Oregon Brewer’s Festival 2011

Starting tomorrow to Sunday… the annually held Oregon Brewer’s Festival. Located by the Waterfront to the river, the festival offers four days with several stages for music and this year 85 breweries each pouring a showcase beer in tastings for $1 or glasses for $4. Also, a Buzz Tent with 8 rarer experimental taps that will be kicking all weekend since they are smaller kegs so that tent will continually be refreshed with new offerings.

To avoid the crowds, I am with a small group that took Thursday(tomorrow) off and will be sitting by the Buzz Tent to keep an eye on the rare beers. Going earlier always means it is less crowded, especially if it is before the after work crowd or Saturday late afternoon/evening people.


Photo from last year’s OBF

You can find the regular beer list here (though I like this list at Portland Beer better since it has descriptions, although the one on the official site has #s for the locations so you can more efficiently plan your various tent visits). The Rare Tap List is overall listed here but Twitter #OBFBuzzTent will announce when new beers are ready to taste all weekend. Entry to the event is free, though you have to purchase tokens and a $6 tasting mug to drink that is reusable the whole weekend in lieu of any entrance cost. There is some food available at the festival thanks to six restaurants that will have booths, but you can also bring your own food. I have XXX Sharp Cheddar and Bergonost cheese from Yancey’s with crackers all ready.

Some beers I am particularly looking forward to that caught my eye from the taplists:

  • Burnside Brewing’s Gratzer, a smoked beer style which they just unveiled recently
  • Dogfish Head’s Black & Red, which is a Raspberry Mint Imperial Stout, I wonder if those flavors will work… “A velvety smooth “dry-minted” stout with a serious fruit problem! Heavily roasted grains brings forth a dry, chocolaty character that contrasts with the sweet, fruity full-bodied flavor. But it’s not really black – it’s a very deep red, and the foam has a pinkish hue. A hundred pounds of spearmint and peppermint in secondary fermentation help the beer finish sweet and smooth.”
  • Kona Brewing Co’s Sassy Grassy, a beer described as “Ginger Lemongrass Quencher”
  • Old Market Pub & Brewery is offering a beer named Berried Alive! which is a Belgian Boysenberry Ale. “336 pounds of Oregon boysenberries and 110 pounds of Oregon raspberries in the secondary fermenter on top of a six-grain malt bill weren’t sufficient to make this beer stand out for Old Market brewers. They then fermented the brew with Trappist high gravity yeast and aged it in Pinot Noir barrels. Low hop levels let you better taste the fruit and oaky, smoky notes.”
  • Also in the fruity style is Widmer Brothers Brewing Foggy Bog Cranberry Ale, which promises tartness in its ale profile
  • Three Creeks Brewing FivePine Chocolate Porter sounds just my style- I’m a stout and porter type of girl
  • Prodigal Son Brewery and their Bruce Lee Porter, ok maybe partially because of the name
  • On the other hand, despite the name, Boneyard Beer’s Girl Beer which is a Pilsner with “Eighty-eight pounds of sweet dark cherry puree in the secondary give the English Ale yeast something to do while this one waits to make up her mind”
  • Many things on the Buzz Tent List sound delicious, but I am most excited for Ale Industries’Dry Hogged Bacon Brown and Maui’s Imperial CoCoNuT Porter and Stone Brewing Co’s Stone Smoked Porter w/Vanilla Beans

Possible Faceoffs:

  • Ginger as an ingredient- Blue Frog Grog’s Ginger Meyer Ann (with lemon) VS Kona’s Sassy Grassy (with lemongrass) VS Black Diamond Brewin’gs Oranje World (with orange) VS New Belgium’s Somersault (with apricot)
  • Berry Bash- Dogfish’s Black & Red VS Old Market Pub’s Berried Alive VS Ram’s Berry White VS Cascade’s Razberry Wheat vs Vertigo’s Razz Wheat VS Boneyard’s Girl Beer
  • Porter Time- FiftyFifty’s Donner Party Porter VS Laughing Dog’s Anubis Imperial Porter VS Maui’s CoCoNut Porter VS Prodigal Son’s Bruce Lee Porter VS Three Creeks FivePine Chocolate Porter
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Pics from Yesterday: Bailey’s Taproom Germanfest, Cartopia for FourSquare Day

We started out with the Germanfest at Bailey’s Taproom. Our group of 7 were fortunate enough to get a great seat by the front so that we could watch Rob Widmer deliver the Widmer Alt in his red pickup truck thanks to our pre-sale tickets  that for a $10 more allowed us in 2 hours earlier in a more leisurely drinking environment since it was limited admission. Usually we have a small cheese plate with a little bread to help absorb the alcohol since we seem to insist each time at these festivals on trying every single beer. This time with 7 of us and because we wanted a German theme to the food given it was Bailey’s Taproom Germanfest, it got a little crazier.

As a plus though, I was introduced to Edelweiss Deli, which is where all the cut up cheeses, the Champion bread with its seedy goodness, and the hungarian, paprika, and pepper salami came from, as well as some European chocolate and gummy candy.

The cheese board you see is what I usually bring and fits the wedge for the table, but since I thought we might have more cheese then we could fit on the plate this time based on snack roll call the day before, I cut mine into cubes. In the left, largest compartment was a favorite of many, the havarti with caraway. To the right of that was a traditional German brick cheese- which tasted creamy but also had a bit of a smell that necessitated using a toothpick unless you wanted to smell it all day. In the smaller compartments, from left to right, was the butterkase, a smoked cheese, and then I cut up pieces of a Bees and Beans honey bar.

More pictures of various brews. My personal favorites were the Vertigo Zen Dunkelweizen with its touch of banana; Berlinerweiss in various combinations with the syrups they had ranging from raspberry and huckleberry to the mysterious woodruff (the raspberry accounts for the pink beer you see); the Cascade 10 Autumn Gose offered Cascade’s signature tartness but not too sour; the Oakshire Schwarz Black Wolf offered some roasty malt; and Rauchbier, at least the first time around- I liked the smokiness, but it was overwhelming on my second 6oz pour- but great with the salami. Others also liked the Heater Allen Hugo Bock and the Hopworks “What the Helles” Helles Bock. Thanks for the 19 beers Bailey’s!

We then went to Cartopia to help celebrate Four Square Day with a Swarm Party. Every checkin at Whiffies that night would garner a $1 donation to the Red Cross for Japan- and we got to eat some delicious cart food from Whiffies (fried pie, with here a filler of BBQ Beef Brisket with Mozzarella), Potato Champion  (fresh cut, twice fried, Belgian-style pomme frites, served in a paper cone. They are just as crispy as they look) and from Pyro Pizza (Italian style wood oven fired White Truffle pizza that has white truffle oil brushed on the dough and then is topped with romano cheese and a dash of black pepper. Next time, I’ll try to remember to ask to add as an additional topping basil or sundried tomatoes).

Whiffies fried pie with bbq beef brisket with mozzarella Pyro Pizza White Truffle Pizza

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Bailey’s and Santeria go together like milk and cookies

I’ve certainly mentioned Bailey’s Taproom often enough, but I may not have mentioned that almost every time we go there, we also get the best Mexican we have found in Portland so far, Santeria. Sure, it’s a hole in the wall, hidden between Mary’s and convenience store and Tugboat and Bailey’s along a tiny street. But, they are fast, delicious, and deliver to your table at Bailey’s as you are enjoying the inevitable taster tray because Bailey’s has rotated their taps (as they do every week) and now there are a dozen new beers you may not have had before. No wonder we come here weekly. This time though, we tried to capture the experience with our guests.

When you walk into Bailey’s first grab a table. There a lot of 2-tops and only a few that can comfortably fit more. Ignore the armchairs- not if you want to eat anyway, because the tables by them are low. After you have claimed your territory, come up to the front to read the beer menu in plastic sheets. The front has all the drafts, the back is all bottles. The chalkboard also has the list of all the drafts – but the menu has more detailed descriptions of each beer on tap.

Bailey's Taproom, beer, tasting tray, sample tray

You can order a pint, or a 10 oz, or tell the good man that you want a sampler and he will give you a little sticky to write down your do it yourself tray. Order by number!

Bailey's Taproom, beer, tasting tray, sample tray

Once you have your liquid deliciousness safely at your table, now is the time to get the solid delicious stuff. You can actually grab a Santeria menu from the barkeep and call your order, but we like to walk across that little alley in order to see what the specials are and see what is available, and that way when they come deliver your order they can find you since there is a good chance the delivery person has already seen you. After you order, hurry back to plot how you are going to fit the food and drinks on the table. In this photo below, the left side of the table ordered single tacos so it came on a smaller plate, but the food are usually the size of the platters you see on the right.

Bailey's Taproom, beer, tasting tray, sample tray Santeria, mexican food,

One thing Santeria does well are mole. Also, their tinga is outstanding- it is chicken or a vegan version using soy chorizo, cooked to a nice spicy burn with cooked with chorizo, tomatillo’s, onions, tomatoes, and chipotle peppers. Add mole and tinga for a super combination of spicy flavor bursting with every bite- you’ll need the rice and beans to give your tongue a break. And your beer of course. Below are Mole enchiladas with tinga in brown mole sauce.

Mole enchiladas with tinga in brown mole sauce, Santeria, mexican

If you can’t decide what kind of meat you want, try the First Class Flight which includes 3 tacos, one each of the Tinga taco, Pastor taco (sweet pork cooked with onions and pineapple) and Cochinita taco (a tarter Mayan recipe with pork slow cooked in orange juice, lime, achiote and banana leaves) served with rice, beans and guacamole for a very filling meal. Alternatively, you can switch out the Tinga taco for the saltier Carnitas taco if you order the When Pigs Fly taco flight instead. Below is the First Class Flight.

Santeria, mexican, First Class Flight which includes 3 tacos, one each of the Tinga taco, Pastor taco (sweet pork cooked with onions and pineapple) and Cochinita taco (a tarter Mayan recipe with pork slow cooked in orange juice, lime, achiote and banana leaves) served with rice, beans and guacamole for a very filling meal

If you want to really absorb alcohol though, the burritos are the best choice. Thick and stuffed with alcohol absorbing deliciousness. I often get the Chorizo Burrito (filled with chorizo, eggs, cheese and pinto beans) to get lots of protein, or if I am feeling a bit sweet and spicy and no-bean please I get the Pastor Burrito with pastor, rice, cilantro and onion. More recently I’ve been getting the Fish (Pescado) Burrito with breaded cod, rice, refried beans, lettuce, pico de gallo, and sour cream because although hey, it’s a burrito, I’ve been crushing on the texture of the crunchy deep fried flaky fish inside the soft burrito. For a hint of what’s inside, it’s the same kind of fish that would use for what you see below in my fish taco (I did just eat 3/4 of a Cheesus/Quesus before I got here after all). I like to switch out the sour cream for salty Cotija cheese but when F goes over to order on my behalf he always forgets, thus you see sour cream on the taco which is the normal combination.

Santeria, Fish taco, breaded cod

If you are veggie, you can get the vegan burrito (Black beans, rice, lettuce, pico de gallo, guacamole)- they always bring you the green and red sauce but request the habanero one to really kick that burrito up. Or, get the burrito using veggie chorizo or vegan tinga. Below check out the vegan taco version, and the size of a burrito- in this case a vegan chorizo burrito. Another plus of the burrito is that you don’t need to manage silverware on your table and you can hold the swaddled warm burrito in one hand and your beer in another. It also can take less space because the swaddling is so good you don’t really need the plate

vegan taco, vegan taco, guacamole Santeria, vegan burrito, Black beans, rice, lettuce, pico de gallo, guacamole

Don’t forget to eat the carrot! It’s pickled but spicy, don’t waste it! After you are done, bus up your dishes and empty glasses to the bar where the beer dude will hold it for the Santeria person to take back, get your one beer that didn’t fit on the 6-drink sampler tray, maybe in a 10oz or pint. Don’t be surprised if you eat everything… or if you want to run back over to Santeria for a takeout container. It’s a little hole in the wall, but it’s good authentic Mexican- surprising almost everyone because the looks really are deceiving here. I didn’t even have this on the list for my guests to eat, since they were from LA I assumed good Mexican was a dime a dozen so had other food in mind- but F insisted, and since other F wanted Bailey’s anyway, this ended up working out. And… this was judged to be really good Mexican by them. In fact, this is not the first time that Santeria has heard from LA residents about how authentic and better their food is!

Now, drink, talk, play. Bailey’s has boardgames if you would like to play a game, but on my part our weekly visit is also our “lots of talking about work, the local/national/world news, gossip of our friends, etc” catch-up time that is so easy to fall out of at home when you have your own computers and TVs and one wants to play a videogame while the other wants to read a book in bed, etc. Email and Twitter and FB can’t compare to actual conversation and goofy faces. No one is there rushing us out like a date night at a restaurant, there’s no TV that inevitably draws your eyes away from the people you’re with… it is like 21st century Cheers. Actually, all the guys who run or work at Bailey’s do know our names when we go in… and we recognize many of the other regulars as they probably do us. Awww.

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Zwickelmania 2011

Saturday February 19th 2011 was the third annual Zwickelmania. Zwickelmania is hosted by the Oregon Brewers Guild (OBG) and is a five hour statewide event in which many breweries throughout Oregon open their doors and offer visitors a chance to tour the breweries, meet the brewers, and sample their favorite beers… Various shuttle buses sponsored by Rogue or Brewvana drove different routes to take those who didn’t want to drive or bike/wanted to visit multiple breweries on a route in a row from stop to stop… and did I mention all for free? Amazing.

Each brewery has different offerings. The ones that I specifically set my sights on for my first time doing Zwickelmania were first choice, Laurelwood, that was offering cupcake and beer pairings. Meanwhile, Alameda’s free tastings were 2 beers: My Bloody Valentine (a Blood Orange Saison), and Caffeinated Bear (a special keg of their award winning Black Bear XX Stout infused with 3 pounds worth of cold-brewed Kobos coffee per keg) sounded interesting. Fellow enjoyer of deliciousness H wanted to see Columbia River Brewing (new to Portland and they had purchased the location of Laurelwood Pizza) and Upright (which we had both separately kept wanting to visit, but neither of us had ever been), both of which were also on the same route as my two top picks, so we headed out at 10:30 to start our brewery open house adventure on the N/NE route.

We decided to start with Columbia River Brewing. After parking the car along a neighborhood street, she risked my life by dashing out in front of an approaching car to cross the street but was cautious about crossing in front of a car that had to turn onto the street from a driveway. We still ended up at Columbia River Brewing before they opened at 11, and tried to casually peruse their food menu (highlighted by an offering we saw of a Black Angus Beef burger stuffed with bacon and cheese) and waited a few beats after they opened the doors.

This was their first time on Zwickelmania as well, and after they generously poured pretzels and some sliced hye roll onto serving platters and offered glasses of water, Rick the brewer took us on a tour. He talked about the various barley he uses- he sometimes will even mix them, and he has in his recipe book more then 80 some recipes, some which are 200 years old. He also told us about how he became a brewer, which started with a short apprenticeship in England where he fell in love with beer and brewing while on vacation and started learning the ropes right there on vacation. Unfortunately we only had 30 some minutes before the shuttle was scheduled to stop, so we left as the group was starting to get samples directly from the tanks.

Smelling and tasting the samples of the grains ingredients that can be used in the beer recipes. I found it endearing that they were labeled using obviously hand-torn paper from a notepad that advertised a drug (Clavamax- which is an antibiotic for dogs and cats!). Also, their old school tanks, which are not automated/computerized – the only technology is monitoring the temperature.

Next stop was Laurelwood Public House and Brewery. They had advertised that they would be pouring four, but they actually gave out samples of five, although only four were officially paired with a dessert item. The beer samples included the Organic Expresso Stout, Beer X, and Vanilla Porter at one table, and at a smaller stand the Moose and Squirrel Imperial Stout and the Bourbon Olde Reliable Barleywine. This was definitely the highlight for me of all the brewery stops.

The chocolate cupcake with expresso whipped cream was paired with the Laurelwood organic expresso stout. The expresso stout has a coffee taste profile to it that comes out quite clearly, while the cupcake was moist and perfect. Ok, I had two of them. I wouldn’t be surprised if this was true of other tasters too… we got there 20 minutes before the Laurelwood posted opening time of noon, but they were already pouring and tasting, and a little bit later they had to bring out the big refills of the food, and those cupcakes were being displayed on the real working instead of the pretty trays. That tray made such a welcoming sight for your eyes though upon first entering the crowded little tankroom (though we saw a loft lounge on the 2nd floor!)

The chocolate cupcake with chili is paired with the Laurelwood vanilla porter. The chocolate cupcake with chili just had a little bit of that chili dusting on the cream to balance out the sweet and bitter that was present in the vanilla porter. Meanwhile, the dried cherry and orange peel chocolate bark was paired with the Laurelwood Beer X so that the fruit tartness could further add to the complexity of Beer X. I also used the bark to balance out the Moose and Squirrel Russian Imperial Stout, which was too bitter for my liking.

Our favorite pairing of the day was the smokey ginger and bacon cookie sandwich with maple cream filling, paired with the bourbon barrel aged Olde Reliable barley wine. The cookie was huge and chewy, and since the barleywine has a bitter finish, the sugar on the ginger cookie could add a bit of sweetness along with the maple cream, while the little pieces of chopped bacon in the cookie gave it a bit of savory salt

Next stops, and with less pictures, were Alameda and Upright. Alameda‘s offering My Bloody Valentine, a Blood Orange Saison, was amazing. I was expecting more blood orange undercurrent to it, so it was not quite what I expected, but still a beer to kick back and enjoy. Meanwhile the Caffeinated Bear (a special keg of their award winning Black Bear XX Stout infused with 3 pounds worth of cold-brewed Kobos coffee per keg) definitely had upped the intensity of the coffee flavor- up to tasting like it had a shot of expresso in my beer- without enough of the roast and chocolate to smooth it out, though I’m someone who likes sugar and cream with my coffee and would never drink a plain expresso.

At Upright‘s basement tasting room, we shared a $6 tasting tray (they had about 10 beers to choose from, though only half were their own and others were guest) as well as tasting a beer tapped from the tank by a brewer for free. Then we rode the Brewvana shuttle for the last time back to Columbia.

Thanks Brewvana, for the transport and the complimentary pretzel necklaces and bottled water, and we’d be interested to see what kind of tours you’ll be putting together (they open in April). The photo of the art on the top of the bus ceiling tells you their attitude towards beer.

Finally, it was time for food. We decided on Burnside Brewing- thanks H! We started with fries and she with oatmeal pale ale and I with the apricot wheat and scotch bonnet pepper ale. That pepper ale is basically like super jacked up pepperjack beer- difficult to drink on its own, but it actually was fine with my entree until I was full. On the other hand, we appreciated how the oatmeal added a touch of smooth cream, just a touch, to the pale ale. Fries were nothing special- just absorbers of grease (and alcohol, so there is that). Tossing this in a little bit of truffle oil or parmesan or garlic or adding interesting dips like cheese sauce or curry would have made this so much better. The fries, essentially, need something else.

For our entrees, H had the excellently executed Duck Menage a Trois which was cooked perfectly to crispness while still being moist with juices, while my super meaty and savory Thundering Stampede 3-meat meatloaf was also really good. My meaty entree of meatloaf was enhanced by the addition of buffalo and elk and then the whole thing wrapped in bacon made for some complex savoryness. The meat was accompanied along with some slightly undercooked fingerling potatoes (too bad, as I wanted it to wipe up all the juice on the plate) and the vinaigrette dressed greens which balanced the savory of the meat with just the right amount of acid. Did I mention how meaty savory good the meatloaf was? Great great entrees.

Just like the appetizer though, the dessert also disappointing. The description, Bacon-Maple Ice Cream Banana Split with Chocolate Stout Sauce, intrigued us from the start. I was expecting a stronger bacon profile- like chunks of bacon- with the ice cream, those flecks weren’t cutting it. Fifty Lick’s bacon ice cream is far superior. Still, if I wanted some good food with my beer and not just adequate food, as long as you’re ordering an entree, Burnside does offer more substantial complex entrees then any other brewery I’ve visited so far. It is gastropub rather then comfort food pub grub, aka restaurant quality entree that might draw you here even without the beer offerings (although the atmosphere here is standard northwest brewery- exposed ceiling, minimialist industrial with lots of wood to warm it up). Too bad the appetizer and dessert are still at the typical brewpub level, so not as standout and leads to an uneven menu.

Burnside is still so young though, so much potential is there. And, after reading the yelp reviews later, I wish I had tried the appetizer of Cohiba- I had noticed it when reading the menu but passed since I was interested in the entrees. The cohiba is a raved about offering of Duck Confit, crispy crepe, wrapped in collard greens. Maybe when we go back and get their dry Irish Stout, which was still on deck when we visited?

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Leave the gun. Take the cannoli.

A coworker had a birthday this past week. His pick was a birthday treat for our team from Ken's but that the cakes Ken's had were passed over instead for macarons. He got two kinds, the sweeter orange ones as well as the spicy chocolate ones. I sampled both (even though each was probably 2 inches wide so these are nice big macarons) and the spicy chocolate are far superior by balancing rich chocolate with that dusting of pepper. I think the orange ones would be much better as part of a high tea but in the regular macaron size, they were a bit too creamy sweet for my taste anyway, though I think many in the team chose that over the idea of the heat in the chocolate. After a discussion of how macarons vs macaroons suddenly we were talking about other bakery goodies, and out came the word "cannoli" and the famous quote from the Godfather.

So of course this weekend I had an urge for some cannoli. I was hoping to find a place that would offer a version that would fulfill my craving without having to resort to asking my sister to ship them from her current hometown Boston from Mike's Pastry. But, as luck would have it, there is a bakery that is well reviewed for them in North Portland, only a few blocks from a yellow Max line stop. The cannoli I got are size small (they have small and large ones available but I think the small is  the perfect sweet 4 bites) at Di Prima Dolci on Killingsworth. I could not resist also buying some bread (I'm almost always a wuss for getting bread from a bakery- that aroma is too intoxicating to not take a bit with me) and well as pignoli cookies. The pignoli cookies are made with almond dough that then is rolled in pine nut, resulting in a cookie that is soft and chewy while having a light nutty flavor.

The take home from my errand run


This bakery stop worked out perfectly because they are just a door down from Hop & Vine’s release party with Block 15 of  bottled Pappy's Dark, one of the highlights IMHO of the recent Bailey's Cellarfest. Unfortunately they were only allowing one bottle per customer, so I only was able to snag one for our beer cellar. Hop and Vine had Pappy's Dark on tap, and I also got to try their Super Nebula, a Bourbon Barrel-Aged Oatmeal Imperial Stout which I actually decided I liked better then Pappy's Dark. The oatmeal gives it a bit more creaminess to the malty bourbon flavor profile of the beer. I can't wait until next year, as Nick said they might try to get more in the bottle next year of Pappy's, but also release both Pappy's and Super Nebula as their February bottles. Since he is also dropping off a keg and a case at Bailey's though, I might be able to get a second bottle so I am not torn between savoring and sharing its goodness versus saving and investing the beer. I know Block 15 is pretty new to the brewery scene, but they are definitely creating a unique impression with their barrel fermentation and mixing palate, keep the liquid deliciousness coming!

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