AleFest 2007-Columbus, OH
Rob, Mark, Nick and Jeff joined me
Earlier this month I attended Columbus AleFest with some friends. The event was held at the Alladin Shriners Building near Easton. There were 50 craft brewers with over 200 beers. Once admission was paid, each person received 20 sample tickets, a sample glass and a raffle ticket. I never measured the sample glass, but it was probably 2-3 ounces. For the most part I tried to sample beers that I had not had before. I was a bit disappointed that most of the people serving beer were volunteers, and not representatives from the company. I first noticed this while wearing my Harpoon IPA shirt and walking up to the Harpoon table, and I did not get any reaction. I appreciate the work of the volunteers, as this event benefits Special Olympics, but the brewer and beer connoisseur in me wanted to talk beer with the experts. There were two beers that stuck out with me. I had a flemish ale, which had a unique spicy and sour taste, with banana and bubble gum esthers. It reminded me of a farmouse ale or a lambic without fruit. The winner for the day was Southern Tier Unearthly Imperial IPA. I had my eye out for an IIPA and fell in love with this one. Think IPA on steroids, meaning a lot more hops and fermentable sugars and you get this beer that checks in at an incredible 11% alcohol and 153 IBUs. Think about that for a second. Most of your beers out there are under 40 IBU (International Bitterness Unit.) Regular India Pale Ales, which are considered high in bitterness register at 40-100 in most cases. As far as the alcohol, most beers are in the 4-6% range and a high gravity could be 8-10%. It was nice seeing the local beers, Columbus Brewing Company and Hosters. Evidently Hosters still does not have a location re-opened in Columbus yet, but they are brewing and bringing it into Columbus for bars and stores. Columbus Brewing Company actually had company reps, including one of the brewers. It was great talking to them. We had a few samples of the Maibock, which was a nice change of pace.Dogfish Head wins the award for most interesting display, as they had the 90-minute IPA running into a filter filled with fresh hops before coming through a flash cooler and out the tap. For those that don't know, flash coolers are the most logical setup for portable keg beer. Instead of worrying about a big trash can and bags of ice that melt in less than an hour, you run the kegged beer through copper tubing that loops around through a cooler that is filled with ice and water and a tap is installed on the side of the cooler. The beer comes out of a room temperature keg and it is flash cooled before being dispensed. Of course you may also want to use a CO2 tank for consistent flow. The principle of a flash cooler works much like a wort chiller in homebrewing, which is used to quickly chill boiled wort before it is placed into the primary fermenter.
No comments:
Post a Comment