Thursday, September 30, 2010

Tupper Cask Blast

Tuppers (03)



Columbia Firehouse Restaurant and Barroom
109 S. St. Asaph Street
Alexandria, Virginia
30 September 2010

Join us in the barroom tonight from 5:30 onward as we inaugurate our new cask beer program with very special guests Bob & Ellie Tupper of Tuppers Beers, on hand to pour their Tupper's Hop Pocket Ale both on tap and straight from a cask. To compare and contrast, we'll offer a 6 ounce pour of each for 6 bucks. This is a great opportunity to meet the mind behind the beer all the while getting schooled on the thrill of drinking cask ale straight from the source - not a bad way to knock back a Thursday either.

About Tupper's Hop Pocket

An interest in history and beer led Bob and Ellie Tupper to a quest throughout the United States and Europe to talk to brewers and sample classic examples of traditional brewing styles. In 1978 they began taking formal tasting notes on each new beer they could find.

By the early 1990s the Tuppers had tasted and evaluated over 6,000 beers and visited hundreds of breweries. They had found many excellent beers, but envisioned an ale that no one had made—one that would encompass bold American flavors and traditional European brewing techniques. They asked Old Dominion Brewing Co., which they felt was one of the very best craft breweries in the country, to work with them to develop this ideal ale. Tuppers’ Hop Pocket Ale was the result.

In 1997 the Tuppers again worked with the Old Dominion brewers to create Tuppers’ Hop Pocket Pils, based on the Keller or Hefe Pils style of Northern Bavaria, but with a unique American boldness to the flavor.

The Tuppers live in Bethesda, Maryland, where Bob teaches history. Ellie works in Washington as a production editor of scientific books. The Tuppers still travel and taste beers and now have notes on over 14,000 19,000 different brews.

About Cask Ale

Cask-conditioned beer, or 'real ale', is brewed from only traditional ingredients and allowed to mature naturally.

The unfiltered, unpasteurized beer still contains live yeast, which continues conditioning the beer in the cask (known as 'secondary fermentation'); this process creates a gentle, natural CO2 carbonation and allows malt and hop flavours to develop, resulting in a richer tasting drink with more character than standard keg ('brewery-conditioned') beers.

Some people have the notion that real ale is naturally "warm and flat". This is incorrect; cask ale is ideally served between 50-52 degrees - cool, but not cold like most keg beers - and should have a noticeable natural carbonation from the secondary fermentation in the cask. Look for the little bubbles, which swirl around when you agitate your pint, and a creamy taste.

READ THIS [emphasis mine]

However, anyone not used to real ale's true texture and correct serving temperature can easily get misled when sampling poorly-kept real ale - in all probability avoiding it in future under the assumption that all cask beer is supposed to be 'warm, flat, and generally unpalatable'. This is not the case; a well-kept pint is cool, refreshing, and packed with malt and hop aroma and flavor.

I don't often quote press releases verbatim, but I've done so here (with some minor redacting) because this one was written well, because Bob and Ellie Tupper are friends of mine, because I dig their beer ... and because, tonight, the beer will be cask-conditioned.

Cask vs. draught (01)


UPDATE: Pictures from the tapping

Wednesday, September 29, 2010

Clamps & Gaskets: Roundup for 2010 Week 38

Clamps and Gaskets: weekly roundupWeek 38
19 September 2010 - 25 September 2010

  • 2010.09.25
    DC Brau receives its Federal Brewers' License. One step closer to becoming Washington D.C.'s first production brewery since 1956. http://bit.ly/agHfoF

  • hop bine
  • 2010.09.25
    USDA deals blow to U.S. organic hop industry, says non-organic IS organic: http://bit.ly/cxXwAC
  • 2010.09.25
    It's autumn!? Temperature of 98 °F at National Airport sets a record for Washington, D.C. http://bit.ly/cza6mq
  • 2010.09.24
    New list of French Cru Bourgeois announced. Already some controversy. http://ow.ly/2Jao4
  • 2010.09.24
    Professor Charlie Bamforth wrote it. Charlie Papazian reviews it. "Beer is Proof God Loves Us" due out 20 November 2010. http://exm.nr/8Xf0Uw
  • 2010.09.24
    To counter rapidly diminishing sales, Budweiser to give away free beer. http://bit.ly/b3IVsi
  • 2010.09.23
    Bricks and mortar vs. mobile: Food Truck Wars in Washington, D.C. http://bit.ly/9McMsq
  • 2010.09.23
    Three more lion cubs born at Washington DC National Zoo. http://bit.ly/c5CWCM

  • Harvest Moon 2010
  • 2010.09.23
    The 'super' harvest moon and Jupiter made quite the show in the sky. http://bit.ly/aIv6zs
  • 2010.09.22
    Video on homebrewing from Slate: http://bit.ly/c6NWGL
  • 2010.09.22
    For Italian white wines, look past Pinot Grigio. http://bit.ly/9nUi7E
  • 2010.09.22
    Belgian India Pale Ale (BIPA): enough, already, says beer writer Lew Bryon: http://bit.ly/8Yff5F
  • 2010.09.22
    A review of "A History of Beer and Brewing", which includes research on beer among ancient civilizations. http://bit.ly/9IZrL7
  • 2010.09.22
    The ancient Israelites proudly drank beer —lots of it. http://bit.ly/dsVhl7
  • 2010.09.21
    The ancient Israelites proudly drank beer —lots of it. http://bit.ly/dsVhl7

  • Bordeaux red wine
  • 2010.09.21
    Decanter reports that 2010 will be among the great vintages of Bordeaux, but with a low yield. http://bit.ly/9knX1S
  • 2010.09.20
    What's new in Baltimore, Maryland? Frank Zappa's head. http://bit.ly/blF0Hp
  • 2010.09.20
    Victory Brewing Company in Pennsylvania installing a 345-panel solar energy roof. http://yfrog.com/mxfv8kj
  • 2010.09.19
    The life of a beer judge at the Great American Beer Festival. http://bit.ly/cuo2dM
  • 2010.09.19
    The awards festival at the Great American Beer Festival was streamed live by BeerTapTV.

***************************
  • Clamps and Gaskets is a weekly wrap-up of stories  not posted at Yours For Good Fermentables.com. Most deal with beer (or wine, or whisky); some do not. But all are brief, and many are re-posts from my Twitter account: twitter.com/cizauskas.
  • The Clamps and Gaskets graphic was created by Mike Licht at NotionsCapital.

Sunday, September 26, 2010

Gravity pour versus handpump

I'm sometimes asked by bar owners about how to install and use a beer engine to serve cask ale, also known as 'real ale.' The implication is that this simple hand-pump device will somehow 'improve' the cask ale that's being served, increasing the level of carbonation and extending the lifespan of the beer. That is, of course, patent nonsense. A handpump does neither; it's simply a hand-pump.

Firkin Thursday

To that point, here's a guest post by Steve Hamburg, one of the foremost cask cellarmen in the United States. It is taken from Cask-USA, an online forum devoted to cask-conditioned ale in the US, hosted at Yahoo! Groups, reprinted with permission.

In theory there should be NO difference between a beer served by gravity or handpump, unless you expect all your handpumped beers to be served through a tight sparkler. There's simply no way that gravity pour can replicate the thick, cascading head, but that doesn't mean the beer should be flat and lifeless.

The issue, as it almost always is with cask ale, is poor cellaring technique. Too many bars/pubs will over-vent their cask beers (breach the cask and leave the porous soft spile in too long) and then use the handpump and a tight sparkler fitting to artificially compensate for what is essentially a pretty flat beer in the cask.

The goal of the cellarman is to optimize the level of natural carbonation that's consistent with the beer style and to serve each beer in a manner that best expresses the aromas, flavors, and mouthfeel. Over-venting is poor practice - there's simply no way you can get conditioning back into flat beer. Then again, if the brewery doesn't understand cask conditioning and racks flat or under-primed beer into the cask, even proper cellar technique won't help.

Porter just right


When I cellar beers my goal is always the same: to maximize the natural sparkle and clarity, no matter how it's served. Again, you should NEVER need a tight sparkler to produce carbonation in a cask beer. I, for one, don't like sparklers at all. But I recognize that many people prefer the creaminess produced by them, and also that this may be a desirable characteristic in certain styles (e.g., mild, porter, stout).

Sparkler 002


In practice, especially at festivals, it can be extremely difficult to maximize natural conditioning. That's because many beers, especially strong ales and barleywines, may require lengthier aging to build up suitable levels of carbonation. But pulling through a handpump will only give you the illusion of carbonation - the beer will be just as flat regardless of serving method, but the handpump just froths it up a bit.

First Draw


Based on your experience, I can understand why you guys generally prefer handpumped beers. Just understand that there's nothing really magical about pumps. The same beer - if cellared properly - should have the same sparkle regardless of how it's served.

And then there's the problem of over-primed casks, common in the U.S. That's a topic for another day.

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This post is one in a series on Cask Ale: Fobbing at the Tut.

Saturday, September 25, 2010

Pic(k) of the Week: Ale from a Gourd

Pumpkin ale poured FROM a pumpkin!


When the folk at Heavy Seas threw a public party at their Baltimore, Maryland, brewery, they poured beer from a pumpkin.

The Great'er Pumpkin is brewed with a large measure of pumpkin pulp —itself a relatively innocuous ingredient— flavored with pumpkin spices (possibly cinnamon, mace, allspice, etc.) added to the traditional mash of barley malt, and hops in the kettle. After fermentation, the beer is aged in 53 gallon once-used oak bourbon barrels from the A. Smith-Bowman Distillery of Fredericksburg, Virginia.

The large (great?) pumpkin in the photo was grown by the brewery's cellarman in his suburban backyard. He hollowed it, whacked in a tap, and filled it with 10 gallons of the beer.

Great'er Pumpkin


The Great'er Pumpkin is quite the full-flavored beer (think of a bourbon/caramel/malty slice of sweet pumpkin pie) and it's a fairly strong one, at 9% alcohol-by-volume (abv). Its full name, by the way, is The Great'er Pumpkin Imperial Pumpkin Ale, a moniker which conjures up a Tim Burtonesque nightmare of a marching army of giant orange gourds intent upon world hegemony.

Happy Autumn!

***************
  • The comparative in the beer's name suggests another beer, and indeed the brewery does brew The Great Pumpkin, nearly identical, except for not having been bourbon-aged.
  • Why is a bourbon barrel 53 US gallons? Here's why!
  • Caveat lector: As an employee of Select Wines, Inc. —a beer & wine wholesaler in northern Virginia— I sell the beers of Heavy Seas.
  • Pic(k) of the Week: one in a weekly series of personal photos, usually posted on a Saturday, and often of a good fermentable as subject.

Tuesday, September 21, 2010

Clamps & Gaskets: Roundup for 2010 Week 37

Clamps and Gaskets: weekly roundupWeek 37
12 September 2010 - 18 September 2010


  • 2010.09.18
    Winners at the 2010 Great American Beer Festival, with analysis by Brookston Beer Bulletin: http://bit.ly/9d4fGz

  • Mädchen
  • 2010.09.18
    Happy Oktoberfest: today through 2 October. If you can't be in Munich, here are ten North American Oktoberfests. From USAToday: http://bit.ly/8ZpGfV
  • 2010.09.17
    Cuteness alert: Photos of the new Washington, D.C. National Zoo lion cubs. http://bit.ly/d2yQSC
  • 2010.09.16
    Cell phones are prohibited during judging sessions at the Great American Beer Festival. http://bit.ly/auiyhu
  • 2010.09.15
    Get to know Washington D.C.'s Heather Chittum, contestant on "Top Chef: Just Desserts." http://wapo.st/cfBCMr

  • Cask E.S.B.
  • 2010.09.15
    Alex Hall: "The Man Who Sold New York on Cask Ale." Via New York Observer: http://bit.ly/cLH4VY
  • 2010.09.15
    Washington, D.C. Election Results: Vincent Gray ousts incumbent Mayor Adrian Fenty in the Democratic primary, and becomes the presumptive mayor-elect. http://huff.to/ci4pF2
  • 2010.09.14
    "So what IS the difference between barley wine and old ale?" Not much, says UK beer historian Martyn Cornell: http://bit.ly/dxrNcG
  • 2010.09.14
    How to give good [beer] head. Via Washington Post Food: http://wapo.st/cU2aeo
  • 2010.09.14
    Two beers of the new Virginia brewery Shooting Star reviewed at blog Musings Over A Pint: Rebel Ale (rye beer), Buffalo Brown Ale. http://bit.ly/aTCPlS
  • 2010.09.14
    Virginia's Governor McDonnell attempts to sell public on state liquor store sell-off http://is.gd/f9Rh1
  • 2010.09.12
    Ted Koppel: Nine years after 9/11, let's stop playing into bin Laden's hands. http://bit.ly/b6cYXt
  • 2010.09.12
    $52 million expansion plan announced by Bells Brewery in Michigan. http://wp.me/pevlF-3oV

***************************
  • Clamps and Gaskets is a weekly wrap-up of stories  not posted at Yours For Good Fermentables.com. Most deal with beer (or wine, or whisky); some do not. But all are brief, and many are re-posts from my Twitter account: twitter.com/cizauskas.
  • The Clamps and Gaskets graphic was created by Mike Licht at NotionsCapital.