Posted tagged ‘beer tourism’

Philly Beer Week: Where Beer Weeks Began

June 15, 2010

“America’s best beer drinking city” is the tag line on the logo for Philly Beer Week. That partially accounts for the reason I didn’t buy the souvenir t-shirt being sold at the opening event. After all, where would I wear this? We live in a pretty fine beer drinking city ourselves. Kinda reminds me of the bumper stickers, “I’d rather be…(fill in the blank).” My reaction is always, “Then go there or do that.” OK, so I get cranky.  But this got us thinking.

Beer by BART Gail and I made a quick visit from San Francisco to the City of Brotherly Love (and steaming heat), to participate in the celebration of craft beer that gave birth to all the other “Beer Week” celebrations around the country. As with SF Beer Week, the PBW schedule of events was overwhelming. There were close to 1,000 events listed in more than 150 venues, with new events being added every day up to opening day. We located ourselves in Center City, within easy walking distance of several notable craft beer spots and event venues.

On the first day of PBW, we decided to meet the Hammer of Glory (HOG) on its trip around the city. The Hammer is a large wood-handled, engraved metal mallet that would be used to tap the ceremonial first keg of beer at Opening Tap, that evening. We watched the HOG arrive at Nodding Head Brewery on its 10th of 18 stops, across the chest of a “bloodied” Chicago Blackhawk hockey player effigy, acknowledging another big event in town that weekend. The hammer and fake corpse were transported via police escorted hearse. We followed on foot for the next three stops. The HOG went on via a hand truck mounted “keg throne” and then on another leg in the arms of a jogging Rocky look-alike.

hammer of glory

(More images of the HOG relay are at our photo set at Flickr)

The Opening Tap event, held in the Independence Hall visitors center, featured local beers from about forty mostly Philadelphia area breweries. There the Hammer of Glory was accepted by Philadelphia’s Mayor who tapped the first special collaboration keg while local beer writer, Don “Joe Sixpack” Russell, emceed a brief ceremony for the crowd and the TV cameras. Gail and I then turned our attention to tasting local beers. Two of the outstanding beers of the evening were the one-time-only “Pimp My Rye” IPA from Dock St. Brewery (Philadelphia) with specialty rye malts sourced from all around Europe, and a delicious sour apple lambic from Fegley’s Brew Works (Allentown and Bethlehem).

pouring "Pimp my Rye"

Over the course of the next four days we visited the legendary Monk’s Cafe, Nodding Head Brewery, Tria, Varga Bar, Hawthorne’s, South Philly Tap Room, 12 Steps Down, Jose Pistola’s , The Belgian Café, Lucky 7 Tavern, Devil’s Den, The Wishing Well, Brew and out in the suburbs, PJ’s (in Paoli) and Teresa’s Next Door Bar (in Wayne). We met some amazing brewers, and tried some very special brews. With the exception of the release of a luscious Sierra Nevada beer camp collaboration brewed by notable Philly publicans, we concentrated on events featuring beers that we seldom, if ever, see on the west coast. And while we sought out special events for breweries like Cigar City, Bell’s, Terrapin, Left Hand, Drie Fonteinen, Southampton and Voodoo, the ubiquitous presence of solid beers we don’t often see in California, from breweries like Pretty Things, Duck Rabbit, New Holland, Founders, Flying Fish and many smaller Belgian breweries got our attention. These are available in Philly throughout the year alongside the many fine Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Delaware and other Mid-Atlantic beers. You will also find some familiar west coast beers.  Any fan of great beer can clearly spend a few joyful days (or more) in Philly outside of festival time, too.

Terrapin Night @ Wishing Well

There does seem to be high concentration of top-notch beer bars, tap houses and cafes, perhaps more than in any other American city we have visited.  All of venues we attended except for Belgian Café and Lucky 7 were within easy walking distance from our location near 11th and Spruce Sts. There is a reasonably effective transit system (SEPTA) that would reach the large number of great beer venues we didn’t get to.  For instance, we never got to the Northern Liberties and Fishtown neighborhoods which are home to a number of other noteworthy beer destinations.  And, of note for train travelers, there is even a fine beer bar, Bridgewater’s in the 30th St. Amtrak and Regional Rail Terminal.

We were told that most every new restaurant that opens in Philly includes at least a decent beer list and several we visited had superb beer offerings. We clearly could have stayed in another neighborhood and had dozens of choices of events at venues within walking distance there, too. Some of the suburbs are stepping up as well. Beer blogger Brian Kolesar pointed out that a commuter train pub crawl can now be a worthwhile adventure.

My favorite example of the respect with which the people of Philadelphia treat beer is the relatively new Tria Cafe, serving good food, wine and fine beer in two locations and offering classes at their Fermentation School. The servers and cooks continue to study the production, serving and food pairings of wine, cheese and beer, the three fermented comestibles that they champion. The staff receives two hours of “schooling” weekly. Their knowledge is easily apparent when you talk with them about the items on their menu. Perhaps most exciting, Tria also routinely uses their school to teach the public about all three fermentation traditions. We were too late to sign up for the Cantillon fermentation class during PBW, which was a huge hit. Thankfully there were dozens of other tempting events going on at the same time, proving that PBW is a festival that is worth your travel time and dollar.

So, about Philly’s claim of being “America’s Best Beer Drinking City?” OK, I have to admit it. I bought the hat.

- Steve

BEER WEEK - Philly's Best City shirt
(A local believer wearing her Philly Beer Week shirt to the opening, laughing at our skepticism.)

Explore Beer By BART; see our list of the San Francisco Bay Area’s best beer places with detailed transit info, so you can get out there to enjoy without driving.

Announcing Session #29: Will Travel for Beer

June 4, 2009

Will you travel for beer?

00-thesession150If you just wrote or read about the trek to the furthest brew pub in the last round of the Session, and you immediately thought of other beer destinations near and far, we want to hear all about the good ones that didn’t quite fit the assignment! Tell us about that beer trip.

If you see the words “travel” and “beer” and instead of your best tourist sagas you think of work or logistics, we want to know your tips and strategies on the road. (Perhaps for getting prized bottles home.)

And if you haven’t done much travel for fine beer, either for work or pleasure, but you have a trip you’d love to do, tell us where you’d like to go seeking the experience and the community of beer. Who would you want to meet at your destination, who would your travel-mates be, and what would you most want to taste when you arrived?

Details please, whichever way you take this! You’re welcome to pull out the vacation slide show if you wish. By all means have a beer that reminds you of the trip, and describe it if you wish. This episode of The Session goes up on Friday July 3rd, 2009. Finish early and maybe you can go someplace for the weekend!

-Gail and Steve

Visit Jay’s index to all The Sessions, and enjoy some delicious beer writing. To participate in the next Session, come back here to add a comment with a link to your Will Travel for Beer post on July 3, or email the link to us then at beerbybart [at] yahoo.com. Happy trails!

Explore Beer By BART – see our list of the San Francisco Bay Area’s best beer places with detailed transit info, so you can get out there to enjoy without driving.

The Session #28: The Brewpub at the Edge of Night

June 4, 2009

The year was 2002. Our summer vacation was to Norway. Much of the country is north of the Arctic Circle, and therefore gets 24 hours of daylight for at least some of the summer. There is a network of hiking cabins you can stay at all over the country. Viking sites and museums. Trains and boats galore. Fjords even!

00-thesession150 Something that challenged us at that time was that Norway was known as a country with nothing more than weak modern international lagers, and huge taxes on beer, wine and alcohol of any kind. The extreme regulation of drink, and the prices charged in Scandinavian countries was something we had not known much about until we were preparing to leave on the trip.

When we got to Oslo, we did what we normally do when in unfamiliar territory, we asked locals where to get the best beer and if there was a brew pub close by. We were sent to several nice and friendly bars and thankfully to one lone brewpub.

The bars were fine, generally friendly and the beer was potable if not notable.

This little brewpub, however, (which we believe was northwest of the Slottsparken and the royal palace) and whose name we don’t remember, featured some tasty British style beers, brewed by an English woman who, unfortunately, we did not get a chance to meet. Our attraction to the pub was one of those “newfound oasis in the Sahara” effects. The place was modern, pleasant and friendly, had tanks in the corner, and it served ales. There is no way to “objectively” evaluate their quality now, from memory, but there wasn’t then either. The flavorful beers called us back again and again. We stayed late, into the couple of hours of deep dusk that was the extent of night at that latitude.

We are not now able to locate the brew pub on a current map nor can we find reference to its name. Does anybody know this place?

The trip was some kind of a turning point for us. The joy of good local beers (and to some extent wines), in their proper surroundings, in prior trips to England, Germany and other places in Europe and North America, was something we’d taken for granted, but not seen as a prerequisite to a great vacation. We hadn’t really understood that our love of good beers had become that important to us.

Could we travel to a no-beer destination? Sure. But now that would be a major point of contemplation and discussion.

Another thing that has changed is that less than ten years later, Norway is now known for some fine craft brewers such as Nøgne ø.

Being a beer tourist is a lot of fun and incredibly educational. That reminds us of another story… but that’s what the next Session is about. The wonderful pub that’s not as far, the beer destination that wasn’t a pub, the dream trip you want to get to someday…

You’re invited to July’s Session: Will Travel for Beer.

not sunset, not sunrise:  skylight after midnight!

Midnight in July, 2002, Lofoten Islands, Norway. ( Ok, the brewpub was a little south, in Oslo, where there were a few hours of wimpy night. We don’t have a picture of it, so enjoy part of our outdoor adventure instead. Three shots taken between 11:00pm and 2:00 am, on the gorgeous islands we traveled to, just above the Arctic Circle.)

getting hooked, part 2: midnight sun by zodiak

how i got hooked, #3

Explore Beer By BART; see our list of the San Francisco Bay Area’s best beer places with detailed transit info, so you can get out there to enjoy without driving.

National Homebrewers converge on Oakland’s 12th St station for NHC 2009

December 1, 2008

Imagine taking BART to the National Homebrewer’s Conference. This will be possible June 18-20 2009. It’s a great opportunity for brewers, lapsed brewers or those who simply love good beer to check out the state of elite homebrewing, and to learn more about the craft. You could sign up now, and you may want to, since the amazing sessions and events sold out last year!

the trappist
The Trappist, 2 blocks from the Convention Center, photo by Gail.

Once a year members of the American Homebrewing Association gather from near and far for the National Homebrewer’s Conference. This year local Bay Area beer aficionados will have the pleasure of hosting this event, and welcoming throngs of elite homebrewers into our favorite beer destinations by the Bay.

We’ve created a Pub Crawl Page to help visitors decide where to go, and to spread out so no one place is mobbed all the time.

We’re looking for feedback right now, before the beertown.org pub crawl link is changed to go to our new crawl page. Please ask questions, make suggestions and help us hone this resource so NHC attendees can savor our local beer scene smoothly, safely and without parking angst.

Thanks!

Explore Beer By BART – see our main list of Bay Area good beer places with detailed transit info, and get out there to enjoy without driving.

San Francisco Beer Week

September 1, 2008

February is all about beer in San Francisco, with the Beerapalooza events loosely coordinated by The Celebrator (our excellent indigenous beer magazine) and the Strong Beer Month events coordinated by S.F. Brewpubs Magnolia, 21st Amendment and some years Thristy Bear. This year, the heart of what a lot of us consider to be Beer Month around here will become S.F. Beer Week, and the world is invited to visit.

Over the summer beer writer Jay Brooks started organizing local bloggers, in part in response to his admiration for the job the city of Philadelphia did with their beer event earlier, as well as meeting with the original Beerapalooza organizers. This morning he posted a SF Beer Week announcement and disclosed that he’s passing out postcards at the sold out and acclaimed Slow Food festival this weekend in San Francisco!

If you're going to San Francisco... be sure to have a beer here

If you're going to San Francisco... be sure to have a beer here. February 6-15 2009


There’s new, simple website up for SF Beer Week where you can sign up for a newsletter. Obviously, in the mean time, there are other ways you can be a part of this. We can all spread the word organically online, emailing pals about possible travel plans, bookmarking the site using such tools as Digg, Delicious, Facebook and the like, by talking about it on our favorite beer forums and our own blogs. Bravo to Jay for his web-community-savvy approach, and for the logo which adds a certain thirsty element to the iconic San Francisco skyline in front of an IPA-colored sunset.

Explore Beer By BART – a list of Bay Area good beer places with transit info, and get out there to enjoy without driving.

Road trip 2008 – part 1 – Mammoth Beers and Bluesapalooza

August 30, 2008

This August we once again went off beyond the civilized tracks of BART for a mountains and beer festival vacation. One of the pleasures of doing this is in not taking our laptops. It’s great to be unplugged, and based within walking distance of our tasting destinations, renting a room for festival or brewpub evenings, and then driving and camping out in between.

This was our second year visiting Mammoth’s beer and blues festival, Bluesapalooza. This festival has a lot going for it. The location on the eastern side of the high Sierra in the ski resort village of Mammoth is glorious, with brilliant mountain sun, cool breezes and a shaded pine grove setting. This year the area perimeter was increased somewhat, giving participants more room to circulate. The music was solid, and the beer selection offered delicious treats from around the state.

Mammoth beer and bluesapalooa festival

Mammoth beer and Bluesapalooa festival

 

Water is the great political struggle, historic sore point and source of brews on the Eastern side of the Sierra, so it makes a strong rallying cry. The host brewpub has had something interesting for each of the last two years. This year it was 395 IPA, named for the picturesque highway nearby, made with with local hops, sage brush and mountain juniper. (Steve, always tough on additives and novelty beers, was not so impressed, but Gail thought it was evocative of that rain on the high desert aroma, one of the most primal of Eastern California experiences.)

For those of us in the Northern counties, the chance to try beers from smaller Central and Southern California beers is always delightful. After running to Pizza Port of San Diego when the festival opened, and then making a bee line to Craftsman, we relaxed and took it slow.

Brewbakers of Huntington Beach pouring for thirsty Northerners

Brewbakers of Huntington Beach pouring for those of us of the North

Looking at the Eastern and Southern Californians flocking to Marin, Bear Republic, Rubicon, E.J.Phair, and others from our extended area showed that this festival works both ways. Straddling the divide was Denise Jones, brewer for Moylan’s in the Bay Area, but native to the Bishop area just south of Mammoth. She was profiled in the magazine/program distributed before and at the festival, and we found her pouring at the Moylan’s booth. We had been a fan of her brewing earlier at Third Street Aleworks in Santa Rosa, so we were happy to see her get respect in her home turf.

Savoring the blues with a glass of Blind Pig and matching shirt from Russian River

Savoring the blues with a glass of Blind Pig and matching shirt from Russian River

 

The Bruery attracted Belgian style brew fans under the pines

The Bruery attracted Belgian style brew fans under the pines

A newcomer (for us anyway) with some nice Belgian inspired beers was The Bruery out of Placentia, with a crisp tasty wit called Orchard White that was getting good festival word of mouth.

Bluesapalooza dancing, sporting the 395 IPA shirt

Bluesapalooza dancing, sporting the 395 IPA shirt

The festival was well-run, with only tiny quibbles. The first night there are no guest beers, just the local brews, which is OK if you are not expecting otherwise. However, they had vegetarian alternatives at the BBQ dinner line this year, which was good to see. Most troubling, the festival seemed to completely run out of water, both in the portapotty hand washing stations and for rinsing and drinking at the beer booths, by mid-day Saturday. At altitude in a dry climate, that’s not a good thing. So there are a few more things to fine-tune. Still, it was a treat to be there, and we’d go again.

Afterwards we headed west. (More to follow!)

Explore Beer By BART – a list of Bay Area good beer places with transit info, and get out there to enjoy without driving.

Beerfest in Sonoma and the Bay Area Beer Bloggers launch!

June 10, 2008

A weekend spent in the heart of wine country, a festival… a long bike ride along country roads… and not a drop of wine. It’s not that we don’t like wine, or that we don’t know the quality of Sonoma’s wines, it’s just that we were saving ourselves for the world class beers of Sonoma.

Thanks to the networking inclinations of the extraordinarily prolific and dialed-in Jay Brooks, the Beerfest in Sonoma was the second meeting of BABB, the (happily babbling?) Bay Area Beer Bloggers.

jay brooks and chris nelson, beer bloggers, in the shade Jay Brooks and Chris Nelson

    chris nelson and the thirsty hopster, jj, swap tales Chris and JJ

Meredith Nelson of thebeergeek.com can shoot documentary videos while savoring something special from Russian River brewing. Meredith Nelson
(Each shot is linked to a larger version)

We had the pleasure of driving up with JJ the Thirsty Hopster, running into Jay Brooks upon arrival and then meeting Meredith and Chris who do thebeergeek.com and who are on an epic international beer tour this year which thankfully included this Beerfest in Sonoma. It was great meeting them. For one thing, they share an interest in vegetarian food-beer pairings, another area where the beer culture revolution has plenty of room to make progress. We hung in the shade, and talked about all kinds of beer miscellany and unrelated miscellany. We tried some lovely beers, including a delicious stout from Bear Republic, two remarkable redwood beers from Brian Hunt’s Moonlight brewing, and a delicate floral spice Italian brew from Russian River Brewing that we’d tried previously at the Raley Field festival in Sacramento. Everybody took some snapshots.

Later we ate at Santa Rosa’s 3rd Street Alehouse, and were delighted by a rich robust porter there. The following day we took a lovely bike ride west out of the town of Healdsburg, enjoyed the richly aromatic countryside, (floral! resinous! earthy! ooh, barnyard!) passed by notable wineries, drank water, and eventually returned to Bear Republic for dinner and then to Russian River Brewpub for…ummm…dessert, Belgian style. Just one of the pleasing beer tourism moments at Russian River was seeing someone from LA arrive with six Russian River growlers to be refilled for his coworkers down south. Sonoma County, you got something going on.

It’s possible to take a bus from San Francisco to within a few blocks of Russian River Brewing, nearby Third Street Alehouse and Flavors, a restaurant that serves Moonlight beers. After this weekend we’ve vowed to write all of that up, as soon as we decide where it goes in the site architecture.
Here’s to Sonoma!

Explore Beer By BART – a list of Bay Area good beer places with transit info, and get out there to enjoy without driving.

Beer Tourism (or Travels With Hops and Barley)

October 12, 2007

Now and then, you have to get beyond the urban area. Our little hobby of seeking out good beer by BART, Caltrain, busses and ferries is fun, but it can’t touch all the great California beer destinations.

This summer we got out of town to several events, including a mountain blues and brews festival, Bluesapalooza.

Bluesapalooza

Every year in the ski village of Mammoth, California, the local brew pub throws a blues festival and beer tasting party designed to get the all best brewers in the state to come out for a mountain weekend. The public’s invited to come along for the festivities. While Mammoth is a destination that most people can’t get to without a car, one advantage of going a ski resort in the summer is that there are plenty of condos to rent at reasonable rates. We found a place that was within walking distance of the concert and tasting area, so everything was easy.

Sipping Huge Beers at Mammoth

The 50 California breweries present included quite a few we know from Northern California plus some of our favorites from San Diego County such as Green Flash, along with plenty of brewers and offerings we’d never encountered before. Craftsman Brewing Company was a brewery from Pasadena with a strikingly creative approach. They were pouring concoctions such as a flavorful “pre-prohibition” lager and a delicate lavender sour beer. EJ Phair, from near the Concord BART station, offered their new West Coast style IPA. Their standard IPA is a pleasant mild-mannered English-style brew, but we were pleased they’ve jumped into the hoppy end of the pool. The hosts, Mammoth Brewing, offered up a tasty bottle-conditioned strong dark Belgian-style brew with a festival label.

The music was first rate. Friday night’s logistics were a little disappointing, with only the Mammoth brewery’s beers available and with an organizational snafu that forced everyone to stand in one very long beer line. Saturday offered a full festival and concert format, and proved worth the journey.

A bonus for our group was that we all enjoyed tasting Rubicon and Brew It Up, both from Sacramento. This meant that two days later we were able to adjust our itinerary to have lunch at Brew It Up, and to check out their interesting business model: a big brewpub that’s set up for homebrewers to come in and brew/bottle their own beers on site, with support from fellow brewers and the staff.

A little earlier in the summer we planned a week around some Trinity Alps camping, outdoor Shakespeare in Ashland, Oregon and a drive through gorgeous Crater Lake National Park. We planned our route to allow us to try some delicious beers. Our goal was to pace the trip so our tasting stops were not at the beginning of long drives. We were delighted to get to the remarkable Etna Brewery in the remote little town of Etna, California, to Wild River Brewing in Grant’s Pass, Oregon, to Six Rivers (north of Eureka on the coast highway), and finally to good old Bear Republic and nearby Russian River Brewing, whose brews may often be found at some of our Beer By Bart favorites in San Francisco and the East Bay. Spending an evening tasting the latest wares at Russian River Brewing (then staying nearby in the city of Santa Rosa and driving home the next day) is a highly recommended experience for aficionados of great beer.

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