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Friday, September 30, 2011

New Beer Friday - September 30 Edition

Jacob at Vivant
This week, Vivant's head brewer Jacob Derylo wrote his first blog post and had it published over on the brewery's website. While it's not at all surprising to hear that professional brewers embody the same passion as their homebrewing counterparts, it is rare to hear one of the pros describe it so eloquently, as is the case in the excerpt below. (To read the complete post click here.)

"There is no greater satisfaction than nurturing a beer from grain to pint glass. This is probably why craft brewers are a tight knit community. We all get that same feeling when we see someone out drinking our beer, that all the headaches and heartaches, the stuck fermentations and stuck mashes, it's all worth it. We are in the business of giving you, the craft beer drinker, something a little more. We take this trust in us very seriously. Every beer we make is a reflection of who we are and what we believe. The belief that the local, little guy can carve out their niche in an industry mainly dominated by just a handful of large breweries and make a difference. There's a reason I do what I do. I love making beer, it's almost as much fun as drinking it." Well said, Jacob. Keep the good writing coming!

New (and Returning) Beers

  • Short's Bloody Beer, $2.19/12oz - "A lighter bodied beer with an appealing ruby red glow and aromas of spicy tomato juice. Fermented with Roma tomatoes and spiced with dill, horseradish, peppercorns, and celery seed lead to an astounding initial tomato flavor, followed by a lingering finish that allows each additional ingredient a chance to resonate on the palate" (source).
  • Great Lakes Nosferatu, $3.29/12oz - "Highly hopped imperial red ale rich with flavor, yet remarkably balanced. 8% ABV." (source).
  • Bardic Wells Clurichaun Bru Clu, $10.39/22oz - A coffee-flavored, hopped & carbonated mead. How awesome does that sound? To learn more about the Clurichaun series, see the August 12 edition of NBF.
  • Lagunitas Doppel Weizen, $4.79/22oz - Take a "virtual taste" of this Bavarian-inspired double wheat beer with a video from Lagunitas. 
  • Breckenridge Autumn Ale, $1.79/12oz - "Breckenridge Brewery's fall seasonal combines the malty goodness of a German lager with the clean crispness of an American ale. Brewed with Munich malts and a delicate blend of Bavarian hops, Autumn Ale is a full-bodied treat with a nutty-sweet middle, a warming alcohol level and notes of toasted grains. A pre-winter winner" (source).
  • Big Sky Slow Elk Oatmeal Stout, $1.69/12oz - The folks at Big Sky want you to "enjoy the creamy texture, great malt complexity and the unequaled smoothness of this Northern Rockies Oatmeal Stout" (source).
  • Brooklyn Black Chocolate Stout, $2.19/12oz - Brooklyn uses "three mashes to brew each batch of this beer, achieving a luscious deep dark chocolate flavor through a blend of specially roasted malts. [They] brew it every year for the winter season. It is delicious when newly bottled, but also ages beautifully for years" (source).
  • Arcadia Hop Rocket, $3.89/12oz - "At 111 IBUs, this huge ale rockets off the charts with a massive nose of sticky resinous hops and flavors of grapefruit, lemon peel, spruce, earthy mushrooms and dew-covered grass" (source).
  • St. Peter's Grapefruit, $4.79/16.9oz - An award-winning (source) grapefruit-flavored beer from the chaps who use those great old-timey oval bottles.

Fictional Acronym of the Week

GRAPE
Grand Rapids Association of Pinot Enthusiasts
Meetings start every day at five...and sometimes earlier.


Picture of the Week


Versluis Orchards Farm Stand
Lake Michigan Drive - Just west of Siciliano's

Thursday, September 29, 2011

Gone to grape

Several varieties of wine grapes are still available for purchase from Taylor Ridge Vineyards. Trust us, it's worth the trip.

Chardonnay*
By Steve Siciliano

Yesterday afternoon Barb and I made a quick trip to Taylor Ridge Vineyards in Allegan to pick up a load of grapes. I always enjoy our annual September visits down to the heart of southwest Michigan’s wine country. The leaves on the trees lining the two-lane roads are on the cusp of their fall foliage and the expanses of brown-turning corn fields surrounding the faded red barns and old farm houses are still pretty to look at. Yesterday’s sky added another dimension to the experience. It was an interesting sky—low banks of purple clouds moving fast under their high-billowing cumulus counterparts. There were occasional bursts of sunlight and brief glimpses of the blue sky. Every so often a brief downpour necessitated turning the windshield wipers on high. A minute and mile later the pavement would be dry.

One of those rain showers hit while we were loading up the grapes. Brian Taylor, the seventy-three-year-old farmer who owns the vineyard with his wife, Carol, looked up at the sky and grimaced. Rain is never good during the harvest—it can water down the juice and lower acidity. But many years of harvesting have taught Brian that since the weather can’t be controlled, it's best to go with the flow.

Brian told me that he still has some Foch, Dechaunac, Frontenac, Seyval and Lacrosse available for purchase and that he will offer a discount to anyone who mentions that they are a Siciliano’s customer. I picked up ninety pounds each of hybrids that grow well in Michigan—Noiret and Leon Millot. The ninety pounds of each will translate into six gallons of wine, twelve gallons total. I have no experience with the latter but according to Brian it will produce a wine with a distinct berry aroma.

On the way home I thought briefly about stopping at a couple of bars in Allegan’s quaint and historic downtown. But there was pressing business waiting for me at the store and Barb had to get to her stained glass class. Maybe we’ll come back during one of Allegan’s infamous lake-effect snow storms. I’m sure wine country is also beautiful in the winter.

*Unfortunately Taylor Ridge is sold out of Chardonnay for the year. The grapes pictured belong to Buzz contributor Wes Eaton, a talented winemaker in his own right, who had the boss pick them up on his recent trip to Allegan.

Tuesday, September 27, 2011

Crushing grapes on the back forty - Week 1

Whether a seasoned pro or complete novice, when it comes to winemaking (or anything else for that matter), all are welcome at Siciliano's.

By Steve Siciliano

There was a lot of activity in the store’s back parking lot this past Saturday. At nine o’clock sharp folks began rolling in with cars and pickups packed full of grapes to take advantage of the free use of our winemaking equipment. The seasoned winemakers who had used the equipment in the past needed no guidance in operating the crusher/de-stemmer and basket presses. While they crushed and pressed their grapes I chatted with them about the quality of this year’s harvest and about how the wines that our equipment had helped produce in prior years were developing today. Many others, however, were winemaking novices who had never experienced the pleasure of watching a hydrometer bob in a test tube of freshly squeezed grape juice.

I love working with new wine makers. They all seem to have a tinge of doubt that they will actually be able to make wine out of the green and purple bunches they hauled to the store in five-gallon buckets, bushels and laundry baskets. But after we show them how to crush and de-stem the grapes, how to use the presses, and how to take hydrometer and acid readings, they leave confident knowing that they too can be winemakers, and good ones at that.

Just a reminder, folks, our winemaking equipment will be available free of charge between the hours of 9am and 4pm on the first four Saturdays in October. In addition to the crusher/de-stemmer and basket presses, the equipment also includes an apple/pear crusher in case anyone wants to make cider or perry. And, as always, members of our staff will be happy to assist you in any way we can.

Just imagine the good times that lie within

Monday, September 26, 2011

Brewing with oak barrels at Vivant: Revisiting funky tensions in craft brewing

Why old, bacteria-laden wood barrels still enjoy positions of privilege in modern, state-of-the-art brewing operations.

A little age on it
By Weston Eaton

In anticipation of Brewery Vivant’s upcoming Wood-Aged Beer Celebration (October 22, 1-9pm), I spent an afternoon visiting brewers Jacob Derylo and Brian Kuszynski and their beloved Jack Daniels oak barrels. While sampling and discussing the features of Vivant wood-aged and especially oak-aged beers, it soon became apparent that along with the brewers, the barrels too were living entities capable of deciding the fate of future batches of beer. Like people, and unlike stainless steel fermenters, oak barrels breath and are alive. Literally, they are full of bacteria. Living organisms such as Brettanomyces and a multitude of others impart unique qualities when beer is aged inside. Further animating the barrels, the brewers, particularly Kuszynski, names each in alphabetical order after both real and imagined women. (Their first barrel, Angelina, is still in use today.) Also like other sentient beings, barrels show resistance. They refuse to be quantified and controlled as their processes happen on their own terms. Barrels, then, have their own agency, despite attempts by the brewers to wield control.

Brewing with wood is labor intensive. Holding 55 gallons of beer, oak barrels are bulky, difficult to get beer into and out of, and must be stored with beer in them at all times lest they dry out. Taking a walk around Vivant’s brand new production facility, I am startled by the contrast between shiny, mechanical, industrial equipment and sweaty, earthy, old-world oak barrels. While the large fermenters, tanks, and brewhouse all fit nicely, the barrels are stacked tightly in the few spaces that remain, evidence of their ongoing struggle for priority and legitimacy in the production facility. Essential to quality control in a brewery is cleanliness, which calls for seemingly endless bouts of sanitation procedures. Working with wood therefore requires its own approach. To allow porous, living barrels into the brewery makes this task increasingly challenging, demonstrating the strain between craft and more intensive production methods.

As Derylo explains, if using wood to produce a beer, one must work on the barrel’s schedule and be prepared to concede a little human authority: “We taste [the beer] every week; that way we can control it a little bit more. When its ready to go its ready to go. We listen to the beer, the beer tells us when its ready...you just trust your barrels, see what happens with them.”

Derylo, explaining
This raised a couple questions in my mind. Why allow such unpredictability, such uncertainty into the brewery? Why would a brewer intentionally yield technical and scientific advancement to unpredictable natural processes? How does a barrel gain a brewers trust? The answer, I believe, is tied to the dialectical tension between control and creativity found within the essential nature of the craft brewing endeavor.

In one sense, we might say that brewing a craft beer on any marketable scale is a bit paradoxical. The word "craft" implies uniqueness, individuality, distinctiveness, and also one-of-a-kind-like rarity, exclusivity, and even luxury, as in things produced under a guild program where from start to finish, each product is produced by a single artisan. A crucial element here too is time. Under a guild regime, individual artisans decide when they need to work, as opposed to prescribed and disciplined work schedules. The word craft therefore implies a lack of standardization, for both beers and brewers, as standardization is a process of duplication, not creation.

In reality, the closest thing to pre-capitalist beer production practices is home brewing, where the only constraints on beer production are skill, knowledge, access to resources, and creativity. The result of course is an infinite range of products, none of which make it to the formal market. While home brewing provides inspiration, in the professional market brewery success necessarily parallels increases in rational efficiency. Yet while the efficiency of a truly craft production model is unrealistic today, it is the ideals associated with craft production that drive hype, craze, and beer-geekyness in consumers, but also brewer innovation and ingenuity in recipe development and marketing. For instance, while there are other measures of success in the world of craft brewing (consistency and sales being strong contenders), those who succeed in producing beers that are (or appear to be) rare, exclusive, single-batch, and unstandardized often receive high recognition from beer fans and provide the highest notoriety for brewers and breweries.

Jake & Brian, with barrels
While this might help illustrate the undergirding drive for craft authenticity that sends ingenious brewers back through the annuls of fermentation history to find an overlooked muse, or into related fields, such as culinary arts, for untapped inspiration, Derylo explains his attraction to oak barrels as derived from personal taste as well as from the nature of Vivant itself. Why does he choose to brew with oak? “Because we love wood-aged beer. It fits into what we’re trying to do down here. We’re a strictly Belgian brewery, so sours, Geuzes [an un-fruited lambic blend] fit right into that category. We’re trying to be small enough so we can do stuff like this.”

Vivant’s wood-aged beers can be divided into two categories, one featuring the dry, vanilla-like character of oak, and the other featuring the astringent funk of Brettanomyces. When added directly to a used whiskey barrel, the beer absorbs the booze from the wood as well as the wood's character, providing a complex depth that’s constantly changing over time but also on your palate. While I was treated to many samples straight from the barrel, my favorite from this category was already on tap, a barrel-aged Triumph, a truly global Belgian/English/American IPA hybrid.

Used once to impart its oaky essence, the brewers then reuse the barrel for another batch, this time inoculating the barrel with an extra dose of Brettanomyces. Cassandra Rose (from their third barrel), a dark brown Brune with rosehips, was my favorite beer from this second category--it resembled a classic funky Flanders sour ale. This beer, the aforementioned oak-aged IPA, and several oak-aged porters, Saisons, Abby Ales, spiced ales, ciders, fruit beers and special blends will all be on tap October 22nd. Come on over to Vivant and taste for yourself the fuzzy line between consistency and uniqueness, standardization and craft.


Former Siciliano's staffer Weston Eaton is currently pursuing a PhD in Sociology at Michigan State University. He lives with his wife and dogs in Grand Rapids, MI, the great beer city of the great beer state.

Friday, September 23, 2011

New Beer Friday - September 23 Edition

It's here, ya'll, the first official day of Autumn. We suggest you celebrate by participating in one of the many area activities that make the season so incredible--ArtPrize, college football, color tours, trips to ye olde pumpkin patch, cider mill, farm market, or beer store. Beside these general, ongoing events, which you should take advantage of early and often (especially trips to the beer store), here's a link to Oktoberfest West Michigan, a great fall festival taking place this weekend down at John Ball Park.

Though Siciliano's has no direct affiliation with this or any other Oktoberfest, don't be surprised to see one, many, or even all members of our staff in attendance at this or any other Oktoberfest. It's never been our style to pass on a good party.

New (and Returning) Beers

  • Southern Tier Pumking Imperial Pumpkin Ale, $7.89/22oz - Serving suggestions for one of the season's most anticipated pumpkin ales: "Pour Pumking into a goblet and allow it’s alluring spirit to overflow. As spicy aromas present themselves, let its deep copper color entrance you as your journey into this mystical brew has just begun. As the first drops touch your tongue a magical spell will bewitch your taste buds making it difficult to escape" (source). And remember, before journeying into any mystical brew, be sure to tell someone where you're going. It's only common sense.
  • Victory Moonglow Weizenbock, $2.69/12oz - Siciliano's staffer & certified cicerone Kati Spayde reviewed last year's version of this beer. The review (available here) should give some insight into this year's version.
  • Rince Cochon, $8.99/750ml - From what we understand, the name of this 8.5% ABV Belgian Strong Pale Ale is "rinsed pig" (source). Best to not think too deeply on that one.
  • Maumee Bay Brewing IPA, $6.19/22oz - Toledo-based Maumee Bay Brewing calls this beer a "nicely balanced flavorful ale, made bitter with copious amounts of Centennial hops and a long fascinating history." As far as we can tell, Maumee never reveals what in the aforementioned "long fascinating history" contributes so much to bitterness. Our guess is that it has something to do with the great Michigan-Ohio War of 1835.
  • Vander Mill Totally Roasted Cider, $11.49/750ml - Our friends at Vander Mill have this to say about their limited-release, pecan-flavored cider: "This cider was specially made for a draft customer in Grand Rapids, MI. We are using over 4lbs of homemade cinnamon roasted pecans in a 30-gallon batch of this limited edition cider to bring you 'Totally Roasted'. You will notice that soaking pecans in cider brings a unique texture and taste to the drink. We use cinnamon and vanilla during the roasting process and follow that up by adding whole cut vanilla beans to the cider. These subtle tastes certainly make this a cider all its own" (source).
Picture of the Week


In the picture above, Chef Andy from Charlie's Crab
and Steve from Siciliano's are (again) engaged in mortal combat.
As always, their preferred weapon of choice is the wooden cane.

Prost!

Thursday, September 22, 2011

Raw cider for sale, one day only at Siciliano's

Cider, Vintage 2010
Vander Mill, a local cider mill and winery, will be selling raw cider in Siciliano's back parking lot on Sunday, October 2nd, between 2 and 4pm. The cider is available on a pre-order basis for $3.50 per gallon. To reserve yours, contact us by phone or email before 12pm noon on Friday, September 30, and provide your name, phone, and the number of gallons you'd like to purchase. The cider will be pressed on Saturday night and filled from bulk containers the next day. Interested parties will need to bring or purchase their own containers for transport.

After filling your containers, be sure to stop in to Siciliano's for the other supplies you'll need to produce your own hard cider. Whether it be buckets, carboys, chemicals, or yeast we will be more than happy to help you find what you need and also provide instruction. Please bear in mind, however, that neither Siciliano's nor its credit card machines will be involved in monetary transactions between Vander Mill and interested cider makers. This is to say, be prepared to pay cash for your raw cider.

For more information on basic cider making, please click here. For directions on making "New England style cider", please click here. General questions regarding the cider-making process may be directed to any Siciliano's employee at any time. Just stop in and see us!

Tuesday, September 20, 2011

The complete joy of crossword puzzles

By Steve Siciliano

As a result of having to look for ways to occupy my down time during my recent convalescence after hip replacement surgery, I rediscovered a hobby/passion/obsession that I had gotten away from some seven or eight years ago. Back when the store was much less busy, I had ample time to work on the Los Angeles Times crossword puzzle that appears daily in the Grand Rapids Press. For those who are unfamiliar with these particular crosswords, they get harder as the week progresses—Mondays and Tuesdays are fairly easy, Wednesdays can be a bit more challenging, Thursdays are hard but with persistence can usually be solved, Fridays are very difficult and Saturdays—well for me anyway—Saturdays are nearly impossible.

As with any activity, whether it is brewing, winemaking, bread-making or crossword-puzzle solving, the more you do it the better you get. Crossword aficionados become familiar with the subtleties—the devious misdirections, the play on words, the abbreviated clues which indicate that the answer is also abbreviated, etc. Then there are the oft repeated clue and answer combos, what the diehards call “crosswordese”, that show up on a fairly regular basis—Some Olympians’ tools (epees), Old Persian poet (Omar), and Yemen’s chief port (Aden) are typical examples. Once you acquire a backlog of crosswordese knowledge the puzzle solving gets easier. And then every so often a puzzle will have a clue that is a gimmee for a beer and wine merchant—Like Cabernets, e.g. (reds), Ale hue (brown).

I don’t know why I’m so fascinated with crosswords. Perhaps it’s because one of my avocations is writing and I love working with words. I also love trivia—what some, including my wife, would call useless knowledge—and it’s nice to be able to retrieve that “useless” information and apply it toward the solving of a puzzle. Kind of gives you a weird sense of satisfaction.

Of course the added benefit of working crosswords is that it keeps the mind sharp, probably helping mitigate the effects of years of exposure to brain cell destroying (though tasty) beverages. Anyway, lets hope that's the case.