Liquor Stories - New Arrivals from Local Liquor Stores!

Liquor Stories:

 

      This is our tribute to local liquor stores that like beer - and not just crap beer, I mean Real Beer! Not all of them are cool enough to contribute to our kick a$$ club, so be sure to treat the ones that do with some extra business. You might even get a discount!


 

 

Mountain Spirits:

 

Beer

Green Flash Brewing Hop Head Red bomber

Bear Republic Racer IPA bomber

Eel River Organic Porter bomber

Delirium Tremens Belgium Ale  750ml

Marble Brewing Double IPA bomber

Marble Brewing Imperial Red Ale bomber

Left Hand Smoke Jumper bomber

Asahi Draft bomber

Shock Top Lemon Shandy 6 pk.

Leinenkugel Summer Shandy 6 pk

Blue Moon Summer Honey Wheat 6 pk

Shadow's Wild Black blackberry 6 pk

New Belguim Shift Pale Ale 4pk 16 oz cans

 

Wine

Wild Horse Pinot Noir   750ml

Fleur Petite Syrah   750ml

Creme de Lys Chardonnay  750ml

Souvrain Chardonnay and Sauvignon Blanc   750ml

 

Spirits

Woodford Reseve Double Oak Bourbon  750ml

 

Come enjoy some great new beers!

 

 

 

Silver Dollar

 

New 6pks

 

Ska                              Mexican Logger

                                    -Everyones favorite mexican style lager is back for the summer

 

Mad River                    Serious Madness

                                    -Limited Release Black Ale

                                    -Silky Smooth and Sublime

 

Marble Brewing           Red Ale

                                    -very very hoppy Red Ale

 

                                    Amber Ale

 

                                    IPA

                                    -Gold Medal Winner of the GABF IPA

 

New Belgium               Shift

                                    -Pale Lager

 

New Bombers

 

Marble Brewing           Double IPA

                                    -A barrage of Juicy resinous hop character

 

6pk Of the Month (Always a $1 off)

 

Lion Stout                    -The only beer I know of that comes from Sri Lanka and it also happens to

                                    be my favorite Stout

 

Bomber of the Month (Always a $1 off)

 

Fort Collins Double Chocolate Stout

 

                                    -Deep roasty flavors, rich chocolate nose, with coffe undertones.

 

Current Stouts in Store

 

Lion Stout, Guinness, Obsidian Stout, Old Rasputin, Green Flash Double stout, Black Hawk, Breck. Oatmeal Stout, Steel Toe Stout, Left Hand Milk Stout and Nitro Stout, Tenfidy, Fort Collins Chocolate Stout and Double Chocolate Stout, Alaskan Stout, Samual Smith Oatmeal Stout, Bourbon Barrel Stout, Espresso and regular Oak Aged Yeti Stout, Santas Little Helper Imperial Stout.

 

 

Star Liquors (Durango) Newsletter


Hi Home-brewers and beer lovers!

                Spring is really in the air now, flowers and trees blooming, allergies in full tilt and lighter beers tasting oh so good.  Ska released Mexican Logger and in celebration we have made Ska our beer of the month with the cheapest Mexican Logger in town at a smoking $6.99!  WOW!  That’s a deal.  Breweries are beginning to release their spring beers and a few have even put out their summer beers.  Put down the stouts and pick up an amber or a micro brew lager.  Speaking of which, that takes us to our first beer for this newsletter.

*New Belgium has offered up a Pale Lager called Shift.  Shift comes in a 4 pack of 16oz cans, in addition New Belgium is also had Ranger and Fat Tire in the same package, all are $8.29.  Shift is a nice example of micro brew lager, good carbonation a light straw cooler with a small white head.  Malty biscuit up front, finishing with a mild hop bite, refreshing and easily quaffable.

*Next in our new beer offering is a true blend of two worlds.  Dues Brut des Flanders is a cork and cage .750ml.  This Belgium Strong Ale is brewed by Bosteels in Belgium.  At a hefty $34.99 it is daunting to the wallet.  But wait!  There is a reason for that crazy price. This beer is treated like a Champaign in more ways than one.  First, in Belgium, Deus is brewed with summer barley.  Goes through its first fermentation, then laid to rest for maturation, often considered its second fermentation.  Dues then travels to the Champaign region of France and is bottled, sugars and yeast are added and the third fermentation begins.  Now the long maturation begins, aging the beer on its yeast for several months.  Next, just like Champaign the bottle goes through riddling.  Placed in racks the neck of the bottle it tilted downwards, the bottles are hand turned daily for many weeks and the angle of the tilt is increased until the bottle is vertical with the neck down.  Then the yeast is removed by freezing the neck of the bottle, the frozen yeast is pushed out by pressure in the bottle. The beer is then dosed to make up for loss when forcing out the yeast, cork and caged and ready to ship to thirsty beer drinks around the world.  What a process!  The beer is heavily carbonated like Champaign with a never ending white head.  Delicate flavors of yeast with citrus and floral notes, a little sweetness and hints of farmhouse.  Spiciness and malt are brought to balance with an alcohol burn from the %11.5 ABV.  There is no doubt that this is a special occasion beer.  Not just the price but also the fact that this is about as unique and time consuming a process as beer can go through.  

*Coming back to the ways of the United States let’s look at Rogue’s Oregasmic Ale.  22 ounces of Pale Ale goodness, toffee and caramel are held up by a nice malt body, hints of floral honey balance by Willamette & first growth Independent Hops.  Rogue always uses its Pacman yeast which gives all of its beers their own twist, $6.49 for a solid American microbrewery beer.

 

*Now let’s visit the wily Mikkeller and his crazy beers.  I have been hunting for Mikkellers beer Geek Breakfast for years and am proud to announce it is now on the shelves.  An oatmeal coffee stout that Ratebeer scores a 100, this is a great beer with a %7.5 ABV, Ingredients: Water, malt (pils, oat, smoked, caramunich, brown, pale chocolate and chocolate), roasted barley, flaked oats, hops (centennial and cascade), ale yeast and gourmet coffee.  Mild creaminess from the oats gives way to the big coffee and toasty malt that dominates this beer, bitterness, coffee and chocolate linger on the tongue forever.  Very hearty, very robust, and very, very good, $10.49 for a 500ml is very reasonable for this outstanding beer. 

 

*Another Mikkeller offering we just put on the shelves is Sur Monk a Danish Sour.  Mikkeller took a Belgium Quad and poured it in a barrel and soured it.  This guy is now running from the monks but we appreciate his efforts.  $14.49 for .500ml of sweet sour goodness sounded good to me.   This is a love it or hate it beer, sour apples, tart cherries and sweet raisins merry together with dashes of tobacco and vinegar.  .  Mikkeller defiantly pushes the envelope, but so many of his crazy ideas are so good!

 

*Traveling to the land of the rising sun, one of Japans premier breweries is Kiuchi Brewery, with a rich history of brewing for 180 years these guys know their stuff.   Hitachino Nest Espresso Stout is a fantastic offering, 12oz of this black goodness is $5.49 and worth it. Bitter coffee, toasted malt and chocolate dominate this beer.  Big coffee aroma and a tan head capture the coffee stout to a T.  Dark fruit and a hint of sweetness shows, but the coffee flavor pushes through from start to finish. 

 

*Back across the sea, we thought it would be fun to have a look at an American Style IPA brewed in Belgium.  To Ol brewed the Final Frontier, this is a Double IPA with an ABV of %9, showcasing Simcoe, Centennial, and Columbus hops.  Little to no head and a nice reddish copper color sits well with this DIPA lover.  Floral and defiantly hoppy, caramel malt and a sticky mouth-feel balanced in hops favor, this is a great take on a style firmly planted in American soil.  12oz is a pricey $6.99, boy those hops traveled allot!

 

*Cider is the fastest growing portion of the beer world these days, and while it is still relatively small we have hoped on the bandwagon as I mentioned in last month’s newsletter.  Today we will look a Colorado cider Glider Cider and their Grass Hop-Ah.  A .500ml cider for $8.29, this cider is trying to appeal to beer drinks.  Semi- sweet cider is bolstered by lemon grass and hops and a crisp dry finish, a beer lover’s cider, still gluten free for our poor, poor friends out there that are gluten intolerant.

 

*New Zealand has blown up on the specialty beer market in the past few years, and 8 Wired is one of the leaders.  Contract brewed by Renaissance Brewing, 8 Wired has some great recipes brewed by Søren Eriksen.  Batch 31 is an oak barrel aged Imperial Stout brewed with coffee.  A %11 ABV beer with distinctive coffee aroma and flavor, chocolate, earth and leathery smoke all blend together to create a wonderful stout.  Traveling as far as it does adds a hefty price, $14.49 for a 500ml beer, but for big stout lovers this is a great brew.  A sweetness drift through most of the beer but it still finished toasty and dry with a moderate finish. 

 

*Traveling back to the U.S. we go to The Bruery with their annual release of Saison de Lent.  A spring saison which hits the spot on warmer days, throw in a healthy dash of Brettanomyces and we are rocking to prep the garden for planting.  A %6.5 ABV and lighter color and body make this .750ml a nice beer.  Fruity, floral, dry and earthy, traditional saison yeastiness shows as well as a little citrus.  The Bret is there but not as dominant as many other Bruery beers.  A reasonable $9.99 makes this a fun beer to try that will not break the bank.

 

*Last but not least on today’s beer list is Odell’s Shenanigans.  Cork and cage .750ml for $13.49, this is yet another beer that is creating styles or maybe just new names.  Called an Oak Aged Crimson Ale, with a touch of bret and heavy amber malt this a beer for drinking now or aging.  Sweet malt and dark fruit, leather and a little funk blend together for a unique beer.  Vanilla and caramel from the barrel are subtle flavors, the dark crimson color and light fluffy white head give a great appearance.  %9.1 ABV provides a little heat to this big malty beer, worth a try.    

Cheers and good brewing!

HOPS Brewsletter - April 2012

HOPS – Homebrewers Of Pagosa Springs

 

Hello HOPS Heads,

So there I am, alone, at night, in the middle of the forest in northern Arizona, staring at one big cock-eyed boar. I’m holding my mountain bike between it and myself, as if my bike somehow just turned into the Great Wall of China, only with reflectors and pedals. The swine snorts at me. I snort back. We were sizing each other up. Who was tougher? Who was uglier? Who smelled worse? Neither of us were swayed - it was a stand off. Moments like these make me ponder life and its intricacies. How does one decision made hours, days or months before direct us into completely random situations later on? The results of those decisions are adventurous at times, other times disastrous. Kind of like brewing outside of the box. Ya win some, ya lose some, but when you win it is usually a triumphant experience. I recently had a Stone collaboration beer called La Citrueille Celeste de Citracado that was brewed with pumpkins, yams, toasted fenugreek, lemon verbena and birch bark (yes, all in the same beer). Now this is brewing out of the box taken to a new level! Leave it to Stone Brewing. While the beer was, well, interesting, I still applaud them for going out on a limb. I mean, this is America. We wrote the rules on breaking the rules (or something like that) and brewing should be no exception! Experiment on, even if it means potentially pissing off some Belgian monk living in a cave brewing the exact same recipe for the last 1000 years. Some times the decision to go out on a limb during a brew can result in some great beer. Dry hop your stout with mint leaves. Add a couple of drops of vanilla in a few of those pale ales when bottling. Throw a lasagna in your boil and let me know how it ends up. Be adventurous. My decision to go for a night-time mountain bike cruise after drinking (somewhat heavily) with a bunch of buddies resulted in a rather awkward meeting with a hairy beast in the dark. Your experiments in brewing should rarely end up that churlish. Then again, considering some of the people I brew with, a similar situation is entirely possible after a few too many homebrews on brew-day. In any case, give it a whirl. What have you got to lose? It might be an award winner!

 

Until next time, cheers and happy fermenting ~

 

Randini the Beer Spammer

 

Tech Tip of the Day: Mashing Grains – Mash temperatures can greatly affect the way your beer ferments, tastes and its body. (I will generalize this as much as possible.) Mashing is normally done between 145 and 158 degrees. As the crushed grains soak in water, an enzymatic process begins converting the starch into sugar. To quote Charlie Papazian’s The Complete Joy of Homebrewing: “In general, the higher mash temperatures will produce dextrinous (heavy-bodied beer) worts in a very short, active period, while lower temperatures product more fermentable (lighter-bodied, more alcoholic beer) worts over a longer period.” For those of you brewing with extract and are eyeballing stepping up your brewing a notch by heading toward all grain, you may want to consider some partial mash recipes and play with mashing. This is a great way to get more experimental with your beer and get a taste of the all grain mashing process without diving into the equipment investment.

 

Quote of the Day: Did you ever walk in a room and forget why you walked in? I think that's how dogs spend their lives. – Sue Murphy

(Editor’s note: Homebrewers wouldn’t know anything about that kind of behavior, now would we? ;-)  Randini)

 

 

 

HOPS Meetings:

 

  • HOPS – New Business:
    • Next Meeting: Tuesday, the 24th is the next HOPS meeting, Pagosa Brewing Co at 6:00 PM. The YELLOW COLOR GROUP is up, so if you are in this group, make sure you have been in touch with your Color Group Leader (Jason) to find out what is in the pipeline.
    • Style of the Month: Stout
    • Discussion: Some ideas we want to go over include the following:

A)      Membership Dues – Time for us to squeeze some money out of you!

B)      Durango Pub Crawl, May 12th – we are meeting with the Animas Alers homebrew club in Durango for presentations, brewery tours and sampling. Discussion will include hotel info, carpooling, etc.

C)      Other upcoming events found below.

 

 

 

UPCOMING LOCAL NEWS & EVENTS:

 

Mark Your Calendars:

 

  • Tuesday, April 24th – HOPS Meeting: This coming Tuesday is the HOPS Meeting (normally the fourth Tuesday of the month). We will meet at Pagosa Brewing Company at 6:00 PM. This month we will be going over some of the upcoming events and agenda items above, along with the Style of the Month. This time is Stouts. For more info on these styles, check out the descriptions listed on the BJCP website here: http://www.bjcp.org/2008styles/catdex.php. Check out the posts from local liquor stores on our website at www.pagosahops.org to see what is in stock.

 

  • First Friday Out, May 4th – The first Friday of the month we like to drink beer. Ok, we like to drink beer more often than that, but we usually get together somewhere around town, and this time around we will meet at the Pagosa Bar. See you there at 6:00!

 

  • AHA Big Brew Day, Saturday May 5th AHA Big Brew is a celebration of National Homebrew Day (May 7). Each year homebrewers around the world invite family and friends to their brewing site on the first Saturday in May to celebrate the holiday. Everyone is encouraged to help out with the brew, enjoy the fun and join in on a world-wide toast at noon CDT. For more info go here:
    http://www.homebrewersassociation.org./pages/events/national-homebrew-day
    We will be brewing at Pagosa Brewing Co again this year. To encourage attendance, they are offering a "Big Brew Discount" to all participants (both HOPS Members and not) during the event.  This would include:
    $1 off house beers
    $2 off whole pizzas

 

  • Durango Homebrew Gathering / Pub Crawl, May 12th –The Animas Alers Homebrew Club in Durango is hosting a pub crawl / homebrew / brewery event. This will probably include a homebrew tasting at Ska, along with tours & presentations then followed by a tour of beer spots including other breweries and Lady Falc’s. More details at our meeting tomorrow!

 

  • Hooch Brew Off, June 16th in Durango – The event that throws a wrench in your typical judging – this is more like a prison party without the convicts. Brew up your own hooch and bring it to this one of a kind event. For more info go to: http://pagosahops.org/#!/houch-brew-off-on-june-16th-durango

 

  • Archuleta County Fair, August 2-5 – Be sure to keep in mind the beer competition for the Fair this year!

 

 

For the Calendar:

  • April 24: HOPS Meeting – Pagosa Brewing Co at 6:00
  • May 5: Big Brew Day – Pagosa Brewing Co, Group Homebrew
  • May 12: Durango Pub Crawl with the Animas Alers
  • May 14-20: American Craft Beer Week
  • May 22: HOPS Meeting – Pagosa Brewing Co at 6:00
  • June 2: Four Corners Homebrew Gathering – Aztec
  • June 16: Hooch Brew Off – Durango
  • June 26: HOPS Meeting – Pagosa Brewing Co at 6:00
  • June 21-23: National Homebrewers Conference
  • July 14: Salida Brewer’s Rendezvous
  • July 24: HOPS Meeting – Pagosa Brewing Co at 6:00
  • August 2-5: Archuleta County Fair – Beer, wine and mead competition
  • August 4: Mead Day
  • October 11-13: Great American Beer Festival - Denver
  • November 3: Learn to Homebrew Day

 

NEWS:

 

  • Ska 2012 GABF Pro-Am Homebrew Competition: Here is an email from Ska regarding the homebrew competition coming up:

 

Greetings Homebrewers!

Happy 2012 to all!  Just wanted to let everyone know that we will be holding our annual GABF Pro-Am HomebrewCompetition during American Craft Beer Week again.  The dates for American Craft Beer Week are May 14-20, 2012.  Registration will begin in mid-late February but just wanted to touch base with everyone so you could begin to plan ahead.  Please let me know if you have any questions.

 

Cheers,

 

Kristen Muraro

Events Coordinator

Ska Brewing Co.

Office:  970-247-5792 Ext: 35

Cell:  970-946-0715

Kristen@skabrewing.com

225 Girard St.

Durango, Colorado 81303

 

  • Hop Rhizomes Available – If you are looking to grow your own hops, Tony with Pagosa Brewing Co has sent some information on getting a wide variety at pretty good prices. They normally take about two years to get established. If you are interested in getting some let me know. They are about $2.50 each (unless you order 40 ormore) and they have a wide variety to choose from.

 

  • Beer News Around Durango – For the latest news on the beer scene in Durango, check out http://beerat6512.blogspot.com/. Our neighbors to the West have a great beer town, along with some great writers and this is a fun place to check up on the happninz. Erich Hennig, my brew-brotha-from-anotha-motha just joined the team. Check it out – I think you will enjoy it!

 

 

Pagosa Brewing Company News / Events:

 

THIS WEEK ONLY!
"Growler Amnesty" Week!

Get into Spring Cleaning...
Bring in your empty PBC Growlers for Full Credit on your bill! 
(at $3.50 value) And, of course, we always offer refills too!    
   

THIS WEEK ONLY!
"Bike to the Brewery" Week!

Bike to the brewery and receive

VIP parking & door prizes all week!

 

~ On Tap Beginning of April ~
Alpine Abbey Blonde
Based on the Monastic Abbey biers of Belgium...  These world-class biers are brewed by Trappist Monks to support their Abbeys and Monasteries.  For authenticity, we procured our yeast from one of these Abbeys, copied their water profile, and imported specialty malts and hops from Belgium.  
Alpine Abbey Blonde has a wonderfully complex aroma of light fruit and subtle spice, and it finishes exceptionally dry and smooth.  
À votre santé! (To Your Health!)!

~ On Tap Middle of April ~
Double Black

Imperial Black IPA - One of the most extreme, and yet deceptively quaffable IPA's we’ve ever crafted.  As such, we call it Double Black and it’s not for the faint of heart.  It’s got an amazing balance of black malts and hops with an intense depth of character of rich malts, but not too heavy.  First featured during the Opening Reception at the Big Beer Festival in Vail in January 2011. 

 

 

FRONT RANGE & BEYOND NEWS & EVENTS:

  • Salida Brewer’s Rendezvous – July 14th (One of the coolest beer fests in CO if you ask me. And yes, I heard you askin.)

 

 

 

FOR SALE / FOR FREE / WANTED:

 

  • Fridge (Great for a Kegerator) – If a HOPS member is interested in building a kegerator I found a free fridge that would be great for the job. Email me for more info – randy@speeddirect.com. Again, don’t reply to this email or you will send it to every beer drinking fool on the planet. Really.

 

Anybody else have anything you want to list? Beer related or not, just lemme know and I will circulate your stuff around the universe. Well, my universe…

 

 

 

Links:

 

  • Homebrewing News – A website started by our buddy Bill Downs here in the Four Corners area that focuses on product reviews and more: www.homebrewingnews.com

 

  • Local Beerlover Networking Website: Check out www.brewerfest.com for a social beer lover’s networking site. It works kinda like Facebook, only without all the loser teenagers counting how many totally irrelevant “friends” they can amass proving how completely lame they are. This site is actually cool! (Yes, a big fan of Facepuke here…) Joseph from Pagosa Brewing started this one up and it has some great photos of HOPS junk, plus it is free to join! Sign in and rock out with your beer out.

 

 

 

 

UNSUBSCRIBE – But if you do, one hairy cock-eyed beast will show up in the middle of the night. And I can not say if it will be a cock-eyed boar or a fellow homebrewer. Either way, it aint gonna be purdy…

"Houch" Brew Off on June 16th - Durango

Hi All,

Getting tired of all the BJCP sanctions, all the category guidelines and beer-snobbery that comes with brewing? Actually, I'm not either, but that doesn't mean we can't branch out and have some fun exploring different 'not-so-snobbish' forms of fermenting. And so I present to you the 'Houch Brew Off' brought to you by our friends from Worth Dreams. This is a new (actually, no, it's quite old) take at fermenting hooch. Basically, take some fermentable matter and turn it into alcohol, just like they do in prison! (You can even use a toilet to ferment in if you so desire.)

This event will take place at Durango Brew Supply on Saturday, June 16th. Please see the attached flier for more details (I hope I can figure out how to attach this thing). Ferment whatever you want as long as it falls within the guidelines in the attachment. There is no charge per entry and you can enter as many as you want. The guys at Durango Brew Supply will probably 'cellar' your entries for you if you can not get to the competition / hooch party the day of. This sounds like a lot of fun, though 'judging' this could be a risky undertaking... 8-{

Cheers, and happy hooch day ~
 
Randini

Remember, if you have any specific questions, please email me at randy@speeddirect.com or Al at the contact info listed in the attachment. Replies to this email go to everyone on the list!

First Friday Out (FFO) - Time & Location Changed!

Hi guys,Since this is closing weekend at Wolf Creek Ski Area, a handful of us opted to pull out the camping gear and head up to the hill for the weekend. Looks like the FFO will be at the new Raven's Nest bar at the top of the Raven Lift (until they close, then down to the campsite). Hope to see you there! And if you feel like braving the 45mph winds and 17 degrees they are calling for tonight, come join us around the campsite. ;-)

Cheers ~ 
 
Randini

Brewsletter - March 2012

HOPS – Homebrewers Of Pagosa Springs

 

Hello HOPS Heads,

A moment of reflection: Ode to an Eichmann. In about 2 hours from the time I write this, Pagosa Springs will lose a character. A guy that was hard to ignore. Most people liked what they found, and well, others, who knows what they saw. But for the most part I would say he is respected and most would agree he was a pleasure to be around. I am one of the latter. Not that I am a pleasure to be around, but I think he is. Jamie Eichmann and his girl Holly (and Holly’s son & Molly-dog) are off to the Holy Land of beer, cheese and brats: Wisconsin. I told him his accent would be in full swing within 20 minutes of crossing the border. He corrected me; it was required to cross the border, so it would be immediate. Se la vie (such is life, for the non-so-French – myself included). He’s a hard guy not to like, and I think this is a genuine dude that will be missed and Pagosa already ain’t quite what it used to be, and they haven’t even left yet. Cheers, my friend and God Speed. I like your brews and hope you land that gig with New Glarus Brewing Co. Anyway, enough about that guy, let’s get back to the topic at hand. ;-) Beer and all the fun fermentables to be experienced along the way, and especially to be enjoyed with good friends.

 

Cheers, and Best Wishes to the Eichmann Entourage ~

 

Randini the Beer Spammer

 

Tech Tip of the Day: About Yeast Starters and Growing Yeast: People have asked about easy ways to grow yeast. I will just cover one method today, as there are many. Freeze some wort at the end of each brewing session.  This gives you ready made starter wort with basically no effort. Defrost the starter wort and pitch the yeast in a sanitized flask.  Put it on a stir plate (if you have one) and you have a starter in no time. If you don't have a stir plate just make sure you don't tighten a lid of a jar and let it build pressure as the yeast starts (kaboom). I don't think it needs to be boiled again, as it has been boiled, cooled and frozen.  Others may disagree and it certainly wouldn't hurt anything to do so, but it would add some time. Also, for bigger beers I do typically start with a smaller beer and work up to it.  

 

Quote of the Day: Alcohol does not solve any problem, but then neither does milk.

 - Unknown

 

 

 

HOPS Meetings:

 

  • HOPS – New Business:
    • Next Meeting: Today, Tuesday, the 27th is the next HOPS meeting, Pagosa Brewing Co at 6:00 PM. The RED COLOR GROUP is up, so if you are in this group, make sure you have been in touch with your Color Group Leader (Eleanor) to find out what is in the pipeline.
    • Style of the Month: Scottish and Irish Ales
    • FFO (First Friday Out) – The first Friday of February (the 6th) we will meet at The Pagosa Bar (that’s right – the PB baby! They have some great beer on tap!).
    • Discussion: Some ideas we want to go over include the following:

A)      Membership Dues – Time for us to squeeze some money out of you!

B)      United Way Brew Event (Schedule date and recipe – more info below)

C)      Durango Pub Crawl – we are working with the homebrew club in Durango about doing to gathering / pub crawl in March. Bring ideas on what you would like to do. Tastings? Presentation Topics? Just looking for ideas…

D)      Homebrew Hoedown Plans – we need to decide if we are hosting another event. Last year we did it in June. Do we want to do it again?

E)      BJCP Club Competition? Also paired in June with the Hoedown maybe?

 

 

 

UPCOMING LOCAL NEWS & EVENTS:

 

Mark Your Calendars:

 

  • Tuesday, March 27th – HOPS Meeting: This coming Tuesday is the HOPS Meeting (normally the fourth Tuesday of the month). We will meet at Pagosa Brewing Company at 6:00 PM. This month we will be going over some of the upcoming events and agenda items above, along with the Style of the Month. This time is Scottish and Irish Ales. For more info on these styles, check out the descriptions listed on the BJCP website here: http://www.bjcp.org/2008styles/catdex.php (Category 9) Check out the posts from local liquor stores on our website at www.pagosahops.org to see what is in stock.

 

  • First Friday Out, April 6th – The first Friday of the month we like to drink beer. Ok, we like to drink beer more often than that, but we usually get together somewhere around town, and this time around we will meet at the Pagosa Bar. See you there 6:00!

 

  • United Way Brew Event - Bill Tramarco in our HOPS club is involved with the local United Way chapter based in Pagosa Springs and we chatted with him recently about their upcoming annual appreciation celebration in April. We'd like to get HOPS club members together to brew some beers that we can donate to the event and use to help support United Way. We will send out more details soon and we should brew by early March to give the brews sufficient time to be ready by the event in early April. Post any suggestions or thoughts you have about this on this thread and we'll take everything into consideration. What better way to support charity than to make homebrew!

 

  • Durango Homebrew Gathering / Pub Crawl – Sometime in April (?) we are planning a get together with the Homebrew Club in Durango. This will probably include a homebrew tasting at Ska, along with tours & presentations then followed by a tour of beer spots including other breweries and Lady Falc’s. More details will follow as we get them.

 

  • AHA Big Brew Day, Saturday May 5th AHA Big Brew is a celebration of National Homebrew Day (May 7). Each year homebrewers around the world invite family and friends to their brewing site on the first Saturday in May to celebrate the holiday. Everyone is encouraged to help out with the brew, enjoy the fun and join in on a world-wide toast at noon CDT. And yes, we will be brewing it up here in P-Town. For more info go here:
    http://www.homebrewersassociation.org./pages/events/national-homebrew-day

 

  • Archuleta County Fair, August 2-5 – Be sure to keep in mind the beer competition for the Fair this year!

 

 

Other Dates to Keep In Mind:

 

NEWS:

 

  • Ska 2012 GABF Pro-Am Homebrew Competition: Here is an email from Ska regarding the homebrew competition coming up:

 

Greetings Homebrewers!

Happy 2012 to all!  Just wanted to let everyone know that we will be holding our annual GABF Pro-Am HomebrewCompetition during American Craft Beer Week again.  The dates for American Craft Beer Week are May 14-20, 2012.  Registration will begin in mid-late February but just wanted to touch base with everyone so you could begin to plan ahead.  Please let me know if you have any questions.

 

Cheers,

 

Kristen Muraro

Events Coordinator

Ska Brewing Co.

Office:  970-247-5792 Ext: 35

Cell:  970-946-0715

Kristen@skabrewing.com

225 Girard St.

Durango, Colorado 81303

 

  • Hop Rhizomes Available – If you are looking to grow your own hops, Tony with Pagosa Brewing Co has sent some information on getting a wide variety at pretty good prices. They normally take about two years to get established. If you are interested in getting some let me know. They are about $2.50 each (unless you order 40 ormore) and they have a wide variety to choose from.

 

  • Beer News Around Durango – For the latest news on the beer scene in Durango, check out http://beerat6512.blogspot.com/. Our neighbors to the West have a great beer town, along with some great writers and this is a fun place to check up on the happninz. Erich Hennig, my brew-brotha-from-anotha-motha just joined the team. Check it out – I think you will enjoy it!

 

 

Pagosa Brewing Company News / Events:

 

~ On Tap This Weekend ~
Spring Hop 
 Champion Belgian Ale - Colorado State Fair '11
Join us for the tapping of our annual Spring Hop Ale!  It's a hybrid Belgo/American Pale Ale brewed with Belgian & American hops. It's got a complex Belgian nose, followed by a easy drinking dry middle, and finishes with a spicy, lingering American bitterness.
Special Food Pairings:  Belgian Carbonade Stew, Salmon Pizza with Dill Cream Sauce, and NY Cheesecake with Whiskey Cream & Belgian Chocolate Drizzle.

~ On Tap Beginning of April ~
Alpine Abbey Blonde

Based on the Monastic Abbey biers of Belgium...  These world-class biers are brewed by Trappist Monks to support their Abbeys and Monasteries.  For authenticity, we procured our yeast from one of these Abbeys, copied their water profile, and imported specialty malts and hops from Belgium.  Alpine Abbey Blonde has a wonderfully complex aroma of light fruit and subtle spice, and it finishes exceptionally dry and smooth.  
À votre santé! (To Your Health!)!

~ On Tap Middle of April ~
Double Black

Imperial Black IPA - One of the most extreme, and yet deceptively quaffable IPA's we’ve ever crafted.  As such, we call it Double Black and it’s not for the faint of heart.  It’s got an amazing balance of black malts and hops with an intense depth of character of rich malts, but not too heavy.  First featured during the Opening Reception at the Big Beer Festival in Vail in January 2011. 

 

FRONT RANGE & BEYOND NEWS & EVENTS:

 

  • Hop Rhizome Source: Another source for growing your own hops. You can harvest wild hop rhizomes locally or you can purchase rhizomes from different suppliers. Here is one other one that sent our club an email: 
    To: Homebrewers of Pagosa Springs 
    I’d like to introduce myself, my name is Andy McCormick and I own Arrowhead Hops, a small hop yard in central Iowa 30 minutes north of Des Moines.  Arrowhead Hops is happy to announce the 2012 hop rhizome pre-order sale through March 1st! Pre-ordered rhizomes will be delivered in early spring. 
     All rhizome varieties will be $2.75 each for club members, quantities allocated for this sale are limited and no minimum purchase is required. Please email Arrowheadhops@yahoo.com with variety and quantity if you wish to place an order.

    Brewer’s Gold, Chinook, Galena, Mt. Hood, Nugget, Sterling, Willamette
    Thanks
    Andy McCormick
    Arrowhead Hops

 

  • Salida Brewer’s Rendezvous – July 14th (One of the coolest beer fests in CO if you ask me. And yes, I heard you askin.)

 

 

 

FOR SALE / FOR FREE / WANTED:

 

  • Free Fridge (Great for a Kegerator) – If a HOPS member is interested in building a kegerator I found a free fridge that would be great for the job. Email me for more info – randy@speeddirect.com. Again, don’t reply to this email or you will send it to every beer drinking fool on the planet. Really.

 

  • All Grain Brew Equipment Wanted – Yours truly is looking for some misc. all grain brewing equipment. I mainly need a wort chiller and a sparge arm.

 

Anybody else have anything you want to list? Beer related or not, just lemme know and I will circulate your stuff around the universe. Well, my universe…

 

 

 

Links:

 

  • Homebrewing News – A website started by our buddy Bill Downs here in the Four Corners area that focuses on product reviews and more: www.homebrewingnews.com

 

  • Local Beerlover Networking Website: Check out www.brewerfest.com for a social beer lover’s networking site. It works kinda like Facebook, only without all the loser teenagers counting how many totally irrelevant “friends” they can amass proving how completely lame they are. This site is actually cool! (Yes, a big fan of Facepuke here…) Joseph from Pagosa Brewing started this one up and it has some great photos of HOPS junk, plus it is free to join! Sign in and rock out with your beer out.

 

 

 

 

UNSUBSCRIBE – But before you do, come see me at the HOPS meeting tonight so we can discuss this further. I’d bet that after some Irish & Scottish Ale sampling you’ll change your mind!

Liquor Stories - The Latest Goods From Our Local Liquor Stores

Liquor Stories: The Latest Goods from our Local Liquor Stores

 

      Our tribute to local liquor stores that like beer. Not just crap beer, I mean Real Beer! Not all of them are cool enough to contribute to this rockin' Brewsletter, so be sure to treat the ones that do with some extra business. 



Mountain Spirits:
Here is a list of new items I have in the store from the last 2 weeks.  

In the beer department:
Oscar Blues Deviant Dales IPA   16oz 4-pk cans
Uinta Hop Notch IPA   6 pk-btls
Uinta Ba Ba Black Lager    6pk-btls
Unita Monkshine Belgium Blonde   6pk-btls
Rogue Northwestern Ale bomber
Great Divide Hercules Double IPA bomber
Great Divide Yeti Esresso oak aged Imperial Stout bomber
Angry Orchard hard cider: traditional dry and crisp apple
Sierra Nevada Pale Ale in 12 pk cans
Sierra Nevada Torpedo Extra IPA in 4-pk 16oz cans
Durango Purgatory Ale bomber
 
In the wine department:
Angeline Pinot Noir California
Fizz 64 Sparkling Red dessert wine from Italy
Souvrain Chardonnay and Sauvignon Blanc  California
Domaine Beauregard Muscadet 2009 France
Les Floroys Marsannay  2009 France
Secret Coast Pinot Noir  New Zealand
Murtia Monastrell  Spain
Priorat Clos Gebrat Tinto  Spain
Manos Negras Sauvignon Blanc  Chile
Manos Negras Carmenere   Chile

Silver Dollar Liquor:

New 6pks:


Boulevard Brewing                   Double-Wide

                                                -IPA


Samuel Adams             Whitewater IPA

                                                -White IPA

                               

                                                Noble Pils

                                                -Pilsner


Oskar Blues                             Deviant Dales

                                                -IPA

 

New Bombers:


Full Sail                                    Top Sail

                                                -Imperial Porter aged in oak bourbon barrels

 

Uinta Brewing                           Labyrinth

                                                -Black Ale

                                                -Brewed with Licorice sticks and aged in oak barrels

 

Jolly Pumpkin                           Calabaza Blanca

                                                -Artisan White Ale

 

Brouwerij Bockor                     Cuvee Des Jacobins

                                                -Flanders Red Sour Ale

                                                -My wife’s favorite and until recently could only get it on

Tap

 

Bomber of the Month

 

Stone                                       -Smoked Porter

 

6pk of the Month                  

 

Oskar Blues                             Old Chub

                                                -Scotch Ale

 

You can go onto our website at www.pagosahops.org and check out previous postings as well.



Meeting Reminder / Color Group Info

Howdy HOPS Heads,Just a reminder that there is a HOPS meeting this coming Tuesday the 27th at Pagosa Brewing Co at 6:00. The style of the month is Scotch and Irish Ales. Since things are still getting put together for memberships, feel free to bring any style samples you can find to the meeting. Then at the meeting we will discuss membership dues, color groups and all the fun that comes with it. Makes you want a beer, dont it? ;-)

See you then, 
 
Randini

Untitled

Sorry for the extra spam today…there is a lot going on in the Four Corners homebrew community right now! I’m attaching an updated Word document (Word 2000 and later will work) with a hops survey from Amber Beye. Amber made a few changes to the original survey so please use this one and return it to her at amber@sccorps.org.

Cheers!

Untitled

Thanks for the heads up about beer donations, Tony. Is there a way to donate homebrew through Pagosa Brewing Co.?

Cheers!

Jason

From: Tony Simmons [mailto:tony@pagosabrewing.com]
Sent: Wednesday, March 21, 2012 12:07 PM
To: jason.cox@coxinnovations.com
Subject: [pagosahops.org] Re: HOPS Survey about Hops!

FYI - According to State Liquor Law, you can bring/donate beer to any private party.  However, you cannot donate beer to an event (even for a non-profit) that is advertised to the public.  Beer donation to events where money transaction occurs can only be done through a liquor store, brewery, winery or distillery.

Reply

HOPS Survey about Hops!

I received an email from Amber Beye, a local Four Corners resident writing a grant to perform a hop variety trial with Fort Lewis College. Amber is interested in the varieties that home brewers are most willing to use or would like to try and has created a survey (in Microsoft Word
2010 document format) to gauge Four Corners homebrewers' preferences for hops.

All participants are welcome and you just need to fill out the attached document and send it directly to Amber at amber@sccorps.org by March 28, 2012. You can also contact Amber with any questions you have about the survey.

In the end, we might end up with a local hop farm serving Four Corners homebrewers. At the least, though, you can help Amber write a grant that will help further hop farming in our region.

 

Cheers!

Jason