Decide What Style of Beer You Want to Drink with This Flow Chart
There’s so many types of beer out there that it can be tough to decide what you want to imbibe. This handy flow chart is here to help you with that.
There’s so many types of beer out there that it can be tough to decide what you want to imbibe. This handy flow chart is here to help you with that.
The thought of one person walking around the grounds of beer festivals for a couple of days and objectively telling you what the “top” or “best” beers are is blatantly absurd. There are hundreds of beers to sample through, and the fact that everyone’s tastes are distinct makes it even more difficult to come up with a list of beers.
And yet, among the greatest joys of attending a beer festival is being able to sample different things and reflect on your discoveries and preferences afterward. With that in mind, you should certainly try the following craft beers during the next festival and see if they make it to your favorites list.
1. 3 Minutes to midnight
An Imperial Stout beer with 10% alcohol content by Bellwoods Brewery, this beer is aged with tart cherries for three months to give it rich and complex notes of tart fruit, roast malt, and bitter chocolate.
2. Fermium House Ales
Brewed by Bar Volo, this Black Imperial IPA with 7.5% alcohol content has a wonderful mix of mango, pine, and orange, as well as roasted malt and chocolate/
3. Red Tape Stout
Brewed by Indie Alehouse with 10% alcohol, this is a delicious, creamy stout with black color.
4. Witchshark
Another Imperial IPA but brewed by Bellwoods, this double IPA has 9% alcohol and combines an aggressively bitter and hoppy taste with juicy and fruity tones. It is deceptively smooth and consistently among the top beers in Canada.
5. Zombie Apocalypse
Another top brew by Indie Alehouse with 10% alcohol content, this is the kind of strong drink with a chocolatey, roasty, boozy feel.
6. Fangboner
A Brett IPA brew by Great Lakes that combines hops with Brettanomyces yeast to produce an appallingly brilliant bitter/funky hybrid that begs to be guzzled down.
7. Amsterdam Bar Hop Brett Bier de Garde
This all-brett IPA by Amsterdam is brewed with a different hop every time, though it maintains its dry bitterness with complex pineapple, mango flavors and notes of herbaceous grape. It has 6% alcohol content.
8. Coffee Porter
Brewed by mill Street, this is a nice, award-winning porter with 5.5% alcohol content. It is made with Balzac coffee.
9. 504 Pale Ale
Brewed by Liberty village, this is a refreshing and vaguely subtle IPA with 4.8% alcohol content that is meant to calm you after riding the dense route for which it is named.
10. Nutcracker Porter
Brewed by black Oak, this dark porter has 5.8% alcohol and notes of coffee, figs, cinnamon, and spice rounding.
This list is not conclusive, and with breweries introducing new drinks to the market, feel free to try out new entrants at the beer festival. They might just make it to the list next time.
Photo Credit: BlackOakBeer
Hoptimus Prime. Smooth Hoperator. Hoptical Illusion. If a brewer has the chance to make a hop pun (and odds are good, thanks to the hop boom), they’ll make it. But NPR’s The Salt says that the explosion of craft beer over the past decade has led to a legal problem:
There are no new names left.
Well, that’s not exactly the problem. As The Salt reported yesterday, name trends within the craft brewing community-think place names, hop names, and yes, plenty of puns-mean that more and more, brewers are accidentally naming their beers with the same name as other small brewers:
For example, when the brewers at Avery in Colorado and Russian River in California discovered that they each had a beer named Salvation, they met at an annual Colorado beer festival to talk it out. Vinnie Cilurzo, co-owner and brewmaster of Russian River Brewing Co., says that neither he nor Adam Avery knew who had coined the name. Nor were they particularly worried about it. Still, they took the opportunity to come to a clever compromise. They combined their beers in a blend and named it Collaboration Not Litigation.
They sound chill.
But not all brewers are so relaxed about their naming rights. The Salt mentions several other anecdotes in which brewers ended up in litigation-not only over names, but over actual art and logos, like the common celtic crosses seen on some beer labels.
The story is fascinating, and it highlights a big dilemma for small business owners: If these brewers don’t trademark their names, they’re left open to imitators. If they do trademark them, there’s still no guarantee they won’t be copied, whether intentionally or not. They’re left with a choice between expensive and time-consuming legal action, and turning the other cheek.
Source: Craft Brewers Have run out of New Names
Image via Shutterstock
Late fall brings us a preponderance of seasonal brews, from ciders to Christmas porters to Glögg. But one you may not have heard of-and one you should definitely try-is wet-hopped beer, which is suddenly popping up in taprooms and being written about in Bon Appetit. So what is it?
First of all, let’s talk about the hops. Hops are the flower of the hop plant-the resin-packed cones-and they look a little like green acorns. Their bitterness provides the counterpoint to the syrupy sweet flavor of malt, that crisp tang that evens the keel of your IPA boat. Many IPAs are made with hops that are dried and pelletized, while wet-hopped beers are added within hours of picking, still wet and fresh from the field-presenting an interesting dilemma for brewers located further than a day from the farm. Turns out, the hassle is worth it.
Hops weren’t always used in beer brewing-in the earliest days, brewers used all kinds of plants to flavor beer. According to this excellent Short History of Hops by beer historian Martyn Cornell, one early mention of the usefulness of hops comes from a surprising source: Abbess Hildegard von Bingen, the German mystic whose latin texts inform some of what we know about Medieval Europe.
In the 12th century, Bingen described how hops could be used to preserve liquids. And while it’s not clear when they were added to beer, German farmers were doing good business selling hops to brewers across Northern Europe by the 13th century.
Many of the modern hops we use today are mostly descended from breeding programs, many of them aimed at creating hops that were higher in resin content. Yes, resin is the stuff that creates that bitter, crisp taste, a bit like the resin of cannabis plants. American hops-the ones you’ll be tasting in wet hopped beers around these parts-are famous for their delicious resin-y goodness.
Often, the hop cones are picked and dried, then put into a kiln and turned into little pellets. As Bon Appetit explains in this great post, pelletized hops taste very different than their fresh-picked counterparts, just like dry herbs taste different than fresh ones.
But because fresh hops start to wilt very quickly after they’re picked, pelletized hops are the practical way for most brewers to make their beers-getting hops from the farm to the brewery in under 24 hours is a logistical nightmare for most breweries.
So, considering the industrialization of the farming and brewing business over the last century, how did the idea of wet hop beer ever enter the picture? To find out, I called Jason Ebel, the co-founder of Two Brothers Brewing Company about 30 miles west of Chicago. Two Brothers makes a wet hop beer called Heavy Handed, and was one of the first breweries to try the technique from the Midwest-where access to hops, normally sourced from the Pacific Northwest and California, was anything but steady.
As Ebel told me, a friend on the West Coast described adding fresh-picked hops to a beer, and he had to try it. “Part of the fun of craft brewing is experimenting,” he says. “I thought, there’s got to be a way to try it here in the Midwest.” Back then, Two Brothers worked with a small Washington State hop farmer to source their hops-so Ebel called her up and asked if she’d be willing to “box them up right out of the field” and put them on an overnight truck.
The farmer was game, and the first shipment of wet hops packed in parkas made of ice packs to keep them fresh left the farm at 3PM and was already brewing in the Two Brothers’ batch by 8AM the next morning. So far so good. The next shipment was scheduled to arrive by truck the following morning for another batch-but strangely, it never arrived. By that afternoon, Ebel had scrapped the batch and given up hope. But late that afternoon, the UPS driver rolled into the lot and revealed that his haul had been opened and the ice packs removed. The hops were unusable.
What had happened? “Sorry it’s late,” the driver explained to Ebel, who cracks up recalling the story. “This got quarantined because they thought it was dope.”
That was in 2000, and much has changed about brewing culture since then. For one thing, hops moving across state lines are a far more common sight. Two Brothers is now in its 15th season of making Heavy Handed, and now grows the hops at a local farm in Pontiac, Illinois. Each six pack of the beer features three separate beers, each brewed with its own wet hop variety-Cascade, Centennial, and Chinook-and every year, the company hosts a day at the hop farm that begins with harvesting the cones and ends with dinner paired to the resulting beer.
There are now dozens of wet-hopped beers on the market, but keep in mind that wet-hop beers depend far more on the harvest process than conventional beers-so supplies of specific brews might not be as consistent as other IPAs. I tried the three I could get my hands on at my local shop, starting with Denver’s Great Divide Brewery, which makes its Fresh Hop Pale Ale with Pacific Northwest-grown hops.
Great Divide’s contribution to this (deeply empirical) taste test surprised me. I’d read so much about wet hops, I expected a razor-sharp bite of resin. But this leaf-colored beer taste more malty than hoppy at first, until I gave it a few more sips to sink in-then I noticed the earthy stuff everyone mentions when they describe fresh hops. It was more soil than grass, and I mean that in the best way possible.
On the opposite end of the spectrum was Lagunitas’ Born Yesterday Pale Ale, which they shipped to me within 24 hours of brewing-what the company calls a “birth record.” The Pale Ale uses Amarillo, Mosaic, and Equinox hops (“picked on the equinox itself, for all those astrology fans,” says the Lagunitas). It was with Born Yesterday that I really started to taste the grassy notes. In fact, they weren’t just notes, they were intense, blaring choruses. It was almost like tasting the green-stained smell of grass, crackling and fresh. It was delicious and overpowering.
Finally there was the Two Brothers’ Heavy Handed I’d heard so much about, which landed somewhere between the two. It was more like a layer cake of earthiness and crazy, bright citrus, like the bastard child of a rye and an IPA, with a crazy porter uncle. Ebel had described it perfectly by saying that wet hops add “an extra layer of depth,” adding “earthy, sometimes grassy” character to your IPA.
There was a surprisingly huge range between the three beers, which I had kind of expected to taste like double IPAs on steroids. That’s definitely not the case; wet-hopped beers are more of a way to taste the plants themselves, each with their own eccentricities, than a single style of beer. It’s way more fun that way, really, a bit more like wine-tasting for beer fans. Now get out there and drink some.
Source: Wet Hop Beer
While most people will only spend a few dollars to enjoy their favorite beer, they would be surprised when told that some beer lovers spend more than $400 dollars on a single bottle of beer. These high end beers are not for the average drinker and most are produced in a limited number. Some of the top 5 most expensive beers are:-
Cost $150 per bottle
Volume-700ml
Samuel Adams’ Utopias is the only American brewed beer that makes it to the top five most expensive beers. Named in honor of the American revolutionary hero, Samuel Adams’ Utopias was first produced in 2002 with an ABV of 24% which was eventually increased to 27%.
Every year, a limited number of bottles are released. The beer is packed in ceramic bottles that resemble cooper finished brewing kettles. Samuel Adams’ Utopias is banned in 13 states due to legal restrictions.
Cost $275 per bottle
Volume-330ml
The Schorschbräu Schorschbock 57 beat the BrewDogs End of History to become the strongest beer in the world in 2011. Though the German brewer wanted a higher ABV, these was not feasible as it would have violated the 500 year Germanic beer purity law. Only 36 bottles of the Schorschbräu Schorschbock 57 were ever made
Cost $400 per bottle
Volume-375ml
The Carlsberg Jacobsen Vintage No. 1 is brewed by Jacobsen Brew house and only available in Denmark. This 2008 vintage is a brown colored beer that is made from the finest caramel and hops. It is then aged in French and Swedish oak barrels for six months in old wine cellars. With 600 bottles from the first vintage, this beer is found in the finest restaurants across Copenhagen.
Cost $765 per bottle
Volume-330ml
This controversial Scottish beer is also one of the most expensive you can have. Formerly the world’s strongest beer until the Schorschbock came along, BrewDogs End of History is made by mixing juniper berries and nettles from the Scottish highlands.
It’s insane alcohol levels are achieve by freezing and distilling it multiple times. This Scottish beer has the distinction of being packaged in carcasses of taxidermied hares, squirrels or weasel. Only 12 bottles were ever produced.
Cost $800 – 1800 per bottle
Volume-500ml
This is so far the most expensive beer to date. It is brewed by the Perth based, Nail brewing. First brewed in late 2010, this beer’s price tag is up the sky because the water that is used to brew it comes from the Antarctic.
Sea shepherd’s scientists flew to the Antarctic where they dug up ice which was melted for the brew process. Only 30 bottles of this beer were ever made with its first bottle being sold for $800 in September 2011
Looking for something new and unusual to treat your taste buds to this summer? If so, then you’re in luck! Below you’ll find six of the most unusual beers I could find, and believe me, I ventured into some fairly dark corners of the web to pull these out. Most of these aren’t for the faint of heart, but if you’ve got a sense of adventure, follow me!
What do you do if you live in Japan and have an overproduction of milk? You mix it with beer, of course, and that’s exactly what the Japanese did. When I was in college, we used to crack jokes about putting beer in your cornflakes for breakfast. “Beereal,” we called it. Turns out, you can do exactly that. Is it milk that tastes like beer, or beer that tastes like milk? Try it and see for yourself.
I know what you’re thinking…chili and beer? Yes! Each bottle comes with a scorching hot pepper inside, and it certainly adds to both the flavor and the heat. There’s not another beer quite like it, and your tongue and taste buds may never be the same again.
Well, someone was bound to come up with this combination sooner or later, right? Actually, this is one of my personal favorites. One part beer, one part coffee, it makes the perfect nightcap. If you’re a coffee lover, and even if you’re not overly fond of beers, this one is highly recommended, and by the way, it makes an excellent “float” too!
Everybody knows that pizza and beer go together. It’s the perfect food and drink combination, and now, they’ve actually been combined into one thing. That’s right. You can drink a beer that actually tastes a lot like a pizza, complete with onion, garlic, tomato, basil and oregano flavors. What’s for dinner at your house tonight?
Being a fan of the Dark Star brew mentioned above, I’ve got this one on my “must try” list. A stout drink, 10% by volume, it combines beer, coffee and vanilla. I wasn’t sure they could improve on the basic idea of coffee plus beer, but this strange brew is making me rethink. I can’t wait to get my hands on some.
While this brew doesn’t include any actual finished mustard, it does feature crushed mustard seeds. It’s dark and bitter, but absolutely delicious. Be warned though, this is beer that bites back!
There are hundreds of great beers from all over the world. If you find any of these beers available in Edmonton drop us a line!
We do our best to collect as many kinds of beer in one place every year at the Edmonton Beer Festival. Don’t miss out, see you in 2015!