Session #37: When to drink the good stuff

The Session - Beer Blogging FridayThe Session is a monthly one-day event held by beer bloggers around the world, where they each post their thoughts on a unified theme.

This edition of The Session is sponsored “SirRon” at The Ferm.

The Session #37: Announcement – The Display Shelf: When to Drink the Good Stuff

Finding a drinking occasion that lives up to the reputation of the bottle and the story of its acquisition is not a dreadful struggle to have, but it is a struggle nonetheless. When my good friends are over and we have had a few other beverages, will we still be able to enjoy my cave aged Hennepin that I bought after my tour of the brewery and have cellared for ten years? Will I miss it like I miss that four year old Golden Monkey?

The topic is open ended and the rules of The Session are close to nil. You can use your post to be persuasive or therapeutic. You may choose to tell a story of a great bottle you once opened or boast of your own beer collection.

I have only just started experimenting with cellaring some of my beer. Even before I discovered craft beer I’d believed in the idea that “fresh beer is better beer”. I mean, take away most of the water, add some flour, and you’ve got bread. What bread tastes better after sitting for some length of time? Even after my craft beer epiphany I still gravitated toward “pale” brews, which still benefit from being drunk fresh.

As such, I haven’t really run into the problem of setting something aside “for a special occasion”. (I do however, have a bottle or three whose siren song I’m resisting so that I can have it later this year.) Most of my friends are beer fans themselves and appreciate those rarer, “special” beers. Those that aren’t, well, they either bring their own beer or I choose something just for them that helps keep them away from the stuff they just wouldn’t appreciate. Those occasions are few and far between, though. I moved away from most of my close friends and only see them occasionally. My wife, while she enjoys a nice craft beer, doesn’t like the high-gravity stuff that does well with aging. That usually just leaves little old me to enjoy those beers I’ve been saving.

Then, of course, there’s the “don’t postpone joy” philosophy. I remember in my youth I got my mother a candle shaped like a rose or something. Well, she wouldn’t burn it because it was too nice. Years later, we discovered it in the attic. It was completely malformed, the fragrance was gone, and even if the wick would have held a flame it wouldn’t have melted evenly. Instead of enjoying it soon after receiving it, she saved it for a special occasion and never got to enjoy it at all. My wife likes to paint these one-of-a-kind pottery bowls which are just lovely, but rather than leave them to gather dust on a shelf, she uses them. A couple of them have small chips out of them as a result, but she has enjoyed them. Why wait?

Writing this reminds of two things. One, if I’m going to cellar more beer I need to get a bit more organized as I don’t really know what I have or how long it’s been in there. But, then, doesn’t that go against the “spirit” of beer? Beer is simple, approachable. If I’m going to start cataloging my purchases by vintage and judging whether or not the occasion is “worthy” of a bottle, doesn’t that send me careening down the path to one of those annoying oenophiliacs we all know? Still, I know that there are some rather tasty beers that become even more tasty with just a little time and patience, and who wouldn’t want that?

Secondly, I’m reminded that I haven’t gotten together with friends—to chat over some good beer—in an embarrassingly long time. This is something I will need to rectify very soon because, to me, being with friends is more than enough reason to celebrate.

Forty Plus Blessings

I am officially an old man -40 years old- at least according to old standards. In reality I don’t think these standards apply to me as I still feel young, I’m in the best shape I’ve been in my life, and I have many things that make me feel alive like my family, children, work, sports… and good beer. As a matter of fact, the only thing that makes me aware I’m 40 years old is all of the experiences I’ve gained over the years and the blessings I have to count.

Ron and his forty gifts

Speaking of blessings, my friends gifted me with a whole selection of craft beer… the best of the best. A group of them (including Al at Hop-Talk) got together to find 40 unique brews that I never had before AND were of my favorite styles. Impossible… I know. But would you believe that 38 of the 40 I’ve never tried? They were even individually wrapped!

Some that I am particularly looking forward to are: Sierra Nevada’s Harvest Wet Hop Ale, SlyFox’s Odyssey Imperial IPA, Clay Pipe’s Pursuit of Happiness Winter Warmer, Founder’s Breakfast Stout and Avery’s Mephistopheles’ Stout. And that is just a few of them.

I am now fully stocked and I can’t wait for the weekend when I get to browse my beer cellar to find something I’m in the mood for. I may not even wait that long.

All of these brews were delivered at a party my wife put together for me; a low key party with my close friends who traveled from near and far to join me in celebration. It was perfect… no over-the-hill gags and not a huge gathering of people I barely knew.  We had lots of great beer and great beer food  like Dubliner cheese, dried meats, garbage bread, deli pickles, etc. We had great fun doing plenty of things I don’t do often enough like playing ping pong, cards, and just sitting back to chat. It must have been more than a decade since we played The Great Dalmuti which was a blast. (and, “it is good to be the king”)

So as I begin my run at the other side of the “hill”, I have plenty of good beer to get me started; certainly more than 40 blessings to count. So let me start with my wife, my children, my family, my friends… and keep counting from there.

One thousand comments!

Russ from Simple Home Brew Beer made the 1,000th comment here at Hop Talk.

To celebrate this milestone, we wanted to send Russ a 365 Bottles of Beer Page-A-Day 2009 Desk Calendar. However, he lives in Australia. Aside from the shipping logistics, who wants a calendar with the wrong Equinoxes/Solstices?

So, Russ, I’m afraid all I can offer you is this fifteen minutes of fame.

Thanks to Russ and everyone else who has offered their thoughts and opinions. I look forward to reading more.