Showing posts with label Mikkeller. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mikkeller. Show all posts

Thursday, December 16, 2010

It's not what you think it is: Mikkeller Ris A La M'ale

A beer table with Mikkeller Ris A La M'ale
A beer brewed with almonds and cherries.
It's sweet? - no.
Sour? - nope.

One Woman thinks that Mikkeller Ris A La M'ale is a beer to be appreciated in the quieter moments in life.  Pink, soft, and round in the mouth. It's subtle. So subtle that you almost have to love it first in order to appreciate it. It smells ever so slightly of almonds and muddled cherries, but really just memories of those flavors. Barely carbonated, and not very fragrant the most noticeable feature of this beer is its murky sepia toned reddish pink color. Just a touch of berried vanilla sweetness that could be confused with tartness, a suggestion of yeasty malt, a couple of vanilla seeds and a tiny pinch of allspice. Somehow, it makes you forget that you're drinking, even at 8% ABV.


Musical pairing - Morton Feldman, Piano Four Hands (1958). Crudely put, Morton Feldman's music is quiet, easy to dismiss, and hard to like. And yet, it has the ability to resonate in the moment and linger in your mind in the form of pretty fragments of memories.

Tuesday, May 11, 2010

Cornucopia of Beers: Hop Stoopid and More

One Woman's alter-ego, m., has been recovering from last Friday's big event called "oral exams" – no, it's not a trip to the dentist, but what the folks in the questionably quake-proof ivory towers call a "rite of passage" for PhD students. The diversionary tactics were a success.
Disaster averted, exams passed, and there have been many, many, (*gasp*) undocumented beers between then and now. 

Here's the digest version of highlights:

Friday, May 7 – Hop Stoopid and more
A cornucopia of beers prepared by loving colleagues (thank you--!!) awaited as m. stumbled down the stairs after a 3-hour oral exam. Beers of the day: Lagunitas: Hop Stoopid (8% ABV, 102 IBUs--very hoppy, goes straight to your head. Hop stoooooopid~); Northcoast Brewery: Pranqster, a Belgian style golden ale, that has the pleasant aroma of Belgian yeasts, but the audacity of a punky Californian ale (one of my favorite California beers); and Grolsch--a personal favorite of the fantastic vodka-infusion specialist/ethnomusicologist, rb--a thirst-quenching Lager that's a Dutch classic. One Woman is really blessed to have such wonderful colleagues.


Saturday, May 8 – Indian Wells: Lobotomy Bock and Groupo Modelo: Pacifico
Perfect beers for hangin' with the dogs and watching radio DJs play softball.
Photo by mch. Model: "Bowpi"


Sunday, May 9 – Dark Horse: Boffo Brown Ale; The Livery: Karhu IPA; Shawnee: Session Mild; New Jersey Garden State Stout (first release!)
Stepping off the plane at JFK, One Woman was whisked off to the 2nd Williamsburg Cask Ale Festival by This One Guy.

There's something wonderful about the warmth of the cask ales – it's beer for sipping slowly, letting the flavors dance... The Garden Stout was a nice maiden voyage of a keg: Yummy tart cocoa, light roasted coffee, a little acidic, and has that malty fresh-baked bread taste of small-batch beers. Congrats on your new release, Jersey! I'll hold the reviews of the others for another time.



Monday, May 10 – Mikkeller's Pale Ale
One Woman snuggled into a corner on the mini porch at her favorite East Village weird beer bar temple of beer, Burp Castle, with this Mikkeller's Pale Ale. See my earlier post for details on the brewery, but wow! Once again, the Mikkeller dudes do it up right. It's a translucent mahogany color, and has a lively grapefruit taste that lingers. Head is well-crafted with bubbles of different sizes, making this beer a very pretty one to admire. There's some magic in the mix of malt and bold hops--Turkish Delight? Burnt honey? Yummy. Okay, and the crazy final word on this one: it goes really well with cookies. Always ready for the unexpected, One Woman pulled out a Momofuku Milkbar Compost Cookie--excess in legendary cookie form--from her purse (what the?!) and sampled it with the beer. The cookie itself is very complex (its ingredients include butterscotch and chocolate chips, graham crumbs, pretzels, potato chips, and coffee grinds. wow.), but the butter envelops the bitter of the beer while bringing out more of its toastyness, while the coffee grains in the cookie ad another dimension to the beer--a stoutness, if you like. Then, the salt in the cookie makes all the flavors pop. Weird, yes, but cool.

nyc al fresco chez burp castle. no, it's not a chimay.

Musical Pairing: Jem and the Holograms! (theme song). The question is, who's actually cooler, Jem, or the Misfits?! Click to listen and enjoy.

Thursday, March 25, 2010

Destinations: Spuyten Duyvil - Mikkeller Draft Bear

WILLIAMSBURG, New York. Some people, like dude with the amazing Beer Stocked Refrigerator (click on the link to be impressed by a fridge!), are better prepared than One Woman. Around 6:00 pm, One Woman still didn't know what the beer of the evening was going to be. So she called up This One Guy to meet at the mighty Spuyten Duyvil (another reason to heart New York City). And after all, with One Woman's week in nyc approaching the later half, a trip without a visit to SD would just be wrong. Late afternoon / early evening is my favorite time to go to SD, before it gets too crowded. Last night was the perfect evening to sit outside in their recently expanded backyard. With its gravely ground, wispy green life, mismatched patio furniture, and J/M/Z subway signs lying around, and flanked by the sides and backs of neighboring apartment buildings, it's a cute backyard. In a Williamsburgy way.

In any case, SD is probably the most serious beer venue New York City has that's open to the public. Since opening in 2003, they pride themselves on a selective stock of the "rare and obscure" "antiques and curios" from all over the place, including, but not limited to the US. Their emphasis is on European (continental and UK) beers, which sets them apart from the recent domestic-focused craft beer phenomenon, but without limiting themselves to one region. They usually have about 6 beers on tap and 1cask beer going, and these rotate quickly. Using Riedel stemware (fancy!!) for some of their pours, the place commands respect. Some of this seriousness, One Woman has yet to fully appreciate, being the young beer exploratrice she is. But what makes this place truly amazing is their beers, and if you're looking for adventure, depth, philosophy, a good time, or education, go here. One Woman can't help but love it.

The Beer (or "bear") of the evening was the Mikkeller Draft Bear. Mikkeller is a Danish Brewery that's a beer lover's dream of passion-turned career, and of cross-cultural collaboration. It's a young, Old World brewery, started by two home brewers, Mikkel Borg Bjergsø and Kristian Klarup Keller, inspired by New World experimentalism. They challenge you to go on a "taste adventure" with them. Sign me up!

One Woman was unable to find any clues about why the Mikkeller Draft Bear is a "bear" (is it related to the mythical Boontville creature from Anderson Valley, the Beer?). But, the Draft Bear is sort of grizzly bear-colored. Named a righteous, Imperial Pilsner (!!), the Bear has slightly translucent reddish, copper color, that shines in the twilight sky. It has the pilsner smell (the fresh, yeasty whiff of pils malts), but nothing of your Danish grandpa's pilsner in color or flavor. At 8% ABV, it's a slow sipping beer that's warmly hopped and tastes like light brown sugar or that cotton candy flavor, but without being too sweet. All this is lovingly well-balanced to make a sexy, modern beer.

Musical Pairing: Thelonius Monk with John Coltrane, "Ruby, My Dear" (click on the link to listen). I love Monk and this is probably my favorite Monk tune, but I can't decide who I love more on this track. Is it Coltrane who can magically become transformed by Monk's style and still remain unmistakeably the Trane? Or Monk, 9 years Coltrane's senior, who has the ability to irresistibly draw in Trane who, left to his own devices, plays soaring long melodies that are gorgeous, but almost diametrically opposed to Monk's angular style that bursts with small explosions everywhere? Hearing these two very, very different players come together and blend so smoothly is nothing short of a miracle!