Posts Tagged ‘Sprecher’

The 2010 Summer Solstice Beer Lovers Fest

Tuesday, July 6th, 2010

Thanks to the Wisconsin Brewers Guild, Saturday June 26th marked the first time ever that all the brew masters from every Wisconsin brewery in attendance at the Summer Solstice event were all together at one place. It was pretty awesome.

My high hopes for the event were, by and large, met when we got there. Like smart drinkers, we were dropped off in the center of the Bayshore Town Center so none of us drove.. I was under the impression that the grassy center was where the event would be held but the way it was laid out actually worked a little bit better. Two sections of the street through the outdoor mall were completely closed off for the tents. In the center where I thought everything would be was actually a stage with music and tents for guests to sit and relax. The music wasn’t obnoxiously loud at all either which was key. It was laid out very well, save for a few important details that could use reconsideration for future events.

1) The tents were on the east side of the road so all the brew masters, servers, and beer were in direct sunlight as the sun went down. Let not also forget that us patrons were also being fried by the blazing sun. It would have made a bit more sense to place the tents on the other side so everyone would benefit from less exposure. It should be noted that Lakefront had sun screen at their tent which came in handy (only after my girlfriend was already beet red).

2) To allow non-event patrons access through the Town Center, the road was divided in half and public property so attendees couldn’t walk from one side to the other with beer in their glasses. A minor nuisance that is completely understandable. Could it be done a bit differently? Maybe.

3) Children. Everyone loves kids (well, everyone loves their own kids anyway) but they need to go. As quoted from the website, “You must be 21 or older to attend this event. Photo identification will be required at the admission entrance.” While everyone in line did get carded, most of the people I was with, myself included, found ourselves tripping over children and trying to avoid people pushing strollers. If that wasn’t bad enough, I witnessed many couples with an infant or young child while they were drinking. Designated Driver tickets were available but I didn’t see a single person with one of the other wristbands on. Come on people, get a babysitter and leave the kid at home, lets be responsible here, it’s a BEER event, there was nothing for your child to do.

4) The lack of easily accessible bathrooms was near unacceptable. Sure, there were two mall bathrooms available but no clear signage to them. One of the first complaints I heard from the crowd, and heard often was, “Where are the port-a-potties? Where am I supposed to go to the bathroom?” Once it became common knowledge as to the whereabouts of the bathrooms like playing telephone and passing it on to the next person, it wasn’t too bad. But with the location known there was still another issue at hand. Both men’s rooms had one urinal and one toilet in them and the urinal inside the bathroom at the food court section of the mall was “out of order”. Certainly bad timing for that. Despite the grumbling among attendees and brew masters alike, the lines for the bathrooms were never out-of-control. A few port-a-johns would be absolutely necessary in the future though, especially if the crowd grows.

5) Lastly, while a moderately sizable crowd (for the location) seemed to be there (I’m still waiting on firm numbers) a major issue needs to be addressed regarding the timing of the event. Never again should this be put on at the same time as the first Saturday of Summerfest as well as Cedarburg’s Strawberry Fest. That was a major flaw of this event and hopefully it didn’t affect attendance so poorly that a follow-up event next year is out of the question.

Also, I won’t even bother arguing the price point for attendance, a complaint I heard a few times. $50 was completely reasonable for the amount of beer and unlimited food available and anyone that thinks otherwise should double-check what they spend at the bar next time. You’ll get less product for more money no question.

So, with those correctable details disclosed, lets move on to why you should have been there. With more than 100 different beers from 30 different Wisconsin breweries, there was about every style you could imagine available to try. 12 different Glendale-area restaurants provided delectable munchies that were well paired with the food and were available at the specific beer booths which made it even easier. Some specific beer highlights for me ranged from the assertive Whiteout Imperial IPA from Hinterland to the ever-awesome Bourbon Barrel Stout from Central Waters to the unusual but good Sahti, Finnish style farmhouse ale from Vintage Brewing Co. I also enjoyed classics like New Glarus’ Belgian Red, Lakefront’s refreshing Klisch pilsner, and Silver Creek’s strong Imperial Mai-bock.

While almost all the food was sample size, it was substantial and didn’t skimp on flavor. Not only that, but it like the beer availability, it was all you could consume. That certainly helped keep the drunkenness to a reasonable level as well as the buckets of water and large kegs of water brought by Sprecher. (I didn’t see anyone out of control, or anyone even close for that matter but police patrolled the area just in case.) I’ve got to say that Solly’s mini hamburgers topped with sautéed onions took the cake as I enjoyed three of the delicious little patties throughout the fest. Other pairings to note were Auntie Anne’s cinnamon-sugar sprinkled soft pretzel stick with Lakefront’s Bridge Burner and California Pizza Kitchen’s BBQ chicken pizza with Delafield Brewhaus’ Fruhlingzeit Maibock. Coa also had a nice little treat I believe was the Chicken Flautas that I may have to head to the restaurant for. Zambonie’s also made a great little steak nugget with a mushroom that was marinated in Silver Creek’s Imperial Mai-Bock.

The simplicity of a hand-edible object seemed to subconsciously drive me to some places over others despite the presence of tall tables lining the side of the road opposite the beer tents. There was both beer and food I regret not sampling due to trying to enjoy as much as I could in such a short span. Regardless, everything I tried I enjoyed. Nothing seemed out of place or poor in quality which really helped boost this event to greatness.

Aside from the tangibles like the delicious and thirst-quenching beer and tasty, filling food, the brew master interaction was spectacular! Between their presence and the fun, talkative crowd, the whole day was an absolutely blast! From the friendly people from the Wisconsin Brewers Guild at the ticket counter to Jackie and two other people at the media booth, everyone was a pleasure to talk to.

More specifically, Todd and I heard directly from the brew master at the Delafield Brewhaus that the famed Whiskey Barrel Aged Okauchee Scotchie Ale is only brewed every three years. MAN! I gotta wait that long ‘til I can finally try it? We also learned from Russ Klisch at Lakefront that they’ll be releasing a new beer called True Evel in a week or so to support an Evel Knievel exhibit at the Harley Davidson Museum [available now!]. Paul from Central Waters, who received an abundance of our attention during the event, told us that the very anticipated sour brown ale yet to be released is bourbon barrel aged as well. Based on their current line up of fantastic barrel-aged beers, the sour brown should be a must-get brew! Paul was awesome to hang out with as well! Hopefully if you went you had a chance to chat it up with him like we did (thanks Paul!).

Camaraderie didn’t stop there though, as I witnessed both Andrew and Russ from Lakefront stepping into New Glarus’ tent to help pour their beers when the lines got long as well as Russ walking the grounds sampling a few different beers. The brotherhood and respect between the different locations transcends the “rivalry” one might expect.

This event was made spectacular through all the social lubrication we consumed while meeting new people and being complete chatty Kathys! I hope that the event was seen as a success in the business-sense as I feel in any other regard it was fantastic enough to warrant a yearly return. We can only hope that the word of mouth drives more people to a possible following event to promote great beer and food awareness. For a first year not a whole lot had to be improved on. The small things that need tweaking can easily be taken care of for subsequent events to rocket them to complete greatness!

I had a blast and it seemed as if everyone else did. You know it’s been a good time when four hours fly by like it’s been nothing. If you didn’t make it out you missed a good time and will hopefully have the opportunity to attend next year.

-Andy

(Thanks to Chris from Beer Buffalo Lodge for allowing us use of his great photography and for pictures from my girlfriend Trish as well!)

Milwaukee Firkin Fest Round up

Wednesday, June 23rd, 2010


So I know this is a bit late but I wanted to at least give my thoughts of this first time event. Milwaukee Firkin Fest is a festival celebrating Milwaukee based breweries, so the total number of booths pouring was around 20 or so. There weren’t actually any firkins though, which perplexed me a bit. Lakefront did have something called stitchvass that was about the closest thing I saw resembling a firkin. The usual suspects were in attendance. The afformentioned Lakefront along with Sprecher, Milwaukee Ale House, and Waterstreet Brewery, and the list goes on. I spent about half of the fest pouring beer for a home brew club I belong to called Beer Buffalo Lodge. This was a great way to interact with the paid attendees. Most everyone I spoke to seemed fairly knowledgeable about craft beer. They would ask about ingredients and how the beers were made. Which I found very refreshing. There were the usual “dudes” that show up to simply pound beers but for the most part it was an intelligent crowd.

Overall it seemed to be a success considering it was the first time holding the event. This purely my opinion and maybe the bottom line would prove otherwise. Only time will tell if they decide to make it an annual event.

-Beerwolf

Sprecher Belgian Style Dubbel Review!

Thursday, June 17th, 2010

Sprecher Brewery is releasing their Belgian Style Dubbel this Saturday for their 25th Anniversary party and I was lucky enough to get a pre-release bottle of their Belgian Style Dubbel today and if this beer isn’t reason enough to head over their with me Saturday, I don’t know what is. Posted below is my review and event information:

A- / 4.25
look: 3.5 | smell: 4.5 | taste: 4.5 | feel: 4.5 | drink: 4
16 oz bottle poured into a Duvel tulip. 6.50% ABV, 10168 on the neck (June 16th, 2010). Interesting because when I picked it up today I was told it was bottled just today. Either way it’s as fresh as humanly possible.

Appearance – The tall pour froths up a one-and-one-half finger dense light khaki-colored head. The beer is a beautiful clear mahogany red-brown with sharp red-orange highlights in the light. The head isn’t retained all too well as it sinks to a creamy pile leaving lackluster spots of lace on the glass for a Belgian style.

Smell – Dark Belgian candi sugar pairs well with the up-front toasted malts. Deep, dark fruit esters from the Belgian yeast play a pivotal role despite being in the background. Complex notes of cherries, fig, and prune add a layer of dimension to the hearty, biscuity, caramel malt nose. Serious hop-heads won’t find much of their favored aroma in this dubbel but it absolutely hits the mark on the style.

Taste – Round, deeply toasted malts push right to the forefront of the flavor profile hitting fast with a smooth, dense breadiness and sweet caramel cube flavor. Belgian yeast and candi sugar aren’t messing around either as they follow up the maltiness swiftly. Dark fruit esters still add a fantastic cherry, fig, and prune complexity while the alcohol becomes very slightly noticeable on the back end. The nuances grow nicely as it warms while toffee pokes out through the finish.

Moutfeel – Very smooth and robust, this dubbel really hits the mark here where most fall flat. A medium level of carbonation allows this beer to go down smoothly. A very light warming sensation finishes up the sweet, malty dubbel.

Drinkability – Sprecher’s 25th Anniversary dubbel nails the style that seems hard to pin down by some smaller American craft breweries. With a fantastic mouthfeel and comparable taste and aroma to boot, it’s a dubbel worth the extra money and definitely worth cellaring to see how it ages. I presume it’ll change gracefully to something possibly even better than it is fresh. Nice work Sprecher!

Come on out Saturday June 19th from 6-10 P.M. to try the awesome new Sprecher beer and hang out with Randy Sprecher. There is no cover charge and if you attended the Firkin Fest last weekend and retained your ticket stub it will get you a free beer!

Step Up the Game Wisconsin!

Thursday, June 10th, 2010

I can’t keep my mouth shut any longer. I don’t like to rant on BeerFM, but this needs to be said: Wisconsin beer drinkers; step up your effin’ game! We’re getting a bad name and I’m sick of it. It seems like the only tastings or events any of the “beer advocates” or “beer geeks” go to are huge to-do’s such as Great Taste of the Midwest and Great Lakes Beer Fest. There is fantastic camaraderie between beer geeks in other states. Where is that for Wisconsin?! BeerFM just hosted an awesome night at Silver Creek a few weeks ago to release their Imperial Mai-Bock, turnout based on invites was sad but we had a great time regardless. There’s the Summer Solstice Beer Festival in Glendale, WI that’s the first ALL WISCONSIN beer festival with over 200 beers paired with same-size samples of food from the Glendale area. 1 person I know is going. Or how about the Beer Fest at Wine Cellar of Wisconsin in Brookfield in a little over a week? I’m the only person I know going.

I’m sick and tired of looking on Beer Advocate’s Wisconsin Beer Calendar to see nothing posted in the events and what’s there, next-to no one is attending. Now, what’s even worse is that I hear rumors floating around about Stone pulling out of the Wisconsin market. That’s the straw that broke the camel’s back; the spark that fueled my rage. I draw the line when a fantastic brewery, for yet unconfirmed and undisclosed reasons, will (possibly) discontinue distributing to this great state.

How could this possibly be? Maybe it’s because they just moved into Illinois and have a much better market there? Or maybe they realized they make no money here because the Joe-Wisconsin-beer-drinkers are too busy drinking ONLY Bud, Miller, and Coors shit!

Come on people. If you advocate craft beer, a) don’t by macro; spend your hard-earned money on GOOD CRAFT BREWED beer, and b) when you know friends that claim to “love beer” and their response to, “what’s your favorite beer?” is “Miller Lite” you should be doing everything in your power to enlighten them to a world beyond the bullshit they call “beer”. I’m not saying these beers don’t have a place in the world, but they certainly shouldn’t command such a disgustingly large percent of  market when there are much, much better offerings available! Wisconsin is known as one of the “drunkest” states based on population and alcohol consumption, but sadly, it isn’t off the type of beer that should be consumed; craft beer. Instead, the majority of sales are from a style that’s a bastardization of what real beer is, only to make the process cheaper and pump out more of it.

When will the Wisconsin beer advocates join the good fight to slay this preconceived notion that everyone here only drinks Miller Lite and finally show people there are people here, in this great state, that love good beer for the flavor, not necessarily for the effect? And more importantly, fight to show other people what flavorful beer can be? Next time you’re out picking up beer, pick up some local beer like Lakefront. Pick up some New Glarus. Hell, pick up some Stone and show support for a great brewery that might not be distributed to this state after summer because we’re too busy drinking beer-flavored water.

-Andy

Chameleon Brewing Release Party

Tuesday, April 27th, 2010

“Chameleon Brewing, dedicated to creating innovative craft beers true to the American spirit, is a new brewery started by Randy Sprecher, founder of Sprecher Brewery. Crafted to please and tease a wide variety of palates, Chameleon beers are light in body, yet full of complex flavors and aromas.”

Chameleon Brewing is hosting a release party for their beers, Hop On Top, Fire Light, and Witty tomorrow, April 28th, at Bayshore Mall in Glendale, WI from 5:30-8:30. Here is what they have to say on their website calendar:

“Come join us for complimentary beer and food samples as we celebrate the launch of Chameleon Brewing! The event will be held at the rotunda, next to Bar Louie, at Bayshore Mall.”

You can find there website here: http://chameleonbrewing.com/index.php

I’ll be there for a short time with my cousin to sample Chameleon’s beers and hopefully score some to review for a BeerFM podcast.

Hope to see you there!

-Andy

500th Review Episode

Wednesday, November 11th, 2009

500th Review Episode

Wow. I’ve made it to 500 reviews on BeerAdvocate. It’s time to celebrate with a good beer! Take a listen to this spur-of-the-moment episode to catch my 500th beer review featuring Sprecher’s Czar Brew, a Russian imperial stout aged in oak bourbon barrels!

500th Review Episode

Milwaukee Beer Week

Sunday, October 18th, 2009

Milwaukee Beer Week

Andy quickly talks about the Sprecher Oktoberfest event, Lakefront owner Russ Klisch at Three Cellars, and the upcoming Sprecher Oktoberfest release party with Brewmaster Craig Burge.

Milwaukee Beer Week

Oktoberfest Episode 1

Sunday, October 18th, 2009

Oktoberfest-01

Its 2 weeks late, but October brings around some of my favorite beers; Oktoberfestbiers. This episode starts weekly (if not more frequent) Oktoberfest review podcasts. Im still getting over my cold so bare with me and crack a good Oktoberfest open!

Oktoberfest Episode 1