Archive for the 'Belgian Beer' Category

An obviously interesting new San Francisco Restaurant with great beer

One of the blogs I follow is Food Gal, a blog about cooking, restaurants and food written by Carolyn Jung, who was Food Editor at the San Jose Mercury News before the most recent round of layoffs and buyouts. This week, she notes, there’s a new restaurant in San Francisco:

    New And Fishy

May 1st, 2008
From the team with the golden touch responsible for Town Hall and Salt House (both in San Francisco), now comes Anchor & Hope, a new fish house.

Located at 83 Minna St. in San Francisco, Anchor & Hope is the brainchild of the Brothers Rosenthal (chefs Mitchell and Stephen) and their best bud and front-of-the-house maestro, Doug Washington. …. READ MORE…

I was curious, so I went to the restaurant site and, of course,  Anchor and Hope
has an extensive wine list, conveniently posted on line. Nothing about beer.  So I scanned the menu and found Guinness Battered Skate Wing (skate is a fish that figures in a lot of famous dishes.) Hmm. So I e-mailed the restaurant. Do you have a beer list I asked?  Do they ever:

Draft: Drop Top Amber Ale, Anchor Steam Porter

Bottles: Alaskan Summer (Kolsch), Scrimshaw Pilsner, Franziskaner,  Alagash White , Czechvar (the Czech Republic Budvar Budweiser), Session Premium Lager (Full Sail),  St. Peters Organic English Ale 500m.

Firestone ‘Union Jack’ IPA, Dogfishead 90 min IPA, Stone IPA, Fullers ESB, Fisher Blonde Flip Top 650m, Duvel, Tremens Delerium, La Choffe, Deschutes ‘Mirror Pond Pale Ale.

Unibroue ‘La Fin de Monde’, St. Bernardus Tripel, Rogue ‘Dead Guy Ale’, Lost Coast Downtown Brown, Wolavers Brown, Three Philosophers, Samuel Smith Oatmeal Stout, Ole’ Rasputtin, Young’s Double Chocolate Stout 500mL, Duchesse De Bourgogne.

Prices are middle-of-the-road, entrees in the low $20 range. Not cheap, but obviously a place to go with someone special. One question. They have great beer. Why in the hell don’t they advertise it?

Posted on Tuesday, May 6th, 2008
Under: Belgian Beer, Craft Beer, Food and Beer, General | 2 Comments »

A report on the 5 Guys and a Barrel Beer Dinner in San Francisco

5 guys and a barrel photo gail williams

Photo:
Credit: Gail Williams

The brewers and friends, left-right, Vic Kralj, proprietor, The Bistro, Hayward, CA.’; Rod Tod, Allagash, Portland, ME., Adam Avery, Avery Brewing, Boulder, CO.; Tomme Arthur, Port Brewing-The Lost Abbey, San Marcos, CA., Vinnie Ciluzo, Russian River, Santa Rosa, CA. and Cynthia Kralj. Not pictured, he’s hidden behind Cynthia, is Sam Calagione, Dogfish Head, Milton, DE.

Beer dinner puts the spotlight on barrel-aged beer

I couldn’t attend what, no doubt, was one of the stellar beer dinners of the year, in San Francisco last Sunday, April 20, 2008: Beer Chef Bruce Paton’s Dinner with the Brewmasters: Five Guys and a Barrel dinner at the Cathedral Hill Hotel.

Fortunately, Gail Williams and Steve Shapiro, the intrepid creators of beerbybart.com, the Web site that shows one how to get to most every decen beer venue in the Bay Area by BART, Caltrain, bus and foot, did go and furnish this account.

Gail took the photo above and has more on her Flickr site.
At my suggestion, they went through the courses one by one. Take over the reporting now Gail and Steve:

This was a remarkable event, created by “the beer chef, Bruce Paton,” last week… “Five Guys and a Barrel” a dinner featuring Allagash White, Russian River Blind Pig IPA,Dogfish Head 90 Minute IPA , Avery The Maharaja, Allagash Interlude, Russian River Supplication, Port Brewing Cuvee de Tomme , Dogfish Head Palo Santo Marron, Avery The Beast Grand Cru, Lost Abbey Older Viscosity, then a toast with the intensely sour rustic concoction the brewers of all of the above blended after a trip to Belgium together — “Isabelle Proximus”

Beer Chef’s Hors D’Oeuvre Selection
Allagash White and Russian River Blind Pig

Hors D’Oeuvre — included three intense little soups, two in small glasses and one in white Chinese soup spoons — the artichoke and mushroom was a delectable wonder to behold. beers were Allagash White is a very approachable refreshing beer to have with food… andVinnie’s Russian River Blind Pig — ok, not a lot to say except that this is still my favorite IPA on the planet, not to be dethroned by the lovely IPAs to come..

First Course
Citrus Cured Curraun Blue Sea Trout with Accoutrements
Dogfish Head 90 Minute IPA and Avery The Maharaja

It was really amazing, sea trout is a form of salmon and it was served with little dabs of sauce. It was a wonderful palate of flavors. Dogfish Head 90 Minute IPA - a delightful unexpected nutty flavor came thru in
the double IPA in this pairing,

Avery The Maharaja — more floral, perhaps better with the salmon-like dish at hand and the delicious smattering of sauces and roe.

Second Course
Selection of Artisanal Cheeses with House Made Condiments
Allagash Interlude and Russian River Supplication

Both beers were fabulous. And as we ate the brewers were telling stories about their trip to Belgium. Lots of fol de rol and guy stuff. Three amazing cheeses — We’d love to find out what they were.

Allagash Interlude was the more delicate and seductive of these two complex and interesting sour beers, and now I’d try it with any flavorful cheese.

Russian River Supplication was much bolder and more rustic … it did sort of pray for or even demand my full attention, so the name makes more sense to me now. For me, in each course there was a closely paired beer, and an odd couple that sort of triangulated off of the more tightly paired beer. This was an awesome effect.

Third Course
A Study in Duck
Port Brewing Cuvee de Tomme
Dogfish Head Palo Santo Marron

Various forms of duck including a seasoned”duck ham” with Port Brewing Cuvee de Tomme — the room adored hearing Tomme say “cuvee de me” and Dogfish Head Palo Santo Marron — made in a rare incense-like jungle wood container. It’s fascinating that wood is becoming so important in craft beers. Our table loudly wished he’d said “cuvee do moi” but had no complaints with the pairing.

Fourth Course
Warm Chocolate Mocha Cake with Blood Orange Sabayon and Fig Syrup
Avery The Beast Grand Cru
Lost Abbey Older Viscosity

Steve: The Older Viscoscity was wonderful It worked so well with the chocolate. Just a beautiful pairing. They were counterpoints to each other.

Gail: Was that delicious! Avery The Beast Grand Cru — this was the beer I’d have had if I had
skipped dessert, but the Lost Abbey Older Viscosity completely went with the chocolate and citrus — this pairing was one of those amazing combos that knocked both of us out of the park. Again, The Beast became the counterpoint for me.

The final toast
Isabelle Proximus

Gail: Isabelle Proximus is the 5 guys beer — five American brewmasters who play at a high level with Belgian beer styles went to Belgium and brought back some magical mystery bacteria! There’s something so amusing and delightful about the concept.

Isabelle Proximus is complex, intense — tough after the sweet course, but quite the experience! thank goodness I’ve been letting Vinnie, Tomme and all the guys educate my palate in this direction… this was no beginner’s Belgian… It was demanding but terrific. Hooray for five guys plus Bruce!

Steve: There were a number of sour beers. It was a treat. It gave us such a wide diversity of beer styles, big and sweet, intense and sour.

Post dinner: Afterward we went to the hotel bar in order to leave with Blind Pig on the palate. The fact that that beer is nearly always availble from the hotel bar puts the Cathedral Hill Hotel at Van Ness and Geary on the mental map of SF beer fans.

Final note from me: Except for Isabel Proximus, every one of these beers can be purchased here in the Bay Area. Don’t know where? E-mail me at whatsontap@sbcglobal.net and ask for our 2008 Northern California Retail Beer Store List. Bruce Paton has lots more dinners coming. Sign up for his e-mail list here.

Posted on Sunday, April 27th, 2008
Under: Barrel-Aged Beer, Belgian Beer, Food and Beer, General | No Comments »

An End of Passover beer tasting: Petrus, Avery, Lightning

Passover ends at 8:28 p.m. PDT tonight (Sunday, April 27, 2008) and I intend to celebrate with a bottle of Petrus Aged Pale. A friend’s coming with a bottle of Black Lightning Porter from Lightning Brewing, Poway, CA. and I have a sample bottle from Avery (Boulder, CO.) of Samael’s Oak Aged Ale, 15 percent ABV.

The Lightning Web site desxribed Black Lightning Porter this way:

Lightning Black Lightning PorterBlack Lightning Porter: (ABV 8.5%) A Baltic Porter (Fall Seasonal)
We have created our Black Lightning Porter to have intensely rich malt aromas with strong notes of chocolate and coffee. This has been by the judicious blending of 9 different malts, the bulk of which are from classic UK maltsters. Even though many breweries will add coffee and cocoa extracts to produce these effects, we feel this cannot replace the subtleties experienced by using only malted and then roasted barleys.

Here’s what Avery says about Samael’s:

Samael’s Ale is a super-caramelly, oak aged English-style strong ale. Perhaps the least hoppy (sacrilege here at Avery!!) beer we’ve brewed, to accentuate the malt. The oak is very apparent in this rich and high gravity ale, adding additional depth and complexity with a woody and cask-like nose and a pronounced vanilla flavor on the palate. Notes for 2007 - With the addition of an additional roasted malt, Samael’s now delivers subtle bitterness to add balance to the natural sweetness.

Oh yeah, there’ll be a few bottles of homebrew as well. Hallelujah.

Posted on Sunday, April 27th, 2008
Under: Barrel-Aged Beer, Belgian Beer, Craft Beer, General | 2 Comments »

An auction for a rare beer, no bids, KQED Belgian Tour bidding heats up

Two auctions I’m following are the 1987 J.W. Lees Harvest. Bidding closes Monday. No one has bid so far, it’s still at $9.99.  I’m gonna bid on  it tomorrow. This should be an excellent beer, worth more than $10.

On my KQED Belgian Beer Tour of San Francisco and Oakland, there’s been a bit of activity. Price is now up to $403. Bidding ends tomorrow

Posted on Saturday, April 26th, 2008
Under: Barrel-Aged Beer, Beer Auctions, Beer Bars, Belgian Beer, General | No Comments »

Only two more days to bid on KQED’s Belgian Beer Pub Crawl

KWED Belgian Beer Pub Crawl

Help. I need a secretary or an aide-de-camp. I’m VERY LATE with this posting. Let me explain, last year I volunteered to do a San Francisco pub crawl for KQED, KTEH, the public broadcast stations. It was a big success.

This year I’m doing a Belgian Beer Tour, also with Mr. Toad’s Tours furnishing the transportation. It up right now on the KQED Online Auction. There are only two moe days remaining to bid.

So if the idea of a whole lot of great Belgian beer at a number of spots in the East Bay and San Francisco grabs you and you feel like making a charitable, tax deductible donation, check it out. This is for a very worthy cause and the price is low.

Posted on Friday, April 25th, 2008
Under: Beer Auctions, Belgian Beer, Pub Crawls, Pubs | No Comments »

An online, rare beer auction starts on Friday

J.W. Lees Harvest  Vintage 1987Will the day come when fine beer trades like great wine? How about right now. Liquid Solutions a spirits, beer, wine and cider retailer with a mail order business is beginning an online beer austion starting Friday noon Pacific Time. The uction closes at 7 p.m. PDT on April 28.

The first two lots offered are: 1. A 1987 bottle of J.W,. Lees Harvest Ale. J.W. Lees is a Manchester, England brewer. Startig bid is $9.95. At that price I’d snap it up. Regular 2006 and 2007 Harvest sells for about $8. I wrote about this beer a couple of weeks ago (Tasted a couple of vintages — the one offered for sale is the first. They were absolutely incredible, especially the one aged in Calvados barrels. Read about the beer here,

Lot 2 is three bottles of 1996 Orval. Starting bid is $19.95. Hmmm. A 1996 would be bone dry with a leathery “horse blanket” nose from the wild yeast used in the secondary fermentation in the bottle. It would be an entirel different creature than fresh Orval. I wrote about Orval in detail. You can find that column here.

To register and bid online, go to Liquid Solutions. By the way, Liquid Solutions has a physical address and phone number: 275 Beavercreek Rd #C149 Oregon City, Oregon 97045, 503-496-1942

Posted on Thursday, April 24th, 2008
Under: Beer Auctions, Belgian Beer, Craft Beer, General, Imports | 1 Comment »

Emails: The New Toronado opens soon in San Diego

David Keene at Toronado San Diego, Photo by Alan MoenBill, I was at the Toronado “pre-opening” last Thursday in San Diego. It’s in the North Park area, at - I think- 4026 30th Ave, near University.

Not sure when it will officially open. Small but cozy place, lots of beer people there. Dave Keene was pouring lots of great beers, including Malheur Brut and a giant bottle of Duvel. Alan Moen

Great shot of the pour Alan,.

Jay Brooks at brookstonbeerbulletin.com says the owner is Ian Black, who worked at the Toronado in San Francisco.

Posted on Tuesday, April 22nd, 2008
Under: Beer Bars, Belgian Beer, Craft Beer, Pubs | 1 Comment »

A treasure of great pastrami and great Belgian beer at The Refuge in San Carlos, CA. on the San Francisco Peninsula

Now this is pastrami

A gigantic, utterly succulent and delicious pastrami sandwich at The Refuge San Carlos, CA. This humungous baby cost $12 and worth every penny, especially when paired with a flagon of St. Bernardus Abt 12., just one of the beers from The Refuge’s well-stocked cellar.

Photo: Matthew Sumner, San Mateo County Times

IF YOU LIKE GREAT BEER AND REALY GREAT pastrami, the kind one usually can find only in New York City, then crank up hupmobile and go to the The Refuge, 963 Laurel St. in San Carlos. Where’s that? It’s on the San Francisco peninsula. Check out the map.

The Refuge, San Carlos locator map

Prorprietor Matt Levin makes the pastrami and stocks his cooler with some of the best Belgian beer available anywhere.

Here’s Bay Area News Group Food Editor Nick Boer’s review…

Pastrami impossible: Fine dining redefined

By Nicholas Boer
Staff writer
Article Launched: 04/18/2008 12:11:05 AM PDT

For anyone other than our readers in San Mateo, it might seem like a stretch to suggest a trip to San Carlos for a sandwich. After all the (totally killer) Reuben is $16, and you need to factor in $8 for a drink, a few bucks for a tip, and another $20 for five gallons of gas (the trip took 50 miles from my workplace in Walnut Creek; slightly less back home to Livermore). If you’re in for a bite, you’re in for $50.

But this is more than a meal. It’s a rich cultural experience. The pastrami, thick hand-carved slices, rivals any found on my deli tour of New York City. The Belgian beer selection is also second to none. The 20 French wines by the glass cover tantalizing ground. There are Jewish classics — sparked by a chef’s fresh imagination — such as chopped liver and chicken noodle soup. Alongside regional favorites such as cheesesteak sandwiches, you’ll find European cheeses and charcuterie. You can order a Single with Cheese ($12) after your Sauteed Foie Gras ($16). Or have a Cobb Salad ($10) and a Creme Brulee ($6).
If this seems jarring, off-kilter “… Welcome to the Refuge. Read more…

Here’s my take on the beer…

THE BEER: The Refuge is definitely not light lager land, and that’s fortunate. The food here tends toward rich and mildly spicy, and you need a beer with legs to match the intensity of the food.

Fortunately, there’s an awesome list of Belgian Duchesse de  Bourgognebeers that pairs nicely, especially with the pastrami. Two that worked well were St. Bernardus ABT 12 and Duchesse de Bourgogne (and you thought wines had complex names). St. Bernardus ($9) is great beer: huge, creamy, long-lasting head, a spicy nose with hints of herbs, chocolate and vanilla. But be cautious, it’s strong: 10.5 percent, double the strength of an ordinary lager.

The Duchesse ($9) — Duchess of Burgundy in English — is totally different. It’s a mildly sour Flemish brown ale. There’s an initial hit of sweetness with a sour edge that grows in intensity. It’s a nice counterpoint to the rich sweetness of the pastrami. Those are just two of the 14 excellent beers on offer. The management serves free two-ounce samplers, so try a variety.
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Posted on Friday, April 18th, 2008
Under: Barrel-Aged Beer, Belgian Beer, Food and Beer, General | 3 Comments »

Dean Biersch opens a cool new pub-restaurant-beer garden in Sebastopol

Hopmonk Tavern

Dean Biersch on the back deck of his new Hopmonk Tavern which opens Thursday in Sebastopol. That’s a pint of Hopmonk Kellerbier from Gordon Biersch. The tavern and beer garden is not connected to Gordon Biersch. It’s Dean’s first restaurant opening in 8 years.

FROM THE EARLY DAYS IN THE LATE 1980s in Palo Alto, the Gordon Biersch brewpub chain – guided by partner Dean Biersch – carved out a niche for comfortable, but posh digs, with clean-tasting, fresh beer from partner Dan Gordon, the German-trained, American brewer.

Over the next two decades, Gordon Biersch rose in splendor, spanning the nation with 25, uber-fancy establishments. The two partners sold the brewpub business to Big River Brewing, Chattanooga, TN and and raised money for a San Jose brewery by handing control of the busuiGoogle locator map, Hopmonk Tavernness to a Las Vegas investor. Dan Gordon’s happily brewing beer in San Jose. Dean Biersch moved to Sonoma. He’s divorced with three kids, one 13-year-old and twins, 10.

And tomorrow, (Thursday, April 17, 2008), Dean’s back in the restaurant business.

Eight years after he opened his last Gordon Biersch restaurant, he opens Hopmonk Tavern: A Beer Garden in Wine Country, 230 Petaluma Ave.
in Sebastopol, CA. (Don’t live in the Bay Area? Here’s a map.)

But don’t look for posh. The whole emphasis is comfort. It’s at the convergence of two state highways, on the edge of downtown Sebastapol, on the route to the Pacific Coast. The landmark, L-shaped building, built in 1903, was the power house for the Petaluma & Santa Rosa electric railroad that ran through Sebastapol. For a decade, it was a brewpub, Powerhouse Brewing, which closed in 2005. It became Sebastapol Brewing, which closed last year.

If you’ve visited either of the previous brewpubs, you’re in for a shock. The interior is totally changed. Biersch has covered the concrete floors with Douglas fir planks, recycled from a split pea factory in Idaho. When I visited last week the new booths, plush, 1950s-style naugahyde, I think, were still covered in plastic. There’s a new bar and a small brewplant, which, Dean said, will be used later.

Hopmonk pilsIn the meantime, there’s an extremely wide range of beer on tap, including a special pils: Hopmonk Kellerbier, brewed by Gordon Biersch. I found it crisp, malty, excellent. Also Dan Gordon’s wonderful new Dunkelweizen, intense and interesting. I’m posting my Beer of the Week column about it in a few minutes, because the link’s expired to our newspapers. Hopmonk’s also stocking about 75 Belgian beers in bottles, ranging in prices from $5 - $8. We’re making every effort to keep prices low, he said. All beers are served in the appropriate glassware.

Dean has brought in a beer sommelier, Anastasy Tynan, an ace homebrewer from Hawaii to select beers offered and to provide expert help to patrons. They both prefer to call the post, “Hop Monk.:” Great idea, not so pretentious.

More about the beer in a minute.

There’s also a beer garden now. Dean says they jackhammered out the concrete, covered the ground with decomposed granite, there’s even a firm path for wheelchairs and the whole place, including the outside beer garden, has wheelchair access. Most trees in the beer garden are just planted, but there’s lighting and tables and it’s already a pleasant spot It’s sheltered from the wind and might be hot in the sun, but very pleasant in the evening.

Hopmonk Tavern exterior

The other part of the building’s has been converted into a music hall, with seating, a bar and a stage. Dean hopes to bring in top and indie local and Bay Area musicians. He’s even added a “green room” for visiting musicians.

About the food, Dean has hired Lynn McCarthy, an outstanding young chef from Sun Valley, Idaho. He has rebuilt the kitchen for her. The idea, they both explained, is to produce rustic tavern food, very unpretentious, but very real food. “We use very heavy flatware, rustic plates, our mussels come in an iron pot and we have lots Belgian style dishes,” Dean says.

During a tour, McCcarthy set out some of her specialities. What grabbed me were the “small plates.” A charcuterie plate of cured meats, Prosciutto and a “tavern pate,” is $10.50. The pate is made from chicken livers in a reduced Calvados apple brandy, from California Cider Co., at the edge of Sebastopol. Wow. Another was an artisanal cheese plate, three local cheeses, including Carmody, a Munster-like cheese from nearby Bellwether Farms, served with fresh bread and fruit, $12.

This is a place to sit down, munch, enjoy the beer and the atmosphere and not spend a ton of money.

About the beer on tap right now…It’s a long list, Stone Brewing Smoked Porter, Anchor Liberty Ale, Belhaven Scottish Ale, Ducjhesse of Burgundy, Eel River Organic Porter, Fullers London Pride, Mendocino Spring Bockk, Moonlight Death & Taxes, New Belgium Mothership Wit, Rogue Dead Guy Ale and Sonoma Farmhouse Saison from Lagunitas. They also plan to have cask ales on hand pump.

Gee, I reckon I might find something here to drink. See you there.

Posted on Wednesday, April 16th, 2008
Under: Beer Bars, Belgian Beer, Craft Beer, General, Pubs | No Comments »

CALENDAR UPDATE: This is Belgian Beer Month at the Toronado

Toronado logoIt’s Belgian beer month at the Toronado, 547 Haight St., San Francisco. Somehow, this very important fest escaped my notice.

Basically, Toronadao proprietor David Keene puts every Belgian he has on tap (or almost every Belgian). There are dozens, including Lambics and gueze and many kegs that have some age on them and should be delicious.

See ya’ there.

Posted on Sunday, April 13th, 2008
Under: Beer Bars, Belgian Beer, Festivals, General | No Comments »