Saturday, November 10, 2012

The Hold Steady, Craft Beer, and great cheese!







If you would have told me when i was 22 years old that a great life would have been a Subaru in the driveway, steady and gainful employment, and simple peace and quiet I probably would have kicked your ass out of my apartment. On the same lines, had I heard an amazing Saturday night consisted of great beer in the box, a massive iTunes file, your dog sleeping on the couch, and blogging I would have had a shit fit and not wanted to grow up. Well, i am now 30 years old and this is where I am. My dog is out on the couch I used to spend hours watching hockey on, I am enjoying my 3rd Summit Saga IPA, and am writing a blog. And yes, mu Subaru is in my driveway.


Life is very routine now a days and I like it that way. Days start at 5:30, shower, daycare drop-odd at 7, check in at the office, call on my accounts until 4, rinse and repeat. The weekend breaks up the monotony and that is what I am up to tonight. I have recently become a devoted fan of The Hold Steady. Y'know how Bill Walton follows The Grateful Dead? That is me with these guy's. Okay, maybe not to that extent but you get it. Here is what I like about them. First, they are a Minnesota band. They may have formed in Brooklyn but Craig Finn graduated from Breck High and that is good enough for me. Not to mention they consider First Ave to be home! Second, their music is killer! They have amazing guitar riffs and very non-traditional song progression. None of this "verse/chorus verse/chorus" crap. They are unbelievably unique in their song structure. Third, their lyrics are borderline Bob Dylan. 9/10 times I don't really care about lyrics but this is really how they hook you in. Craig Finn is an amazing story teller. He incorporates characters, places, and themes throughout different albums. I have never heard this done before.


I have put their discography on my iTunes and just sat back and enjoyed. I always thought the lead in to that popular album from The Offspring was strange when he talks about sitting back in an easy chair with a glass of wine and listening to an album. I have my feet up on my desk with a bottle of Summit Saga and am taking it all in. I guess in a way I am still the 11 year old in his room listening to music and playing video games and I can't find a single thing wrong with that. Take it from The Hold Steady themselves when they sing, "we're good guys but we can't be good every night." I may have a rough morning tomorrow.
I mentioned cheese as well. I am sitting with my very own cheese plate right now. I am obsessed with cheese. I always have been, the sharper the better. On this plate I have extra sharp provolone, red Leicester, 10 year old cheddar, and fontina.. Don't act like your not impressed! The cheese makes me want the brews a bit more and it is just good stuff. 22 year old me is really pissed off right now!

Friday, November 9, 2012

Oye!

Whew! Back to craft beer after a little break, a scare rather. Lets just say I have learned how amazing a loving and understanding family can be. I have started a new job recently and am getting the lay of the land and haven't decided how I feel about it. Am I writing concert reviews for Rolling Stone or a professional Beer Reviewer for a publication? No. Am I flipping burgers at Burger King? No. It is somewhere in the center, but the center is a dangerous place because you can become complacent and sedentary.

I am drinking some Craft Beer to get back to normal. I am only sampling on the weekends in deference to my new employer. For me, beer drinking is not about addiction or dependence, it is simply about having a beer. So here I am in my glory. up late in front of the computer, Summit EPA open and 5 more in the beer box, The Hold Steady on iTunes, and writing. I am content as hell right now. I am listening to Banging Camp on The Hold Steady's "Separation Sunday" album and just have it on repeat. Just one of those nights.
         
    

I have been thinking about beer a lot lately as a viable hobby. I attended a social media conference today as my new boss wants me to be a sort of community manager for the company because no one else there gets social media as a concept. I digress, I made a connection with someone who is loosely connected to the beer scene in the Twin Cities. That is a kind of Craft Beer Mecca, its like going to Napa or Sonoma for a wine weekend. Sh knows the folks who put out Growler Magazine. Apparently they want to expand into the Duluth Area for distribution and content. Good idea since Duluth has 36 local Craft Beers to its name. Starfire Pale Ale from Fitgers Brewery is far and away the best. I would love to be a contributor, if nothing else, have a beer with them. Hopefully it works out.

                 

Thursday, November 1, 2012

Sampling

I have been doing a lot of mix-a-sixing lately. I am a little disappointed at the lack of single bottle selection in Duluth. I get it that a liquor store is making its bank on the swill beer that the college crowd is going to pick up on but it is about specialty. Northern Minnesota is all about the craft beer so why not cater to it a bit more? Well, enough whining. As I sit and write this I am enjoying a FANTASTIC EPA from Odell Brewing called St. Lupulin. Now, Summit Brewery has no worries about my allegiance straying but this is simply amazing. It is a lot more floral than bitter and the bottle is just cool. After continuous sampling from Odell including their Cutthroat Porter, 5 Barrel, 90 Schilling, Red Ale, Isolation Ale, and the current, I could use a trip to Colorado.


A find I was excited about was Big Eddy's Baltic Porter from Leininkugels Brewery in Chippewa Falls WI. For me, Leine's has always been a flop. Their brews have been boring and don't bring much to the table but stale flavors and shoddy craft and their stupid Honeyweiss is the main culprit.I digress, Big Eddy Baltic Porter was a step up although not the greatest beer. I am comparing it to Surly Smoke Baltic Porter which may not be a fair side by side since Surly has a very different take on craft beer than most. Big Eddy was not as flavorful as i would have liked but packed a punch with 8.5% alcohol. I will be on the lookout for their Big Eddy genre for a while.
IMG_20121101_223257.jpg

It is my favorite beer season though. Fall is when I really get back into beer. I have had some awesome fall brews and a new beer event. I kicked off the Oktoberfest season with Surly Fest. This may have ruined me for traditional Oktoberfest's. As I said earlier, Surly seems to have a different take on Oktoberfest than anyone else. The add a lot of hopps to the brew. They hit up a really great recipe. I am fortunate to live down the block from a liquor store that has a lot in stock that no one buys. Other noteworthy Oktobers have been Summit, Schell, New Glarus, and The Brewhouse in Duluth. All of these are pretty traditional recipe's that fall into the Marzen line.


I was lucky enough to get out for the night and hit up Duluth Oktoberfest at Tycoons Alehouse in the old City Hall building in town. It is an old building built in 1910 by the Freemasons. I met up with some friends from the Minneapolis area and we had a great night. We enjoyed Oktoberfest from The Brewhouse and Capitol Brewery. The Capitol wasn't the greatest. It was a lot like Point Oktoberfest which is lame because they make it all year. Way too malty. We had chicken and potatoes and beer brats which were amazing as well. We watched a stein holding contest and saw old people doing polka like Mack-10 Crip Walks.It was a great night!



As fall turns over to winter my beer journey continues. Winter Ale's here I come!!