The article below was published in Birmingham Weekly on 10/14/10. It contains some pretty interesting ideas for working your way through a few different styles and brewing companies to get a better understanding for American beer.  I've had 3 out of the 10 beers listed (Sierra Nevada Pale Ale, Stone Arrogant Bastard & the Dogfish Head 90 Minute IPA) so apparently I better get busy on the others if I want to round out my beer knowledge.
"As  recently as the 1970s, America was the butt of jokes in world beer  culture. There were only a few dozen breweries, all producing little  more than straw-colored lagers with minimal flavor. Today, our country  boasts over 1,600 breweries leading the world in creativity and quality  in brewing. To better understand that transformation, I propose drinking  ten different beers that illustrate the nature of modern American beer.  Not all in one sitting.
1. The first beer in this round of exploratory drinking absolutely has to be Anchor Steam Beer. In  the early 1970s, steam beer was the only style of beer indigenous to  North America. I’d argue that in the last few decades Americans have  created quite a few new styles, but steam beer is the godfather of them  all and today’s craft brewers owe a debt of gratitude to Anchor for  persevering through the darkest days of brewing on this continent.
2. Second on your beer tour should be Sierra Nevada Pale Ale, the  first American pale ale ever brewed. The key point to learn from this  beer is that it set the standard for American brewers amping up  traditional English styles with extra hops and alcohol. The same pattern  would lead to the American IPA, the double IPA, the American brown ale,  and the American barley wine. Those categories now boast thousands of  examples across the country, and it really all started in 1980 with  Sierra Nevada Pale Ale.
3. After  you ponder how three decades ago Americans took UK brewing traditions  and created new styles of beer, toast the inspiration coming full circle  with a BrewDog Punk IPA. BrewDog  is a Scottish craft brewery that is heavily inspired by American craft  brewing culture. Thirty years ago it was radical for American brewers to  brew traditional Scottish ales. Today it’s radical for a Scottish  brewery to produce an American-style IPA. And this influence continues  to spread across the world.
4. Not  only have we taken European beer styles in new directions, we have also  perfected European beers in their original form. A great example of  this is Allagash FOUR. It  features four malts, four hops, four sugars, and four yeast strains,  and it is every bit the equal of any quadruple brewed by any brewer in  Belgium. Who needs to buy imports when beer as good or better is being  brewed right here in the USA?
5. I’ll  tell you who needs imports: me. While Americans have mastered almost  every beer style known to man and created more than a few of our own,  there are some European beers that we have yet to surpass, and Cantillon Saint Lamvinus is  one of them. No one would argue Vinnie Cilurzo at Russian River is not a  virtuoso in the field of brewing sour beers. But he still has not  surpassed the mastery of the brewers and blenders at Cantillon, who have  been perfecting the art of lambic brewing for over 100 years. As far as  we’ve come, Belgium’s traditional lambic producers still have some  secrets Americans have yet to uncover.
6. Next up is Samuel Adams Boston Lager. Not  only is Boston Lager at the top of the heap when it comes to sales of  American craft beer, the Samuel Adams brand deserves credit for keeping  American craft beer alive during the late 90s, when the initial craft  boom looked to many to be a fad that had passed. Lots of craft breweries  from the first big wave folded, but Samuel Adams continued to grow and  proved the segment had staying power.
7. Whiskey barrel-aged beer is entirely an American invention, and the brewery that started it all was Goose Island with their Bourbon County Brand Stout way  back in 1992. And it’s still recognized as being among the best there  is. Sip this one from a snifter and carefully ponder American creativity  at its finest.
8. Although  imperial stouts were not invented by Americans, the modern obsession  with them started here. The phenomenon of crazed hordes traveling  hundreds of miles for a chance at buying six bottles of one beer started  with Three Floyds Dark Lord Imperial Stout. The  beer debuted in 2004 and has hovered near the top of BeerAdvocate’s  list of top beers in the world for most of its existence. It’s only  available at the brewery, and only on one day a year. That day has  turned into a massive beer festival with thousands of attendees who all  bring and share beer. And it has spawned several very successful copycat  events all centered around rare, hard to obtain imperial stouts. We  have Three Floyds to thank.
9. I  think nothing is more emblematic of modern Americans’ perspective on  craft beer than our love of absurdly-hopped beers. And the most iconic  example of that theme is Dogfish Head 90 Minute IPA. It  was created by Sam Calagione, now the most recognizable spokesman for  American craft brewing. 90 Minute is unique in that it doesn’t feature  just two or three hop additions that are common for most beers; it is  continuously hopped for a full 90 minutes during the boil. It’s nuts,  it’s delicious, and no European brewer would ever have dreamed of such a  thing.
10. And finally, the last beer you must drink to understand modern American brewing is Stone Arrogant Bastard. It  was one of the first beers to defy classification to such a degree that  a new catch-all category was created for it, American strong ale. It’s a  robust 7% ABV, amber in color with a thick caramel malt backbone, and  intensely hoppy. But the most American thing about it is the  self-righteous diatribe screen-printed on every bottle, explaining how  most drinkers aren’t worthy of the beer because they’ve wasted their  lives drinking fizzy yellow light beer. American brewing is dosed with a  lot of hubris and attitude, and Arrogant Bastard is the epitome of  that."
      
Learning is growing & variety is the spice of life.
the pissed liBEERian

Sam Adams is a great lager and I can't argue with his other choices. The author is spot on when he points out that other countries are struggling to keep up/catch up to our craft brew industry. The UK and Oz are working hard at it, though the national penchant for icy cold, yellow lagers in the latter is holding them back. Little Creatures is starting to make an impact however, and others are sure to follow.
ReplyDeleteYour blog was a jewel of a find! Thanks.
ReplyDeleteI'm Canadian, so I joked a lot about American Beer - it was pretty bad ... actually you still have some strong offenders doing well.
But this looks like an amazing adventure, and will definitely try this National Geographic exploration of American micro-brewing!
Thanks for the compliment Andrew. :)
ReplyDeleteGood luck on your US Craft Brew quest!