Holidays in Sonoma – Beer

Just because you are in Sonoma doesn’t mean you only have the choice of wine. One of the things F and I always do is we always look for local breweries to visit. Our visit to Sonoma was no exception – we visited 3 places offering beer in Sonoma during our Thanksgiving stay.

The first time we visited was Russian River Brewing, but when we saw the line wrapping down the block around 6 PM (which we realize was still within happy hour time, which may have been part of the reason), and the fact it was raining and we didn’t want to stand in the rain in line, we instead headed towards Lagunitas Brewing Company, located in Petaluma.

There are a few things you should know to figure out where visiting Lagunitas is for you. First, you have to know that the biggest area is outside. Most of it is covered, and there are a few heat lamps but you should be dressed for the fact you might be outside.

You should also expect that it might be packed – and it is all seat yourself. Kids and dogs are allowed, so make sure you look down as you are hunting for an open seat! Yes the big tables and benches are communal. There was live music for a while playing, and as soon as we found an open countertop a waiter was there to take our order. Don’t be overwhelmed, although that will be your natural feeling when you first enter.

You can make your beer flight, which is how we saw our very first beer flight that had a bottle as one of the tastes. It was too dark to take photos of the food, but besides the usual beer food I did notice they had some bbq options.
Lagunitas Brewing Company, a beer flight where you can choose yourself may end up with a bottle instead of a little sampler ha ha

So the next day (Saturday), we headed to Santa Rosa for Russian River Brewing again, this time at lunchtime. This made our wait in line much shorter to get carded and then to the hostess stand to then be called when a table was ready.
Visiting Russian River Brewing Company in Santa Rosa, CA Visiting Russian River Brewing Company in Santa Rosa, CA

Once we were carded, we were at least free to go to the bar and get a beer. They had a separate line for those who were just coming to buy cases of Pliny the Elder and not stay. Despite the people at the bar, the bartender was so attentive and noticed we were new and got our beer orders even before some of my party had a chance to digest the menu (and look up beers they had already had and rankings on Untappd) and know what they want!

Overall I found all the staff very friendly and aware and very efficient. Be careful of the beer you order – some of the ABVs are up there, and especially if you were wine tasting during the day! So stay hydrated with water!
Pliny the Elder in cases at the back room (staff took photo for us) at Russian River Brewing Company in Santa Rosa, CA Visiting Russian River Brewing Company in Santa Rosa, CA Visiting Russian River Brewing Company in Santa Rosa, CA Sanctification beer at Russian River Brewing Company Supplication by Russian River Brewing a sour aged in Pinot barrel Make sure you stay hydrated with water while tasting beers at Russian River Brewing Company in Santa Rosa, CA

They have sampler trays as well- there are multiple options, including an option that has everything from both boards (the left board are a variety of styles, while the right board are all Belgian Style and aged beers usually with a “tion” at the end of their name). The one with ALL the beers is pretty impressive looking with bottle caps identifying each beer. This tray should definitely be shared.
Visiting Russian River Brewing Company in Santa Rosa, CA Visiting Russian River Brewing Company and trying a sampler tray of ALL the beers

The third and final brewery we had time for was Bear Republic Brewing located in Healdsburg. I thought it was funny how as we were going to each of these three breweries, we were being upgraded in the surrounding atmosphere from what seemed like an industrial park to then a city like Santa Rosa which had a medium sized city feel to now the charming but also trendy and bustling wine town of Healdsburg.
Visiting Bear Republic Brewing in Healdsburg Visiting Bear Republic Brewing in Healdsburg Visiting Bear Republic Brewing in Healdsburg

We had a beer flight here as well. Fair warning – it really smells garlicky in here because they serve baskets of their Sonoma County Harvest Fair award winning Garlic Fries.
Visiting Bear Republic Brewing in Healdsburg Visiting Bear Republic Brewing in Healdsburg and trying a beer flight

If you are in the Sonoma area and need a beer break, you might consider any of the three above as an option. By Sonoma Plaza (also located in Sebastopol and Novato) we also wanted to try Hopmonk Tavern, but unfortunately didn’t make it- just one more option in case that is located more conveniently to you in Sonoma. It’s not a brewery, but they have a good and large variety in terms of beer selection.

Have you been to any of those breweries I mentioned in this post, or had any beers from any of these three breweries before?

This post is part of my series on my trip to Sonoma where I list various recommendations.

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Upcoming December 2014 Brewery Dinners

I wanted to share a few upcoming brewery dinners that are being held this month in case you are interested.

Raven & Rose + Goose Island Bourbon County Stout Brewery Dinner

Tomorrow, you can get access to some incredible beers from Goose Island Brewery which you cannot always find here in Portland at the latest Brewery Dinner at Raven and Rose. This one is titled the Goose Island – Bourbon County Release dinner, and offers Goose Island cult favorite beers (with four of them being barrel aged beers aged in wine casks or bourbon barrels) with Raven and Rose’s English Style roast dinner.

The menu includes, for $75 a person, a welcome appetizer and beer pairing, followed by a Sunday Roast family style dinner along with a beer flight, and then a dessert with beer. This brings the total to 6 beers! The details of the menu include

Course 1: Welcome Snacks & Beer

Beer 1.IPA, a fruity aroma, set off by a dry malt middle, and long hop finish

Course 2: Salad

Field Greens, radishes, spiced pumpkin seeds, red wine vinaigrette

Course 3: Family style Mains and Sides for a English-style Roast Supper

Mains

Beef Tri-Tip

Oregon King Salmon

Portland Farmers’ Market Sides Like (depending on what is fresh at the Portland Farmers Market on Saturday – I have seen the staff there on more than one occassion loading up their carts!):

Oven-roasted Peppers & potatoes, olive oil, lemon, sea salt

Roasted Farm carrots & Beets, celery root puree

Fried Cauliflower, anchovy salt, sunflower seeds, manchego

Raven & Rose + Goose Island Bourbon County Stout December 2014 Brewery Dinners

Beer Flight for Course 2 and 3:
Beer 2.Class of ’88, The Class of ‘88 Belgian Style Ale was brewed in collaboration with Deschutes Brewery. brewed with whole flower Mt Hood hops, which were first introduced in 1988, then transferred to Muscat casks and aged with Michigan Riesling Grape juice and Oregon Pinot Noir grape must.
Beer 3.Matilda, dried fruit and clove aromas, a spicy yeast flavor, and a satisfying dry finish
Beer 4.Madame Rose, Brown Ale aged in French oak Cabernet Sauvignon barrels with the addition of Michigan cherries and heavily inoculated with Brettanomyces.
Beer 5.Bourbon County Stout, A liquid as dark and dense as a black hole with thick foam the color of a bourbon barrel. The nose is an intense
mix of charred oak, chocolate, vanilla, caramel and smoke.

Course 4: Dessert Beer Pairing

Beer 6. Bourbon County Barley Wine, aged in Kentucky bourbon barrels this traditional English-style barleywine possesses the subtlety of flavor that only comes from a barrel that’s gone through many seasons of  ritual care

The beer dinner is tomorrow, December 7, from 6:30 pm – 8:30 pm in the Main Dining Room. If you are interested, please contact please email Natalia Toral at natalia@ravenandrosepdx.com. There are often Brewery Dinners at Raven & Rose (I think once a month) or beer specials.

Also, the Sunday Roast dinner is a weekly event at Raven & Rose that replaces the regular a la carte menu, priced at $35 per person for a table (all family style as would be the tradition so the price includes the whole dinner: roast, sauce, potatoes, and a choice of two sides for the table) and served only on Sunday. The dinner features roasts that change weekly like whole lamb on the rotisserie and slow-roasted local pork, each carved to-order for the table, and the sides based on whatever is fresh on the market.

For a peek at what the dinner might be like, check out the pictures and recap from.  A preview of the event attended by fellow blogger ladies Beer Musings from Portland and Salt. Water. Coffee.

Cocotte and Upright Brewing Dinner

Thursday December 11th at 6 PM Upright Brewing, which specializes in farmhouse style ales, has a very tasty beer pairing dinner planned at French restaurant Cocotte by chef Kat LeSueur herself. Farmhouse and French food? Sounds incredible! This will be an intimate dinner limited to only 18 tickets. Reserve a seat by emailing the brewery at uprightbrewing@gmail.com. $65.

Menu

  1. First – Cauliflower and Mushroom Raviolo with Aleppo Chili, Anchovy, Picholine Olives, Pecorino, Fir Tips
    Paired with the Copper and Theory Fifth Anniversary Saison
  2. Second – Apricot Puree, Bay Shrimp & Scallop Salad, Roasted Beets, Shaved Fennel, Grilled Pugliese, Fennel Pollen
    Paired with Jeux d’eau, barrel fermented with Oregon muscat
  3. Third – Charcuterie
    Paired with the Six, dark rye saison
  4. Fourth – Roasted Chicken Breast, Chicken Confit, Chicken Liver Mousse, Apple, Butternut Purée, Yolk
    Paired with Fantasia Reserve, single cask from 2010 peach harvest
  5. Fifth – Cheese Course
    Paired with Spollen Angel, Belgian-style tripel
  6. Sixth – Dark Chocolate Bread Pudding, Cinnamon Coconut Ice Cream, Coconut Coffee Caramel
    Paired with Coffee Stout, wine barrel aged with Extracto cold press

Whole Foods Pearl + Rev. Nat’s Hard Cider Brewery Dinner

I’ve attended brewery dinners at the Whole Foods Market in the Pearl in the past, such as this one with Hopworks that I recapped and this one with Burnside that I also recapped. For December 18, a Thursday, from 6:30 pm – 8:30 pm they are at it again, this time partnering with Reverend Nat’s Hard Cider. This is a huge bargain / value of a brewery dinner I think, the best that I know of in Portland at the moment. You get four courses with four pairings for a mere $40. The dinner also offers you an opportunity to hear from Reverend Nat himself to hear about how he is a cider rebel / revolutionary and evangelist.

The brewery dinner is set upstairs in the room they call the Mezz, which is near where the cafe is. They have done incredible jobs setting up beautiful dinners there before in the past: you will forget you are in a store! If you look carefully, you will see me in the photo in the back right!

Whole Foods Pearl Brewery dinners, this one is with Hopworks Urban Brewery (HUB) Whole Foods Pearl Brewery dinners, this one is with Hopworks Urban Brewery (HUB)

Course 1

Gorgonzola cheesecake, tomato sauce, flat bread, basil oil 

Paired with Reverend Nat’s Hazelnut Abbey, a cider utilizing Starvation Valley cranberries, Albina City hazelnuts, organic Minneola tangelos and a touch of winter spices

Course 2

Cider brined trout, apples, greens, pickled fennel, creme fraiche and spiced almond 

Paired with Reverend Nat’s Revival, I think he is probably bringing Hard Apple which is a secret blend of Washington-grown apples and then they add piloncillo, dark brown evaporated cane juice, purchased direct from Michoacan, Mexico. Or, maybe he’ll bring the limited release Revival Dry, which is made with 2/3rds English and French bittersweet-bittersharp apples and 1/3rd American heirloom dessert apples and represents the first cider Reverend Nat ever made.

Course 3

Spiced crusted pork tenderloin with pickled onions, creamy shrimp hominy and yam Yukon whip

Paired with Reverend Nat’s Envy (one in the series of his 7 Deadly Sins ciders), this cider is big, as it is intensely hopped with 11 varieties of hops (boiled, bursted, whirlpooled, dry), a half-ton of dark muscovado and the finest northwest fresh-pressed apple juice

Course 4

Apple crumble with vanilla bean ice cream

Paired with Reverend Nat’s Providence, I’m not sure if he is bringing the Ginger Tonic (to which he adds to the cider pure squeezed ginger juice, hundreds of hand-cut fresh lemongrass stalks, the fresh-squeezed juice and zest of thousands of limes (zested by hand!) and top it off with hand-extracted quinine from the bark of the Peruvian cinchona tree) or the Traditional New England version, a traditional cider that follows a very old recipe dating from early 1600’s colonial America but additionally made with prime California raisins, dark Maldivian muscovado, whole Indonesian cinnamon and nutmeg and fermented to complete dryness on toasted American oak.

Whole Foods Pearl + Rev. Nat's Hard Cider December 2014 Brewery Dinners

To get tickets to this brewery dinner, you can sign up in the store or go to Eventbrite.com at this link. You can also try to win reservations for 2 people by going to the Whole Foods Facebook page here and leaving a comment!

Even if you can’t make either of these two brewery dinners, you definitely want to keep an eye out for future events, either for yourself or perhaps to give as a gift, as both Raven and Rose and Whole Foods offer brewery dinners often as part of a series.

Let me note even if you don’t drink beer often, one of the great things about pairing the beer with food is that it opens up a new way to appreciate the flavors in beer that you might not have realized when drinking beer by itself.

Furthermore, even if you are a beer drinker regularly, these events also give you access to the brewers in a very intimate atmosphere, which is a really unique opportunity.

Which of these brewery dinners interests you? Have you attended a brewery dinner before, and what did you think of it, what brewery was it with?

Cheers!

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Holiday Ale Festival 2014 is coming!

This week from Wednesday to Sunday December 3 – 7 2014 is one of my favorite beer festivals, the Holiday Ale Festival. As in previous years, it takes place under heated tents at Pioneer Courthouse Square, with a view of the gigantic sparkling Christmas tree through the clear tent that will keep you dry no matter what the weather. With the Max line literally stopping only yards away and plenty of hotels nearby in the downtown area, you may choose to make it a whole “day away from home staycation”. I think the best time to visit, if you can, is during the daytime rather in the evening since that is the more popular and obvious time. The festival hours are 11 AM – 10 PM everyday but Sunday when the festival ends at 5 PM.

Photo of the setup of the Holiday Ale Festival in Pioneer Courthouse Square, photo by Timothy Horn Christmas Tree in Pioneer Courthouse Square, 2013
Photo Credit: First photo by Timothy Horn, second photo is mine

Under the tents are some tables and seating, gas heaters, port a potties, as well as a couple food vendors (this year featuring Bunk Sandwiches and Urban German Grill) so along with your 2014 admission mug and tokens, you have everything you need in one place, just bring money and friends! As long as you bring your wristband and mug back, you can get re-admitted any of the festival days, so also feel free to pace yourself and stretch out your visit to many.

Example goodness from Bunk Sandwiches, here are their samples of Cubano sandwiches Example goodness from Bunk Sandwiches, here are their samples of Cubano sandwiches
Example goodness from Bunk Sandwiches

Example goodness from Urban German Grill Example goodness from Urban German Grill
Example goodness from Urban German Grill

Make sure to check in your coat and any bags you may have (feel free to maybe get a little Christmas shopping in beforehand and then finish up at the Holiday Ale Fest!) because all proceeds from the bag and coat check at the Holiday Ale Fest, as well as the raffle located at the Coat Check (you don’t need to be present to win) and the root beer garden all benefit the Children’s Cancer Association. This worthy cause, CCA, works to impact the care and quality of life of children with cancer and other serious illnesses immediately by delivering resources, friendship, and helping quality of life today.

Besides the donation to the Children’s Cancer Association, what makes this particular beer festival unique to others is its focus on lots of dark beers and also aged beers. I love tasting the notes of chocolates, roast, coffee, toffee, molasses, caramels, nuts, etc. that you can often detect in dark beers. Some beers additionally are being brewed or aged with extra ingredients such as cranberries, cherry puree, maple syrup, habanero peppers, even pumpkin pie spice and there is a lot of flavor going on to add to the holiday spirit all around you. It seems the colder weather is season for these kind of flavors and thus “holiday ales”.
Holiday Ale Festival, photo courtesy Timothy Horn
Photo Credit: Timothy Horn

Add to that that most of these beers are also barrel aged, which means that as part of the process they sit in barrels and absorb the flavors of the barrels and some of the characteristic flavors of the previous liquid occupant of those barrels- and some of the options include wine barrels, whiskey barrels, rum barrels and more. You will get additional flavors of wood, vanilla, dark fruits, perhaps some sourness or heat or extra spice and possibly more from this treatment. If you are thinking that sounds a lot like getting the complexity of aromas and flavors like a wine or port you are exactly right.

Not only that, but the guidelines for this festival are that all the beers available at the event were made specifically for the event, blended specifically for the event, or a vintage beer – in other words the beer has not been released prior to the Holiday Ale Festival. So the beers of the festival are, in some cases, sometimes previews of beers that are coming but in most cases, one off special beers from the past or just made for the event!

Holiday Ale Festival 2014 logo
You only have until Wednesday to buy your tickets online and be able to use a card to pay. Admission at the door is CASH ONLY. Admission is $35 including the reusable plastic mug and 12 beer tickets. Remember you can exit and return using that mug as often as you’d like over the four days of the festival, and additional beer tickets are $1 each. If you buy your admission ahead of time, you also get 2 additional tickets and can use an expediated entry line.

One beer ticket is almost all cases will get you a 4 ounce sample pour. You can get a full mug pour for 4 tickets. There are some beers which may cost more tickets because they are more limited in quantity or are special taps (such as all the Limited Release Beers). You must be 21 and older to attend the event

I have taken a look at the beer list and wanted to point out a few highlighted beers I am excited to try when I attend Wednesday (I am working a half day and then enjoying the rest – see earlier comment about staycation, and this is a too conveniently located beercation to turn down!). My list here are only from the Standard Release Beers and not the Limited Release beers that you need to come at the right release time to enjoy. But, if you do come to the festival, make sure to see what Limited Release beers may be tapping during your visit!

This isn’t even my full list- just a snapshot of to help you see the kind of beers and to give you an idea of what the Holiday Ale Festival offers. I haven’t had these beers yet but the descriptions sound interesting to me…

  • 13 Virtues Brewingis presenting their Barrel-Aged MAX Stout which is a barrel aged Imperial Stout that has been aged in both Eastside Distillery and Bull Run Distillery Whiskey barrels for three to four months, giving off oak and vanilla notes and textured layers of deep, dark secrets. Succumb to temptation…
  • I wrote about this previously when reviewing Kell’s Brew Pub, but the Kells Brew Pub MIC Stout AKA Boom Roaster, a collaboration between homebrewer Natalie Baldwin and Kells head brewer Dave Fleming. It is an Imperial Coffee Milk Stout uses Sidamo coffee from Ristretto Roasters and was the People’s Choice and Judge’s Choice winner of the Willamette Week Beer Pro/Am, see if it’s a winner for you!
  • Republic Brewing Co. is bringing the cutely named Do You Want To Build A Snowman?, a Barrel-Aged Golden Blend using four different barrels from the cellar, including Cuvee de Bubba, Pinot Noir re-fermented Kolsch, Tequila Barrel Aged El Oso Lager and Demolition Derby barrels. Yeah, that’s all. Huge fruity notes of pineapple, strawberries and grapes snuggle up to spicy oak, tropical hop notes and a slight pleasing tartness
    Holiday Ale Festival photo, by Timothy Horn
    Photo Credit: Timothy Horn
  • Cascade Brewing is offering a beer they are calling Gingersnaps which is a NW Style Sour Strong Ale that is a blend of Red, Spiced Red and Spiced Quads aged in Bourbon and rum barrels for up to two years on spices including ginger, cinnamon and nutmeg, and figs. Chocolate and rum hold down the low end while Bourbon and spice hit the high notes on the palate. The finish is a crescendo of raisins, dates, chocolate and ginger with a lingering boozy warmth. Sounds like sour yum to me.
  • Coalition Brewing is bringing supposedly their Loving Cup Male Porter’s big brother to the festival, an Imperial Maple Porter beer named Big Maple. This big brother beer is a blend of malts including Patagonia caramel 15 malt that adds a malty sweetness, while two different chocolate malts provide layers of roast and chocolate notes. Vermont grade A maple is added to the boil, bringing a subtle sweetness and maple aromatics. A whisper of smoke balances this winter treat. Enjoy this one-off beer while you can!
  • Ex Novo Brewing Co. did a collaboration with Moonstruck Chocolates to create a beer called Moonstriker, a Baltic Porter with Mexican Chocolate.
  • Fort George Brewery has created Santa’s Dinner Jacket, a Bourbon Barrel-Aged Imperial Red Ale that has been aging in Bull Run Distillery barrels. Sipped slowly and allowed to warm, this beer tells a story of time spent in the barrel infusing this heftily hopped ale with notes of port, sherry, caramel and toffee.
    Holiday Ale Festival picture, photo by Timothy Horn
    Photo Credit: Timothy Horn
  • It’s not always just about dark beers. How about a saison? Specifically, Gigantic Brewing has created Red Ryder BB Gun, a Saison with Cranberries that promises to be a balance of sweet and sour and spicy and tart.
  • Consider comparing the cranberries in that to Burnside Brewing Co. presenting Jingleberry, an Imperial Stout with Cranberries. Yes, that’s right. An imperial stout aged on fresh cranberries that features hints of cocoa and toffee.
  • It’s not always about the whiskey and bourbon barrels of course, like with the Lompoc Brewing Pinot Noir Barrel-Aged Cheval de Trait Belge, named in honor of Belgian work horses – one of the strongest breeds, this dark Belgian Style Strong Ale has been aging in Maryhill Winery Pinot Noir barrels for six months. It has a malty body and strong oak character, finishing dry with hints of chocolate and tobacco.
  • Or, how about the McMenamins Edgefield rum barrel aged Imperial Mexican Mocha Stout called Lord of Misrule brewed with cacao nibs, kilned coffee malt and habanero peppers, then aged in rum barrels post-fermentation for another taste of what barrel aging can produce?
    Holiday Ale Festival, photo by Timothy Horn
    Photo Credit: Timothy Horn
  • There are several chocolate flavors going on in various beer entrants to the festival, but what about White Chocolate Milk Stout? Yep, Oakshire Brewing is bringing one called Prestidigitation that is a beer Blonde in color, yet full-bodied and mildly sweet. This milk stout uses coffee, cocoa nibs and star anise to produce the flavors and aromas of a milk stout with the color of a pale ale.
  • I plan to do a face-off between two chocolate banana beers that are on deck for the Holiday Ale Festival- one from Old Town Brewing Co called Bluth’s Original Chocolate Banana Hefeweizen and described as a Chocolate Bavarian-Style Hefeweizen that is , straight from the description, basically a frozen banana with double the chocolate, nuts and two sticks. Brewed to Pop-Pop’s original (stolen) recipe to be a “cold banana in delicious brown treat.” Two-row, wheat and chocolate malts co-mingle with Mt. Hood hops and cocoa nibs. “There’s always money in the banana stand! No touching!”.
  • The previous beer then will be compared against Stickman Brewery‘s Big Black Banana, a Dunkelweizen for which the Stickmen brewers took their bananas foster beer (Bananas On Fire!) and dunked it in chocolate for the holidays. The Weihenstephan Weizen yeast provides banana and spice, the caramel comes from a good dose of Crystal 120 and Special B malts, and the chocolate from cocoa nibs and chocolate malt.
  • Chocolate and banana? Check. And how about Chocolate and Cherries? Check, thanks to Portland Brewing Co. bringing a Bourbon Barrel-Aged Imperial Cherry Stout brewed just for the 2014 Holiday Ale Festival. This brew boasts a huge malty backbone from seven different malts, a Northwest hop profile, and notes of roasted coffee balanced by delicious cherry flavors from an Oregon-grown sweet cherry puree.

Holiday Ale Festival, photo by Timothy Horn
Photo Credit: Timothy Horn

I hope this list has not been too overwhelming. Does anything stand out to you? Are you planning to attend or recommend the Holiday Ale Festival?

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Drink Portland Brewing ZigZag River Lager in July

This entire month of July, Portland Brewing is donating a portion from every case or growler of Portland Brewing ZigZag River Lager (growlers must be purchased at the Portland Brewing Co Taproom, cases must be purchased in the state of Oregon) sold right back to our Northwest waters via Sandy River Basin Watershed Council.

The Sandy River Basin Watershed Council is an independent non-profit organization that works cooperatively with volunteers, agencies, businesses and community groups to improve the health of the watershed for fish, wildlife and people. The Council coordinates efforts among many public and private partners to produce the greatest benefits for the watershed.
This entire month of July 2014, Portland Brewing is donating a portion from every case or growler of ZigZag River Lager (growlers must be purchased at the Portland Brewing Co Taproom, cases must be purchased in the state of Oregon) sold back to our Northwest waters via Sandy River Basin Watershed Council. This entire month of July 2014, Portland Brewing is donating a portion from every case or growler of ZigZag River Lager (growlers must be purchased at the Portland Brewing Co Taproom, cases must be purchased in the state of Oregon) sold back to our Northwest waters via Sandy River Basin Watershed Council.

This means you can enjoy a refreshing lager to cool you down while also supporting a good cause! If you are looking to bring some beer to a party, or for your own get together, consider stopping by for some of the Portland Brewing ZigZag River Lager.

This entire month of July 2014, Portland Brewing is donating a portion from every case or growler of ZigZag River Lager (growlers must be purchased at the Portland Brewing Co Taproom, cases must be purchased in the state of Oregon) sold back to our Northwest waters via Sandy River Basin Watershed Council.

I was invited to visit Portland Brewing back in April as they were first launching Zig Zag River Lager. I was able to taste then how fresh and balanced the flavors of this beer are with the blend of pale, wheat and very malty Munich malts and the spicy Tettnang hops with hint of caramel notes. Let me assure you that it is perfect for the hot days ahead this month to refresh you.

This entire month of July 2014, Portland Brewing is donating a portion from every case or growler of ZigZag River Lager (growlers must be purchased at the Portland Brewing Co Taproom, cases must be purchased in the state of Oregon) sold back to our Northwest waters via Sandy River Basin Watershed Council. This entire month of July 2014, Portland Brewing is donating a portion from every case or growler of ZigZag River Lager (growlers must be purchased at the Portland Brewing Co Taproom, cases must be purchased in the state of Oregon) sold back to our Northwest waters via Sandy River Basin Watershed Council.

While there, I also tasted the Oregon Honey Beer brewed with Oregon-sourced white clover honey and Willamette hops, also a wonderful summer beer choice and Portland Brewing even shared a recipe for Oregon Honey Beer Marinade for grilling. You can drink and eat from your growler! Not to be outdone, maybe pair that with their recipe for ZigZag River Lager Beer Cheese.

So let’s raise a glass or bottle of Portland Brewing ZigZag River Lager to the Sandy and give back to the Sandy together! Visit The Portland Brewing Beer Finder to use the search and map tool there to find where you can get some Portland Brewing near you, or visit the Portland Brewing Taproom.

Portland Brewing Company Taproom Portland Brewing Company Taproom

If you do stop by the Portland Brewing Taproom at 2730 NW 31st, make sure you also check out the really cool Copper Brewing Vessels. You probably already saw a peek of them from the outside, but they are right there to your left when you walk into the tasting room.

Portland Brewing Company Taproom

The copper vessels were acquired all the way from Germany and Portland Brewing actively uses them in their brewing during their boiling part of the process.
Portland Brewing Co Taproom Copper Brewing Vessels, acquired all the way from Germany and actively used by Portland Brewing in the boiling part of the brewing process! Portland Brewing Co Taproom Copper Brewing Vessels, acquired all the way from Germany and actively used by Portland Brewing in the boiling part of the brewing process! Portland Brewing Co Taproom Copper Brewing Vessels, acquired all the way from Germany and actively used by Portland Brewing in the boiling part of the brewing process!

I also got a little tour of the brewing facility narrated by none other than Portland Brewing head brewer Ryan Pappe himself, so I got a better look at the Copper Brewing Vessels being used and the super cool controls for the vessels. How sci fi steampunk awesome are these!!

If you’d like a look yourself, Portland Brewing does free brewery tours every Saturday from 12pm – 3pm with three complimentary samples of beer and a PBC bottle opener, but you have to be wering closed toed shoes and they will also have you wear those stylish goggles you see Ryan modeling.
Portland Brewing Co Taproom Copper Brewing Vessels, acquired all the way from Germany and actively used by Portland Brewing in the boiling part of the brewing process! Portland Brewing head brewer Ryan Pappe tells us the details Portland Brewing Co Taproom Copper Brewing Vessels, acquired all the way from Germany and actively used by Portland Brewing in the boiling part of the brewing process!

While at the Portland Brewing Taproom, besides the handful of Portland Brewing beers (including possible experimental recipes only available at the Taproom), you will also be able to try some beers from Pyramid Breweries who purchased it and dubbed it “MacTarnahan’s Brewing Company” for a while until Pyramid was purchased and last year MacTarnahan’s Brewing Company returned to the original Portland Brewing name of today.

Whatever the history, the end result is that combined with the Pyramid beer and Portland Brewing beer there are more than a dozen beers for you to try here! The Portland Tasting Room is also a restaurant so feel free to linger here for a bite to eat. The menu suggests beer pairings with several dishes, and if you come for happy hour (3PM – 6PM and 9 PM – close, daily!) there are a dozen bites $5 or less for you to enjoy, and also a handful of desserts also $5 or less.

Other specials they have on their Event Calendar include getting a burger &  fries and pint of beer for $10 every Wednesday, getting a free Portland Brewing pint glass when you buy a pint of beer on Tuesdays, and on Sundays kids 12 and under get a free kids meal with purchase of an adult dinner AND they have live music every Sunday in July, and more! Next weekend on July 19 Portland Brewing is also doing a mini festival of Oregon Honey Beer.

This taproom is such a hidden gem.

For extra credit, consider visiting tomorrow, Friday July 11, which is when Portland Brewing Taproom will be doing an Outdoor Movie Night! The movie starts at 9pm and they will be showing “Beerfest” will be on the big screen. There will also be Raffles, Prizes, and Beer and German Food Specials. Of course you can get some Portland Brewing ZigZag River Lager in your glass too.
consider visiting tomorrow, Friday July 11, which is when Portland Brewing Taproom will be doing an Outdoor Movie Night! The movie starts at 9pm and they will be showing Beerfest on the big screen. There will also be Raffles, Prizes, and Beer and German Food Specials. Of course you can get some ZigZag River Lager in your glass too.  The $5-10 suggested donation will benefit CASA for Children Multnomah and Washington Counties, aka Court Appointed Special Advocates for Children who advocate for the children who have been abused or neglected and are going through the trauma of the court system and foster care system.  So you'll be enjoying beer, having a good time, and contributing to TWO WORTHWHILE CAUSES at once.

The $5-10 suggested donation will benefit CASA for Children Multnomah and Washington Counties, aka Court Appointed Special Advocates for Children who advocate for the children who have been abused or neglected and are going through the trauma of the court system and foster care system.

So you’ll be enjoying beer, having a good time, and contributing to TWO WORTHWHILE CAUSES at once.

I hope to see you raising a glass or bottle of Portland Brewing ZigZag River Lager this month!

Disclosure: This tasting of the beer at the Portland Brewing Brewery Day Celebration was complimentary, but I will always provide my honest opinion and assessment of all products and experiences I may be given and I have visited them before this event and will certainly be visiting them again in the future. The views and opinions expressed in this blog are entirely my own.

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Portland Fruit Beer Festival Beer Preview

This is it! It is the countdown to the Portland Fruit Beer Festival– which kicks off this Saturday, June 6 11am-9pm until the end of Sunday, June 7 11am-6pm. Tickets are already on sale at $20 general admission Saturday or Sunday (the admission includes one 16oz glass you keep and 12 drink tickets). This is an all ages festival.

As I’ve summarized before in my June roundup of Portland events, this unique beer festival features almost 50 fruit beers and ciders, with many beers/ciders have been brewed specifically for the Fruit Beer Festival so this may be your only chance to try them.

Portland Fruit Beer Festival 2014 poster

Well, technically it starts with a special VIP session they are holding on Friday evening, which for $30 (only $10 more than the regular admission on Sat/Sun) from 4-9pm and limited to 300 VIP guests you get access to the fruit beers without everyone else (or less of them, a lot less of them in the way!), and there will also be a few special tappings (4 of the 26 beers are tapped especially for Friday).

The fruits featured are a wide range of fruits: you can see the list here at New School which has descriptions with the beer. There is also another special list of 25 Rare Rotating Tap list of one-off or vintage kegs of just 5 gallons each, and some are listed with the tentative times they will be tapped so you can make your drinking plans now.

Because you do that right? You look over the list of beers for a festival and start noting which ones you want to try, which ones you really really want to try, and then when you attend the festival get in line for the beers in that order to make sure it doesn’t run out and you aren’t disappointed?

And maybe if you have fellow drinking partners, you plan out a drinking strategy so no one is getting 2 of the same beer and you can each wait in different lines and come back and share tastes for most efficient tastings? Right?

I nearly fell out of my chair when I was reading my email and saw I was invited to a media preview of some of the beers that will be tapping at the Portland Fruit Beer Festival by Ezra/Samurai Artist (Ezra Johnson-Greenough), the king of the Portland Fruit Beer Festival. Well, I don’t know if king is the official title, but he does organize the whole thing. He seems to be doing double duty by modeling a PDX Beer Week T shirt also here.
Samurai Artist aka Ezra Johnson-Greenough kicking off the event and already wearing a PDX Beer Week shirt at the Portland Fruit Beer Fest Media Preview with sneak peeks of 10 of the beers

I do drink a lot of beer (well of everything- I like to say I don’t discriminate/yearn to be learn and enjoy all deliciousness). Ok, mom, don’t worry, I take that back. I don’t drink a lot, but I have tried a large variety, maybe once twice a week, and maybe Bailey’s Taproom/Upper Lip is like my Cheers.  But I don’t blog much about it, as there are much better beer writers out there, including official media source The Beer Here at the Oregonian and  already mentioned The New School (which are my main sources for beer news) and then for more personal stories of beer rather then just event announcement I often read Beer Musings from Portland by Kris (who also sometimes writes for Oregon Beer Growler).

I was shocked that I would try to fit into such beer expert company.

Thankfully, I was able to pull in another contributor to this blogpost… a beer know it all who also works at Deschutes and Bailey’s/UL Ryan Spencer, who also sometimes contributes to Serious Eats and apparently Cicerone. So official beer expert. Thanks so much Ryan for helping me out with this, especially as I already had tickets to see a show that night and had to leave a little early.

As part of the media event, Ezra and some brewers let us taste 10 of the beers that would be at the Portland Fruit Beer Festival. It felt to me like a secret meeting as we stood around in the back of Burnside Brewing drinking out of plastic cups as the beers were poured from growlers. Each brewer talked a little about the beer and maybe the inspiration for it while inevitably shuffling their feet or other nervous tics which made for terrible pics so I eventually gave up. But I got a few pics of the first few brewers, heh! There was no place to set the cup down (except for the floor) in this secret beer meeting so I don’t have any pics of the beer, except in the brewer’s hand.
Bryan Keilty from Lompoc Brewing explains Lompoc Brewing's Pear'n Kramer sourced their pears for this brew from the backyard of someone's mom! Burnside Brewing Nero's Fiddle uses a proprietary blend of apples, one of them being a Roman Beauty that inspired the name Nero, at the Portland Fruit Beer Fest Media Preview with sneak peeks of 10 of the beers

Some Tasting Notes

So here are our notes of the Portland Fruit Beer Festival Beer Preview tasters we tried, ranking in order of fruit beer love.

  1. Citrus Royale from The Commons Brewing – Portland, OR
    Style: American Sour ABV: 5.8% ABV IBU: 11
    A sour spelt based beer with Navel Orange, Murcott Mandarin, Meyer Lemon peel and orange and lime juice. One of the most exciting beers at the preview and one to look out for is The Common’s Citrus Royale. This beer is a variant of The Common’s Biere Royale released last year, but with a variety of citrus fruits rather than currants. While retaining the same base beer and “house” lacto culture acquired from Nancy’s Yogurt as last year, the sourness and fruit character are restrained in comparison; allowing for the base beer to shine through with pleasant citrus undertones. The citrus character is derived from a blend of naval orange, meyer lemon, mercott mandarin juice added throughout fermentation creating a flavor profile reminiscent of a mimosa.
  2. Mayme B from Alameda Brewing – Portland, OR
    Style: Belgian Dark Golden 6.6% ABV 45 IBU’s
    The Mayme B is a Belgian Dark Golden bier brewed with Mamey fruit (Pouteria sapota). This tropical fruit native to the Caribbean and Central America has a flavor which could be described as a mix of sweet potato and pumpkin topped off with maraschino cherry and almond twist… or at least that’s what the brewer said. I didn’t detect the cherry, but the sweet potato, pumpkin, and hint of almond I was able to detect, and it gave it a bit of “chewiness” that I really liked. Meanwhile the rest of us were just like “what… what is this fruit?” And he’s like “It’s like a football but like a papaya” and probably formed his hands to make a football shape three times. Apparently he discovered this fruit while on his honeymoon in Mexico, but he was able to source the fruit from Florida, but I don’t think he’ll be doing a lot more of these so get it while it lasts! The 100 pounds of mamey was added post boil in the kettle and also post fermentation, along with Belgian Pilsner malt, Special B, and the Belgian yeast (he apparently really like this yeast, as it’s the 3rd beer he’s brewed with it). For a fruit beer, this was completely unexpected and unique which is why I gave it bonus points for originality and creativity as well as the taste.
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    The size of a Mamey fruit as described by the Alameda brewer at the Portland Fruit Beer Fest Media Preview
  3. Peach Slap, from Deschutes Brewery – Portland, OR
    Style: Sour Ale with Peaches ABV: 3.2% IBU: 22
    Peach Slap is a crisp light Belgian ale that starts light, gets a little complexity with his love of gin gimlets and so he added a floral quality with the addition of juniper berries and peppercorn. And then, along with peach puree, there’s the surprise heat thanks to peach habanero syrup. The base beer is light but bubbly and sweet like drinking a sparkling berlinerweisse so is super tasty. This is also a top pick for me and is sure to be a crowd pleaser, though some might complain it leans more towards soda than beer (in fact, before the peach habanero the brewer worried it was like liquid fruit roll up but with the syrup at least it was more like soda), but that wouldn’t be me, and then I’ll just drink your glass for you, thanks.
    Telling us about his love/inspiration of gin gimlets and the use of peach habanero syrup in the Deschutes Brewery Peach Slap Sour Ale with Peaches, at the Portland Fruit Beer Fest Media Preview with sneak peeks of 10 of the beers
    Telling us about his love/inspiration of gin gimlets and the use of peach habanero syrup in the Deschutes Brewery Peach Slap Sour Ale with Peaches
  4. Aren’t You Glad I Didn’t Say Banana? from Laurelwood Brewing – Portland, OR
    Style: Citrus Wheat Ale ABV: 4.4 IBU:14
    Another beer to look out for at the festival will be Laurelwood’s Orange You Glad I Didn’t Say Banana. Drawing inspiration from both Laurelwood’s year round hefeweizen and Brewmasters Vasili Glestsos’s son’s love of knock-knock jokes, this beer is another citrus bomb that emphasizes pithy/rind flavors rather than juice. Laurelwood added 12 gallons of juice and over 6lbs of citrus zest from a myriad of fruits including oranges, lemons, limes, and grapefruits. The fruit flavor is supported by a prominent wheat character derived from the same base beer used to make laurelwood’s hefeweizen, the only difference being the fruit addition and the use of wit yeast versus hefe yeast.
  5. Boysen The Hood from Gigantic Brewing – Portland, OR
    Style: Golden Tart Boysen Belgian ABV: 6.4 IBU: 19
    This year Gigantic Brewing was one of a few breweries smart enough to brew a beer which met the requirements for both Cheers to Belgian Beers and The Fruit Beer Fest. Boysen The Hood is a basic Belgian golden ale brewed with pilsner and wheat malts. However, this beer deviates from the norm in that it was kettle soured for 24 hours and then aged on fresh Oregon boysenberries. The result is an easy drinking light Belgian ale with notes of blackberries and strawberries reminiscent of a Berliner weisse.
  6. Lacerta Frambuesa from Ecliptic Brewing – Portland, OR
    Style: Belgian Framboise ABV: 6.5 IBU: 20
    Lacerta is the lizard constellation, as brewer John Harris has a constellation theme going. He was also quick to note this is not a framboise, it’s a frambuesa. So pay attention and get it right! The base beer is a light ale made in the Aztec style then infused with Cocoa Nibs in the mash and at fermentation 100 pounds of raspberries were added.The Cocoa nibs definitely add an unusual additional flavor. Although this beer will debut at the Portland Fruit Beer Festival, John made enough that we may see it at his brewery sometime after.

    Brewer John Harris of Ecliptic explaining this is not a framboise, it is a frambuesa beer, that he brewed 
  7. Up From San Antone from Widmer Brothers/5 Stones Artisan Brewery – Portland, OR + Cibolo, Texas
    Style: Grapefruit White IPA ABV: 6.6% IBU: 55
    The Widmer/5 Stones collaboration beer is the second beer in a series of collaboration beers Widmer plans to release throughout the year. This collaboration is with 5 Stones, a small brewery in Texas that specializes in brewing with fresh produce and non-traditional ingredients. Named after a line in the song “Amarillo by Morning,” the name is a nod to the location of 5 Stones and the usage of Amarillo hops. Up From San Antone is a combination of a classic NW White IPA and Belgian Wit, similar in style to Deschutes Chain breaker White IPA. Widmer juiced and zested over 100 lbs of fresh grapefruit with coriander to impart a strong grapefruit character that comes across more bitter and pithy as opposed to juicy, both emphasizing the bitterness of the fruit and hops.
    Widmer Brewers chatting about Up From San Antone, their Grapefruit White IPA at the Portland Fruit Beer Fest Media Preview with sneak peeks of 10 of the beers
    Widmer Brewers chatting about Up From San Antone, their Grapefruit White IPA at the Portland Fruit Beer Fest Media Preview with sneak peeks of 10 of the beers. Also, of the brewers that actually wore the brewery shirts to as to be easily identified, they have the nicest ones. This kind of insightful coverage clearly differentiates me from other beer blog coverage.
  8. Pi Beer from Fort George Brewery – Astoria, OR
    Style: Fruit Wheat Beer ABV: 5% IBU: 3.141592653358979323846264338372950288419716939937510
    For Fort George’s PFBF entry this year the brewery took a traditional approach to fruit beers with a low alcohol wheat beer and the addition of strawberries and rhubarb. Named after the beers low IBU value of 3.14, Pi Beer has a big strawberry aroma with a hint of tannic acidity from the rhubarb. The fruit aroma however falls short in the flavor of the beer letting the wheat character shine through. Where Fort George succeeds is in Pi Beer’s drinkability making it a refreshing beer on a hot day.
  9. Nero’s Fiddle from Burnside Brewing – Portland, OR
    Style: Graff ABV: 7.0%
    Burnside Brewing and EZ Orchards Cidre collaborated to blend a whole bunch of apples- including Roman Beauty, Pink Lady, and Granny Smith apples, the Roman Beauty being what inspired the name Nero. The apples were slightly fermented per French Style cider and whirlpooled directly into the kettle.
  10. Pear’n Kramer from Lompoc Brewing – Portland, OR
    Style: Golden Ale ABV: 5%
    Description: The origin of these pears is a story of friendship- they came from the backyard in Salem, and were hand picked by the brewers and bartenders of Lompoc themselves last summer. In fact, the Kramer name comes from the name of the mother whose backyard they relieved of those 40 pounds of pears. I guess you can say the type of pear used in this beer is “Backyard Pear”. This beer fermented in stainless stell with those pears which were just quartered so skin and all for 5 months before being transferred to another stainless steel tank for conditioning where it was inoculated with a touch of gueuze. There is something a little local farmstead beer about this beer which is charming.

This wasn’t available to taste, but Abe (Abram Goldman-Armstrong) gave us a little drinking break as he talked about Cider Riot and their contribution to the Portland Fruit Beer Fest. It is one of the rare taps to be opened on Saturday afternoon and made especially for the festival. Inspired by Michael Jackson the beer writer who would sometimes use this descriptor, this cider called Hedgerow Fruits uses dessert apples then blended with black currants and black prunes.
Abe (Abram Goldman-Armstrong) describes how Cider Riot's contribution of the Hedgerow Fruits fruit cider (apples AND black currants and prunes) was inspired by beer writer Michael Jackson. At the Portland Fruit Beer Fest Media Preview with sneak peeks of 10 of the beers

The Fruit Beer Festival, as before, will be held Burnside Brewing. Burnside Brewing will be open and you can also get food via Pulehu Pizza with their grilled pizzas, as well as Bunk Sandwiches.

Attending Beer Festival Tips

  1. The earlier you arrive at the festival the better so as to not have as many lines and in case certain beers run out for the day. I almost always arrive at the beginning and so can be gone in a few hours unless I’m waiting for rare beers to rotate in.
  2. Keep in mind you don’t have to pay admission both days- you just need to bring back your glass from the Saturday and buy extra drink tickets as needed.
  3. My recommendation is to scope out what beers you want- particularly for the rare beers, if it says which day it is being tapped you may want to plan for that day. As I noted earlier, rank which ones you really want to try and try to get those first.
  4. Keep in mind to have a little bit of water with you in order to cleanse your palate and not get dehydrated.
  5. If you go with friends who aren’t squeamish about sharing, you can taste even more by each person calling what they are going to go get and you mark it off the list! If there are ones you particularly want you can always get a second one on your own!

 

WHAT: Portland Fruit Beer Festival

WHEN: Saturday, June 6 11 am-9 pm until the end of Sunday, June 7 11 am-6 pm

WHERE: Burnside Brewing at 701 E Burnside St, Portland, OR 97214

TICKETS: On sale at $20 general admission. You can also buy admission at the door. The admission includes one 16 oz glass you keep and 12 drink tickets.

 

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