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Archive for June, 2008

Jun 28 2008

St. Louis Brewer to Buyout Inbev

Published by breddings under anheuser-busch, inbev Edit This

If you’re one of the many Budweiser fans concerned about the fate of Anheuser-Busch then you’ll be glad to know that at least one brewer in St. Louis is prepared to take a proactive stance against Inbev.

Schlafly Beer, a craft brewer in St. Louis, has started a fundraising campaign with a goal of buying Inbev. So even if the beer giant does eventually buy out A-B at least, ultimately, Budweiser will remain an American beer! Go, contribute now!

By the way, Schlafly makes some really excellent beer, too. If you ever have the chance you should try some.  They make a nice oatmeal state and a beautifully hoppy American pale ale.

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Jun 27 2008

Anheuser-Busch Rejects Inbev’s Bid

Published by breddings under anheuser-busch, inbev Edit This

In a letter to Inbev this week Anheuser-Busch told the Belgian beer giant thanks but no thanks to their unsolicited bid. The letter points out many reasons that the bid was rejected but they all boiled down to “We are SO worth more than that!”

Is it a real rejection or a negotiating tactic? Conventional wisdom is that this will now enter the hostile takeover phase. I don’t pretend to know what the next step will be but I fully expect that this time next year Inbev will own the American brewer.

I also fully expect that most beer drinkers in America and Europe will notice very little difference.

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Jun 18 2008

Heather Ale

Published by breddings under specialty beer Edit This

For some time now I have not bought Heather Ale from the Fraoch brewery in Scotland. I saw it everytime that I dropped by the local beer store but I ignored it. It seemed like little more than a gimmick. But today I decided that I would finally try the stuff.

Turns out it is a lovely beer. The ale is on the lighter side though it is still substantial enough that no one would confuse it with a lager. The heather, I presume, adds a very nice flowery and fresh aspect to the beer giving it a refreshing and spicy flavor. I enjoyed it thoroughly and might have to go pick up a few more bottles tomorrow

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Jun 17 2008

Inbev vs. Anhueser-Busch – Let’s All Just Calm Down a Bit

Published by breddings under anheuser-busch, inbev Edit This

In case I haven’t mentioned it I live 90 miles south of St. Louis, the home of Anheuser-Busch.

Busch country.

So as you might imagine things are reaching a fevered pitch around here. You’d think that a foreign government is threatening to take over the country; not the run of the mill big beer business deal that this really is. I can usually calm the hysteria a bit when I point out that Coors is owned by a Canadian company and Miller a South African company.

Even so, people are still freaking out. And this headline, Inbev tone turns more hostile in bid for A-B, in the St. Louis Post-Dispatch didn’t help any.

But we all need to calm down. First, it’s just beer, ok? We all love it but life will go on if something about beer changes. Second, Budweiser and the other big brands brewed by Anhueser-Busch aren’t going anywhere. And odds are they’re going to be brewed in exactly the same breweries in exactly the same way as before.

Interesting side note: It occurred to me today that if this deal does wind up going through the Boston Beer Company, Sam Adams’s brewer, will be the biggest American owned beer producer.

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Jun 16 2008

German Alt Brew Day – Homebrewers Notebook

It may seem that I’m a relentless homebrewer based on the fact that a mere two days after I bottled my stout I started another beer. But don’t assume anything yet. We’re only two brews into this second homebrewing phase of my life so my enthusiasm may peter out soon.

Anyway, today’s brew: I ordered the extract German alt kit from Northern Brewer a few weeks ago and today was it’s day of reckoning.

The brewing went OK – no major hitches. Well, none until I was cleaning up. The kits come in these substantial little cardboard boxes. When I picked this one up to throw it in the recycling stack in the garage I noticed that it seemed a little heavy. I opened it up and there was a pound of dried malt extract.

By now I had already boiled the wort. The carboy was full and cooling in a bathtub full of cold water. I couldn’t re-boil it; that would screw up the hopping schedule. So after cursing to myself and staring at that damned plastic bag full of brown powder for about 20 seconds I decided to just dump it straight in.

If you’ve ever dealt with DME you know that it’s very fine and likes to clump. The barest amount of moisture will make it form into solid little rocks. And that’s exactly what it did when I dumped it the carboy – it formed three or four dozen little malt balls in the wort which, eventually, drifted to the bottom.

Once the wort was cooled down sufficiently I pitched the yeast as usual. Will this affect the brew? I have know idea but it will be interesting to watch.

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Jun 15 2008

The Mystery of the Mislaid Mead - Homebrewers Notebook

Yesterday I mentioned a mead that I bottled alongside my stout. Let me tell you about that mead.

When I got the beer.about.com gig I was really a bit surprised. I expected that another more qualified writer would land it. But I got it and I couldn’t have been happier. I had to work really hard to earn and keep the position and consequently my homebrewing exploits fell to the wayside.

Fast forward two years to now and I’m finally getting back into homebrewing. When I decided to start brewing again around a month ago I began cleaning the dusty heap of homebrew equipment that had sat neglected for two years. Among all of that I discovered a carboy full of mead. It didn’t have a cap or plug of any sort; it was just sitting there open to the world - or really the nasty air of my basement.

But I smelled it then, after it smelled OK, I tasted it and it seemed to be in good shape.

I have no memory of this mead - when I put it down or why it didn’t have a plug and airlock. But there it was. So as I brewed my stout I also tended to this mead. I transferred it twice to a clean carboy so to clean it a bit and I think it’s going to be really quite good.

I bottled it yesterday; even added some priming sugar in the hope that it will have some yeast left and will carbonate like any other homebrewed beer. I’ll report back when it’s aged a bit.

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Jun 14 2008

Stout Bottling Day – Homebrewers Notebook

I bottled my stout today. My wife had to work – her job requires the odd Saturday – so as soon as she had gone I got busy. I started by lugging the five gallon carboy up from the basement to the kitchen. Actually there were two. I also bottled a mead that I don’t think that I’ve mentioned here before. Anyway, I brought both up and sat them on the counter. I always start with this step because it agitates the beer and I want to give it time to settle down before it goes in the bottles.

So, I left the two carboys on the counter and took my time gathering and cleaning everything for my bottling. Plenty of time, right? But when I turned to the stout to start siphoning when *bloop* the airlock bubbled! Three weeks and the damn thing thinks that it’s supposed to still be fermenting!

I stood there staring at trying to decide if I should give it another week. I have no idea how long it took – a few minutes at least - but it bubbled again. It was definitely working and not just burping from the ride upstairs

I bottled anyway. I decided that it’s got to very close to finishing and bottling at this point isn’t that different from krausening, right? I did add priming sugar but only about half of the usual amount. The possible outcomes I’m looking for here, setting aside for the moment the chance of exploding bottles, is super-fizzy, average carbonation or near still.

That’s right; Danger IS my middle name!

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Jun 13 2008

Could I Have Been Wrong about American Wheat Beer

Published by breddings under wheat beer Edit This

I’ve long complained about a style that rose out of the craft beer revolution known as American wheat beer. The original Bavarian wheat beer known as Hefeweizen uses a unique ale yeast that gives the beer a spicy flavor and aroma with strange but completely enjoyable hints of banana. The flavor is pronounced in the finished beer but it’s even more apparent if the brew is left unfiltered with the tasty yeast suspended in it.

American craft brewers took this idea of unfiltered wheat beer except that they didn’t use the same sort of yeast – they use a regular, clean fermenting yeast. So what is left was a largely flavorless, sweet beer with a lot of body (thanks to the wheat).

I’ve always complained about the style but rarely find an ally among other beer geeks.

But could I have been wrong? Tonight I tried a beer from Schlafly in St. Louis, MO that was labeled Hefeweizen. I expected the usual Amercan flavorless version and, as I expected, this one did not use the proper Bavarian yeast. But still it was very tasty. Spicy and sweet but very good. I may have to give this whole style a second look.

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Jun 12 2008

The Patience of My Dear Wife

I like beer. That’s obvious to anyone who’s even taken a cursory glance at this or either of the other two beer blogs that I maintain. I like everything about beer – how it tastes, how it looks in a glass, how it works so well as an ingredient in almost every dish I make, how it’s made and how much fun it is to make at home.

My wife can take or leave it. If it weren’t for me being around the house she would probably go months at a time without having one. The idea is shocking to me.

But she patiently tolerates how much beer has invaded our home. I have a lot of beer in the house. I receive quite a lot of it from breweries for tasting and review. I take my time with these reviews and at anytime there is anywhere from a six-pack to a case’s worth of beer waiting for my tasting. One half of a shelf in our refrigerator is devoted to beer as is one whole cabinet in our kitchen.

And that’s just the commercial beer. I have two to three hundred bottles stored in my homebrewing room in the basement. Yes, a room devoted to homebrewing – I ferment beer and store my equipment there. All those bottles, variously full of beer or waiting to be so are on shelves and on the floor.

And that’s just in the house. A good quarter or more of the available storage space in our garage is devoted to my all-grain brewing equipment. That’s a big wooden stand that I built with two gas burners, a cooler that I converted into a mash tun, innumerable pots, a keg that I cut the top off of, propane tanks and miscellany.

And not once has my wife ever complained, implied inconvenience or even looked askance at my various beer messes. I have a wonderful wife!

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Jun 11 2008

Is a Vote for McCain a Vote Against Beer?

Published by breddings under alcohol laws Edit This

It is shocking but videos do not lie – especially videos posted on YouTube, right?

OK, so it was a gaffe but where did it come from? Does John McCain have a secret plan against American beer? Is he using his wife’s connections at Anheuser-Busch to push forward plans to sell another American beer maker into foreign hands? How deep does this go? I mean, is this eighteenth amendment kind of stuff?

It is scary territory, indeed. Any politician who can make a statement like this, however unintentionally, should be given a hard second look. Were you considering voting for McCain? Do you like beer? Maybe you should reconsider that vote!

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