Sunday, November 24, 2013

Dinner, Drinks, and a Movie, All in One Spot

For many adults, the concept of dinner and a movie has been a mainstay in date or group activity ideas for decades. But we usually take that phrase to mean dinner at a restaurant, then a movie at the theater. The Alamo Drafthouse Cinema, located in Littleton, Colo., melds the dining and cinema experience together very well due to an emphasis on a high quality presentation. They also serve an amazing selection of craft beer, highlighting an array of local breweries.

The Alamo Drafthouse was founded in 1997 in Austin, Texas by Tim and Karrie League, according to its website. These two were inspired by the idea of enjoying movies with good food and beer. Since its opening, Alamo Drafthouse has opened other franchises in Texas and several other states. The Colorado location opened in early 2013 in the Aspen Grove shopping center, and has been very well received. Last night, my wife Kris and I saw our second movie there and had a great time. As I mentioned, craft beer is a central focus for the beverage service, but there's also a full selection of wine and spirits available. The tap list includes about 30 craft beers, most of which rotate to include seasonals. The food is also very good, with a large menu that includes salads, snacks, pizza, burgers, sandwiches and more. If you want to get a drink or a bite before or after the movie, there's also a cozy and inviting bar inside the theater.

Great drinks and food are an excellent starting point. What makes this concept work so well, however, is the theater's service and disruption policy. Each theater has stadium seating, with wide aisles and appropriately-sized tables for every two seats. The servers have room to maneuver when delivering food or taking orders, so the viewing experience is hardly interrupted. The theater also has a strict policy against talking or cell phose usage during movies, with the consequence being automatic dismissal from the theater upon the second violation.

If you can handle this policy and enjoy the experience along with your fellow movie-goers, Alamo Drafthouse is definitely a place to visit for dinner and a movie. So what movie did we see on Saturday night? Hunger Games: Catching Fire. It's a great movie that I highly recommend, even if you haven't read the books. To give you an idea of how good the tap list is, I enjoyed an Elevation Brewing Third Base Belgian Style Trippel and a Great Divide Yeti Imperial Stout. A baked pretzel and a mushroom and caramelized onion pizza made a great meal to share. This is my kind of dinner and a movie!

Tuesday, November 19, 2013

Dark Roasty Malts & Lighter Comfort Fare

Stout season is upon us, and here in Colorado we're lucky to have many excellent choices available to us. Whether it's a dry, sweet, oatmeal, American or imperial stout, these complex beers offer so much character and intrigue for the drinker. On this November evening, I chose an Old Rasputin Russian Imperial Stout from North Coast Brewing Company to enjoy with a turkey reuben. This meal offers a lot of flavor and comfort while feeling lighter and very much scaled down from a traditional reuben. The sandwich features thin-sliced turkey breast with Jarlsburg cheese and angel hair coleslaw on marble rye, and then grilled on a panini griddler. We also had oven-baked sweet potato fries on the side.

Old Rasputin is a classic Russian Imperial Stout, very roasty and dark with complex flavors of coffee, dark chocolate and a hint of tobacco. It's more of a sipper that's most commonly enjoyed during the colder months, but can also pair well with certain foods and desserts. The beer's flavors went well with the meal, with the roasty malts playing nicely off the marble rye bread and the cheese. The turkey also works well with the dark elements of the beer, but is somewhat overpowered by the robust nature of this style. An American stout like Deschutes Obsidian Stout or Avery Out of Bounds Stout just might make a better pairing choice in the future.

Overall, this was a delicious meal made even better with the chosen pairing. Old Rasputin can be found in many states throughout the country year-round, and is an excellent value at approximately $10 for a 4-pack of 12 ounce bottles. That's quite reasonable for an excellent beer that's 9% ABV. This kind of darker, complex, soul-warming beer style is ideal during the fall and winter. It's perfect to savor with loved ones or friends while enjoying the kind of warmth that good company can provide.

Sunday, November 17, 2013

Football, Friends, and Good Beer

This weekend, my wife Kris and I took an unforgettable road trip with our friends Brian and Doug who I've known since our Air Force ROTC days at Michigan State University. The destination was Lincoln, Nebraska to watch our MSU Spartans take on the Nebraska Cornhuskers in a pivotal late-season matchup. An essential part of the college football game day experience is tailgating near the stadium before the game. It's ideal to enjoy food, beverages and camaraderie with friends old and new while donning your school's colors on a beautiful fall Saturday. For this occasion, I selected the Dry Dock Brewing "Booty Box," a variety pack of cans that features something for everyone.

The four beers in the pack are Hefeweizen, Apricot Blonde Ale, Amber Ale and Hop Abomination IPA. There are several reasons why this pack is an excellent choice for bringing to a tailgate with a smaller group. For one, canned craft beer is lighter to carry and leaves you with less waste to throw away. The variety in styles and flavors ensures that everyone in the group should find something that suits their palate. The Hefeweizen is an excellent example of the style, with a lighter body but delicious wheat flavors and fruity esters from the German yeast. The Apricot Blonde is brewed with real apricot puree, providing a lot of flavor without making the beer overly sweet. The Amber is an English style that's big on toasty caramel malts, and Hop Abomination is a well-balanced IPA. All four beers go well with many different foods, and they're all fairly sessionable, with Hop Abomination the strongest at 6.5% ABV.

Needless to say, we had an enjoyable tailgate with great craft beers and bratwurst while getting to know fellow Spartans and a few Huskers as well. More importantly, we had an amazing experience at Memorial Stadium watching MSU beat Nebraska in football for the first time ever. If you ever get a chance to see a game in Lincoln, I highly recommend it. Fortunately, the Nebraska fans are just as hospitable to opposing fans after the game as they are before the game. Lincoln also has a great beer bar called YiaYia's where we had a couple pints later in the evening. The tap list features about 10 rotating taps of excellent regional craft beers, and well over 100 bottled beers from around the world. It was a nice place to end a very memorable day while enjoying great company and savoring a huge Spartan road win.

Saturday, November 9, 2013

The Canned Craft Beer Revolution is Here

Canned beer is not what it used to be. For decades, beer in a can was synonomous with cheap, flavorless light lager. Now, you can find any style of craft beer in a can, from an apricot blonde to a Russian imperial stout. So, what led to this revolution in the craft beer industry and how did canning become not only acceptable, but a possibly superior packaging method?

Oskar Blues Brewery, which was founded by Dale Katechis in Lyons, Colo. in 1999, started the canning trend in 2002 by being the first craft brewer in the United States to can its beer. Oskar Blues is known for its big, burly beers and for bucking conventionality in how it markets its brand. The fact that OB produces excellent beer definitely helped, but the idea of canning craft beer caught on. Shortly after, Ska Brewing in Durango, Colo. also began canning its product, much to the pleasure of the region's active, outdoor enthusiast beer drinkers. Over the years, many major players in the craft brewing industry such as New Belgium, Sierra Nevada, Avery and Boston Beer Co. have started canning a segment of their product line.

The reasons why canning is an excellent packaging method for craft beer are abundant. Aluminum cans keep out virtually all light and oxygen, preserving the beer for longer. Cans are also more environmentally friendly than glass bottles, making the process more sustainable. Cans are lighter in weight than bottles and are great for taking on hikes, camping or fishing trips, tailgating and wherever else you want to enjoy a delicious craft beer. The can also has no impact on the flavor because, due to the canning technology, the beer doesn't actually touch the aluminum. With all these great reasons for choosing a canned craft beer, old misconceptions and stigmas of canned beer have been fading away.

The option to can beer has also been a huge boost to smaller breweries looking to package and distribute their product. Mobile canning lines make it possible for small, newer breweries to can their beer without the large cost of having a fixed, permanent canning or bottling line. They're able to package and distribute beer to local markets at their own pace and at a cost they can handle. This helps give consumers in some markets even more choice and selection when they stop by their local liquor store, and gives more excellent breweries a chance to be real players in their local or regional markets.

The canned craft beer revolution has been nothing but beneficial for the industry and for consumers, in my opinion. As more breweries move toward canning, the canned beer stigma will continue to fade. It may also make craft beer more approachable for the uninitiated, exposing more people to the many beer styles we know and love.

Sunday, November 3, 2013

A Russian River Experience at Parry's Pizza

Each time I visit Parry's Pizza, I'm reminded that this is arguably the finest beer bar in the south Denver metro area. I discovered this gem in April of this year, a couple weeks after Parry's Greenwood Village location opened. They feature 50 craft beers on tap, with many local breweries represented. The food menu is expansive as well, centered around New York style pizza but also including starters, salads, calzones and more. It's also a family-friendly place that's appropriate for kids. But I think a major factor that sets this bar apart from others, in addition to the large and ever-rotating tap list, is the schedule of frequent beer events Parry's hosts. They've held major tap takeover events featuring Avery Brewing, Odell Brewing, New Belgium Brewing, Dogfish Head Brewing and others. By "major," I mean close to 20 draft beers from the featured brewery, including limited and highly sought after offerings. Needless to say, I'm a fan.

When I saw a message recently from Parry's "Ale Yeah!" email group about a special Russian River Brewing Company tapping, I knew I had to make another visit. I passed up the chance to try two of Russian River's wild ales at Rackhouse Pub's "Battle of the Barley," so I wasn't going to let this opportunity pass me by! Russian River, located in Santa Rosa, California, is most famous for Pliny the Elder double IPA, the nation's highest rated beer. It also produces some of the nation's highest rated wild or sour ales, and it was about time I tried them. Russian River has scaled back its distribution outside of California in the past year, so kegs of these amazing beers don't make it to many bars in Colorado. When they do, they usually don't last more than a few hours.

I was able to have a glass of Pliny the Elder before the keg kicked. It was my second time trying it, but the first time on draft. It's a wonderful, balanced double IPA with huge citrus and piney hop aroma and flavors. While Pliny is an outstanding beer and example of what a double IPA should be, I've had several other DIPAs that definitely give it a run for its money. I think this is more a reflection of how many great breweries are able to consistently produce excellent hop-forward beers.

The highlight of this Russian River experience was the opportunity to also try the beers Temptation and Supplication. Temptation is a wild blond ale that's aged in Chardonnay barrels. It pours clear and pale, with a thin head. An aroma of tart fruits is present, and the taste is crisp, tart and finishes very dry. It's a very complex wild ale that exhibits a lot of character from barrel-aging and the use of the wild yeast Brettanomyces. Supplication is a wild brown ale that's been aged in pinot noir barrels with sour cherries. It's an absolutely delicious beer that's delicate, complex and mesmerizing all at once. Several wild yeast strains are used in the aging process, giving it an appropriate amount of funky, sour flavor.

Overall, it was another great craft beer occasion at Parry's. I really appreciate having a place like this in my neighborhood, and can't wait to hear what they plan to pull off next.