Friday, December 28, 2012

"THE DREAM IS OVER"

AS I PROMISED, YOU WILL BE THE FIRST TO KNOW WHAT IS HAPPENING TO THE ALBANY LOCATION.  ON WEDNESDAY LAURIE MET WITH THE LANDLORD, WHO ASSURED HER THAT WE WERE ON TRACK TO A NEW LEASE - ON THE BUILDING AND ON OUR BUSINESS LIFE.  ON THURSDAY WE RECEIVED AN E-MAIL ANNOUNCING THAT HE HAS SOLD THE BUILDING.  WHILE WE CAN GUESS, WE HAVE NOT BEEN NOTIFIED TO WHOM OR THEIR INTENTIONS OR TIME FRAMES. BASED ON ASSURANCES THAT WE WERE STAYING WE PUT ON HOLD PLANS FOR A NEW LOCATION AND LOOKING FOR FUNDING TO MOVE.  ASIDE FROM FEELING A TAD BETRAYED, WE ARE WORRIED ABOUT NOT KNOWING HOW MUCH TIME WE HAVE TO EMPTY THE BUILDING, SAY GOODBYE, RETURN MUGS, ETC.  AS SOON AS I KNOW ANYTHING I WILL LET YOU KNOW. WHATEVER HAPPENS WE WILL HONOR ALL DEBTS AND AGREEMENTS BOTH TO VENDORS  AND CUSTOMERS SOMEHOW.  THANK YOU FOR BEING LOYAL FRIENDS AND PATRONS. -JIM MAHAR

Wednesday, December 5, 2012

Man it's been one year already?


Restaurant Week!

Come celebrate Merry Monk’s 1st Anniversary in Downtown this Friday. Happy Hour specials, complimentary hors d’oeuvres and surprise give-a-ways, oh my! And just when you thought it could not get any more spectacular, the music will start around 10:00 PM. Be happy. Be Merry.

The Merry Monk | 90 North Pearl Street |
518.463.6665

Tuesday, November 27, 2012

Who Said Mahar's is closing?

This just in from Jim Mahar.  I know it seems like he is yelling.
  I think his cap lock is stuck.

A TON OF RUMORS COMING OUT OF JUNIORS THESE DAYS ABOUT THE IR PURCHASE OF OUR BUILDING AND THE IMMINENT CLOSING OF MAHAR'S.  NEW OLYMPIC SPORT, I GUESS.  FOR WHAT IT IS WORTH I HAVE WRITTEN CONFIRMATION FROM THE GENTLEMAN WHO INHERITED OUR BUILDING AND FROM THE OWNERS OF JUNIORS THAT THIS IS NOT TRUE AND THAT IN FACT A NEW LEASE IS ON THE WAY.  WE HAVE NO REASON NOT TO BELIEVE THEM AND, EVEN IF THEY LIED TO ME I AM SURE THAT THEY WOULD NOT LIE TO THE STATE LIQUOR AUTHORITY AND TO THE ATTORNEY GENERAL'S OFFICE.  SINCE LAURIE AND CAITLIN HAVE COME TO THE BAR THE CLEANING AND THE BEER LIST ARE IMPROVING GREATLY.  IN FACT WE ARE ABOUT TO START, IN A SMALL WAY, THE REMODELING AND RECONSTRUCTION THAT WE HAVE BEEN UNABLE TO DO FOR SO LONG.  WE ARE IN CONTACT WITH NEW BREWERS THAT ARE NOT YET SUBJUGATED BY DISTRIBUTORS AND ARE PLANNING MORE "MEET THE BREWER" NIGHTS. THIS HOLIDAY SEASON SHOULD BE A JOYOUS ONE.  WE WILL BEGIN THIS THURSDAY WITH THE LATEST RELEASE FROM OUR GOOD FRIENDS AT WANDERING STAR BREWERY - THEIR CHRISTMAS CASK OFFERING - CASK RED NOSE RYE.  

Monday, September 24, 2012

Hop Analysis is in.



Received the long awaited hop analysis and it is as expected.  I sent 150g of the Helderberg Hops to Hop Union in Yakima, WA.  Alpha 5.7 and Beta 3.4  The closest corresponding hop variety is Cluster.  Alpha 5.5 and Beta 4.5  



Thursday, September 13, 2012

Helderberg Hops

The hop yard is quiet.  All the bins are cut down. Of the 115 hop plants the 8 Helderberg plants were the heathest and the highest yield.  1lb dry cones off the 8 Helderbergs.  Next were the Brewer's Gold with 4lbs dry cones off 50 plants.  Only 4oz of Centennial  off 50 plants and the Cascades are a total loss.  150grams of Helderberg Hops were sent out to Hop Union for analysis.  Hope to hear from them by Monday. 





Looking to get more heirlooms for next years yard.

The best beer town in New England


WHEN JEN AND JOHN KIMMICH OPENED THE ALCHEMIST BREWPUB in Waterbury, Vermont, in 2003, patrons would empty their pint glasses into other containers and sneak their beer out. The quality and scarcity of the drink demanded such measures. “People used to hoard it,” says Jen Kimmich.


They still do. The Alchemist Brewery’s double IPA Heady Topper is the third highest-rated beer in the world, according to website and magazineBeerAdvocate. Beer pilgrims also come to Waterbury — a quiet town of just over 5,000 people — for its bars, which serve prized offerings from area breweries that often are difficult to find elsewhere. These pilgrims talk about Waterbury with the reverence of wine drinkers discussing Tuscany or the Loire Valley. “I don’t know how all these people are finding us,” says Chad Rich, owner of a pub in town called Prohibition Pig (802-244-4120,prohibitionpig.com). “There’s a lot of word of mouth. In the craft beer world, people talk.”
Located just northwest of Montpelier, Waterbury is about a 3½-hour drive from Boston and pops up off the highway on the same road as Stowe. Lodging is available within walking distance of the town’s beer attractions, making an overnight stay appealing.
The Alchemist brewpub closed after flood waters from Irene inundated the basement in 2011. The Kimmiches decided to rent out the space, making way for Prohibition Pig, which opened in March. Heady Topper is still brewed and sold in cans at the Alchemist cannery (802-244-7744, alchemistbeer.com) just up Route 100, which Jen Kimmich is trying to market as the “IPA Highway.”
It doesn’t take long to feel comfortable in Waterbury. At Prohibition Pig, local pickled vegetables and a pulled pork sandwich make for a satisfying lunch. The bar is one place where you can drink Heady Topper — a citrusy, aromatic beer loaded with hops — on tap. Across the street, Blackback Pub (802-505-5115,blackbackpub.com) functions like something of a beer geek’s rec room. There are about 30 seats, and owner Ricky Binet writes each customer’s tab down on the back of a coaster. When a friend calls on the phone, Binet puts him on the bar’s speaker system so everyone can say hello. On tap are rare creations from Vermont breweries such as Hill Farmstead Brewery (802-533-7450,hillfarmstead.com) of Greensboro Bend and Lawson’s Finest Liquids (802-272-8436, lawsonsfinest.com) of Warren. The establishments The Reservoir (802-244-7827, waterburyreservoir.com) and Arvad’s (802-244- 8973, arvads.com) also have extensive beer lists. “With these brewers, you’re splitting degrees of whose Jedi power is greater,” says Binet.
One brewer whose powers are unquestioned is Shaun Hill of Hill Farmstead. Twice Prohibition Pig’s Rich uses the word “savant” to describe Hill. Binet compares Hill to Mozart and calls him a genius. Hill has about a dozen accounts; four are in Waterbury. Six of his beers make RateBeer.com’s top 25 double IPAs. “He’s the best brewer in America,” says Binet.
There’s folklore in beer, and Hill is the perfect protagonist. On a recent Saturday, empty kegs and a pallet of bottles wrapped in plastic sit under a lean-to at the brewery in Greensboro Bend, about 90 minutes north of Waterbury. The brewery occupies part of a barn next to Hill’s house. A dozen or so cars have driven a few miles up a dirt road to fill growlers and bottles, which you can return from a previous trip or purchase on-site. A trip to Hill Farmstead is the only way to take home the brewery’s beers. If Hill really is a genius, he’s a reluctant one. He gives short answers to customers who have questions about what he’s pouring, and you get the sense he’d much rather be brewing the beer than selling it.
Finding some beer to take home is part of the hunt. The Alchemist Brewery is open daily but can sell out during busy times. Seeing the crowd at 11 a.m., an employee predicts she’ll sell out her entire stock in two hours. Tip: Stop at the Hunger Mountain Coop (802-223-8000, hungermountain.coop) in Montpelier on your way to Waterbury; on Fridays the store receives deliveries from The Alchemist, as well as from Lawson’s Finest Liquids. (Lawson’s Double Sunshine earns a perfect rating of 100 on RateBeer.com and is produced just a half-hour from Waterbury.)
Both Hill and Jen Kimmich say they have plans to double production within the next year. They’re concerned about freshness, and even with doubled production you’re unlikely to see these beers too far afield. “If the beer is sent too far from the source, the quality and freshness begins to diminish,” explains Hill. “We like to know that our beer is served in its best state.”Kimmich says answering e-mails from distributors asking to sell her beer has become a full-time job. After the flood, however, she is grateful to have a job at all. “We’ve been working hard to get people here, whether it’s for beer, ice cream [the Ben & Jerry’s factory is up the road], something else,” says Kimmich.
From one beer drinker to another: Skip the ice cream. You’ll need room for one more IPA.
Gary Dzen, who covers the Celtics forBoston.com, also writes the 99 Bottles blog on craft beer for Boston.com.end of story marker
end of story marker
E-mail him at gdzen@boston.com and follow him on Twitter @globegarydzen.end of story marker
By Gary Dzenend of story marker
Boston.com Staff  / September 12, 2012

Friday, September 7, 2012

Pot of Gold

Sergeant Phil maybe no leprechaun but he passed this image along.  Or is he?

Thursday, September 6, 2012

Guest Blogger

Laurie is guest blogging  over at The TU's Farmlife blog.  Can you guess what she in blogging about.
http://blog.timesunion.com/farmlife/9116/guest-laura-teneyck-hop-farmer-yes-as-in-beer/


Thursday, August 2, 2012

IPA Day


Over at Drink Drank Craig is running a little Haiku contest for the best IPA Haiku.

Here is mine:
August heat
Hop yard growing
IPA soon come

Wednesday, June 27, 2012

Lawmakers hoping to help small breweries and farmers

http://www.legislativegazette.com/Articles-Top-Stories-c-2012-06-25-81871.113122-Lawmakers-hoping-to-help-small-breweries-and-farmers.html


By Brandon Quinn
Staff Writer



hops


shadow

Bills passed by the Legislature will aid expansion of the state’s craft beer industry by creating a farm brewery license, loosening restrictions of the State Liquor Authority on small breweries and granting tax exemptions to micro-breweries. By 2024, the new farm breweries will be required to use 90 percent of their hops from local farms. Photo by AP.
June 25, 2012
The Legislature passed three bills to aid and expand the state's craft beer industry last week by creating a new type of business license, a farm brewery license, giving tax exemptions to small breweries and loosening the restrictions placed on them by the State Liquor Authority.

In support of the measures, Senate Majority Leader Dean Skelos said, "New York's craft breweries create fantastic beer, but just as important, they have a strong and growing impact on our economy because they create jobs, support agriculture and promote tourism," a sentiment echoed by all parties involved.

The first part of the three-pronged approach, the new farm brewery license, would enable manufacturers of less than 60,000 gallons of beer annually to sell their products at retail outlets for off-premises consumption.

In addition, such breweries can now operate restaurants and inns on, or adjacent to, the farm brewery property, allowing for profit from beer-tasting events and other forms of "agro-tourism" that have provided a boon to New York state's wineries. Off-premises "branch offices" would also be allowed, up to a limit of five such establishments.

















Under the legislation, breweries can generate other forms of revenue by selling products at these restaurants or inns. The bill allows for the sale of "beer-making equipment and supplies, food complementing beer and wine and souvenir items," as well as additional items such as pillows made out of hops and hop-soap.

This part of the legislation is modeled after the 1976 Farm Winery Act, which tripled the number of wineries to about 248 within the state, according to Julie Suarez, director of public policy of the New York Farm Bureau.

Suarez said at the time of the farm brewery bill's proposal that the legislation will most benefit the Finger Lakes and Central New York regions of the state, which grow the most hops in New York. It will benefit the growers as much as the brewers, she said, because by 2024, those with farm brewery licenses will be required to use 90 percent of their hops and 90 percent of all other ingredients in their beer from New York farms.

In a press release lauding the passage, Dean Norton, president of the New York Farm Bureau said, "Beer mugs are clinking across New York state as the NY Farm Bureau raises a glass to the Senate and Assembly for passing legislation creating a 'farm brewery' license. This will provide opportunities for local breweries to prosper and it will expand markets for New York farmers and their crops, much like what happened in the New York wine industry when similar legislation passed in the 1970s."

In terms of tax credits, the new law would establish a dual approach to financial relief.

First, it would give tax credits for small breweries based on the amount of gallons of beer they produce annually, up to a maximum credit of $745,000. Only breweries that brew less than 60 million gallons per year are eligible for the credit.

Additionally, the legislation would waive the $150 per barrel label fee imposed by the State Liquor Authority for breweries whose annual output is 1,500 barrels or less.

Lastly, concurrent legislation was passed exempting both farm wineries and new farm breweries "from a costly and burdensome tax filing requirement," as described by Gov. Andrew Cuomo months ago when he first introduced the bill.

Presently, "All beer, wine and liquor wholesalers here in New York are required to report sales made to restaurants, bars and other retailers," according to a press release from the Governor's Office. Under the new legislation, farm wineries and breweries would not be considered wholesalers anymore, hence would not need to file their numbers.

"Our farm wineries and farm distilleries are small, often family-owned operations and they have struggled to afford the costs of complying with this annual reporting," said Darrel Aubertine, commissioner of the Department of Agriculture and Markets, when the legislation was first proposed.

Breweries will still have to keep records of how much beer they sell to individuals, wholesalers and retailers for Tax Department audit purposes, but would not need to file the paperwork.

Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver praised the passage of the agreed upon measures, saying "These measures will help create jobs, revitalize our local economies, and produce another great 'Made in New York' product. By enacting a brewers' tax credit, creating a State Liquor Authority beer label registration fee exemption for small breweries, and creating a new farm brewery license, we are supporting the future of a growing industry in the Empire State."

Sen. Joe Griffo, R-Rome, added, "Agriculture is one of the oldest industries in the state and this bill combines it with craft breweries, which is one of the fast growing. Promoting craft breweries and agriculture is common sense and good economic policy."

Monday, June 25, 2012

The Bier Abbey

It really has been worth the wait.  The Bier Abbey did not disappoint.  Best draft list  around the Tri Citys.   I had a Ichtegrem Grand Cru from the Strubbe Brewery and a  Bons Voeux from the La Brasserie-Dupont Brewery with my corn meal and wheat beer battered haddock.   With two beers pouring on Nitro I had to have 4oz er of  Left Hand Sawtooth before I left.  Elisabeth and George are waiting to serve you. What are you waiting for?  

Wednesday, June 20, 2012

Beer Here: Brewing New York's History

Bar tray, 1900–1930. The New-York Historical Society, Gift of Bella C. Landauer, 2002.1.3205

To consider the fascinating yet largely anonymous legacy of beer brewing in New York City, the New-York Historical Society presents Beer Here: Brewing New York’s History. This exhibit surveys the social, economic, political, and technological history of the production and consumption of beer, ale, and porter in the city from the seventeenth century to the present.

In the past three decades, New York City has become an important center of craft and home beer brewing. While this phenomenon began only after President Jimmy Carter signed into law an act that legalized home-brewing, the growth of New York’s present beer industry also marks the resurgence of a long-standing tradition known to few outside the world of beer aficionados. Beer has been brewed in New York City and State since the days of its earliest European settlement, when it was a vital source of nourishment and tax revenues. Brewing continued locally and statewide throughout the eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries, and for much of the nineteenth century New York State was home to one of the country’s largest brewing industries. Early nineteenth-century development of New York State’s hop farming industry was vital to this growth, and from the 1840s through the 1880s the state was the largest producer of hops in the United States.
Exhibit sections explore such topics as: the nutritional properties of colonial beer and early New York brewers in the age of revolution; infrastructure innovations and the importance of access to clean water; large-scale brewing in nineteenth-century New York and the influence of immigration; the influence of temperance and impact of prohibition; bottling, canning, refrigeration and other technological advances; and the state of the city’s breweries in the age of mass production. Featured artifacts and documents include: a 1779 account book from a New York City brewer who sold beer and ale to both the British and patriot sides; sections of early nineteenth-century wooden pipes from one of the city’s first water systems; a bronze medal that commemorates an 1855 New York State temperance law; beer trays from a variety of late nineteenth-century brewers; sign from the campaign to repeal prohibition; and a selection of advertisements from Piels, Rheingold and Schaefer, beloved hometown brewers. The exhibit concludes with a beer hall that features a selection of favorite New York City and State artisanal beers. The beer hall hours are:
Tuesday-Thursday and Saturdays: 2pm–6pm
Fridays: 2pm–8pm
Sundays: 2pm–5pm

Beer Here: Brewing New York's History is proudly sponsored by Crown Holdings, Inc. Additional support is provided by Brooklyn Brewery and Heartland Brewery.

Thursday, June 14, 2012

Hop Chef Albany

 June 6th at the Pearl Event Centre was Brewery Ommegang's Hop Chef competition.  The event feachers eight local chefs pairing and cooking with Ommegang beers.
Jamie Ortiz serving Rare of the Dog Rare Vos and Faux Egg Shooter with a Honey Thyme Bacon Chaser
 Rachel Mabb and the ladies of Bitches Kitchen Serving up Chili Shrimp & Sausage Wonton in Hennepin Broth
 DP interviewing Elliot Cuniff Executive chef of the Colonie Country Club
Chef Aj Jayapal's Rare Vos-Infused Miss Sydney's Marinated Pork Tenderloin, Malted Savory Waffle, Rare Vos-Braised Fresh Sauerkraut of Apple, Bacon and Cabbage, Earthquake Mayo.

Gnome Week







Wednesday, June 13, 2012

All About Cask Conditioned Beer


David Jensen is based out of San Francisco and is the primary writer and photographer for Beer 47, a blog focused on craft beer, beer events, cooking with beer and homebrewing. In addition to the blog, you can frequently find David on Twitter as @beer47, tweeting interesting news and sparking up conversations about craft beer while sipping his favorite Double IPA. By day David is a software engineer for a small Internet company.

 
2012-05-22-6919130826.jpeg
Have you ever walked into a beer bar or pub and noticed some of the taps both looked and dispensed beer differently? Or have you ever been to a beer festival, or beer event, where beer was served directly from a spigot in the side of a metal container propped up on a table? If so, then you may have already encountered cask conditioned beer. If not, then after you read this article, I hope you seek some out.

What is Cask Conditioned Beer?

Cask conditioned beer, or cask ale, is beer that is both conditioned in and served from a cask. Up until the beer is placed in the cask, the brewing process is exactly the same: mash, boil, ferment. After the beer finishes primary fermentation, it is placed in a cask with finings (a substance that causes particles suspended in fluid to drop out of suspension) to help clarify the beer. Often sugar will also be added to the cask to aid with the secondary fermentation, and sometimes even extra hops. The beer is then conditioned in the cask. Conditioning is the penultimate stage in the brewing process when the beer matures, clarifies and carbonates. In the case of cask conditioned beer, there is a small amount of yeast remaining in the beer that causes secondary fermentation, which carbonates the beer. The conditioning time depends on the beer style and can last between 24 hours and 16 days. Traditionally, the casks are conditioned at the pub by the publican, but can also be conditioned at the brewery and shipped out when ready. When the cask beer is ready, the yeast and other sediment settles to the bottom, the beer is carbonated and served directly from the cask. Cask ale is always unfiltered, unpasteurized and always best fresh.

Some of the most common styles of beer found in a cask are English-styles: bitter, mild, brown, pale, ESB and so on. However, I have seen other styles, such as American IPA on cask like Ballast Point Sculpin IPA, and I've also tried Rogue Chocolate stout on cask.
But what's the difference? Since cask conditioned ales are not filtered and not pasteurized, they contain live yeast that continues to add complexity, new flavors and new aromas to a beer. The exact differences vary from beer to beer. The texture of a cask conditioned beer on your palette is often more creamy and smooth than its non-cask counterpart. Furthermore, there are a few beers that are only available on cask.

The Vessel

The cask is a barrel-shaped container that, in general, is longer than wide and has a bulge in the middle. Unlike a keg, a cask does not contain any valves or internal tubes; instead, it has two holes, one hole on the bulge on the side of the cask and another hole, called the bunghole, on the circle face of the cask. The hole on the side of the cask has a plastic or wooden fitting called a shive to regulate the flow of air into and CO2 out of the cask. The bunghole is the opening from which the beer is dispensed. This hole is sealed with a fitting, called a keytone, which is first thoroughly cleaned and then hammered out with a mallet to attach the tap.

Up until the mid-20th century, most casks were made of wood, but now most are made from stainless steel, and a few are plastic. The most commonly sized cask is called the firkin, which holds 9 Imperial gallons, or 10.8 US gallons. Most other sizes are rarely ever seen. If you see your local brewpub or beer bar advertising "Firkin Tuesday" or "Firkin Friday," the chances are they will have cask beer available.

Serving

2012-05-22-lightbox.jpeg
Cask conditioned beer is dispensed directly from the cask in one of two ways. First is simply by means of gravity, or gravity dispense. The cask is laid on its side and a spigot is attached through one of the openings. If you attend a festival or special event of cask conditioned beer, this is likely what you will see.
The second method for dispensing cask beer is likely what you will see at a pub that regularly serves cask ale: a beer engine, also known as a hand pump. The beer engine allows the cask to be in a remote location, preferably under the bar in the cellar (or some other temperature-controlled area). The beer engine is a pump, usually manually operated, that siphons beer into an airtight piston chamber. Pulling down on the pump raises the piston, drawing beer along with it, up through the spout into your glass. The spout is often a swan-neck spout and sometimes fitted with a "sparkler" to aerate the beer and create a more foamy head. Since beer sits in the piston between servings, good pubs will discard the first pull of the day.

Cask Ale Should Not Be Warm and Flat

Most of the time we drink our beer too cold. The first reason is practical: the colder the beer, the easier to dispense on draft without a glass full of foam. Another reason can be to cover up any off-putting flavors. Ice-cold beer is harder to smell and to taste but as it warms up, a beer can reveal a beautiful bouquet of malt and hops, or it can reek like the floor of a dank pub.

The ideal temperature for beer depends on what you're drinking, but the ideal temperature for a beer on cask is most certainly not ambient temperature and not warm. Instead, it should be cellar temperature, which is about 50 - 55ºF, and well under room temperature of 67-72ºF. Good pubs will serve cask beer at the proper temperature.

Try Cask Conditioned Beer

If your first cask conditioned beer is not handled properly, you probably won't have a good experience. It should be fresh, cool (not warm, not cold), carbonated, not flat, and with a head textured more like soap bubbles than foam.

A great way to try many cask conditioned beers at the same time is to attend a festival like Casks and Quesos or Festival of Firkins, which take place during San Francisco Beer Week each year.
If you seek out cask ale at your local beer bar or pub, be sure to find a place that both has high turnover on their cask conditioned beer and stores and handles it properly. In San Francisco, tryMagnolia Pub and BreweryToronado, or Public House. In Denver, try Falling Rock Taphouse. In New York City, try The Ginger Man or The Blind Tiger. In Toronto, try barVolo, who is also encouraging other Toronto bars to serve and properly handle cask ale. If you're having trouble finding a spot with cask ale, just send me a message on Twitter and I'll try to find somebody to help you out.

Friday, June 8, 2012

Merry Monk

Merry Monk to switch chicken wings for deep fried duck legs

Wednesday, June 6, 2012

Pig Roast

The City Beer Hall in Albany will throw a pig roast to observe its first birthday. Scheduled for 3 p.m. until late on Saturday, June 30, the event will feature a 100-plus-pound pig being roasted on the patio and related food and drink specials. Pork will be free until it’sgone, while other items will be priced a la carte. More details when I have them.
The beer hall is located at Howard and Lodge streets in downtown Albany.

Thursday, May 17, 2012

Ithaca Wild Game Night @ City Beer Hall

If you have not attended a Wild Game Night at The City Beer Hall, in Albany, you are missing one of the best food and beer pairs in this part of the world.  This dinner was even better than the Crossroads Brewery event two months ago.  Chef Dimitris was on his game.  I don't know many who can put out 120 wild boar chops cooked to perfection.  With extra waitstaff the food came out fast and hot.  Ithaca was able to prove they are more than just Flower Power.  Pairing beers from their Excelsior series helped.  The highlight for me was the last course.  Excelsior Brute Golden Sour Ale served with Venison Osso Bucco with marrow sauce over faro.

The food looked beautiful on the plates.  You can tell because even the owners are taking pictures  



 

Hudson Valley Hops at AIHA




Nice beer event at The Albany Institute of History & Art last Saturday the19th  David Carroll, the new Director of AIHA, said turn out was good for a new event like this and people were coming up to him and wanting to know more about beer making and hop growing in the region.  Breweries in attendance were Ommegang, Evans, Chatham and Keagan.  You know you are getting old when the sign for the first place you worked after college is in a museum's collection and you are out partying with your father in law.

Wednesday, May 16, 2012

Over at the TU Steve Says

Table Hopping

Table Hopping

Eat, drink and be candid
By Steve Barnes | E-mail | About Table Hopping

Troy beer hall opens Saturday

Broadway Brew Biergarten, the replacement for Broadway Brew in Troy, which was closed in mid-March as part of a two-month penalty ordered by the city, opens at noon Saturday (5/19). There will be 16 German and Belgian beers on draft plus 50 more beers in bottles. In a news release, owner Kareem Jandali says, “Broadway Brew Biergarten will be the only bar in Troy that will have picnic tables and free peanuts,” and promises, “As soon as you walk in, the décor and the authentic costumes the staff will be wearing will make you feel as if you were in Germany.”
The restaurant is located at 254 Broadway. More details on hours, menu and beer list when I have them. The Facebook page is here.

Pliny the Younger

Pliny the Younger over at SLATE

Thursday, May 10, 2012

Ommegang throwing chef challenge

Ommegang throwing chef challenge


Eight Capital Region chefs will compete in the Ommegang Hop Chef Challenge in June, each preparing two dishes to pair with beer from Brewery Ommegang in Cooperstown. The evening is scheduled for 5:30 to 8:30 p.m. Friday, June 8, at the 11 North Pearl Event Centre in Albany. Dishes and beer pairings will be sampled by judges and the public. The lineup:
  • Jaime Ortiz, corporate executive chef, Mazzone Hospitality
  • Ric Orlando, chef-owner, New World Home Cooking and New World Bistro Bar
  • Brian Bowden, executive chef, Creo
  • Elliot Cunniff, executive chef, Colonie Golf & Country Club
  • Rachel Mabb, Bitches Kitchen
  • A.J. Jayapal, corporate director of food and beverage, Mallozzi Group
  • Paul Ozimek, executive chef, Taste
  • Marcus Guiliano, executive chef/owner, AromaThyme Bistro
The competition is part of campaign by Ommegang called Great Beer Deserves Great Food. Three such regional competitions are being held — in Albany, Washington and Philadelphia — and winning chefs will be invited to compete in a finale during the brewery’s Belgium Comes to Cooperstown festival in August.
Tickets are $55 and are available online.

Tuesday, May 8, 2012

Can beer save America?

Take a look at this interesting story the bride found BY  over at SALON

Monday, April 23, 2012

Beer Run, Charlottesville, VA

Beer Run, Charlottesville, VA
12 draughts on tap-- that's the palette wrecker from green flash, boys--including a cask and a nitro, beer to take out--a really nice selection-- food, tables, coffee, wine...full service just like you dream of.