Call to action: Finding BYOB establishments

We recently received a query from Mark:

Dear Sirs: 

Do you know where I can find out more information on successful & popular “Bring your own Beer” (BYOB) establishments across the nation? 

So, basically, I want to travel to places where I can bring what I want to drink and enjoy their food. There must be a guide for this somewhere. 

Thanks for your consideration. 

Good question, Mark. I’d like to find a couple such places myself. It’s hard to find a reasonably-priced restaurant with good food and good beer.

A quick Google search shows that most BYOB listing are concerned with bringing bottles of wine, not beer. Here are a couple of possibilities:

http://www.byobguide.com/
http://www.wine-pages.com/food/byoblist.shtml (primarily UK)
http://www.byobs.com/

So, Hop Talk readers: can you help out? What is your favorite BYOB establishment? Or, better, your favorite place to find BYOBs to bring your beer to?

Samuel Adams White Ale

Samuel Adams White AleBeer-a-Day #81

This is a seasonal beer for Spring. It’s also another that I had no idea Jim Koch and company were doing.

Pale straw, as you’d expect, with a white head. The orange peel and coriander are obvious, but there’s a bunch more there just on the edge of my sense of smell. The taste is light and refreshing. My wife quite likes it. This is a worthwhile change-of-pace.

Samuel Adams

Samuel Adams Cherry Wheat

Samuel Adams Cherry WheatBeer-a-Day #80

Another fruit beer from Samuel Adams, also from the Brewmaster’s Collection.

Pale clear straw with an ivory head. I get a lot of cherries in the aroma, and no much else. Honestly, it smells like cough medicine. My first impression of the flavor is of black cherry soda, except it’s not as sweet. I’m unsure about this one. Perhaps with the right food pairing…

Samuel Adams Blackberry Witbier

Samuel Adams Blackberry WitbierBeer-a-Day #79

This is another from the Brewmaster’s Collection. I didn’t even know Boston Beer Company made such a thing.

Yellow, with a creamy looking off-white head. The aroma is primarily berries, with just a hint of the beer underneath. It’s not overly sweet. There’s a bit of harshness to it. It’s okay, but I wouldn’t go out of my way to have it again.

Samuel Adams

Ron on Porter

I cracked open my bottle of Rogue Imperial Porter and served it with my NY Strip Steak smothered in caramelized onions & mushrooms. I had purchased this beer as part of my search for a favorite porter. Recently I noted that Victory’s Storm King Stout was closer to the porter I am seeking than any other porter I’ve tried (from a bottle).  Rogue is one of my favorite craft brewers and I was hoping that at $15 a bottle, this would be the one.

But it wasn’t.rogue-imperial-porter

Once again, the primary flavor characteristic came from roasted/burnt barley. You CANNOT taste any malt sweetness behind the charcoal and it ruins what ever hop presence is there. This harsh bitterness is not what I’m looking for in a porter. From Rogue…

This is a huge mouthful of malt and hops. It has notes of bitter rich chocolate and hints of tar. A new hop called Summit was used to give it the perfect hop balance. This porter is the creme de la creme.

I started thinking to myself, I must be wrong, even though we already established that I can’t. Maybe I’m just misinformed… so I decided to look it up.

Robust Porter
Robust porters are black in color and have a roast malt flavor but no roast barley flavor. These porters have a sharp bitterness of black malt without a highly burnt/charcoal flavor. Robust porters range from medium to full in body and have a malty sweetness. Hop bitterness is medium to high, with hop aroma and flavor ranging from negligible to medium. Diacetyl is not acceptable. Fruity esters should be evident, balanced with roast malt and hop bitterness.

Brown Porter
Brown porters are mid to dark brown (may have red tint) in color. No roast barley or strong burnt/black malt character should be perceived. Low to medium malt sweetness is acceptable along with medium hop bitterness. This is a light to medium-bodied beer. Fruity esters are acceptable. Hop flavor and aroma may vary from being negligible to medium in character.

So I’m not misinformed, either.

Now, you can’t be wrong either… you might like this.  You might like to just add some ash from the fireplace, too. Why don’t you add some smoke flavor to it while you are at it. (Check back for my review of Stone’s Smoked Porter for the upcoming Session.)

I don’t like it. I like it bitter from hops and from dark malt, but it still must primarily taste like beer.

Rogue Imperial Porter is not a bad beer. The body, lacing, aroma and quality is top notch; I just don’t love whatever style of beer this is. And Rogue is not the only one.

Allagash White

Allagash WhiteBeer-a-Day #77

After nearly a week of cold, damp, grey skies there is finally a feeling of spring in the air and blue skies above. Sounds like a great time to break out Belgian-inspired wheat beer.

Pale yellow with plenty of haze. (There’s yeast in it after all.) Very spicy. Bananas, coriander, clove. Maybe a little vanilla. Light on the tongue with a malty finish. 

Allagash White

Beer-a-Day Project: February recap

Two months down, ten to go.

  1. Wild Goose Oatmeal Stout
  2. Flying Dog Dog Schwarz
  3. Samuel Adams Winter Lager
  4. Samuel Adams Brown Ale
  5. Samuel Adams Irish Red
  6. Flying Dog Kerberos Tripel
  7. Samuel Adams Hefeweizen
  8. Samuel Adams Black Lager
  9. Samuel Adams Hallertau Imperial Pilsner
  10. Brooklyn Brown Ale
  11. Brooklyner Weisse Beer
  12. Brooklyn East India Pale Ale
  13. Brooklyn Pennant Ale ’55
  14. Widmer Brothers Drifter Pale Ale
  15. Victory Hop Wallop
  16. River Horse Tripel Horse
  17. Victory Golden Monkey
  18. Leinenkugel’s 1888 Bock
  19. Legacy Brewing Midnight Wit
  20. Legacy Brewing Hedonism Red Ale
  21. Legacy Brewing Fat Boy Lager
  22. Leinenkugel’s Honey Weiss
  23. Dominion Oak Barrel Stout
  24. Mendocino Blue Heron Pale Ale
  25. Mendocino Black Hawk Stout
  26. Mendocino Red Tail Ale
  27. Heavy Seas Hang Ten Weizen Dopplebock
  28. Allagash Tripel

January recap