is balanced with Earl Grey tea and employs no hops. It looks like pond water, but don't be dissuaded. It's malty sweet, and the tea provides a musky note. I couldn't locate the bergamot, but the black tea could be described as earthy. I appreciated it in the sense that it was a pretty sharp departure from most West Coast beers, but like it? No. Interestingly, though, after the tasting a bunch of us were standing around and we decided to name our fave. Overwhelmingly, everyone chose this beer. So: it's a love it or hate it beer. Worth a buck to find out if it's your new fave. The IPA was, to my mind, far more accomplished. The brewers (brothers Mike, Nick, and [whoops--memory failure]) take a page from Dogfish Head and add a new hop infusion every minute of the boil. Hops are Amarillo, Columbus and (I think) Simcoe. They tweak the proportions as they go along, so by the end the Amarillos are featured for their lovely orangy quality. The brewery says the beer is 150 BUs (a number arrived at by calculating it based on alpha percentage, not through lab analysis), but it's not. Not remotely. Rather, it's got that wonderfully saturated hop flavor of a Hop Henge, not a vicious bite.
  • Astoria West Coast Lager. Effectively a lagered IPA. It has massive amounts of Centennials and Simcoes. The effect is interesting and I'd like to hear what the crowds think. Without the sweetness of the ale yeast to buoy it, the hops were more naked and a bit more vegetably (thanks to Abe Goldman-Armstrong for identifying this quality). Tasty but slightly different from the usual Oregon beer.
  • Block 15 Pappy's Dark. A substitution for King Caspian, this is a massive barrel-aged dark ale. It is thick with sweet caramel and vanilla notes notes, as decadent as a liquid candy bar. Pretty much everyone in the press group was left drooling. I tried to get a pour of the Nebula later on, but just got another Pappys. A volunteer misfire, but not a terrible set of events.
  • Redhook 8-4-1. The press tasting was at this point running long, and we were sprinting. I will confess to a failing palate. This beer may have had subtleties lost to me, but I found it sweet, wet, and not particularly interesting. Redhook sent me a bottle, so we'll see.
  • Ninkasi Malt Liquor. Malt liquors are slightly sharp and alcoholic, yet indistinct--the beer equivalent of Everclear. Ninkasi's was hoppy and tasty and reminded me nothing of the misspent days of my youth.
  • Seven Brides Pilsner and Oatmeal Stout. Lisa was supposed to give us pizza, but it wasn't ready and so we wandered back to the beer. I found Jeff DeSantis and had a lovely discussion about the nature of hops and where alphas reside. He has a Sorachi Ace-hopped pilsner, which contained none of the lemon I expected, and a stout, which suited my shattered palate just fine. I recommend trying these earlier in the day than I did to give them a fair shake.
In summary: I had a great time and was pleased to see the new breweries come down and pitch their beers. Perhaps next year we'll see Migration, Coalition, et al. in attendence. That's what this event does best, and it's good to see some new folks avail themselves of it.

Some pics:

Howe Sound and their cool liter swing-top bottles.


Rob Widmer showing off the latest Collaborators.

Our hostess, the Beer Goddess Lisa Morrison.


A shoddy photo of the not-shoddy Gilamesh Brewery.

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Spring Beer & Wine Fest

Off the top of my head, I can think of eight major beer fests that happen in Oregon every year--and there are twice again that number if you include specialized mini-fests. As a consequence, I've become more choosy and axed the Spring Beer and Wine Fest a couple years ago. Despite its status as one of the original three major seasonal fests, it had really fallen into a slump. It developed two major problems. To help pay for the event, organizers threw open the doors to vendors from random businesses, giving the fest a flea market feel--exacerbated by the venue, which is already inclined in that direction. But worse, the beer wasn't interesting. Breweries just sent their regular flagships, defeating the purpose of the fest.

Things may be changing. I still expect the same atmosphere, and there are still a lot of familiar beers. But there are also some intriguing new offerings (new to me, anyway):
  • Block 15 Nebula (an oatmeal stout) and King Caspian (an imperial red). This is the brewery Derek boldly called Oregon's best, and I'm psyched to finally get a taste.
  • Calapooia Simcoe Springs IPA. (I'm assuming it's made with Simcoe hops.)
  • Deschutes Miss Spelt Hefeweizen. (A traditional hefe brewed with 40% spelt).
  • Gilgamesh IPA and Black Mamba (a hopless beer brewed with black tea).
  • Ninkasi Kraken for PK Nice (Absolutely no idea.)
  • Redhook 8-4-1 Expedition Ale (the brewery's newest specialty release; an imperial brown made with brown sugar.)
There are others I haven't had a chance to try which fit into the relatively new category, too: Lompoc Saison the Beach, McMenamin's Soft Rock Belgium, Oakshire O'Dark 30. Then there are the old faves, which I would be persuaded to tipple just cause they're fine: Fort George Vortex IPA, Firestone Walker Union Jack, North Coast Brother Thelonius. And I guess you could go just to explore these head-scratchers: Panty Dropper Ale, Howe Sound Brewing (beers unnamed).

Upshot? It may be time to throw the Spring Beer Fest back into rotation. The charming and knowledgeable Lisa Morrison will be leading a press tasting at 11, and so I'll know more in a few hours. I'll provide an update to this post with my findings sometime this afternoon.
Spring Beer and Wine Festival
Oregon Convention Center (777 NE MLK)
Friday and Saturday, noon to 11pm.
$5 entry, $5 plastic or $8 glass mug, $1 samples.

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