Tuesday, April 26, 2011

Saturday Home Brewing

Ska's True blonde
This Saturday, along with a very interesting night of drinking Four Loko with good friends, I also made a batch of homebrew beer. I was originally shooting for a "Black IPA", but those plans were quickly thwarted due to the lack of ingredients at my local homebrew store. I typically order all my homebrewing supplies from this place out of Austin Texas called "AustinHomebrew.com". Unfortunately, I was too busy this past week to order my supplies and had to get my homebrew ingredients from "Worms Way", the homebrew store around the corner from my house. Actually, Worms Way is primarily a Hydroponic store, but they also carry enough homebrew ingredients to make some decent beers if you want to brew in a pinch. In this case however, they did not carry enough roasted and dark grains to make a "Black" IPA. So as a compromise, I decided to make a "brown" IPA!

I have never made a Brown IPA, so as a reference I began looking up recipes on-line for clones of my favorite Brown IPA, Dogfish Head's "Indian Brown Ale". Most of the hops were unavailable at Worms Way and the grain bill was composed of Liquid Malt Extract of unknown origins and quantities that I was unable to purchase. As an aside, I am by no stretch of the imagination, a professional beer brewer, but I prefer to make my beer using the "all-grain" method of brewing. All-grain gives you much finer control of the end product than using Liquid Malt Extract and is way more fun than just dumping in some sticky syrup and calling that brewing. Anyway, the grain bill in this recipe was virtually unobtainable and so I had to improvise!
Kettle steeping the grains

My "go-to" beer when I want to brew something with ingredients from worms way, is a standard dry hopped Pale Ale that I actually like quite a bit. I figured I could use the grain base from that beer and just darken it a little bit to bring out the color and flavor I wanted.

The grain bill for the 5 gallon batch of beer is as follows:
8lbs 2 Row
1lb 6 Row
Not a drop remained of the beer made by Dave Morales!
1lb 90L Crystal Malt
1lb Cara Pils Malt
0.5 lb Chocolate Malt

I also needed some hops for this beer which follows:
60min 1oz Kent Golding
30min 1oz Kent Golding
20min 1oz Wilamette
5min 1oz Cascade

and I used Wyeast's American Ale yeast for the fermenting.

I suppose I should just start from the beginning, since I am sure some of my readers are unfamiliar with what is involved with brewing beer. Beer is four things 1) Water 2) Grain 3) Hops and 4) Yeast. Any other flavorings such as fruit or spices are not required to make beer; and in my opinion can sometimes ruin a good beer!

The actual process of brewing consists of 4 phases. 1) conversion of starches to sugars 2) boiling of the liquid and addition of hops 3) cooling the liquid and 4) fermentation. For the average homebrewer, these 4 steps can be completed in about 4-6 hours (with the exception of fermentation which takes about 2 weeks to complete but requires no other energy out side of waiting for your beer to finish).

Here is what went down for today's batch of beer!
Step 1) Conversion of starches to sugars:
All grains were put into a grain bag and placed in 5 gallons of cold, filtered water. This mixture was placed on the stove and allowed to come up to 150 degrees F. After reaching 150 degrees, I stared a Timer for 45 minutes. You want the grains to steep at 150-160 degrees for the entire 45 minutes never allowing the mixture to get above or below those temperatures. After the 45 minutes are up, I move the pot outside, where I have an industrialized size propane burner for boiling my wort (beer, before it is actually beer, is actually called wort (pronounced wert)).

Step 2) Boiling and Hop additions:
My homebrew in the Carboy
I put the spurs to my propane burner and waited about 10-15 minutes for my wort to come to a boil. Boiling is a sensitive time. You must be careful to not boil too hard otherwise everything will boil out of the kettle. The process of boiling only takes 1 hour. So as soon as I saw the first bubbles of the boil, I set a timer and added my 60 minute hop (the one ounce of Kent Golding). Hop additions followed as I have described above with additions of Kent Golding, Wilamette and Cascade hops with 30, 20 and 5 minutes respectively left in the boil time. Hops are added at different times to highlight different features of the hops. Hops added early in the boil impart a lot of bitterness. hops added toward the middle add to the aroma of the beer. Finally hops added at the end of the boil will add to the flavor of the beer.

Step 3) Cool the Liquid:
I have a copper wort chiller that does the trick really fast... if you would like to see how this works, check out this video. Needless to say, I cooled my wort using my chiller, to 70 degrees F and then transfered it to a 6.5 gallon glass carboy (Pictured to the right)

Step 4) Ferment
This carboy was placed in a cool, dry closet (around 70 degrees F, or room temperature) where it will sit for the next week.

I will update you all on how the process is going, when I transfer and dry hop this coming saturday and when I bottle the beer the following week.
Notice Diego consuming the Four Loco in the background!


 I obviously was drinking all during this process. I consumed a Ska "True Blonde", one of Dave Morales' homebrews; a delicious steam beer that I enjoyed a lot (thanks Dave), and one of each Stone "Levitation" and "IPA". I have discussed the IPA in a previous post and will talk about the other beers in an upcoming post. That is all for now, if you have any questions or comments about homebrewing, my technique or the progress of this batch of beer, please post below. If you would like to follow me on this Drinking Adventure, please click on the link on the right where you can subscribe to my feeds. you can also follow me on twitter at @williepawn or friend me on Facebook. You can also email me here. I am also keeping a compiled list of beers tasted HERE that you can look at.  

Monday, April 25, 2011

Do NOT mess with the Four Loko

Diego briefly passes out and we litter his body with Four Loko Cans
I only have flashes of memory. Between blackouts, there are glimpses of what happened to me this past Saturday. I remember laughter... Lots of laughter. I remember grilling an absurdly large Tilapia. I think I took a shower at some point... I'm not positive of any of this. Although I did find a Crawfish on my roof the following morning I have absolutely no idea how it got there.


Let's start from the beginning. I remember making beer (more on that later). I remember that I had some friends there; Abby, Diego, Mena, Patrick, Ben, Trenton, Dave and Alex were all there. Mena made some delicious Cuban sandwiches, which in retrospect may have been enough of a buffer from the looming alcohol poisoning that I needed to survive the night. I remember having made my batch of homebrew beer and kicking back with a can of Green Apple flavored Four Loko, this is when things get a little fuzzy.

What is Four Loko you say?

Let me explain.

On a recent trip to an un-named local Asian Grocery Store, I came across the controversial malt beverage called "Four Loko". Four Loko is a candy flavored alcohol beverage containing 12% ABV and is fortified with caffeine and is as drinkable as Kool Aid. Alcohol is a depressant that slows reaction time, impairs judgement and inebriates its users. Caffeine is a stimulant that counters most of these side effects allowing the user to consume more alcohol! This has been shown to be a deadly combination that has resulted in deaths and numerous stomach pumpings on college campuses nationwide. This stuff is like liquid cocaine. Several states have already banned Four Loko and although they are trying to sell the stuff without caffeine now, there is already a stigma associated with this beverage which makes obtaining it all that more difficult. It also makes it all that more interesting for me to try with some equally eager friends! I bought 14 - 750ml cans... 2 of each of the 7 flavors they sold at my unnamed Asian Market. There were only 6 of us drinking it... we finished it in one afternoon.

Since I don't remember much about the actual night, I will focus on what happened when I woke up. I think I was playing Halo at some point. My xbox was still on from the night before, but somehow the TV and Stereo were turned off appropriately. My clothes were scattered all over the house. No idea how they got there. Pants in the kitchen, a shirt on the couch, socks near my bed... what happened to me? A pounding in my head remained and I strained to focus both eyeballs on the mess we had made the night before. There was a sickly sweet smell in the air and an equally rancid taste in my mouth. Both, remnants of the candy flavored drink we were consuming all night. I staggered to the kitchen for some water. Guzzled down 2 or 3 glasses worth. This is about the time I realized that not only did I lose my mind on Four Loko, but I also lost my keys and my wallet!

Ben with a Magic Crab
I turned the house upside down. Upstairs, downstairs, office, bedroom, bathroom, kitchen. I flipped the couches upside down, emptied cabinets and crawled behind the television. I looked multiple times in the garbage can outside. This was particularly disgusting, since the trash was filled with rank Crawfish, Blue Crab and Tilapia corpses from the feast Trenton prepared the night before. Not only did I have to dig through the fishy corpses, but also cat litter bags and kitchen waste filled the can. The smell was bad enough to make paint peel off the walls. Definitely not the kind of smell you want to deal with when you are as hung over as I was. I gagged... but there was nothing in my stomach to vomit up. Misery was setting in...

Two days later now. I feel much better. Still, no keys... no wallet... no money, ID, Credit cards... NOTHING.

Its going to be a long day or two getting my life back in order. the only thing I am missing is most of the memories of that night. I guess they don't call Four Loko "Blackout in a can" for no reason! Don't get me wrong, I love to drink, but I rarely take things to this level. I don't condone this type of behavior and will definitely be steering clear of the Four Loko in the future. I hope my misery in dealing with the loss of my keys and wallet and the nearly $500 I have had to spend to get my life back in order is warning enough for my readers to steer clear of the brew they call "Four Loko"!

As always, if you would like to follow me on this Drinking Adventure, please click on the link on the right where you can subscribe to my feeds. you can also follow me on twitter at @williepawn or friend me on Facebook. You can also email me here. I am also keeping a compiled list of beers tasted HERE that you can look at.  




















Chilling at home on Friday (no Rebecca Black in this weeks post!)

This will be a short post... nothing major happened tonight, and since my Saturday was totally unbelievable, I just wanted to quickly post my Friday beers and move on to my Saturday update. The work week ended; after seminar I grabbed a beer from the bucket and enjoyed some conversation with my fellow scientists. I drank a Schlafly APA. The APA is a full bodied Pale ale that is dry hopped to give it the crispness and hoppy flavor that make it one of my favorite beers in Saint Louis.

After the previous nights venture to find some Stone Beers, I was pleased to find the "Wine and Cheese Place" in Clayton had all the Stone I could grab with my two hands! I grabbed a 22oz of Arrogant Bastard, a dark and full bodied beer with just the right amount of bitterness. One of those close your eyes and enjoy beers. Stone calls it Arrogant Bastard, because they believe you are not worthy to drink such a fine beer... but I disagree. This is a beer that everyone should drink and enjoy!

After the Arrogant Bastard, I switched it up to the Stone IPA. A classic, West Coast Style IPA, heavy on the hops with a clean finish, great head and that citrus-y bite that I love in West Coast beers. This beer still had the high bitterness that I have grown to expect from a Stone Beer, but it was not overwhelming and I really enjoyed it. I had 3 more after that first one, so they must be good!

Again, I apologize for my briefness... check back later tonight when I will be posting about my Homebrew Party and my experience this past weekend getting "Four Loko'ed" with some friends!

As always, if you would like to follow me on this Drinking Adventure, please click on the link on the right where you can subscribe to my feeds. you can also follow me on twitter at @williepawn or friend me on Facebook. You can also email me here. I am also keeping a compiled list of beers tasted HERE that you can look at. 







Friday, April 22, 2011

PCC Meeting/ Bleeding Deacon

I have to apologize for the lateness of this post. It has been a busy week in my Drinking Adventure. I promise to make the wait worth while.

Last Thursday, we had another Pubcrawl meeting. We decided to celebrate the 15th year of the Pubcrawl with a Mexican Quinceanera theme. A Quinceanera, for those of you who do not know, is the 15th birthday celebration for young ladies in Latin cultures signifying the transition from child hood to becoming a woman. Hence, during our 15th year of the Pubcrawl, we will be celebrating the Pubcrawl becoming a Woman! The PCC (Pub Crawl Committee) and I will be dressing in Quinces Dresses and Mariachi Band outfits and dancing and singing our way throughout the Central West End of STL. Also, as if this idea could not get any better, we will be celebrating this "Fiesta" on the day after Cinco de Mayo... or as we are referring to it as... El Sixo de Mayo. Therefore, if you are free and would like to crawl with us, please show up anytime along the crawl and get ready to party! Bar list and times are below, we hope to see you there!

6:00 Tortillaria
6:40 Zona de Loading
7:20 Flora Loco
8:00 Rosa’s
8:40 34 Casa
9:20 Cantina Louie
10:00 El Duff’s
10:40 El Dressel’s
11:20 !Viva!

We always have our Pubcrawl meetings at "Wildflower Restaurant" in the CWE. Wildflower is a fine dining establishment with really good food and an excellet selection of craft beers on tap. Incidentally, from 4-6 they have $3.00 taps which is a pretty great price for the great beers they have on tap! I started today's drinking festivities ordering a "Gread Divide" IPA. This was a really well balanced IPA with wonderful color, great body and a frothy head that burst over the top of the glass! This was really a terrific beer and considering I knew relatively nothing about this brewery before trying their IPA, I was inspired to know more about them and their beers. So I looked up their website to find they have been around since 1994 and have earned some critical acclaim. Their website says that "Great Divide beers have earned 17 Great American Beer Festival medals and 5 World Beer Cup awards. Great Divide was also ranked 8th in Ratebeer.com’s 2010 “The Best Brewers in the World” and was ranked 7th in Beer Advocate’s 2010 “All-Time Top Breweries on Planet Earth.”" These were interesting stats considering this brewery was not even on my radar before this experience. Anyway, the IPA was so good, that I needed to have one more before venturing out for dinner.



For dinner tonight, we decided to head out with our friends Ben and Lauren to a self described "dive bar" called "The Bleeding Deacon". They have an excellent selection of beer including the highly sought after Stone Beer that I have been craving. I decided on the Ruination IPA and was very pleased with it. It was bitter and hoppy and had a wonderful smoothness that made this heavy IPA very drinkable.

#9
On the way home, we hit up Blueberry Hill for one more beer hoping they would also be carrying the Stone beers we had earlier. Unfortunately they did not and I had to settle for a Magic Hat #9. The #9 is apricot infused Pale Ale that is significantly sweeter than the Dogfish Head that I reviewed Here. After a filling BLT dinner at the Bleeding Deacon, the sweetness was, however, a welcome taste.


As always, if you would like to follow me on this Drinking Adventure, please click on the link on the right where you can subscribe to my feeds. you can also follow me on twitter at @williepawn or friend me on Facebook. You can also email me here. I am also keeping a compiled list of beers tasted HERE that you can look at.  

Wednesday, April 20, 2011

Stone Brewery is coming to Saint Louis!!!

Ladies and Gentlemen, at long last, San Diego's Stone Brewing Company will be invading Saint Louis this week! In fact, there are so many events that I, your humble guide through beer, will not be able to attend even a third of them (even though I would like to be there for all of them).

I will, however, be attending the "Total Tap Take-over" at the Soulard ITap location on Thursday the 21st. Stone will be taking over 24 taps worth of beer! The festivities run from 8:30pm until ???'s... I think we all know what "???'s" mean... they mean I will be probably taking Friday off of work!!! Also of note, Stone Brewery CEO and Co-Founder, Greg Koch, will be in attendance that night and will likely answer all your Stone beer related questions. If you cannot make this event there are other events that you can find HERE including a beer and pizza lunch at Pi and a sampling of the beers at Ciceros Beer School! The Chesterfield ITap will be hosting a "prom" themed night on Friday the 22nd... break out those tux's!

If you are unable to attend the festivities this week. I encourage you to find your nearest store that will be selling Stone and get to drinking! What's that you say? You don't know where to find Stone in Saint Louis? well... If you just look HERE, you will find all the local shops that will be carrying Stone. I can't comment on the selection that you will find, but these are the places that will be carrying it! Did I mention how excited I am that Blueberry Hill is going to carry Stone!!

One last thing that I would like to say... I came across this nifty guide to "festival going". seeing as how we are upon beer festival season, I figured it would be worth sharing with you. Although I don't completely agree with "Commandment #5" on this list, I think there are some good common sense things in there that are worth a quick glance!

Till next time! Cheers!

As always, if you would like to follow me on this Drinking Adventure, please click on the link on the right where you can subscribe to my feeds. you can also follow me on twitter at @williepawn or @drinkadventure or friend me on Facebook. You can also email me here. I am also keeping a compiled list of beers tasted HERE that you can look at. 
 

Tuesday, April 19, 2011

Devi's birthday

Tornado Ally
Friday night (4-15-2011) was my friend Devi's birthday. To celebrate, we went out to one of my favorite bars in Saint Louis; The Scottish Arms. Now, what I believe sets this bar apart from the others is the wide selection of not only local and hard to find beers, but also their extensive collection of Irish Whiskeys and really tasty food (everything from traditional Irish pub fare, to fine dining).

Upon arrival, I noticed a beer I had never seen before. This beer, called Tornado Ally, from Charlefille Vineyard Winery and Brewery in Ste. Genevieve Missouri, was totally new to me. The Tornado Ally is an amber ale with a deep malty color and just enough hop bitterness to let you know the hops are there. To find this beer was a pleasant surprise. Upon further prying into their website, I discovered they not only make this one fine beer... they make 14! Some of which are available for purchase at local beer shops including The Wine and Cheese Shop in Clayton, Friar Tuck locations and even some discriminating Dierbergs and Schnucks. I look forward to drinking more of these beers in the coming months!
Whale #1

My next beer was 6 Row's "Whale". 6 Row Brewing Company is a relatively new brewery on the scene here in Saint Louis whose beers are generally flavorful and whimsical but often forgettable. "Whale", to the contrary, sticks to your palate and lingers around like a house guest. Fortunately, the lingering in this case is a good thing making "Whale" a must try beer to all my peeps in the Saint Louis area. "Whale" is a self described "mistake" of a beer. The brewers basically had a bunch of left over grains, yeast and hops and decided to just throw it all in the brew kettle and see what happens! This beer boasts 10 different grain types! There is a strong wheaty precence to the beer and it finishes with the bitterness of an IPA or other pale ale... hence the name "Whale"; Wheat/Pale. This beer was such a revalation that I had to have 2 more before leaving.
Whale #2

I would like to remind my readers, that today was Devi's Birthday, and as such, we decided that after dinner plans would be up by her... it was HER day after all. She decided that the only thing that could possibly make her happy, would be to have all her friends back to her place to watch "The Human Centipede" on Netflix.

I will pause for you to regain your composure... as well, I will regain mine.

We stopped off for a couple of six packs of beer and partook in possibly the worst movie ever made (all while oddly enough eating Easter candy by the handful). I guzzled down a Sierra Nevada Torpedo Extra IPA as the movie played and found it to be a little too grassy for me. I was always a big fan of SN's Pale Ale, but this Extra IPA thing was just so dry and not balanced.

All in all it was a pretty good night and it made me feel good to be back in Saint Louis, drinking good Saint Louis beer with good friends!

If you have an opinion on any of the beers sampled in today's post, I would love to hear about it. Please post them below. If you would like to follow me on this Drinking Adventure, please click on the link on the right where you can subscribe to my feeds. you can also follow me on twitter at @williepawn or @drinkadventure or friend me on Facebook. You can also email me here. I am also keeping a compiled list of beers tasted HERE that you can look at. 




Upon Returning to The Lou!

So, after all my travels to DC and back to Saint Louis, I have not had the time to update my blog. Since I had so many blog entries during my trip to DC (read: was drinking alot) I needed a little "sober time" and so I eased off the sauce a little bit. This, of course, does not mean that I completely stopped drinking... I just didn't endulge as much as I had while I was in DC!

I arrived back in Saint Louis on Thursday night (April 21st). Upon arrival, I was incredibly hungry and was craving some sushi! Fortunately Abby had found a "Groupon" for a little sushi place on West Pine in the Central West End called "Kampai". I was slightly parched from my flight, so I decided to have the 22 oz Sapporo in a can. Sapporo is a watery Japanese rice beer with virtually no hop flavor. I have to admit though, even if "craft beer" is sort of my thing... drinking a Sapporo with sushi is almost as good as it gets! The Sapporo does not over-power the fish, in fact, I feel it compliments it. The crispness of a rice beer with slightly more body than a Budweiser (full... not light) does wonders for making a meal of sushi all that more enjoyable. It is also noteworthy, that a 22 oz can is almost enough for one whole meal!

After my long day, the prospect of sitting on the couch with the wife, watching some TV and drinking a beer was ideal! Fortunately, the wife was also on board with this plan! There was one little problem however; since I had been gone for a while, there was no cold beer in the fridge! Fear not though! I always have homebrew and/or a secret stash of prized beers in the basement. I took this occasion to break out one of my favorite beers from back home. Madison Wisconsin's Ale Asylum makes some of my favorite beers and the "Mad Town Nut Brown" is a perennial favorite! MTNB is, as the name suggests, a very nutty and deep brown beer with a wonderful malty finish and just enough hops to let you  know they are there without being intrusive in the beer. The beer pours with a thick rich head and drinks like a dream. I did say this was one of my favorite beers right!? I only have a couple bottles of this beauty left from my last trip to Wisconsin, so if any of my family or friends are thinking of coming to visit me in Saint Louis, please bring me another case or two and I will love you forever! If that fails, I may have to make a run for the border JUST to grab some of this stuff... its that good!











  Abby decided to have my other favorite brew from Ale Asylum, The "Hopalicious". This beer boasts 11 different additions of cascade hops making it a virtual garden of hops in your mouth. The fact remains, however, if you love hops and hoppy beers with that citrus bite, there is not much out there that compares to "Hopalicious".

If you would like to follow me, please click on the link on the right where you can subscribe to my feeds. you can also follow me on twitter at @williepawn or @drinkadventure or friend me on Facebook. You can also email me here. I am also keeping a compiled list of beers tasted HERE that you can look at. 

Saturday, April 16, 2011

Repeal of prohibition

I will be posting pics now and filling in the descriptions later... Enjoy















Friday, April 15, 2011

Repeal of Prohibition

This Saturday, Schlafly will be having their annual Repeal of Prohibition Celebration at the Bottleworks in Maplewood. I will be in attendance Live Blogging every one of the 30 beers that will be available at the festival! The festival will be featuring beers from 2 Alaskan breweries that have never before been sold in Missouri! I am sooooo looking forward to this! Be prepared to get sloppy with me this Satuday! If you plan on attending the festival, send me an email or Tweet and we can meet up and talk beer!

See you there!
Prost!