Class of ’88 Imperial Smoked Porter Tasting Party

On this past Monday, Deschutes Brewery Portland Public House (in the Pearl District) had a “Class of ’88 Imperial Smoked Porter Tasting Party”. This was a special addition to their menu that day from 5-8pm where they had a special “flights and small bites in celebration of the release of our next Class of ’88 Collaboration with Great Lakes Brewing Company. This Imperial Smoked Porter is delicious and you will love the porter flight we’ve set up just for this event. Pair Imperial Smoked Porter, Black Butte XXIV and Black Butte Porter with pub inspired specialty appetizers and you can’t go wrong. Cheers to Porters and we hope to see you down here!”

Class of ’88 Flights & Small Bites included a trio of pairs. This included

  • a pairing the Black Butte Porter with a crispy chipotle baby back rib;
  • Black Butte XXIV Nitro with beer nuts and Mt  Townsend Campfire cheese (a jack cheese with alder and applewood smoke);
  • and the Class of ’88 Smoked Imperial Porter with a chocolate porter cube cake

Deschutes Brewery Portland Class of '88 Flights Small Bites Imperial Smoked Porter, Black Butte XXIV and Black Butte Porter with crispy chipotle baby back rib beer nuts and Mt  Townsend Campfire cheese chocolate porter cube cake Deschutes Brewery Portland Class of '88 Flights Small Bites Imperial Smoked Porter, Black Butte XXIV and Black Butte Porter with crispy chipotle baby back rib beer nuts and Mt  Townsend Campfire cheese chocolate porter cube cake

This Class of ’88 Collaboration is their second release of the series for this year. A bit of backstory: the Class of ’88 series of brews is going to be released throughout 2013, and is Deschutes Brewery working with four other craft breweries also founded in 1988 (North Coast Brewing Co., Rogue Ales, Goose Island Beer Co., and Great Lakes Brewing Co.) to create a selection of commemorative beers to celebrate their shared 25th anniversary. Thus the Class of ’88!

The first beer was a trio of commemorative beers in the Barley Wine style at the end of March, brewed with Rogue and North Coast, and each of the three brewers traveled to each brewery to collaborate and each brewery then released their interpretation. Obviously this second one is a Smoked Imperial Porter style. Both are in draft and in limited edition 22-ounce bottles. Next on the list is a collaboration with Goose Island that is supposed to be a Belgian-Style Strong Golden Ale- you can find out some more details here as reported by the New School blog. In fact, it was their review of this smoked imperial porter that solidified my decision to check out this flight, since I had previously had the 2 other beers.

The Deschutes  Black Butte Porter is always a dependable beer- approachable, even if you are not a porter lover like myself. In this case, paired with the crispy chipotle baby back rib, it really became a soothing cleanser for the spicy tangy kick of the rib, providing relief like having a refreshing mango lassi sip while enjoying a curry, both cooling and complementing.

Next, the Black Butte XXIV on Nitro was smooth with a hint of sweetness, and while the sweet nuts raised the profile of with crumbly sugared sweetness and added nuttiness, the cheese was my favorite here by providing a buttery slight smoke slight pepper hint.

Deschutes Brewery Portland Class of '88 Flights Small Bites Imperial Smoked Porter, Black Butte XXIV and Black Butte Porter with crispy chipotle baby back rib beer nuts and Mt  Townsend Campfire cheese chocolate porter cube cake

Finally, I am kicking myself for not even thinking to check to see if they had bottles of the Class of ’88 Imperial Smoked Porter available. This smoky chocolate goodness balanced sweet and bitter with a woodfire smoke at the end, and that chocolate porter cube cake had me taking the tiniest of bites and licking frosting off my fingers over and over. I don’t often get dessert, and clearly I have been missing out here at the Deschutes Portland Public House. If you see this beer, GET IT!

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P’s Downtown Beer Tour: Stop 1 and 2 of Deschutes and Rogue

My sister and her F came to visit this past weekend. Since they came on a weekend rather then a weekday, I was able to take them on my guided tour of some of the highlights of Portland. They arrived late on Friday evening, but not too late to get a start on the PDX experience- starting with microbrews.

Given our start of 11 at night and the fact that no one had eaten dinner yet, we were only able to hit two local breweries. My opinion is that Deschutes Brewery Portland Pub  is a nice intro to a local microbrew because they offer a large selection of their own beers to try (for instance, 16-20 of them) while offering decent food. They are also only a few blocks away from Rogue Distillery and Public House which offers some very interesting beer profiles that are not as common (chocolate, soba, juniper, chipotle, etc). But I don’t think the food at Rogue (with the exception of their tater tots and carrying Rogue cheese even though they are not directly related) is anything to highlight. It’s like they admit they know their beer is so good you will go there despite their lackluster food.

Add to this that the atmosphere at Deschutes is more on the gastropub that appeals to tourists with their carved Northwest wood and Northwest animals and scenery, while Rogue is the neighborhood bar restaurant that has sticky bench booths  that you might find at a sports bar in Wrigleyville but without all the TVs. At Deschutes, the sampler trays offer each guest the ability to pick out any 6 beers to try, and they write nice entire paragraph descriptions for each beer, so again, a great intro to microbrews. Rogue also has their beer binder, with a page each for each beer, but the descriptions at Deschutes are more relatable to the novice and focus more on flavor then history and stats. So… let’s warm up with Deschutes!

 

For food, J and I tried Northwest oysters on the half shell as a starter. You can order each or half a dozen in 3 styles (we got 2 of each): Classic Style with Black Butte Porter Cocktail Sauce; Beer, Lime, and Cilantro Mignonette; and the Chef’s Favorite of Mango Granité. My favorite was the Beer Lime Cilantro Mignonette and then the sweet Mango Granite, I thought there was a touch too much cocktail sauce in the classic style that overwhelmed the oyster. They were great, but those $3 an oyster sure go quick. I got my usual grilled washington pear and goat cheese pizza made of spent grain dough topped with Pears, Goat Cheese, Mozzarella, Hazelnuts (I forget that outside of the NW Hazelnuts are not as common until my guests tried to identify the nut) topped with Arugula tossed in White Balsamic Dressing. Fruit, diary, nuts, and greens in one plate! My F got his usual house-made veggie burger made with Black Beans, Vegetables, Spices, Barley, Brown Rice and Spent Grain from the Brewery on a Brewery-Baked Wheat Ciabatta with Avocado-Tomatillo. I have no idea why he always get this, he never finishes it, and I always end up taking it home and eating it as a leftover but adding cheese and bbq sauce to make it more juicy.

Her F also went with the burger but carnivore style, aka he had the black butte porter burger with pan seared Coleman Ranch Beer Burger finished with BBP-Worcestershire Sauce and a creamy Italian Asiago Cheese, Grilled Red Onion and Mushrooms with a BBP Mayonnaise on a Brewery-Baked Challah Bun. My sister had a dish that had a very similar to mine, the Tortellini Salad with Fresh Ricotta-Filled Tortellini with Sun-Dried Tomatoes, Caramelized Onions, Baby Arugula, Fresh Basil and Toasted Pine Nuts in a White Balsamic Vinaigrette topped with Aged Pecorino Cheese. I’m not sure who’s was healthier, mine or hers, but both were in the same taste profile family- you can definitely say these were sisters in dishes. Also how weird were our couples parallel version of ordering? Hers was a much better leftover later then mine.

Rogue also has tasting trays, but they aren’t on the menu, and when we arrived an hour before closing the bartenders said they were not pouring those anymore- just normal pints. So we only saw them pouring glasses of beer and shots of their distilled liquors, I guess pouring essentially shots of beer was too much work. This meant we weren’t able to try as many beers so wasn’t what I was hoping for, though J really liked trying the  Hazelnut Brown (third from the left). Also shown are Old Crusty barleywine, Morimoto Soba Ale, and on the very right the Irish Lager.

Bridgeport Brewery is also in the area, as is Bailey’s Taproom and Henry’s Tavern, but we stopped after Rogue as it was already 1am and we had a plan to go snowshoeing the next day. I like Bridgeport also for the atmosphere and decent food, it is along a similar experience as Deschutes but with less beer on the list. It ended up lower on my list as its location is on the other end of the Pearl District so not as convenient for a walking beer tour unless you time perfectly to minimize trolley wait – and honestly you could possibly walk and get there faster then waiting (as a side note, why don’t the Android Trimet apps have trolley stops, only bus and train! Grrr). Meanwhile Bailey’s and Henry’s both offer a wide selection, with Bailey’s offering more unique rotating tap but Henry’s offering wider variety but not as necessarily unique and local, and the feel is more corporate then Bailey’s. Henry’s also is a larger space and has pool tables and lots of TVs in the bar area, while Bailey’s has no TV- just board games and talking to your friends. If you are looking to explore beer, all are stops that offer plenty of microbrews to try all in essentially a stumbling distance. These are my cut of a downtown beer highlights list.

I also have a liquor-drink progressive walk as well, but this weekend we stuck with beer. Maybe next time.

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