How many people is that?Got to Fremont at 7AM, 4 hours until open.
How many people is that?
Sounds about standard for a big release...that said would he pissed if people tried to cut in line close to open. Breweries here started handing out tickets which cuts down on that.Not too many in front of us; maybe 50? Although many will have mules show up near open.
The line was already around the entire block by 8:30 tho. It's a big block too, easily a few hundred people.
Sounds about standard for a big release...that said would he pissed if people tried to cut in line close to open. Breweries here started handing out tickets which cuts down on that.
Minus the hanging out by a dumpster (I hope).They are handing out tokens in a few minutes and claimed they are going to be strict.
HiResDes: got some chairs, and my ride is parked right next to our spot in line. Just listening to music and playing games. It's not too bad, not much different than what I'd be doing at home.
Right on. I love Fremont. The last time I was in Seattle, we hit the brewery a couple times in a week.lol, was a bit worried when I walked up, but didn't smell.
Interesting...good to know.Got to Fremont around 11:05 and waited maybe ten minutes for some pours of the Ancient Ones. Really good but honestly, I don't think I could tell them apart from standard KDS and BBomb.
Got to Fremont around 11:05 and waited maybe ten minutes for some pours of the Ancient Ones. Really good but honestly, I don't think I could tell them apart from standard KDS and BBomb.
Thanks for the heads up. Yeah love line shares. Can't recommend dark lord day enough for this...despite generally shitty weather and regardless your thoughts on dark lord...the event itself is awesome.I just recently had both KDS and BBomb and agree but these are definitely boozier; although that makes sense in more way than one.
All excellent beer and was a fun experience either way; people were pouring and sharing 2-3 year old bourbon county variants, duck duck geuze and all kinds of shit in line. Was too early for me lol.
And yeah Shin I wouldn't bet the farm on these.
I'm throwing the dry hops into mine tomorrow. Should be due to keg it up on Wednesday.
Fresh hops on my pergola.
Love seeing Jackie O's getting a lot of love lately, never thought it'd happen so quickly
Don't know if I've ever had a Jackie O's beer.
Finishing my night off with a Cuivre from The Bruery, had Apple Brandy Bomb earlier... DIABETUS
edit: Scratch that.. wife wanted more so I cracked open a Rye Whiskey Abyss..
If I don't wake up tomorrow, distantmantra I name you executor of my beer estate.
Hope you survived. Otherwise I will disperse it amongst beer-GAF. Peeps just gotta pay for shipping. ;-)
I survived!
Any insider info on when Ancient One is hitting retail? My friend from Tacoma is itching to try it.
I survived!
Any insider info on when Ancient One is hitting retail? My friend from Tacoma is itching to try it.
I've had no luck.
So I've added a fourth tap to my kegerator. Taps one and two are for traditional sacch fermented beers, tap three is for wild beers (brett and beers fermented with bacteria) and tap four is for sparkling water. I've been adjusting my water for brewing for about a decade, but I think I've taken things too far this time. I take distilled water and build up the correct minerals (gypsum, Epsom salt, sodium chloride etc) to clone various commercial artisan sparkling waters. I've made syrups (ginger and a lemongrass lime) for visitors who want a soda too. It all started when I found myself consistently brewing 3% and 4% beers (brett session IPAs and wits mostly) that I might as well just produce water. It's kind of antithetical to this groups love of the strong beers. Sorry.
I mostly brew in the 4%ish range, myself. Part of it is due to equipment capacity issues. Part of it is just preference. I pretty much always have a low gravity sour on tap. And then usually some kind of session pale or mild. I probably only get around to brewing something north of 5% three or four times a year.So I've added a fourth tap to my kegerator. Taps one and two are for traditional sacch fermented beers, tap three is for wild beers (brett and beers fermented with bacteria) and tap four is for sparkling water. I've been adjusting my water for brewing for about a decade, but I think I've taken things too far this time. I take distilled water and build up the correct minerals (gypsum, Epsom salt, sodium chloride etc) to clone various commercial artisan sparkling waters. I've made syrups (ginger and a lemongrass lime) for visitors who want a soda too. It all started when I found myself consistently brewing 3% and 4% beers (brett session IPAs and wits mostly) that I might as well just produce water. It's kind of antithetical to this groups love of the strong beers. Sorry.
So I've added a fourth tap to my kegerator. Taps one and two are for traditional sacch fermented beers, tap three is for wild beers (brett and beers fermented with bacteria) and tap four is for sparkling water. I've been adjusting my water for brewing for about a decade, but I think I've taken things too far this time. I take distilled water and build up the correct minerals (gypsum, Epsom salt, sodium chloride etc) to clone various commercial artisan sparkling waters. I've made syrups (ginger and a lemongrass lime) for visitors who want a soda too. It all started when I found myself consistently brewing 3% and 4% beers (brett session IPAs and wits mostly) that I might as well just produce water. It's kind of antithetical to this groups love of the strong beers. Sorry.
I was gifted a 25 kilo sack of Maris Otter earlier this year with the only stipulation that I share whatever I brew with it. I've been looking into anecdotes about White Labs WLP099 Super High Gravity yeast and thinking about a huge barleywine or old ale. Shooting for something north of 20%. Something like that seems like a pretty good anniversary beer. You can lay most of it down and drink it as the years go by.I 💘 you my brothers in low alcohol beer. My issue is that I love sessioning out some pints and I love brewing. The only solution is to brew lower alcohol beer and have friends over. Most of my friends are brewers and we're always trying to kill kegs. It's a nasty cycle.
Over the last five years I've found that I've really become a saison (season) brewer. I make saisons and Berliners in summer, fall is IPA and Cascadians, winter is Belgian session ales and spring is Belgian and German wheat beers. My 59 gallon wine barrel solera keeps my full of sour beer (it's really fun to blend with fresh fruits in summer) and I always have fermenters of other wild experiments (my current favorite is a wild beer that I built using the yeast that grew on dandelion flowers).
I still make a double IPA every fall (for kegging) and dark strongs in winter for bottling, but I really have reinvigorated my brewing with my love of session ales. I've really enjoyed the process of taking some of my favorite recipes and tweaking them with mash temp/thickness and % of specialty malt to make a full tasting and well rounded session beer.
I'll have been brewing for 20 years come this February and I really need to come up with something nuts to brew to celebrate. Any ideas? Nothing's too weird. I'm toying with the idea of making a sake hybrid beer.
That could be really fun to make. Large yeast propagation, heavy use of the oxygen tank, nearly overflowing mash tun, and a ton of dry malt extract. I could cork and cage them too.I was gifted a 25 kilo sack of Maris Otter earlier this year with the only stipulation that I share whatever I brew with it. I've been looking into anecdotes about White Labs WLP099 Super High Gravity yeast and thinking about a huge barleywine or old ale. Shooting for something north of 20%. Something like that seems like a pretty good anniversary beer. You can lay most of it down and drink it as the years go by.
I 💘 you my brothers in low alcohol beer. My issue is that I love sessioning out some pints and I love brewing. The only solution is to brew lower alcohol beer and have friends over. Most of my friends are brewers and we're always trying to kill kegs. It's a nasty cycle.
Over the last five years I've found that I've really become a saison (season) brewer. I make saisons and Berliners in summer, fall is IPA and Cascadians, winter is Belgian session ales and spring is Belgian and German wheat beers. My 59 gallon wine barrel solera keeps my full of sour beer (it's really fun to blend with fresh fruits in summer) and I always have fermenters of other wild experiments (my current favorite is a wild beer that I built using the yeast that grew on dandelion flowers).
I still make a double IPA every fall (for kegging) and dark strongs in winter for bottling, but I really have reinvigorated my brewing with my love of session ales. I've really enjoyed the process of taking some of my favorite recipes and tweaking them with mash temp/thickness and % of specialty malt to make a full tasting and well rounded session beer.
I'll have been brewing for 20 years come this February and I really need to come up with something nuts to brew to celebrate. Any ideas? Nothing's too weird. I'm toying with the idea of making a sake hybrid beer.
That's my wheelhouse. I'm really intimidated by the sake fermentation process due to the intensive nature it requires. It's another organism to try to work with though. I'll have to start by researching the Stillwater process. Being in the Rocky Mountains, I'll doubt I'll be fortunate enough to taste it.Stillwater did a saison brewed with sake yeast called Extra Dry. It's really good. Maybe something like that?
That's my wheelhouse. I'm really intimidated by the sake fermentation process due to the intensive nature it requires. It's another organism to try to work with though. I'll have to start by researching the Stillwater process. Being in the Rocky Mountains, I'll doubt I'll be fortunate enough to taste it.
Stillwater has a pretty trippy webpage. I never thought I would want to go to Baltimore, but I've been to stranger places in the search of great beer.
Next time I'm in Denver, I'll check out Argonaut.They distribute all over the place.
Is it just my imagination, or is 120 Minute easier to come by this year than past years? I seem to be able to grab it rather easily here in southern KY.
I don't think anyone cares about it anymore. Seems like the hype was biggest in 2011 after DFH's tv show talked about it. I see it turding up shelves all the time now.
It lasts a couple of weeks here instead of just flying out in an instant. Same thing happened to Backwoods Bastard last year. The first day it went super fast, but they got more the next week and it just sat there for months.