Friday, February 25, 2011

Katz in the Alley at Alley Katz- Day one of Sacramento Beer Week

Stop 1 - Alley Katz - for some John John Dead Guy Ale on draught and a new bit of ambience.  I haven’t yet been to Alley Katz.

the Short Report -
J.J.D.G. Ale - out, but that’s okay, it was tapped at 4:00 and we knew that, the guy said it was ‘pretty good’ take that as you like it
award-winning Hazelnut Brown Nectar - yum.  feels like I should be eating pecan pie along with it
Lagunitas Sacramento Fusion - uh, unfortunately not my style- too much bitterness (both roasted malt bitterness and hop bitterness) and a bit too much hop aroma for me.  It was nice of Lagunitas to name it after Sac though… J
service - maybe I look a bit too Minnesota nice, but it took Fo-rev-er to get a beer, and I was Sitting at the bar.
Further notes:
Did they just serve my husband a bad Anchor Steam Old Foghorn Barleywine?
furthermore, did that guy - who seems to be one of the main proprieters of Alley Katz - just admit that he’s actually never had an Old Foghorn?
What is the world coming to?

On a side note- they did have an amazing selection...

Wednesday, February 16, 2011

Beers in the Closet

Unfortunately, we (Matt'nPat) are just homebrewers, so our current stock and stash of fermented, fermenting, and to be fermented lives in a nice closet under the stairs. To be fair, the closet does keep a nice, stable temperature for fermentation

Currently,there are two carboys going in the closet, both reddish in hue. The furthest along is a hoppy red ale that was brewed on February 2. The hope is that this red will satisfy Matt's craving to go buy a six pack of Jamaica Red every Thursday night. (This being said, there is certainly nothing wrong with doing so: Mad River Brewing Company Jamaica Red Ale, 6.5%)

The second is for me (yes!).  It's a sweet amber ale, styled after the Alaskan Amber, but with a hint of Fat Tire.  It uses Belgian yeast, the best kind of yeast, really, and I am very hopeful that it will turn out wonderfully, despite the accidental explosion out the fermentation lock that caused a snowball of lekkere (delicious, Dutch) Belgian yeast to fling to the closet ceiling.  We believe this was because of the combination of the happening state of the Belgian yeast we re-pitched onto, in combination with the low sugar/low alcohol content of the amber.  (I'm hoping for a weekday night drinkable 3.5%)

More on these current projects soon.  I'm just not sure how much of the recipes I am allowed to divulge.
At least not until we know how good they are. ;)

Also, I feel obliged to add that beyond Matt 'n Pat (me) there is also currently Jordan, who has been an asset to our brewing projects for the past few months. Unfortunately, MattPat has been together a big longer, and MattPat rolls off the tongue a little better than MattJordPat or JordPatMatt or...

Happy homebrewing!

Tuesday, February 15, 2011

Pliny’s all around, Young & Old

It was a perfect February night. The mood was a sober, impatient anticipation, waiting for what was to come. The line was only 30 minutes, the shortest wait time of the night, and the scent of wort was wafting in the air. After a year’s wait, Pliny the Younger had been released. Fans of microbreweries, Russian River Brewing Company enthusiasts and IPA lovers alike had been waiting for this moment for months. Beer-loving Sacramentans of all ages flocked to the brewpub in downtown Santa Rosa last Friday for the annual limited release brew. Still others have plans for a microbrewery tour before time runs out, hitting up Lagunitas Brewing Company and Bear Republic Brewing Co. on the way there.

The previous year, the beer was gone in eight hours. This year, thanks to careful planning and allocating and a ban on growlers of the Younger, the beer should last for a full two weeks, from February 4th to the 17th. In my humble opinion, this plan is still doomed. I would wager that, right now, they are already running over their limit (I mean, come on, it’s opening night), plus these workers have got to be slipping an extra 10 ounces here and there in the back room.

This triple IPA is delicious and well worth the $4.50. It’s sharp, fresh, and the beautiful blend of hops just melts in your mouth. They went easy on the finishing hops which normally give aroma, so the beer has a wonderfully clear, clean taste, like water going down. That said, you should certainly watch how many you drink. Don’t forget that the alcohol level is 10.25 percent.

There was a lot of great flavor without the overwhelming bitterness that sometimes comes with a super-hoppy IPA. I would wager that this is because of a strategy of dry-hopping rather than so many starter hops. Somehow, I ended up as the DD (women always get the shaft on brewpub nights), but, fortunately, they had lovely two-ounce samples for just a fraction of the price.

Homebrewer and beer enthusiast Matt Doyle couldn’t say enough about the Younger.

“It’s cool, because they’re able to take the IPA to the next level,” he said. “More hops, more malt, but the key is that it’s not too heavy. They were able to ferment it all the way down with the use of strong, healthy yeast. That’s what’s able to put it over the top in terms of drinkability.”

By 7 o’clock, there were already people making out by the bar, no doubt due to the double digit ABV of Pliny the Younger. (Sigh… these youth, they never settle down.) Just FYI, after three “high alcohol-level” beers (i.e. Pliny the Younger), they are allowed to cut you off.

This Santa Rosa microbrewery is now at the top of my list. To be perfectly honest, I would take a stout or a nut brown ale over an IPA nine days out of 10, so that means something. Their newbies, Defenestration (yes, that’s correct, their next beer shares its name with the German word for death from being thrown out a window) and Procrastination, are coming soon and will be worth checking out.

The only thing that was odd about the place is how I kept getting confused as to which waiter was ours. There were just so many servers with thick, Burt Reynolds-style sideburns.