Beer Review: Lake Erie Monster

August 24th, 2010

Truly a beast.

Great Lakes Brewing Company in Cleveland, OH

Say what you want about Cleveland, OH (and believe me, a lot of it has been and will be said), but the Great Lakes Brewing Company is one of the best breweries in the country. Which makes it a shame that it has to reside in a city that gets such flack and also must be related to Ohio State in some way. Regardless, Great Lakes does not make a beer that is worth passing over. And undoubtedly, some of their consistent stunners are their IPAs. From their Commodore Perry to the Lake Erie Monster, Great Lakes knows how to produce a powerfully hoppy beer with wonderfully well-rounded characteristics. So whenever I’m lucky enough to find the Lake Erie Monster hanging around the shelves even after being released a few months ago, I have no problem with immediately jumping on a beer that packs a wallop at over 9% ABV, but remains incredibly drinkable no matter the temperature outside or the state the beer happens to be from. Have I mentioned yet that I hate Ohio?

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Beer Review: Blackout Stout

August 17th, 2010

Great Lakes Brewing Co. in Cleveland, OH

I made a great new friend this week: Great Lakes Blackout Stout.

The only reason to visit Cleveland.

But before I tell you why Blackout Stout is the best thing that’s been exported from Cleveland since Lebron James, let me get in a quick word about imperial stouts.

Folks, we’re living through an arms race of stouts — a Cold War of Russian Imperial Stouts, if you will. Everywhere you turn, a brewer is pushing the limits of what you thought this style could be. Stouts with bourbon, maple, oak, chocolate, and coffee varieties, to name a few of the more pleasant flavors, have gained acclaim lately, in no small part because beer geeks – especially those on uber-popular sites like Beer Advocate, Rate Beer, and BarBEERians – prefer these robust, complex, and highly alcoholic beers. Concoct an imperial stout that makes it on to one of these sites’ top beer lists, and your brewery just struck black gold.

But I’m a simple man. I like long walks on the beach, documentaries, and bureaucracy. And while I love the occasional Kentucky Breakfast Stout, I also like classic imperial stouts without the overpowering whiskey, coffee, and wooden flavors.

Blackout Stout is that back-to-the-basics beer. A 9.0 percent ABV stout, Blackout is a high-octane explosion of dark roasted malt, with subtle undertones of chocolate and molasses. More importantly, it has none of those fuselage flavors that have crept into some high-ABV beers nowadays. It’s just a smooth, thick stout that beautifully rings its way down your glass.

With Blackout, Great Lakes Brewing Company proves that keeping it simple can sometimes be enough. Maybe there is hope for Cleveland after all.

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Beer Review: Edmund Fitzgerald

March 29th, 2010

Great Lakes Brewing Co. in Cleveland, OH

I’ve touched upon a few of the great elements of the Great Lakes Brewing Company in Cleveland, OH, before, but oddly, we’ve never gotten around to reviewing any of their beers. In college, I would often grab their wonderful 12-pack bottle samplers where you never knew what you’d be getting. This was always kind of fun, but also a little annoying when you’d come upon a beer that wasn’t so great. However, Great Lakes has their stuff together and rarely makes a bad beer. I even find myself drinking it quite a lot at parties, small get-togethers, or the occasional pre-game before a rough night of High Life and Stella. So to celebrate Great Lakes’s first appearance on the site in review form, I decided to dive into a hearty glass of their Edmund Fitzgerald porter. Though I’d never given it a true tasting evaluation, I was even more surprised to find this one of the most enjoyable and well-rounded porters you can find. Read the rest of this entry »

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If Sinking Islands and Drowning Polar Bears Didn’t Convince You…

December 8th, 2009

globalwarmingbeer…now there’s a study showing that hops are being compromised. By global warming!

Climatologist Martin Mozny of the Czech Hydrometeorological Institute and colleagues say that the quality of Saaz hops – the delicate variety used to make pilsner lager – has been decreasing in recent years. They say the culprit is climate change in the form of increased air temperature.

Mozny’s team used a high-resolution dataset of weather patterns, crop yield and hop quality to estimate the impact of climate change on Saaz hops in the Czech Republic between 1954 and 2006.

We all remember the dreaded hop shortage from 2007, and that wasn’t pretty. But now we may have some indication as to what caused that shortage. And it’s also proof that global warming is definitely happening!

Well, maybe. These kinds of studies are always interesting, and it does show some correlation, but it doesn’t show any causation. There are way too many variables to completely connect this to global warming, but it’s something to at least think about, especially if these type of studies are repeated in different areas of the world.

Mozny notes in the article that this type of decrease in hop quality is being seen in Germany and Slovakia as well. I haven’t heard anything about this change happening in America yet, but we’ll surely be following this trend. And if you’re feeling a little down about raising the earth’s temperature, thus compromising the hops that let us enjoy a Friday night, maybe consider drinking some beer from these breweries that place the importance of the environment next to the importance of their beer:

brookBrooklyn Brewery in Brooklyn, NY: You’d think a big city brewery in a bustling metropolis would place production and cost-efficiency well above environmental protection. Not so. The Brooklyn Brewery runs on 100% wind power through purchasing wind power from a wind farm in Upstate New York. Not many other breweries in the nation can make a statement like that. A small brewery making a big difference.

Sierra Nevada Brewing Co. in Chico, CA: We rave about Sierra Nevada a lot here, but even their commitment to the environment earns our praise.  With the solar panels on the roof, a fuel cell training lab on-site, and a machine that recycles expelled CO2 in the brewing process and uses it in dispensing their beer, Sierra Nevada sounds more like an experimental science lab than a brewery. All this is astonishing when you consider the size of the establishment. And the delicious beer they serve.

greatbrewGreat Lakes Brewing Co. in Cleveland, OH: Great Lakes Brewing is one of many breweries that recycles their barley and gives it to local farmers. But they’re one of the few breweries that makes a commitment to printing all menus and promotional material on recycled prodects, using biodiesel in delivery trucks and shuttles, and creating food from barley used in the brewing process. Any brewery that’s in the mood for reusing materials makes us want to reuse their beer when we’re thirsty.

Lakefront Brewery in Milwaukee, WI: Using 100% organic malts and hops, this smaller brewery in Wisconsin also makes a commitment to using wind energy as a source of power, as well as making a dedication to include Wisconsin growers in their plans for future beer production. The brewery also offers tours on Fridays that showcase the brewery’s dedication to a better environment through operational procedures that are making beer better and more eco-friendly.

newbelgiumNew Belgium Brewing in Fort Collins, CO: Using one of the most efficient brewing kettles in the country, treating their waste water in eco-friendly ways, and always pushing to reduce their carbon-footprint, New Belgium Brewing not only makes some great beer, but also does it all while making a positive impact that will be noticed by generations of beer drinkers to come. Plus, who ever wants to pass-up a Fat Tire when you find it on tap at a bar? Not us.

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