Hoppy BBQ

•05/27/2012 • Leave a Comment

From our friends over at Draft Magazine!

Pairs: beer & hotdogs

Teach your old dog some new tricks with these tasty pairings from beer chef Sean Paxton.

New York-style dog & Saint Arnold Fancy Lawnmower

The classic all-beef New York dog’s punch gets some padding with a crisp, sweet kölsch. This hot dog is as loud as the city it hails from: Its tart sauerkraut, pungent sautéed onions and spicy mustard inundate the senses. Lawnmower’s grainy malts turn the toppings down a notch, while its light honey flavor pulls out the sweetness of the onions and meat. This beer’s flavors are subdued, but Paxton notes its hallmark dry finish stands up to the dog, cutting through the greasy meat and sour, earthy toppings for a clean swallow. ALSO TRY: Alaskan Summer Ale, Gaffel Kölsch

Chicago-style dog & Abita Turbodog

This dynamic dog’s bright, crispy veggies and spicy peppers sing a high note on the tongue while a malty English-style brown ale delivers the bass. The sport peppers’ heat, mustard, sour relish and dill pickle create a potent foil to the rich Vienna beef. Turbodog’s toasted caramel backbone fortifies the meat and “accentuates the richness of the bun,” says Paxton. The ale’s lively carbonation and flash of roast quiets some of the toppings’ intensity, but still allows the sharp
vegetable flavors and salty meat to last on the tongue. ALSO TRY: Gritty McDuff’s Best Brown Ale, Newcastle Brown Ale

Hawaiian-style dog & Unibroue Blanche de Chambly

This dog’s match is a beer with “enough sweetness to draw out the meat and punch up the tropical flavors,” explains Paxton. A witbier’s orange notes add tang to the dog’s pineapple sauce and complement the coconut shavings, while its honey flavors sink into the meat and dampen the toppings’ acidity. The beer’s coriander and herbal flavors draw out the earthiness of the mustard and add extra bite to the chipotle-garlic mayo. Blanche de Chambly’s bubbles cut the greasy meat and potato bun, paving the way for a pineapple, orange and coconut finish. ALSO TRY: Allagash White, Ommegang Witte

Sonoran-style dog & Left Coast Downtown Brown

This northern Mexican hot dog’s bacon-wrapped frank is topped with pinto beans, mustard, mayonnaise and pico de gallo and stuffed into a thick bolillo bun; a bold American brown ale sews all the flavors together. Downtown Brown’s roasted notes connect the beans, bacon and beef, says Paxton, but still allows the spicy pico to tickle the taste buds. As the dense bun sops up the dog’s creamy condiments and smothers the palate, a wash of brawny bitterness ushers the dog’s richness off the tongue. ALSO TRY: Brooklyn Brown Ale, Duck-Rabbit Brown Ale

Corn dog & Ballast Point Big Eye IPA

The crunchy cornbread casing of a dog on a stick calls for a beer that can stand up to the crust’s sweetness; according to Paxton, an American IPA does the trick. Big Eye’s hops bring orange and grapefruit notes that enliven the tongue and add a citrus dimension to the hot dog’s casing and fatty meat. A sharp hop bite pushes against the corn sweetness, while a swell of bitterness washes away the sweet, greasy bite. ALSO TRY: Bear Republic Racer 5, Victory HopDevil Ale

A ride for a cause – - –

•05/23/2012 • Leave a Comment

MUSTACHE RIDE!!!!!

The Boise Mustache Ride is a progressive party that fuses bicycles, mustaches, and local drinking establishment together to create an afternoon of adventure. The procession will travel through the City of Boise starting at Lucky 13 off Warm Springs Road. Roughly following the Greenbelt, we will travel to The Ram, The Symposium, then end at Montego Bay. At Montego Bay you will get happy hour prices all night long and food special that will include your choice of Hamburger or Chicken Sandwich, with baked beans, maccoroni salad, and potato salad for only $5!! The date for this event will be May 26th with registration starting at noon and a departure from Lucky 13 around 1:00 or as soon as the last pitcher is put away.

You are encouraged to dress in non-normal bike attire and a decorated bike will be appreciated. It is also requested (almost required) that you wear a mustache of some sort. Men are to be clean shaven on April 26th and grow as long and as hard as they can for one month. Ladies please glue, draw, or grow if you have the ability, your own mustache for the ride as well. Best mustaches will be selected at the end of the ride.

The event is a fundraiser for the Idaho Fallen Firefighter’s Memorial so participants are asked to make a $15 donation to the cause. With this donation you will receive a wrist band that will get you discounted drinks at each of the establishments we plan to visit. You will also receive two raffle tickets making you eligible for the sweet cruiser bicycle we will be giving away at the end of the ride.

This is not a firefighter only event! Please invite all your friends and family and repost wherever you see fit. We will also be stopping at the Memorial for a group photo of all those who took place in the event so try to keep it together at least until then.

Additional raffle tickets will be available at Boise Fire Headquarters and can be bought from Annette Reed (208-570-6540) after May 1st – 1 for $2 or 3 for $5. Tickets will also be sold the day of the ride as well.

There will be prizes awarded for Best Mustache, Best Porn Stache, Worst Stache and of course best Female Stache!

Fast Girls –

•05/22/2012 • Leave a Comment

EXERGY TOUR!!!

Who doesn’t love kick ass strong women riding through the streets of Boise and Beyond! HELL YES! These woman are the cream of the crop and we get a free pass to watch them duke it out! Go support whenever you can!

Wednesday – Team presentation at 7pm @ Grove plaza

Thursday -

  • Expo and Festival opens 5:30 Julia Davis Park
  • Official Race Start 6:30
  • Expo closes at 8:30
Friday -
  • Nampa rec Center 10 am Expo and Festival  starts
  • 11am race starts
  • 2:30 race finishes followed by awards
Saturday -
  • Downtown Kuna Expo and Festival opens 10am
  • 11am race start
  • 1:30 race finish
Sunday -
  • Garden Valley – 10am community breakfast
  • 12pm race starts
  • 1pm festival opens in Idaho city
  • 3pm award ceremonies
Monday -
  • Hyde park Boise 10am Expo starts
  • 11am race starts
  • 1pm Race finishes with overall awards

 

going going gone…..

•05/22/2012 • Leave a Comment

With all of us DBRB members working on the new Sloth Bear Exhibit at the Zoo (that opens June 1)

I thought it fitting to talk about endangered animals and beers!

From Zythophile -

Endangered beers

Posted on May 22, 2012

Beers, like animals, can be endangered species: some can even go extinct. Nobody’s seen West Country White Ale in the wild for more than 125 years.

Camra, I’m very pleased to say, has recently decided that it could be doing much more than Make May a Mild Month for promoting endangered beers, and has set up a Beer Styles Working Group to look at ways of plugging and encouraging endangered beer styles of all sorts.

I’ve managed to blag my way onto the working group, mostly because I’m keen to point out to Camra members, and beer festival organisers (and brewers) that endangered beer styles in Britain go a long way beyond mild, stout and porter, and to try to get the other half-dozen or more endangered British beer styles recognition and promotion as well: and maybe even get some of the extinct beers remade. (That’s the advantage of beer: it may turn out to be impossible to resurrect the mammoth, but reproducing a vanished beer style generally only requires the will, a recipe and the right ingredients.)

So what ARE Britain’s vulnerable and endangered (and extinct) beer styles? Here’s my personal checklist:

Vulnerable
Porter
Porter, once made by thousands of brewers, large and small, in the UK, actually went extinct in Britain in the early 1950s, and in Ireland in 1973. It was brought back to life in 1978 by a couple of brewers, Timothy Taylor in Yorkshire and Penrhos in Herefordshire. A fair number of small brewers make porters today, but it is still far from the mainstream beer it was in the 19th century, when it was the most popular drink in the country.

Stout
Guinness aside, stout – today’s version began as simply the stronger version of porter – also suffered a sharp decline in the second half of the 20th century. London was once a huge centre for stout brewing (as it was for porter brewing): in the early 1950s the London brewer Watney Combe Reid made one draught stout and seven different bottled stouts. But by the mid-1980s a survey by What’s Brewing found just 29 brewers in the UK and Channel Islands still making stout, most of them milk stouts (qv), and as older breweries closed, few of the newcomers were making a stout. Stout has seen a small comeback among Britain’s new brewers in recent years, but one problem is the extremely blurry line today between stout and porter: some modern brewers actually make a stout that is weaker than their porter.

Endangered
Light mild
Twentieth-century light mild was the descendant of the strong pale light mild ales of the 19th and 18th centuries (qv), still lightly hopped, but with the strength drastically lowered in response to the huge rises in taxes on beer, and the restrictions on production, seen in the First World War. Together with dark mild (qv), this was the most popular draught beer style in Britain from the end of the 19th century through to the start of the 1960s. However, the drink failed to capture new generations of pub-goers, and it suffered a catastrophic decline in sales over the next 30 years. Arguably, since most modern drinkers expect a “mild” to be dark, “light mild” should really be in the “critically endangered” category.

Dark mild

Dark mild is pretty much a 20th century invention, and overlaps with (and sometimes includes) the weaker Burton Ales/Old Ales. It is related to Brown Ale (qv), but Brown Ale was always a bottled beer style. It may have sprung from an attempt by brewers during the First World War to produce a weaker beer that still had a full mouthfeel, by using darker malts (but this is just my guess). Dark mild suffered from the same late-20th century catastrophic decline in demand as light mild: both also had a marketing problem in the 1990s and 2000s as some brewers tried to revive them, that many drinkers apparently would not buy a beer called “mild”, though they would happily drink it if it was labelled something like “dark ale”. This may now be less true, as drinkers become keener on trying the beers their grandfathers drank.

Light bitter
Another product of the “Great gravity crash” of the First World War, light bitter has its roots in large part in the AK, KK and XK light bitters of the 19th century, which were themselves only “light”, at around 4.5 per cent alcohol by volume, in comparison with other 19th century beers. Twentieth century light bitter, between 3 per cent abv and 3.5 per cent abv, included the “boy’s bitters” of the West Country, as well as the AK and KK beers brewed in places such as Kent, Hampshire, Nottinghamshire, Bedfordshire, Hertfordshire, Essex and Monmouthshire. There appear to be very few examples around today.

Old ale

The boundary between Old Ale and Mild is blurry, simply because, historically, Old Ale was Mild Ale, but aged. Old Ales were generally stronger, however (which means they sometimes cross the line into the region known as “barley wine”, a catch-all for many different varieties of strong ale/beer) and a number of Old Ales still survive, including Robinson’s Old Tom, Theakston’s Old Peculier and Adnam’s Tally Ho.

Honey ale

One of the oldest styles in Britain, going back to Old Welsh bragaut, but killed off in the 18th century by a tax regime that wanted only (taxed) malt and (taxed) hops to go into beer. Revived in the late 20th century, but despite the success of honey beers from Wells & Youngs (Waggle Dance) and Fullers (Honeydew), still too much of a minority beer.

Imperial stout
One of the finest strong beers in the world, but extinct in Britain in 1994, after the last brewing (at that time) of Courage Imperial Russian Stout. However, it was successfully revived in the US, where it fitted perfectly the market for extreme beers, and a small number of UK brewers now make Imperial Stouts. In 2011 Wells & Youngs brought out a new version of Courage Imperial Russian Stout, but it is style a style more celebrated away from the country of its birth than in Britain.

Critically endangered
Burton Ale/winter warmer
Burton Ale, dark and slightly sweet, was one of the three most popular draught beer styles in Britain up to the 1950s, particularly in London, where it was a winter speciality. It then crashed out of favour, so that in 1971 Young’s changed the name of its own Burton Ale to Winter Warmer. Ind Coope thoroughly muddied the waters in 1976 by bringing out a beer called “Burton Ale” that was actually a draught IPA, a totally different style. Burton Ales came in every strength: Bass No 1 was an example of the strongest variety, Marston’s Owd Rodger is another strong Burton Ale, but some could be as low as 4 per cent alcohol, when they were sold as milds. A few examples of this classic and largely forgotten style survive: Fuller’s 1845 is one, and Fuller’s is reviving a version of its Old Burton Extra strong ale from the 1930s for its Past Masters series of beers. BPA, the beer that is blended by Greene King with two-year-old 5X to make Strong Suffolk, is a Burton, made with dark sugars and crystal malt: the initials stand for Burton Pale Ale. Almost no new brewers have ever made a Burton, one of the rare examples being Smiles Heritage.

Scotch Ale

Scotch ale is the Edinburgh version of Burton Ale: dark, with a bittersweet, sometimes slightly metallic tang, and generally strong. It survived in Belgium as Gordon Highland Scotch, which is sold (at a slightly lower strength) in the UK as McEwan’s Champion. Hopes are that Wells & Youngs may revive Younger’s No 3, a draught Scotch Ale.

Milk stout/sweet stout

In the late 19th century a taste arose for sweeter stouts, but such beers would quickly lose their sweetness as they aged. The perfection around 1907 of stouts made with an addition of unfermentable lactose sugar, derived from milk, eventually resulted in one of the most popular beer styles of the mid-20th century: even in the early 1970s there were still more than 40 sweet stouts being brewed in Britain. The style again crashed as older breweries closed down, with few or no new brewers making a sweet stout. There has been a small revival very recently in interest in the style, led by the Bristol Beer Factory and its draught Milk Stout.

Vatted old ale

About the only survivor of vatted old ale in Britain is Greene King 5X, which is, alas, almost never made available on its own, but generally blended with other beers to make, eg, Strong Suffolk. Up to the end of the Second World War, however, Old Beer, matured for a year or more in huge oak vats, was still popular in the West Country, particularly in Bristol. Few brewers, alas, have the time or space to make long-aged beers today.

Sour aged ale

A variety of vatted old ale is the sour aged ale represented now only by Gale’s Prize Old Ale, where a proportion of each brew is held back, solera-style, to add to the following year’s fresh ale. The complexity and depth available from such long-aged beers, particularly after several years in bottle, is stunning. Fuller’s rescued POA when Gale’s closed, but again, few brewers have the time or space to devote to such a minority beer.

Brown ale

Modern brown ale in Britain was the invention of Thomas Wells Thorpe, managing director of the London brewer Mann Crossmann & Paulin, who introduced Mann’s Brown in 1902. It did not take off until after the First World War, but by the 1930s every British brewer had at least one brown ale in its portfolio. A number of brewers made stronger Double Brown ales. Again, the closure of so many breweries from the 1960s onwards saw the number of brown ales made fall off a cliff, not helped by the sharply ageing profile of brown ale drinkers. Seriously endangered today.

Extinct
Brett-fermented stock ale
Brettanomyces yeast was first isolated by the Danish brewing scientist Niels Hjelte Claussen in or just before 1903 from an English “stock beer”, in the Carlsberg brewery’s laboratory, in Copenhagen, and the name Claussen gave them honours their origins: Brettanomyces literally means “British fungus”, as Saccharomyces, the name given to the standard brewing yeast, means “sugar fungus”. Brett gave cask and vat-aged stock beers their particular flavours, at it does to Belgian lambic beer, and at least one former classic British beer, Colne Spring Ale, from the Hertfordshire brewery Benskin’s, was deliberately infected with Brett in its production. The last brewing of CSA was in 1970. Today a number of American brewers have been making beers with Brett, but to my knowledge no British brewer has put out a commercial Brett ale.

Strong pale mild
London once had a set of brewers who specialised in making pale ales at around 8 or 8.5 per cent abv that were sold “mild”, that is, unaged: they included the former Lion brewery that stood on the site of the Royal Festival Hall on the South Bank. Strong milds gradually gave way to “four-ale” milds (weaker beers sold at four old pence a quart pot), which themselves were transformed by the restrictions of the First World War into the even weaker light milds of the 20th century.

Gale ale
Ale flavoured with bog myrtle, or sweet gale, Myrica gale, and a host of other herbs from yarrow to rosemary were being made in Britain until an Act of 1711 that brought in a tax on hops and banned any other “bitter ingredient (to serve instead of hops) in brewing or making any ale”. One of the few beers made today that contains sweet gale is Williams Brothers’ heather ale, Fraoch, which tastes, in fact, more of the gale than it does of the heather.

West Country White Ale
West Country White Ale, a “naturally fermented” ale containing eggs and wheat, was one of the oldest British beer styles known, made in Cornwall and Devon from at least the Medieval period. It was still being produced in the 19th century, but died out around 1875.

Mum
A beer style originally brewed in Germany but popular in Britain from at least the 1660s, mum was a heavily herbed, strong, bitter wheat beer. It had vanished by the start of the 19th century.

There are other beer styles you could argue should be on that list, such as oatmeal stout, and the East India Porter Ron Pattinson successfully persuaded the Pretty Things brewery in the US to resurrect. You can argue (I’m sure you will) about which category different beers should go in. And, of course, Continental Europe has its own selection of endangered and extinct beers. But I hope that’s a start to making EVERY month Endangered Beers Month.

Big thanks

•05/21/2012 • 1 Comment

I just wanted to say thanks to our new friends at Crank the Front for hosting an awesome alleycat race yesterday. For all you that couldn’t make it, I will just say that it was a great first time hosting a race. I look forward to your race next year, and to racing against you at the next alleycat. Look for a new link posted on our site to our new friends. Have a great day everyone and Prost!

Friday and Saturday events

•05/18/2012 • Leave a Comment

Payette Brewing Party

Twisted Timber, 4563 S. Cloverdale, Boise, Idaho, 83709

Twisted Timber will be hosting Payette Brewing in celebration of American Craft Beer Week! Five Payette beers on tap, including an sweet beer garden outside and Happy Hour specials inside. Be sure to sign up for the corn hole tournament to win some sweet prizes. All topped off with live music! See you at Twisted Timber, 6-10pm

Call Twisted Timber at 208-362-7157 for more information about the corn hole tournament.

Hoppy Hour

The Taphouse, 760 W. Main Street, Boise, Idaho, 83702

Boise’s newest craft beer bar, The Tap House, located at 760 Main Street (next to the Egyptian Theatre) is celebrating American Craft Beer with Payette Brewing with a special Hoppy Hour from 4-6pm. When you purchase a Payette beer, selected appetizers are only $5!

 Sockeye Brewery

We will be releasing the mighty Double Dagger in 22oz bottles Friday night of Craft Beer Week at the pub. There will be a 6 bottle limit per customer due to the limited quantity. Both brewers will be on hand to talk beer and give high fives. You won’t want to miss out on this one. Cheers!

Table Rock -

Hopocalypse pitched with Belgian strong ale yeast –

SATURDAY: Oyster Stout – SUNDAY: Roggenbier

May 19: We will be at the Farmer’s Market handing out free samples of your favorites!

Highlands Hollow - Super Happy Hour   All pints  $1.25 3:00 to 6:00 pm

Saturday 5/19

Brewers Dinner

Jerk Shrimp salad with a citrus/rosemary vinaigrette

Paired with Lone Pine

Sweet and spicy chicken with rice and asparagus

Paired with ginger Wheat

Chocolate Lava Cake

Paired with Full Moon Stout

All for just  ………$11.95

You won’t want to miss these specials for Craft Beer Week in Boise that’s for certain.  Join the fun for one evening or all of them…..either way you are sure to have a great time celebrating the Great American Craft Beer!

Pigapalooza

Brewforia Beer Market

Downtown Meridian, ID, 3030 East Overland Road # 100, Meridian, Idaho, 83642

Pigapalooza returns to Idaho for the second straight year, bigger than ever before.  This year Idaho’s brewers will be stepping up more than ever with new exclusive beers as well as some all time favorites for everyone to enjoy.  On top of that we’re introducing the Homebrew-B-Q Homebrew Competition featuring beers made with ingredients you’d find only in BBQ, like smoked malts, molasses, honey, brown sugar, chiles and more.

Bike to Work Day Celebration
Friday, May 19

Come join the Idaho Pedestrian and Bicycle Alliance to thank you for using a bicycle or your feet for your daily commute. They’ll have coffee, food, schwag, and other good stuff. Locations are being finalized, so keep checking back. See you on National Bike to Work Day!

 

Ride to the New 3.2
Friday, May 18

Join the FACTS organization as they officially open the newest additional to the Boise River Trail system – 3.2 miles stretching from Garden City to Eagle. We’ll enjoy a ride starting at the Willow Lane Athletic Complex out to the start of the new trail and join FACTS President Judy Peavey-Derr and others for the official opening. It’s not paved yet, but any bicycle with wider tires will be fine on the packed sand and gravel bed. Bring the whole family and enjoy this special asset in the Treasure Valley.

 

Bike in Movie Night
Friday, May 18

The Boise Bicycle Project will host a Friday evening Bike-In Movie event. This year the feature film will be Quicksilver. There will also be movie shorts and music afterwards. Show will start around 8:30, feel free to bring your lawn chairs, lazy boys, or couches – just get them here by bicycle, A no host beer garden will be provided by New Belgium Brewing with all proceeds going towards the paving of the new 3.2 miles of Boise River Trail.

 

Kid’s Mountain Bike Ride
Saturday, May 19

Ages 7 and up, all skill levels. Helmet and signed waiver required.

 

Pedal Power Parade and Finale
Saturday, May 19

This is the big finale for Boise Bike Week. We’ll meet at Capitol Park for a leisurely group ride through the downtown and Hyde Park areas. Afterwards, we’ll have some food and drinks in the park while we raffle off the week’s prizes. Remember – it’s a parade, so wear your parade best and dress up those bikes!
This is a family-friendly event. Helmets and signed waiver required.

 


Wednesday Activities

•05/16/2012 • Leave a Comment

I know this week is busy, but don’t forget the Alley Cat this weekend!

And for today’s events:

Pint Night

Solid: Grill and Bar, 405 S. 8th Street, Boise, Idaho, 83702

Join Payette Brewing at Solid: Grill and Bar in BoDo in celebration of American Craft Beer Week. When you buy your favorite Payette brew you will get to take home the logo’d pint glass as a souvenir.   6-8pm

R&R Public House

in Meridian is hosting a Sockeye beer dinner with a salmon theme on Wednesday of Craft Beer Week. $40 gets you a 3 course meal and 4 Sockeye brews. Each dish will be paired with a beer and each dish will contain salmon. Call 258-2080 for reservations

Table Rock Release - Port Barrel Aged Winter Cheer

Highlands Hollow Special-

Fiegwild with Fishwild!

Live music with Jim Fishwild

1/2 price pitchers of Fiegwild from 6:00 to 9:00 pm

Street Smart Cycling
Wednesday, May 16

Be visible, alert, predictable, and assertive. Street Smart Cycling is a one-hour overview of how to operate your bicycle safely and confidently on our roadways. This condensed version of our regular Street Smarts Cycling course is taught by the Treasure Valley Cycling Alliance and will cover hand signals, basic lane positioning, turning, lane changes, avoiding potential problems, stop lights and signs, and Idaho’s cycling road laws. While geared mostly for adults, it’s a great overview for your kids also.

 

Women’s Road Ride

Please come join Meridian Cycles and a great group of gals at the velodrome for a fun ride to get to know other women riders, get schwag, check out the great line of Sheila Moon clothing, and a post ride barbecue! Pre-ride activities will start at 5:00 (this is also a good time to have a mechanic run through your bike if you’re having some difficulties), the ride begins at 6:00 – we’ll do a 21.5 mile loop that just has a few rollers but is otherwise fairly flat, and stick around afterwards because we will have a barbecue fired up with some sustenance and great post ride company. Helmets and signed waiver required. See rules for more information.

 

Pedal Power Potluck Picnic in the Park

Show Boise that bicycles can be used for more than transporting people. Use your bike to bring your potluck item to the Pedal Power Potluck Picnic in the Park. Better yet, can you use your bike to create your dinner along the way? Mix the drink, whip the cream, or whatever? Let your imagination go wild. Show off your ingenuity, share your favorite local food, and enjoy the evening with like minded friends.

Don’t have time to bake your favorite pie? Too busy to make that great salad? Don’t fret. Pick up a pie, salad or other delectable item at the Boise Coop to share with your fellow cyclists before we pedal off to the potluck picnic.

Check the website for more info: http://Idaho.SierraClub.org/middlesnake.

Helmets and signed waiver required.

 

Ride of Silence
A slow, silent ride to reflect and remember fallen cyclists. Helmets and signed waiver required. This is a worldwide event, see the Ride of Silence web site for more information.

Registration: Begin gathering 6:30 at Camel’s Back park near the tennis courts. Ride starts at 7:00.
Riding Distance: About 5 miles
Riding Time: About 1 hour

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 
Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.