Buffalo Bill’s Blueberry Oatmeal Stout

Buffalo Bill's Blueberry Oatmeal StoutBeer-a-Day #87

What an unusual combination. Oatmeal stout is one of my favorite styles, but fruit beers are a bit of hit-or-miss.

Inky dark with a tan head. The blueberries in the aroma are subtle, with chocolate roastiness underneath. It’s not overly sweet; the blueberries provide more sourness than sweetness. The acid from the fruit seems to counteract that smoothness I should be getting from the oatmeal. It’s okay, but I don’t much feel the need to revisit it.

Buffalo Bill’s Brewery


Rock Bottom Stillwater Stout

Beer-a-Day #85

Stillwater Stout

My boss took a few of us out for happy hour at Rock Bottom in Bethesda, Maryland. He’d been going on about the Brown Bear Brown, which was pretty good, but I switched to the Stillwater Stout and I’m glad I did.

Dark, inky black with a beige head. Lots of nice roastiness and chocolate, and creamy smooth. It was very good.

It was very crowded. Well, $1.50 pints will do that. I don’t go to too many happy hours, but, man, the people there seem to get younger every year. What the heck is going on?

The Great Can vs. Bottle Debate

This is a guest article by David Flaherty of  Grapes and Grains, based in New York City.

Get your filthy hands off my cans!

Get your filthy hands off my beer can!

Within the wine, beer and spirits world, passions run deep. And so do the divisions. Whether it is beer vs. wine, red vs. white, or vodka vs. bourbon, the warring camps of devotees are steadfast and thirsty for the other’s blood. Whether it is double- vs. triple-distilled, screw cap vs. cork, or old world vs. new world, you’re going to get some pretty set opinions. “A screw cap on my wine? I ought a bust you in the lip and drown you in a vat of Yellow Tail Shiraz!” But change in the beer world is coming…you afraid of the can? Well, my friend, it may be time to look again.

So often the choices we make in what we drink tell us a lot about the person. Like wearing an Armani suit, strutting around with a bottle of Sam Adams Utopia is an indicator of class, style and attitude. I remember when just the sight of my bottles of microbrew was called out as being “fancy”, and I was regularly taunted by can-wielding upperclassmen. And of course in this case, “fancy” meant arrogant, or high-falutant, like I was some sort of beer dandy or something. Well, look who laughing now, you Schlitz-drinkin’ d-bags…and no, you can’t have a bottle of my homebrew. And now, the door has opened even further and we’re seeing the unthinkable: microbrews in cans. What the f? A can?! “But only swill comes out of a can.” “Only those that care nothing about their beer would disgrace it with such a filthy vessel,” the naysayers rally. And you’d be surprised just who is saying such things.

A few years ago, Jim Koch of Boston Beer Company (Samuel Adams) shocked the beer world with his blatant disregard of the can. In 2005, he released what he called the “Beer Drinkers Bill of Rights” to ensure better beer for one and all, and stated, “Beer shall be offered in bottles, not cans, so that no brew is jeopardized with the taste of metal.” Uproar ensued in the microbrew community, especially at my beloved Oskar Blues Brewery in Lyons, Colorado where they have taken can technology to new heights and are the pioneers in leading the movement away from the beloved bottle.

cans and bottlesThe evolution of the can is a fascinating one. As recently as the 1930′s, tin cans could not hold beer without exploding. And then came the advent of the liner. Initially made of vinyl (and fancy polymers today), they sealed the can, and prevented all liquid contact with the metal. Over the years, the technology has improved ten-fold and the fear of tainting our precious bevies with metal has become irrational. In fact, its seeming more and more like the can is the perfect vessel for beer.

I was fortunate to meet Dale Katechis, the founder of Oskar Blues brewery a few years ago at Brewtopia. There in the midst of all these breweries and their countless bottles was a table filled with cans. Huh? It seemed so strange. Yet for Dale, it was a subtle war cry; a shot across the stern of the micro beer community. Dale’s Pale Ale was not just a great beer, but also a new philosophy: the Can is King. Backed by the belief in “less air, less light”, Dale was upbeat, passionate and grounded in his renegade ways. And the beer? Unbelievable. Featuring caramel toffee notes highlighted by fresh hops and an intoxicatingly smooth balance, it is delicious, and was deemed the Top Colorado Brewed Beer by the Rocky Mountain News in November, as well as the New York Times pick as the Best Pale Ale in America in 2005.

So fast-forward a few years, and cans are now popping up everywhere in the craft beer world. Breweries like Butternuts in upstate New York, New Belgium in Ft. Collins, Colorado, and most recently Sly Fox from Pennsylvania, to name a few, have begun canning. They’re on the band wagon, and are espousing the advantages of the can: better protection from light and air, easier storage and transport, as well as a quicker cooling time for your tailgate fiestas. So what does that mean for us, the beer drinkers?

Well, frankly, better beer. Be it canned or bottled, brewers are testing and reinventing the ways we package our prized beverages. Concerned with the freshness of their beer, every detail is being scrutinized (and argued over). But honestly, bottles aren’t going away. The only thing that’s really changing? You’re going to find some damn tasty microbrews in cans. So embrace them, my friends. Embrace them without shame. The can will serve you well.

[Ed.: We agree. Do not shun cans.]


german_beer_girlsDavid Flaherty usually waxes poetical about beer (and wine) at Grapes and Grains.


Write  for Hop Talk

Dominion Millennium Ale

Beer-a-Day #84

I’ve never seen this before, in spite of it being fairly local to me. “Premium Ale Brewed with Honey” exclaims the label, as well as 10.5% ABV. Yikes!

Dark honey colored, with a thick, off-white head. Some vanilla in the aroma, along with grassiness from the hops. Not sweet. Some alcohol heat, but not as much as I expected. There’s an unusual burnt toast flavor in the aftertaste.

Old Dominion Ales

40 Random Beers Ratings – Round 2

Of the 40 beers I received for my birthday I’ve tracked thus far how each has rated against the unofficial Hop-Talk beer rating scale.

In this round I add one fantastic brew, Brooklyn’s Local 1. I’m not a big Belgian fan, but this really hit the spot for me. Two other very good stouts received a 3.5, Founder’s Breakfast Stout and Harviestoun’s Old Engine Oil Black Ale. (I think I liked the Engine Oil a bit more)

Left Hand’s JuJu Ginger was interesting with the first sips wonderful and full of ginger, but by the end I was spent on the taste and my tongue was over spiced. Wild Goose’s XPA was nothing to write home about.

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