Thursday, September 29, 2011

Day 272 / Oktoberfest Winner - Germany vs USA

































Day 272 / September 29, 2011

Warsteiner Brauerei / Warstein, Germany

A
NG
P
G
VG
O

Germany wins by a sip!

I found a 12 pack of Warsteiner Oktoberfest at Norm’s Beer and Wne in Vienna, VA.  So I had a worthy contender for my Bell’s Oktoberfest.

As you can see from the photo essay above, Warsteiner won, but it was extremely close.  The Warsteiner was every bit as good as the Ayinger earlier this month.  And the Bell’s was as good as the Victory Festbier.  But I had to pick a winner, and the Warsteiner was just a little bit gooder.


Day 271, Sep / Rumble Oak Aged IPA


Day 271 / September 28, 2011

Great Divide Brewing Co / Denver, CO

A
NG
P
G
VG
O

The lengths I go to for this blog….

So, the big final showdown between American and German Oktoberfest beers has to happen before month’s end.  And I have decided to make it a head-to-head, blind taste test.  On the day it happens, I’ll have my wife blindfold me, pour the beers, take some pictures… hey, this could get a little kinky!

I want it to be a fair competition, and right now, it’s stacked in the USA’s favor.  You see, with the 6 previous beers, I purchased almost all the German Oktoberfests I could find.  Earlier this week I stopped into my Total Wine store and bought a bottle of Beck’s Oktoberfest, because it’s all they had left.  I’ve had Beck’s Oktoberfest before, and it’s just not that good.  I needed a better German contender to go up against the highly recommended Bell’s Oktoberfest from Kalamazoo, Michigan.

So Wednesday night, I convinced the family to go to The Lost Dog Café in Arlington for dinner.  Why?  Because right across the street is Westover Market, home to over 800 types of beer!  I stopped in after dinner, perused the shelves and coolers… and found the same six Oktoberfests I’d already had.  Strike out.  Unless I find something else in the next 48 hours, Beck’s will get unfairly crushed by Bell’s.

But of course, Lost Dog is no slouch in the beer department, either.  While we were waiting for our table to be called, I checked out the selection in the coolers.  There were many good choices, but I settled on a beer called Rumble, an oak aged IPA from Great Divide Brewing Company.  Great Divide puts out consistently good beers, this style sounded interesting, and I’d never seen or heard of it before.

It was a deep amber color in the glass, and you could faintly smell the oak.  The beer is “gently aged on French and American oak”, which gives a unique, but not harsh, taste to this IPA.  It’s also well balanced, and rather tasty.  Highly recommended!

Day 270, Sep 27 / Hop Mountain Pale Ale


Day 270 / September 27, 2011

2010 Old Dominion Brewing Company / 
Dover, DE

A
NG
P
G
VG
O

Hops for Pops

I met up with a friend Tuesday night at Buffalo Wing University in Fairfax, VA.  This place, in a strip mall next to a Safeway, started out as a neighborhood and family / wings and burgers / restaurant and sports bar.  In the five years it has been open, it has morphed into a cheap drafts and shooters / college student and hoodlums / drunk fest and pick up joint.  With wings and burgers.

New Belgium Beers were on special, but I had them all already, so I looked for something I hadn’t had yet this year. 

“What’s the big green tap handle on the end?” I asked our waitress, whose name was Brittany or Tiffany or Shelby. 

Surprisingly, she knew it off the bat.  “That’s Dominion Hop Mountain.”

“What type of beer is that?” I asked, inquisitively.

“Ummm…” she said, as she put her hand on her hip.  She didn’t know anything more than the name.  That’s OK, I guess.

So I ordered one, because at this point in the year, at least in a bar, it’s all about the uniqueness of the brew.  If there’s only 1 beer on tap that I haven’t had, that’s the beer I’m getting.

And this wasn’t a bad choice.  Hop Mountain is an American Pale Ale, and was a dark reddish color in the glass.  While it’s called Hop Mountain, it wasn’t overpowered by the hops, and was actually very well-balanced and tasty.  I’d say it’s pretty similar to a Sierra Nevada, which is OK in my book.

So, Brittany / Tiffany / Shelby – if you’re reading this (yeah, right), tell the next pair of middle-aged guys sitting in your bar that the Hop Mountain is kinda like Sierra Nevada.  They’ll thank you for it, and you might get a bigger tip.

Monday, September 26, 2011

Day 269, Sep 26 / Hofbräu Oktoberfest


Day 269 / September 26, 2011

Staatliches Hofbräuhaus / 
Munich, Germany

A
NG
P
G
VG
O

It all comes down to this!

Six German Oktoberfest beers vs. six American Oktoberfest beers.  Who will win?  The American beers clocked in with an aggregate score of 36.  The German beers are at 32, with one beer left.

Tonight I cracked open a Hofbrau Oktoberfest.  It was a more golden color than the American Marzens.  I gotta say, I cannot recommend this beer.  The taste was a little bit… I don’t know… maybe a little offensive.  Kinda made me go… meh.

I’m not gonna give it a “Not Good,”, so it will settle in at a “Passable.”  So that means that we have a tie at 36 – and we’re going into Beer Run Overtime!  So I’m going to get one more Oktoberfest from both the US and Germany to see if we can settle the score by the end of the month.  Any suggestions?  (I may take a break from the Oktoberfests for a day or two…)

Oh, and as I was pulling out of a Target parking lot this afternoon, I saw this license plate.  This guy needs to read my blog. 



Here is the pre-OT scoreboard:



Germany

USA
Hacker-Pschorr Oktoberfest

G
6

-
-
Stoudt’s Oktober Fest

-
-

G
6
Duck-Rabbit Marzen

-
-

G
6
Ayinger Oktober-Fest Marzen

VG
8

-
-
Erdinger Oktoberfest

G
6

-
-
Shiner Oktoberfest

-
-

P
4
Paulaner Oktoberfest Bier

G
6

-
-
Brooklyn Oktoberfest

-
-

VG
8
Victory Festbier

-
-

VG
8
Weihenstephaner Festbier

G
6

-
-
Flying Fish OktoberFish

-
-

P
4
Hofbrau Oktoberfest

P
4

-
-
TOTALS


    36


36

Sunday, September 25, 2011

Day 268, Sep 25 / OktoberFish


Day 268 / September 25, 2011

Flying Fish Brewing Company  /  Cherry Hill, NJ

A
NG
P
G
VG
O

Who gives a Flying Fish?

The last American beer in the Oktoberfest Beer Run was OktoberFish from Flying Fish in New Jersey.

Now I’ve had several beers from FF before, and most were pretty good, so I thought this could be a strong finish to the USA’s showing in the Beer Run.  Not so much.

While it had a nice deep amber color, the taste was lacking.  I really couldn’t get past the sweetness of the beer.  I’m still sitting her in my chair making that sound – how do you spell that sound when you’re trying to get a taste out of your mouth?  Myah?  Ntah?

So the USA ends with a cumulative score of 36.  Germany needs a Passable tomorrow for a tie, and a Good for a win.  Can they pull it off?  Stay tuned! Same Beer-Time, same Beer-Channel!




Germany

USA
Hacker-Pschorr Oktoberfest

G
6

-
-
Stoudt’s Oktober Fest

-
-

G
6
Duck-Rabbit Marzen

-
-

G
6
Ayinger Oktober-Fest Marzen

VG
8

-
-
Erdinger Oktoberfest

G
6

-
-
Shiner Oktoberfest

-
-

P
4
Paulaner Oktoberfest Bier

G
6

-
-
Brooklyn Oktoberfest

-
-

VG
8
Victory Festbier

-
-

VG
8
Weihenstephaner Festbier

G
6

-
-
Flying Fish OktoberFish

-
-

P
4
TOTALS


    32


36




Lagunitas Brewing in Petaluma, CA (north of San Francisco, west of Napa) makes some BIG beers.  Their Maximus IPA and Hop Stoopid Ale are favorites of hopheads everywhere.  We’ll consider their plain old IPA to be a gateway beer.  It’s a solid IPA, without a strong hop smackdown.

Speaking of gateway beers, I read a couple good blog posts lately by Jake Berg on DCBeer.com relating to beer snobbery.  I’ll admit to being a beer geek, and yes, on occasion I may have been slightly snobby.  But I will try to live up to Jake’s advice:

“What’s the difference between preaching the gospel of craft beer and being a hectoring snob? It’s a fine line. But if you’re making someone feel bad for their choice of beverage, please knock it off. After all, as a wise man once said, the best beer you have is the one in your hand.”

You can read Jake’s posts here:

On Beer Snobbery, Part I


On Beer Snobbery, Part II