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By Joe Sixpack
Posted on Jan. 26, 2009 on Joe
Sixpack
IN LAST WEEK'S column, I
caught up to a collection of new city beer joints. This
week, I'm venturing out to the suburbs, where the beer
scene is growing even more dramatically.
In recent months, there's
been a gush of big-time, multitap lineups. Here are
four that attracted this city guy.
"A lot of places," said Gary
Fry, who runs the newly opened Craft Ale House
(708 W. Ridge Pike, Limerick, Montgomery County)
with his wife, Melissa, "just want to hire hot-looking
girls. I didn't care if Quasimodo walked in for a job
- I just wanted craft beer-knowledgeable and friendly
employees."
Spoken like a true beer geek.
This is a guy who met his
wife at a backyard beer olympics competition, who brewed
his own beer for their wedding.
Fry makes no excuses about
his single-minded passion. This is his first bar and,
so far, he's making no compromises on its big-time,
16-tap draft beer list.
Fantome de Noel,
Victory Old Horizontal and Breckenridge
471 greeted me on a visit earlier this month,
but the kegs are kicking so quickly, it's impossible
to say what'll fill your pint.
The only place you'll find
a macrobrew is in the corner of a long row of coolers
left over from the building's former life as a deli.
My guess is the boxes could hold 400 different beers,
which makes it an excellent option for those who prefer
to bring sixpacks home to their own cul de sac.
But don't leave without a
bite to eat. With chef Steve Howells (formerly of Center
City's James restaurant) in the kitchen, the menu already
features some curious delights.
My bowl of creamy winter
squash soup was topped with a generous portion of herbed
crabmeat. It paired beautifully with a glass of Hoffman
Helles from New Jersey's Climax Brewing.
And about the wait staff
- I didn't see any Quasimodos.
Alison
two (424 Bethlehem Pike, Fort Washington) is
not a beer joint with good food, it's an excellent restaurant
with a superb beer list. It's chef Alison Barshak's
second Montco spot (Alison at Blue Bell is a nearby
BYOB), featuring international cuisine leaning toward
Asian/Indian.
At a recent lunch, I tasted
a verdant mix of brussels sprouts and root veggies,
and a Vietnamese-style pork hoagie with pickled vegetables
and homemade potato chips. Both were deceptively simple
dishes, like something you'd whip up with fresh ingredients
from Reading Terminal Market - if you had a clue in
the kitchen.
A less imaginative chef would
spend a month designing a wine list to pair with her
menu, then toss in overpriced bottles of Heineken
for the Neanderthals.
The beer selection at Alison
two, though, is hardly an afterthought; it's a brilliant,
even daring offering that will complement a wide range
of flavors.
Stoudt's Old Abominable
barleywine, Russian River Damnation
strong golden ale, barrel-aged Allagash Curieux
- these are not beers for fainthearted foodies. Yet,
paired with Barshak's dishes, the palate-challenging
drafts will appeal even to novices.
Bring your mother, order
her the curried shrimp salad and a glass of
Brooklyn Savoir Faire biere de garde. She'll
never gripe about your beer gut again.
I won't go into the bottles,
other than to note that they're very reasonably priced
for a high-end restaurant (Orval for
six bucks). It's almost as if Alison two is saying:
Forget those $12 glasses of wine, try our food with
beer!
Ron's Original Bar & Grille (74 E. Uwchlan
Ave. Exton, Chester County) - known as Ron's
Schoolhouse Grille before a makeover last year - is
the kind of place where office workers in Dockers and
BlackBerries head for a deep-fried lunch.
Pizza, hoagies, cheesesteaks,
strombolis, wraps, burgers, fries - the menu is a panorama
of junk food. I swear, there's an entire page of hoagie
choices, and dinner includes a kitschy blast from the
past, surf and turf.
The food service is quick
and the dishes are perfectly fine, if not completely
memorable.
But I didn't come here for
the food, so thank god for 20 taps (Weyerbacher
Delta, Founders Breakfast Stout) and a massive
selection of bottles that includes those darlings from
Scandinavia, Nogne-O and Mikeller.
But
who's drinking all that good beer? On my visit, everyone
else was cradling glasses of Miller Lite and
complaining about their sales commissions.
The
Tap Room & Grille (427 W. Crystal Lake Ave., Haddon
Township, N.J.) is an oasis in the midst of
the craft beer wasteland known as South Jersey.
At more than 10,000 square
feet, the former dairy is immense and meandering. I
lost count of the bars, and that was before I got outside
to the large deck featuring two more sets of taps.
There are 52 spigots, most
of them devoted to the usuals. But here's a clue: Turn
left after entering the bar, and you'll find a separate
line of taps pouring Flying Fish, Troegs, Rogue, Smuttynose
and other micros. On my visit last week, they were just
finishing up a keg of extremely rare Captain
Lawrence Smoked Porter.
The owners, who have spent
the last year rebuilding the restaurant, are earnest
about improving their beer selection, and for good reason.
"We got rid of the Coors
dollar nights," said co-owner Joe Kreps, "and now craft
beer accounts for 30 percent of our beer revenue."
"Joe Sixpack" by Don Russell appears weekly in Big Fat
Friday. For more on the beer scene in Philly and beyond,
visit www.joesixpack.net.
Send e-mail to joesixpack@phillynews.com.
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