Showing posts with label anheuser-busch. Show all posts
Showing posts with label anheuser-busch. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 18, 2012

Chillin' with Chelada


Have you ever seen anything so terribly compelling that you couldn’t turn away . . . say like a train wreck?

Well, while I was in my local beer store I was poking around looking for something new and interesting to try.  For me that means a new micro brewery or something seasonal.  You know . . . something good!

What I hadn’t ever remotely  anticipated purchasing was an Anhueser Busch product.  And certainly not of the Budweiser variety.  Least of all a Budweiser with . . . dare I say . . . clamato juice. 

Ack!  I said it!  Yes, I bought it.

The 16 ounce can sat in my refrigerator for weeks.  Looking me square in the face every time I opened the door.  Mocking me.  Taunting me to try it.  For the longest time, I couldn’t bring myself to do it.  Hell, I wasn’t even sure why I bought the thing in the first place.  Talk about buyer’s remorse!  Not that it cost all that much money; it was the principle of the thing!

Last night . . . in a moment of awful weakness, I gave in and broke down an popped open that wretched can of . . . *gulp* . . . beer.





It poured a sickish kind of pink color.  As the can emptied out more of the reddish clamato juice poured out.  I swished the can a bit to get as much of the stuff out as I could . . . if I was going to do it, I was going to do it right!

Mmmm . . . clamato juice.

I’ve never actually purchased Clamato juice.   It  is a drink made of reconstituted tomato juice concentrate flavored with spices and clam broth.  My only recollection of ever seeing this product in someone's home was my grandmother who used it to mix up her bloody mary’s.

Anyhoo . . . 

So, the glass of Chelada . . . that’s what they call it . . . sat on my counter as I contemplated drinking this concoction of beer, tomato / clam juice with a supposed splash of lime.  I finally mustered the courage and took a sip.



Hmmm . . . 

And to my complete and utter horror I actually liked it.  For shame . . . it is a pretty tasty train wreck.

Shocking, I know . . . I have nothing more to say for myself.

Thursday, March 15, 2012

New Brew Thursday - Double Tap . . . 10 Penny Ale and Whaler Ale


Recently I was bonding with some adult members of my family . . . shooting pool and enjoying some cold brews at a local amusement center.  The bar had a couple of new (to me) beers on tap that were calling to me.  They both appeared to be local brews . . . even better!  Of course I had to try them.

The first was a beer called Ten Penny Ale brewed by The Olde Burnside Brewing Company which is located in East Hartford, Connecticut.  That’s pretty darn local . . . to me. 

The brewing company is spinoff of the family-owned ice manufacturing business.   The ice business primarily services local businesses.   The owner of the company . . . a beer lover himself . . . became curious about the volume of water being carted off by regular consumers.  Upon asking what they were doing with all that water they replied that they were using it to make beer.  What made his water so special?  Well, it turns out that the source of the water used for the ice making business is similar in mineral characteristics to the waters of Burton-on-Trent, the source of water for many of the renowned ales of the United Kingdom.  Long story short . . . the brewery came to be. 

Ten Penny Ale . . . their flagship brew . . . got its name from the olden days.  At a time when a pint went for a nickel occasionally brewers would produce a special batch that they would charge a whole dime for . . . hence ten penny ale.

Ten Penny Ale is a version of Scottish ale.  Scotch ale is a variety of pale ale with a high alcohol content and characteristically rich and malty.  

 


Flavor-wise, I think that The Olde Burnside version of this ale falls in line with that description.  However, with a 5.6% ABV it isn’t quite as strong as the typical Scottish ale . . . its not unusual for Scotch ale to have an alcohol content that exceeds 9% ABV.

Ten Penny Ale is a clean, flavorful beer.  The malt flavor is very much in evidence with definite caramel notes.  It’s got great body and goes down way to easy.  A very good, well crafted beer, in my opinion.  God, I love micro-brews!


For more information visit their website.



The second beer was Whaler Ale.  The Whalers are a local minor league hockey team and the beer is named after them.  It just has to be a local beer no?  Well . . . no . . . not really.  I was surprised and disappointed to find out that Whaler Ale is actually Anheuser Busch’s Budweiser American Ale repackaged as Whaler Ale.

With all the great locally owned and operated Connecticut breweries around why a huge company that produces copious quantities of mediocre beer?  I don’t know . . . someone didn’t think that one through.   I kind of feel like I was misled into believing it was a local beer; I would have been happier knowing it was a Budweiser product.


The beer wasn't bad but it is what it is . . . mass produced beer in the style of American Amber ale.  It was a little malty, a little hoppy with a slightly sweet undertone.   Don’t let my disappointment in the misguided marketing of the beer dissuade you from trying this beer.  It is refreshing and tasty and overall a good ale.  5.3% alcohol by volume.



Thursday, March 1, 2012

New Brew Thursday - Double Tap . . . Switchback Ale and Honker's Ale

One of our favorite restaurants, Red Park Steakhouse and Pub, has a hoppin' pub with some fantastic bartenders.  The bar is so much fun we normally dine in there instead of the restaurant.  

The pub has a large selection of standard beers with few rotating taps.  There's always something interesting and new to try.  They had two new (to us) ales on tap so we decided try a pair of ales.  Both were distinctly different with completely disparate flavors.


First up to bat was Switchback Ale.

Switchback Brewing was founded in 2002 by a couple of friends and is located in Burlington, Vermont.  I'm a big fan of small breweries, so anytime I get the chance to try a new microbrew I'm all over it.  This one didn't disappoint.  

Switchback Ale is brewed with five different malts, select hop varieties, and their own specially cultivated yeast.  The special brewing process uses the yeast to naturally carbonate the beer, and it is left unfiltered. 5.0% alcohol by volume. 

When the beer was set in front of me by the bartender I was immediately struck by the color . . . a beautiful reddish gold.   It was fairly clear for an unfiltered ale. The taste was refreshing; not overly hoppy, clean and fresh tasting with a nice malty flavor on the tail end.   It wasn't in-yer-face remarkable but overall it yummy and very drinkable.   If you're looking for something different to try, I'd say give it a go.





For more information you can find Switchback Brewing Company on Facebook.




Second in the line up was a beer by a fun name that couldn't be denied . . . Honker's Ale.  Brewed by Goose Island Beer Co. hailing from Chicago Illinois.  


Goose Island started out a single brewpub 1988 but was eventually sold to a better known brewery . . .  Anheuser-Busch . . . in 2011.  



The beer is distributed throughout the United States and England, but interestingly the Honker's Ale we enjoyed is made a little closer to home.  This variety and their IPA brewed specifically for the east coast in New Hampshire.  Does that make it a microbrew?  Mmm . . . I'm not so sure.


Honker's Ale is categorized as an English Bitter.  To me that brings to mind an acerbic hoppy taste but, in fact, this isn't the case at all.  British bitters are much milder than IPA's and are generally considered the mildest of English bitter ales . . . as opposed to best and premium bitter ales.


I would say that describes Honker's Ale pretty well.  It had a mild hoppy taste and was surprisingly light tasting . . . in other words, it is not a strong tasting beer.  It actually had what I would say was a hollow finish . . . not much flavor at all at the end.  4.7% alcohol by volume. 


Did I like it?  It thought it was good but not exceptional.  I can't say that I would buy it again; however, I wouldn't turn one down if someone handed me a glass.


Visit the Goose Island website for more information on this or their other offerings.