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By Joe Sixpack
Posted on Feb. 27, 2009 on Joe
Sixpack
A
NEW BEER from Yuengling - can you believe it? After
180 years, it's about time.
It's Yuengling Bock,
the Pottsville brewery's first seasonal, and it'll be
released in town next week.
Brewery boss Dick Yuengling
told me he was reluctant to brew the springtime brand
because "I hate running out of things."
But he acknowledged that,
thanks to the likes of Boston Beer, seasonal releases
are a hot trend. Yuengling's retailers and wholesalers
told him he had to jump into the game, especially this
year as America's oldest brewery celebrates the big
one-eight-oh.
The dark beer is a dry-hopped
blend of Porter and Chesterfield
Ale, with the addition of malt ingredients
to improve the body, according to brewer Jim Helmke.
Yuengling isn't the only
one debuting new beers during the 10-day beer romp.
I count more than a dozen virgins that will pop the
cap next month, including:
Cantillon Monk's
Café Cuvee Gueuze: A blend of lambics overseen
by Monk's Café owner Tom Peters at the Cantillon brewery
in Brussels. It'll debut at a dinner at Monk's on March
11 featuring American-made wild yeast ales.
Dock Street Hop Garden
Double IPA: Ben Potts is the new brewer at
West Philly's Dock Street; this is an award-winning
recipe from his homebrewing days, featuring 14 different
hop varieties. Try it first at Opening Tap.
Duvel Green: This
actually had a sneak preview in town last September
at Monk's. The lighter (6.8 percent alcohol), younger
draft version of the famous Duvel strong golden ale
will pour at numerous events throughout the week.
General
Lafayette Economizer: Brewer Chris Leonard
takes his experimentation with low-alcohol "session"
beers to a new level. This one is a full-flavored, dry-hopped
American pale ale made with low-priced "recycled, subsidized"
materials. It'll debut at the Tiedhouse Session Beer
Project on March 9.
Lancaster Shoo-Fly
Porter: An Amish pie in a bottle, made with
molasses, eight different malts and grains, and four
different hops. Look for it at Opening Tap.
Nodding Head Da Phunk:
Brewer Gordon Grubb took an ale fermented with
several wild yeast strains, then aged it seven months
in a barrel from Chaddsford Winery. It'll debut on March
10 at the Center City brewpub's offbeat "Don't Meet
the Brewers" tasting.
Philadelphia Brewing
Russian Imperial Stout: You say you want to
see a beefier beer from Kensington's finest? A black-as-ink,
chocolaty stout conditioned on French oak chips ought
to do the trick. Its first pour is March 8, at PBC's
first anniversary party at the brewery.
Sam Adams Imperial
series featuring Double Bock, Imperial Wit
and Imperial Stout. A superb trio of
strong brews that show what brewers can do when they
take a break from making all that Boston Lager.
Taste them at several chocolate and cheese events around
town.
Yards Smoked Polish
Wheat: Brewer Steve Mashington collaborated
with Iron Hill Brewery to resurrect the entirely obscure,
Grodziski-style ale, the first time the style has been
commercially brewed in America. Try it at Opening Tap,
and at Yards' smoked beer festival on March 13.
Stoudt's Scrawny
Dog: A smooth, dry Irish stout that's about
half the alcohol of Stoudt's long-standing Fat Dog stout.
It'll pour first at Brewer's Plate on March 8 at the
Penn Museum.
Triumph Pils Jay's
Way: Brewer Patrick Jones collaborated with
Flying Fish to turn out a pilsner in the style of late
Triumph head brewer, Jay Misson, who passed away unexpectedly
last summer. Triumph will salute Misson's influence
on local lager brewing with its Klash of the Kaisers
pilsner tasting on March 12.
Troegs The Flying
Mouflan: For the past two years, Troegs has
produced a "Scratch Beer" series of one-offs based on
the brewing brothers' earliest recipes. Scratch #4,
a barleywine, was so popular, the brewery is releasing
it in 22-ounce bombers. Sample it a several Philly Beer
Week events.
Victory WildDevil:
Take Victory's most popular brand, HopDevil, ferment
it with wild Brettanomyces yeast, and you get a funky
IPA. Victory will roll it out at the Brewer's Plate.
Weyerbacher Echo:
This deep-copper "Rye-PA" is described as a
winter India pale ale "to bridge the gap between now
and spring." Hey, any excuse for a hoppy beer, I say.
It'll debut at the Weyerbacher brewery in Easton on
March 7.
Sierra Nevada Torpedo
Extra IPA: Brewer Terence Sullivan is bringing
this one from Chico, Calif., for several tastings.
Coincidentally, it one of
the final beers reviewed by my beer-writing colleague,
Oakland Tribune reporter Bill Brand, before he passed
away last week after being struck by a train in San
Francisco.
I'm honored to let his words
describe it: "It's a stunner . . . Torpedo has a huge
hoppy nose, grapefruit, pines, orange marmalade, ripening
fruit. It's a deep copper-color, with a lively head
of foam . . .
"I shared a couple of bottles
with a friend along with some Chinese food the other
night. The beer easily stood up to our spicy kung pao
chicken, handling those little red chilies with aplomb."
Bill gave it four stars.
"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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