Showing posts with label technology. Show all posts
Showing posts with label technology. Show all posts

Thursday, March 19, 2020

What to do if your bar must shut down its tap system for an extended period of time.

Draught Beer Quality Manual 2019

If beer is left stagnant in draught lines for too long, 
the system will be at risk of 
AN IRREVERSIBLE BACTERIAL CONTAMINATION. 

As more and more jurisdictions order closures of meeting places, such as bars, restaurants, and brewery taprooms, as a defense against the spread of the coronavirus, Neil Witte —the [U.S.] Brewers Association Quality/Draught Quality Ambassador— has posted timely instructions on how a taproom/bar should properly care for its draught system if shut down for an extended period of time.
In the event of an extended shutdown of your brewery, it is important to take some steps to make sure your draught system stays healthy and you are not faced with an unexpected expense or quality concerns when starting it back up.

If beer is left stagnant in draught lines for too long, the system will be at risk of AN IRREVERSIBLE BACTERIAL CONTAMINATION [emphasis mine].

Taking the right steps can prevent you from having to deal with dangerous gas leak hazards, costly draught line contamination, or even more expensive draught line replacement.
[U.S.] Brewers Association

Quick tips

  • Disconnect draught lines from kegs/serving tanks.
  • Clean the lines.
  • Disassemble and clean faucets.
  • Do NOT leave lines filled with a chemical solution!
  • Any part/piece of your draught system that comes in contact with beer —that is not cleansed during a line cleaning— should be cleaned and sanitized separately.
Do NOT pack the lines with chlorinated water: they'll be permanently tainted with that fresh-from-the-swimming pool flavor and you'll need to replace them. And as to leaving beer in the lines, don't do it! Experts are predicting a possible shutdown of 8 weeks or more. At that point any beer in the lines, even if it has been kept at 38 °F, will not be tasting its best self. And, far worse than that, to repeat the warning above from the BA: "If beer is left stagnant in draught lines for too long, the system will be at risk of AN IRREVERSIBLE BACTERIAL CONTAMINATION."

Without a doubt, read and follow the entire list of procedures. Direct link to procedures (pdf): here.

Good luck and be safe. And we'll see you on the flip side with many a fresh draught pint.

Cleaning the tap

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Saturday, March 07, 2009

The Session No. 25: Love Lager

Yesterday, being the first Friday of the month, it was the day for The Session: Beer Blogging Friday.

And again, I'm late by a day.

The Session no. 25: Love Lager

The Session is a monthly event for the beer blogging community which was begun by Stan Hieronymus at Appellation Beer. On the first Friday of each month, all participating bloggers write about a predetermined topic. Each month a different blog is chosen to host The Session, choose the topic, and post a roundup of all the responses received. For more info on The Session, check out the Brookston Beer Bulletin’s nice archive page.


This month's topic was hosted by The Beer Nut from Dublin (the one in Ireland):
For millions of people the word "beer" denotes a cold, fizzy, yellow drink -- one which is rarely spoken of among those for whom beer is a hobby or, indeed, a way of life.

So for this Session, let's get back to basics. I'm sure I'm not the only one whose early drinking career featured pale lager in abundance, so consider this a return to our roots as beer drinkers. Don't even think about cheating the system: leave your doppelbocks and schwarzbiers out of this one: I want pilsners, light lagers, helleses [an almost Gollum-like sibilance!] and those ones that just say "beer" because, well, what else would it be?

Earlier in the week, the entire U.S. East Coast had been scraping off and shoveling out from under a snowstorm. Overnight temperatures were in the single digits (that would be the negative teens for you Celsius followers).

But yesterday afternoon, it was 70 degrees Fahrenheit (21 °C), and the scent of Spring was palpable.

I stopped in at my local in Alexandria, Virginia, a beer bar and restaurant called Rustico, where, adding a techno-geek slant to the day, I posted this Tweet (as the 140-character scribbles to the Twitter site are called):
On a spring-like winter's afternoon, a hoppy Pils is so appropriate. Draft Stoudts at Rustico in Alexandria VA. #beerspotter #thesession

And indeed it was. Crisp and bright, with an herbal/grassy nose, a firm sweet malt middle, and a bracing finish. Goldilocksian: just right.

By the way, those mysterious hashmark phrases were searchable terms for fellow Twitterers. "#thesession" put my post alongside anyone else who was posting about The Session on Twitter. "#beerspotter" alerted DC-area beer drinkers looking for good draft beer.

Reading some of the full blog posts (that is, many more words than a mere 140 characters) linked to The Beer Nut, I noticed a 'Letters to the Editors of Playboy Magazine" quality (not that I've ever, ahem, read the column). As in: "Since my college days, I haven't enjoyed lagers, until today, when quite unexpectedly ... ."

Assaulted as we are by over-hopped ales, it can be a 'Saul on the road to Damascus' experience to rediscover the subtle qualities of elegance and FLAVOR actually found in well-made light-hued lagers. And, of course, just because a beer is a light-hued lager, doesn't mean its brewer can't similarly over-hop it (using that term not in a pejorative sense).

A couple of Stoudt Pils into the evening, I ordered a margherita pizza. I was a couple of Pils into things, so I was, naturally, engaged in good bar conversation.

Chef Morales, seeing my pizza under the heatlamp, came out to the bar. "Tom," he asked, " if I placed one of your Brunellos under a heat lamp, would you be pleased with the result? Your pizza is ready ... now!"

Chastened, I returned to my seat, and ate my pizza. And ordered another Stoudts Pils.

Caveat: I am employed by a northern Virginia wholesaler that distributes Stoudts beers (and Brunellos).

Monday, March 02, 2009

Flying Dog rides Web 2.0 to #1

From the end of January through the end of February, the website and beer blog FullPint.com ran an on-line poll to determine "the best East Coast brewery", that is, its readers' favorite brewery of the East Coast.

And the winner is ...

Flying Dog Brewery, transplanted from the Rocky Mountains to the hills of Frederick, Maryland

Maryland's other large production brewery, Clipper City of Baltimore, finished 7th. Number two was another 'dog' brewery, Dogfish Head, of Delaware.

Polls such as this are not scientifically accurate. And that's no knock against Full Pint.com, which never claimed that its poll was anything but fun.

But one thing that the poll did demonstrate was the power of using Web 2.0 skills as free, effective, guerrilla marketing.

The poll began with a large lead for Dog Fish Head. Dog Fish Head was the first famous East Coast Craft Brewery to get national recognition after Samuel Adams began contract brewing their beer nation wide. <...>

Then, through the power of Twitter, a social network service that I can describe to you as a micro blog/global chat room, started to shape what would be the outcome of this poll. Through guerrilla marketing, Dog Fish Head and Flying Dog sent many of their loyal drinkers to thefullpint.com to cast their vote. SmuttyNose and Erie also used the power of their Internet fan base to have votes casted on their behalf.

This poll got so big, that Beer Advocate got wind of this poll. <...> how the heck could breweries with higher BA rankings possibly get out ranked by the final four of this poll. The answer is simple, loyalty, and the power of guerrilla marketing via social network sites.

Flying Dog Wins Best East Coast Craft Brewery Honors
FullPint.com
February 27th, 2009

Flying Dog is quite aggressive with its on-line presence. For contrast, Clipper City Brewing has no official Facebook or MySpace page, does not Twitter, and last updated its blog in November 2008. [UPDATE 2009.05: Clipper City on Facebook, Twitter.]

As Dan at FullPint.com states, all the breweries in the poll produce delicious beers, and all are worth searching out. But, of course, it was Flying Dog that did win!

Twenty were entered; here are the results:
  1. Flying Dog (37.0%, 1,502 Votes)
  2. Dogfish Head (26.0%, 1,029 Votes)
  3. Smuttynose Brewing (8.0%, 304 Votes)
  4. Erie Brewing (5.0%, 194 Votes)
  5. Victory Brewing (4.0%, 162 Votes)
  6. Tröegs (3.0%, 124 Votes)
  7. Clipper City (3.0%, 123 Votes)
  8. Southern Tier (2.0%, 93 Votes)
  9. Ommegang (2.0%, 90 Votes)
  10. Allagash (2.0%, 80 Votes)
  11. Duck Rabbit (2.0%, 78 Votes)
  12. Brooklyn Brewing (2.0%, 75 Votes)
  13. Magic Hat (1.0%, 49 Votes)
  14. Harpoon (1.0%, 34 Votes)
  15. Iron City (1.0%, 24 Votes)
  16. Flying Fish (0.0%, 19 Votes)
  17. Stoudts (0.0%, 16 Votes)
  18. Long Trail (0.0%, 15 Votes)
  19. Iron Hill (0.0%, 12 Votes)
  20. Otter Creek (0.0%, 10 Votes)
  • UPDATE: 27 February 2009. FullPint.com is at it again with an on-line poll for favorite southern US breweries. As before, it is a limited list.
  • Caveat: I am employed by a northern Virginia wholesaler that distributes Flying Dog, Clipper City, Allagash, Brooklyn, and Otter Creek beers.

Friday, October 24, 2008

Beerspeak

New York Times technology writer David Pogue recently posted a gentle diatribe against the use of jargon in technology writing.

Here's an extract, which I've redacted edited* to apply to beer writing.

I think a lot about the technical level of the column. Over the years, I’ve adopted a number of tricks that are designed to communicate technical beer points without losing the novices–and one of them is avoiding jargon.

Why tech beer writers use so much jargon, I don’t know. Maybe it’s self-aggrandizement; they want to lord their knowledge over everybody else. Maybe it’s laziness; they can’t be bothered to fish for a plain-English word. Maybe it’s just habit; they spend all day talking shop with other nerds, so they slip into technospeak beerspeak when they write for larger audiences.

Tech Terms to Avoid
New York Times.com
David Pogue
October 16, 2008

There's a lot of jargon in the beer world. For example, "ABV" instead of "alcohol" or "It tastes like diacetyl" instead of "It tastes like butter." The list goes on and on.

One silly phrase Pogue lists for the tech community is one that is also overused in articles about the business of beer.
Price point. What are you, paid by the word?
“Price” alone does the job.

And what of the annoying use of the word "product"? As in the tautology, "My company produces a product."

Well, what is your product?

"Beer"

You couldn't have said that in the first place? Flummery!

* This blog is not immune from occasional slips into jargon. YFGF is striving to amend its ways.