Saturday, February 18, 2012

Experimental Beers: The Trip Series

So, every now and then (I assume yearly), Elysian and New Belgium Brewing make a collaborative beer called the 'Trip Series,' this is their eleventh and it is a Rosemary and Sage farmhouse ale.  Though I really don't care for most New Belgium beers, I usually try some of their limited runs.

After some quick google searches (post drinking, I had this a few days ago), I come upon the wikipedia page for Saison (French for season, roughly pronounced "Say - Zahn")


From beer advocate's description:

Saisons are sturdy farmhouse ale that was traditionally brewed in the winter, to be consumed throughout the summer months.




Wikipedia's Saison page

Anyways, it's classified generally as a Belgian, however the Belgian style really seems to only refer to the yeast that is typically used and the fact that it came from Belgium.  When something is called a Belgian it really doesn't say a whole lot about it other than it tells you what it is not.

Okay, so if you've had a few Belgians you'll know what to expect, not highly hopped generally, lots of spice notes added to the beer.  As for this particular brew, it hits off with a strong flavor (not surprising at 8.5%) that mellows out once you can taste the rosemary and sage, which are quite expertly blended to complement each other and also not take over the beer.  Following the spice you get a sweet, mellow flavor backed by the yeast.

It was a great beer, well made.  At a high ABV I didn't want more than one and I really have no strong feelings as to whether I get another one or not.  The thing with experimental beers is that they are really fun to try and taste, but for just regular drinking they are either too funky to have or they are too demanding.  The unique flavors require your attention in a way that an equally good beer might not necessarily have.  In other words, it can be difficult to have a conversation that is not about the beer in front of you if you drink one of these.  Which, depending on what you're doing is either good or bad.

They can be quite fun though, I recommend not looking up tasting notes before you try them because it ruins the fun (or the trip in this case).  The other benefit to experimental beers is how much they can expand your tastes.

Cheers,

Nathan

Sunday, February 5, 2012

Meat: It's what's for dinner

Sam here.
So I know we haven't posted in a wee bit but forgive me. I just finished January term which made me crazy and the thought of one more commitment drove me over the edge.
So, I know it's not quite on the drinking side, but that's okay. I wanted to share a marinade that I discovered and am improving. I got the bright idea the other day that I wanted to cook a meal other than making stupid little three ingredient soups.There's nothing wrong with three ingredient soups- they're easy to make and generally pretty healthy as well as a great fallback and cheap as all get out. NOT THE POINT. Anyway, we had people coming over and I wanted to get back the cooking prowess that I felt I once had. Since we had men on their way, STEAK IT WAS. (Actually, we had a couple of steaks we hadn't cooked yet because I was sick earlier but again, not the point)

I went to the store in search of ingredients. The recipe I found called for a dark beer and I wanted to find a good porter because the smoky flavor would compliment the meat. I picked up a 22 oz of Ninkasi's RenewAle Porter mostly because it was $3ish but also because I knew it was a good porter on tap. Ninkasi generally does really well with everything. Nathan really enjoys just about anything they put out. So, here's how you make it:


Tenderize steak. Really tenderize it.
In a container such as a bowl or a ziplock bag, mix 22- 24 oz of beer, a little brown sugar and salt and pepper to taste. Marinade steak for at least 1 hour. 2 wouldn't hurt.
Season steak with pepper and salt.
Broil for at least 10 min.


I ended up taking my steak out at 10 min because I was freaking out about it catching on fire (actually happened) but I probably could have left them in there for a couple more minutes as they were rather rare. You might try with a stout but I recommend the porter as the smoky flavor adds to the steaks flavor without masking it. I really enjoyed this and may use Black Butte by Deschutes or Dick's Lava Rock Porter next time. The latter has a very silky and smoky flavor that I loved and right out of the bottle! Also- try this on the grill if you get a chance!