Tuesday, October 16, 2012

Great American Beer Fest Winners Announced

The 2012 Great American Beer Festival®(GABF) competition awarded 254 medals to some of the best commercial breweries in the United States. Presented by the Brewers Association, GABF is the largest commercial beer competition in the world and a symbol of brewing excellence. View the 2012 winners.
Award-winning brewers received prestigious gold, silver and bronze medals in 84 beer categories covering 134 different beer styles (encompassing subcategories), establishing the best examples of each style in the U.S. Winners were chosen from 4,338 competition entries from 666 breweries, hailing from 48 states, Washington, D.C. and Guam.
Matching its largest field of entries to date, this year’s GABF competition saw its biggest panel of judges ever, with 185 beer experts from 11 countries participating, with assistance from 120 competition volunteers.

Operation Teapot: The Effect of Nuclear Explosions on Commercially Packaged Beverages (March 1956)

cross-posted at snarglr weeks ago.

In 1956, amidst concerns of domestic nuclear fallout, the FDA and Federal Civil Defense Administration undertook a study and released a report covering the exposure of commercially packaged beverages -- including soft drinks and *beer* -- to nuclear explosion.

Mind blown. This is real. Packaged drinks, like beer and soda in cans and bottles, were placed at varying distances from a nuclear detonation. Following the mushroom cloud, their fitness for consumption and taste were evaluated.

Typical of sci-yunce, they evaluated a number of metal can types and glass bottles (all closed). The cans were either 12 or 16 ounces; glass bottles ranged from 6-28 ounces. Various combinations of bottles and cans were placed between 0.2 and 1 mile from ground zero. They were either buried, placed on the ground, or embedded loosely in earth.

So what happened?

Most of the bottles and cans lived through the blast overpressures. Most of the container failures were caused by "flying missiles" of debris, severe crushing due to structural collapse, and falling from shelves.

The ones closest to ground zero were marginally radioactive. Of course, marginal radioactivity is concerning, but the scientists state

Even the most [radioactive] beverages were well within the permissible limits for emergency use and could be consumed upon recovery...
The induced activity of the beverage container, whether metal or glass, did not carry over to the contents... Radioactivity of contents did not vary directly with radioactivity of the container. The beverages themselves showed mild induced [radioactivity]... Beer by reason of its higher natural salt content exhibiting a somewhat higher activity than soft drinks.

My favorite part, though, is when they evaluate the taste of the beverages.

Representative samples of the various exposed packaged beers, as well as unexposed control samples in both cans and bottles, were submitted to five qualified laboratories for carefully controlled taste testing. The cumulative opinions on the various beers indicated a range from "commercial quality" on through "aged" to "definitely off." All agreed, however, that the beer could unquestionable be used as an emergency source of potable beverages."

This story and study came to light by way of a blog post by Robert Krulwich that referenced a blog post entitled Beer and the Apocalypse by Alex Wellerstein. In that post, Wellerstein linked to the full report.

Wellerstein summed it up well, "For me, the takeaway here is that the next time you find yourself stocking up on beer, remember, it's not just for the long weekend -- it might be for the end of days."

Thursday, January 26, 2012

Benton the Younger

Parallel posting at vargocity.com

Recently the Dirty South Beer Club pursued its second home brew project, again with the help of the pros at East Atlanta Brewery. The first one was a Russian Imperial Stout that was named for the arrival of the the Breed's first child, Frederick. The making of that brew was freezing and arduous, but the results were delicious. We enjoyed that beer for over a year and it kept getting better.

This time we sought to recreate what has often been referred to as one the best beers in the world: Russian River's Pliny the Elder. We got the recipe from this site which published a Russin River recipe for a home brew Pliny clone. We brewed it on Nov. 19th and were able to enjoy it in the first few weeks of the new year. This time, the group once again decided to mark the arrival of a new member by naming the beer in his honor. The beer is great, but still probably a runner -up to the original. However, I think the new label knocks the original out of the park.

Monday, October 31, 2011

Brew Gooders

Here's a repost from Bloomberg of a recent interview with the Chief Corporate Responsibility Officer for Molson Coors - a huge beer distributor - about environmental stewardship

Bart Alexander is Chief Corporate Responsibility Officer for Molson Coors, the product of a 2005 merger between the two North American brewers. He spoke recently with Eric Roston, sustainability editor.

 ER: Many people are still getting used to the notion, sometimes through caricature, of the “carbon footprint.” What’s a “beer print”?

 BA: When you put a bottle of beer down you leave a water mark on the coaster. Our company leaves a mark on the world and its people. The challenge of the “beer print” to our employees is grow our “positive beer print” and shrink our “negative beer print.” That idea came out of a bit of a crisis we had. We rolled out a very typical corporate responsibility agenda and people’s eyes glazed over. The company’s leadership team said this isn’t getting through to employees. It needs to, so fix it. A group of us went off to a little mini-retreat. After a day and a half we came up with an idea that we all looked at and said, Yeah. It’s all right. I’ll live with that if I have to…

ER: What was it?

BA: “Connecting for Good.”

ER: Yeah… That’s an issue with this whole space: It all sounds like do-gooder pablum. But really, how does this affect the stock price?

BA: Financial stakeholders ask if a company is looking at risks and opportunities in a qualitative way. At the start, we really couldn’t show our return on investment for our company itself. We did some benchmarking and had generic data. There’s some evidence that companies with corporate responsibility programs outperform the wider market. People care about whether we’re sustaining the availability of water around our facilities or we’re creating community problems. Those are business issues. That’s why we bring together the water stakeholders wherever we do business. We just had a forum in Tadcaster, a water-stressed area in the U.K. 

ER: So did Molson Coors go into this with just a sense, or was there a discrete event or study?

BA: I’m looking at our 2006 business case for corporate responsibility. It had about four pieces. A huge piece of it wasn’t driven by external metrics. It was driven by recognizing what we already felt was a part of our DNA at that point as a new company. Part of it was the no-brainer: all of the eco-efficiency measures. Employee engagement drove part of it. We had some evidence that companies with a high corporate responsibility performance have more engaged work forces. Also, we just looked at the trends: This is what’s expected of well-run companies.

ER: What’s all this look like on the ground?

BA: Here’s an example. There’s a fairly complicated system of reservoirs and pumps that deliver water to our Golden, Colo., facility. It used to run all the time, but didn’t need to. The water resources team said this is ridiculous. They requested capital expenditures to automate the whole thing, but got turned down that year. So they did manual charts to plot out by hand what the usage looked like and started turning pumps on and off. They came up with a significant reduction in both energy and water cost, just by using a back-of-the-envelope method.

ER: Is the management lesson to decline first-time requests for expensive capital?

BA: It’s to not let the lack of a sophisticated solution get in the way of a good and effective simple solution. ER: So how do you quantify fuzzy things that might affect reputation and standing? BA: This year we partnered with several organizations, including WWF in Canada to do what’s called the Red Leaf program. People can do shoreline clean-up or plant trees or event plant virtual trees through social media. Eventually we’ll be able to say how the Red Leaf program affects sales of Molson Canadian. It’s a little early right now to know that. It’s on our agenda for 2012.

ER: What peers have you learned the most from?

BA: When we started asking what guiding principles look like, we pulled a lot from the Cokes and Pepsi’s and the others of the world. Our head of supply chain had come from Campbell’s. I got to know the people at Campbell’s. I thought they were doing a fabulous job so we used them as a model. I particularly appreciated that they were reporting not just to the corporate social responsibility world but to the consumer.

ER: What are you reading?

BA: The Watchman’s Rattle. It’s a wake-up call book about what political, economic, and social challenges the world may be facing.

ER: Commodity prices are trending up globally. There are more consumers, but also staples cost more. How does that long-term trend factor into long-range planning?

BA: The beer business has fairly low profit margins, so the cost of goods is a huge driver of whether we have a good year or bad year. Not only in grains but aluminum and glass and other things. Risks in our supply of commodities are important. You look beyond just potential price and quality variations, and ask: What are some of the underlying factors that tell us a supplier has a handle on the future?

 A recap from Grist can also be found here.

Tuesday, August 23, 2011

Saccharomyces eubayanus

The source of a previously mysterious wild yeast has been discovered. Although we're not the biggest lager fans this cold-loving yeast is something to smile about. It was found in Patagonia, a region not known for its brew. And all this on the heels of an interesting piece on political attacks at funding for science. More research in the name of beer!!!!

Tuesday, June 7, 2011

Placebrewing

A recent story (part 1 | part 2) by Dave Roberts at Grist, he has examined how food across the country has, in general, become boring, monotonous, and potentially dangerous as it has been supplied by a few large companies. His bigger goal is to detail what makes places great and to give us an idea of what we should be focusing on to make places better. In this recent section he uses food to lay out a plan for improving places: saying great food is an important part of great places. As an example of one 'food' that has overcome the domination and homogenization of large corporate domination is beer.


As recently as 1980, fewer than 50 gigantic brew facilities produced all of the beer consumed in the United States. Nearly all of it was horrible. Lovers of good beer were relegated to the tiny import section of the beer case, or to making their own. Today, there are more than 1,700 breweries in operation -- we've returned to the pre-Prohibition peak (granted, when the U.S. population was much smaller).

Roberts says the beer's example can teach us about the importance of regionality and economic diversity, not to mention how beer helps bring people together in public spots.

Wednesday, May 25, 2011

Beyonce




You can't tell me that it's not Beyonce on the 16oz High Life cans. You need only tell me why?

Saturday, October 30, 2010

BCBC

The first thing I started to look for on a recent trip to Vancouver was a place to get a craft beer. I dreaded biding my time in the northwest with Molson and Labatts. While it was difficult to find many establishments with extensive beer selections we were able to find at least one local beers at most Thankfully, British Columbia had a variety of its own more interesting brews. After walking to a popular BBQ and Brewery place that appeared closed we finally found a little boutique whiskey bar in the up and coing Gastown neighborhood. The place was called Shebeen. I'm pretty sure it is housed in the Irish Heather Gastropub which would fit right in around the Decatur Square. I had an IPA on cask but don't recall the name.

Right across the street from our hotel was a liquor store. It, of course was very modern, attached to a trendy coffee shop, fitted with a vegetative roof, and had steady stream of live musicians performing on the street outside. Their selection was decent and they had several local brews so we stopped in often to pick up a bottle. The first one we tried was the Howe Sound Devil's Elbow IPA. Their beers come in these big bottles that were perfect for us to re-seal and keep in the hotel fridge for a day.

Next was Russel's A Wee Angry Scotch Ale. There are a surprising number of people with Scottish heritage in Vancouver. We met one while doing a hike at Grouse Mountain north of Vancouver. He talked with us all the way down the mountain and then gave us a ride back to our hotel and some dinner recommendations. He was not the wee-est bit angry.

Next was Mt. Begbie's Tall Timber Ale. This was a brown also and not my favorite of the trip but not bad. The guy who co-started the brewery has a PhD in Nuclear Physics, like my college roommate. The website says he prefers to make beer, not war. My old roommate does not drink.

Finally we bought ourselves Driftwood Brewery's Driftwood Ale. This brewery has only been around for two years but it looks like they have some interesting varietal IPAs, like the Santori Harvest IPA - featuring BC hops - and their one-a-year wet-hopped Fat Tug IPA.

On the last day we headed to Granville Island - a little haven for artists and boutique crafty types. The is also a brewery on the island called, appropriately, Granville Island Brewery. We each sampled three different brews which were only mildly impressive. All -in-all though we were surprised by the amount of BC-crewed beer there was to be had (in the liquor store, at least). It was not as easy to find all of these interesting local brews at restaurants and bars. Also I was impressed with the quality of many of these small operation beers that we found at the liquor store. It seems that the region's rapidly increasing interest in craft beer is just another reason to head there for vacation.

Tuesday, October 26, 2010

the king of beer(s) club in, um "wine" country!?

King of Beer(s) Club says hello from California! Sonoma and Mendocino Counties, that is.

Pop quiz: name all the awesome breweries in these two counties:

Answer (off the top of my head):
Russian River (Santa Rosa)
Lagunitas (Petaluma)
Bear Republic (Healdsburg)
Anderson Valley (Boonville)
Mendocino (middle of nowhere nearish to Mendocino)
North Coast (Fort Bragg)

DAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAMN.

OK, so now name all the awesome wineries in these two counties.

Sike. That is a silly question. There are so many. I experienced a couple today. Didn't think I'd appreciate them, but, um, I did. Shhhhhhhhh. This one and this one in particular.

But enough about wine. Snobs.

BEEEEEEEER!

So far soooooooo good. Sleeping Brewty and I have hit up Lagunitas, Russian River, and Anderson Valley. Each had its unique charm.

Lagunitas beers tasted:Russian River beers we done slurped up:
  • Pliny the (freakin) Elder!!!!: Thumbs UP UP UP UP UP UP UP UP UP. Maybe the beer I'd choose to drink for the rest of my life, if I had just one choice.
  • After a pint o' Pliny, I decided to push my limits and asked for a sample of all the Belgian style beers they had on hand. I received the following (to the best of my memory)
  • Temptation
  • Supplication
  • Redemption
  • Salvation
  • Sanctification
  • Damnation
  • Consecration
  • Compunction
  • And a couple others
  • Four sours were among the bunch. Though I'm still warming to sours, I could tell that these were superb (especially for an 'merican brewery).
Anderson Valley Brewing Company. Beers that got drunked into my mouth:More to come.

PS: We were totally blown away to meet a serious foodie and wine head (the son of the French Laundry owners) who grew up a stones throw from Santa Rosa and hadn't even heard of Russian River. WTF. WTF!?

Wednesday, October 13, 2010

Does This Beer Make Me Look Fat?



The Daily Beast has gathered the 50 most fattening beers and put them together into an annoying little slide show.

Don't let that stop you from counting calories though! And while you're counting, please go ahead and create a cost-benefit analysis based on caloric intake, alcohol content, deliciousness and session-ability.

Which beer is the best bang for the belly? I'll be waiting.

(h/t Amelia for the link)