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Samuel Adams Griffin’s Bow

Samuel Adams Griffin’s Bow

Essential!

  • Carmel, esters of apple and honeysuckle
  • Sharp with a burst of spice and brown sugar, apple
  • Bitter and smooth

Limited edition brew in 22 oz. bottles. 11.5% ABV

Where has this been all my life?

I continue to be impressed by the beers Samuel Adams puts out. I know many of my fellow craft-beer aficionados are a bit reluctant to admit enjoying Sam Adams, but I find it to be one of the most consistently excellent craft brewers. Samuel Adams has obviously managed its growth very well. The latest proof of this is their limited edition Griffin’s Bow.

A bottle of Samuel Adams Griffin's Bow next to a Samuel Adams beer glass filled with amber Griffin's Bow

I'm Welsh, too, so I mean, I have to like something called Griffin's Bow

Griffin’s Bow is a barleywine, but a barleywine unlike any other I’ve tried. The label describes it as “oaked blonde barleywine ale.” I give Sam Adams a lot of credit for writing “barleywine” and not “barleywine-style,” which is redundant. Maybe putting “ale” after “barleywine” prevented the gov’m’t from cracking down. The beer is aged in oak barrels, allowing unique esters to form, but not for too long. This beer is a rich amber color, but not copper or darker like most barleywines, so I expect that it is a fairly young beer. The label states that Griffin’s Bow can be enjoyed now or aged to “further develop rich and unique flavors.” I, obviously, couldn’t wait to open my bottle, but I will get another (or two) to age in a dark place.

Okay, caveat: This is a barleywine. All barleywines are bitter from their malts, as well as getting bitterness from the hops. They’re sharper than most beers, and some folks who dig IPAs or dry hopped beers still don’t like barleywines because of the bitterness. But folks who enjoy dubbels or Trappist beers would probably enjoy a barleywine. Barleywines are on the intermediate level of beer enjoyment.

Having said that, I’d still recommend Griffin’s Bow to those that haven’t enjoyed other barleywines. The barrel-aging and unique brown sugar flavor to this beer may be a perfect entry into the challenging barleywine family.

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I can’t use my backyard as my …

I can’t use my backyard as my own personal beer refrigerator thanks to this balmy weather. #firstWorldWarmingProblems

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Tom and Jerry

Here’s an interesting nugget of trivia: In 1821, Pierce Egan, a popular sports writer, wrote a book called Life in London, or The Day and Night Scenes of Jerry Hawthorn Esq. and his Elegant Friend Corinthian Tom, which was so popular that it was turned into a play that same year, Tom and Jerry, or Life in London. The story of the raucous Tom and Jerry was so popular that, in London, children playing in the streets were called “Tom and Jerry.” Later, in 1931, Tom and Jerry became cartoon characters for RKO Pictures, human cartoon characters, and they ended their run in 1933, not, maybe, what one would expect. A young animator, Joseph Barbera, was the scriptwriter at the studio during that run and would later join William Hanna in creating the cartoon cat and mouse for MGM that is probably familiar to everyone.

But back in 1821, Pierce Egan was looking for a way to popularize his new play when it came over to America. He added brandy to a traditional eggnog recipe, warmed it, and called it the Tom and Jerry. This drink became a huge fad in the young America, and remained that way until Prohibition where it became a bit too complicated for the speakeasies. In 1932, Damon Runyon wrote “Dancing Dan’s Christmas,” where he describes the Tom and Jerry:

This hot Tom and Jerry is an old time drink that is once used by one and all in this country to celebrate Christmas with, and in fact it is once so popular that many people think Christmas is invented only to furnish an excuse for hot Tom and Jerry, although of course this is by no means true.

In 2010, Mrs. Ferment read “Dancing Dan’s Christmas” and asked me to make one. But we lost some enthusiasm when we read the recipes for it the drink included undercooked eggs. Here’s Martha Stuart’s recipe for six servings:

A mug filled with warm Tom and Jerry

There are proper stemmed mugs for this, but surrounded by Christmas tree lights, our only clear mug full of Tom and Jerry looks festive.

Tom and Jerry

  • 3 eggs, separated
  • 3.5 oz. of dark rum
  • 3 Tbs sugar
  • .25 tsp ground cinnamon
  • pinch of ground allspice and clove
  • 1.5 cups of milk
  • 6 oz. brandy
  • Fresh grated nutmeg, for garnish

Whisk egg yolks with .5 oz. of rum and all the sugar. Stir in cinnamon, allspice, and clove. Whisk egg whites with an electric mixer in another bowl until egg whites are stiff. Gently but thoroughly fold whites into yolk mix. Meanwhile, heat milk in small saucepan until simmering. Divide egg mixture amongst six mugs, about .25 cup each. Slowly pour .5 oz. of rum into each mug, stirring constantly to avoid curdling, then add 1 oz. of brandy. Pour .25 cup of hot milk into each much and top with nutmeg. Serve immediately.

Now, despite the undercooked eggs, this is a great recipe to start with, and the recipe allows for more milk, which, when we eventually braved making it, we totally needed. It’s very strong with over 1.5 oz. of alcohol per mug. We found a balance with a bit less brandy and more milk, which meant equal amounts of rum and brandy (.5 oz. each) and at least .5 cup of milk. The creamier the milk the better, so I heartily recommend whole milk.

But about those eggs. Well, we tried to find pasteurized whole, fresh eggs, but we couldn’t, even at our local Whole Foods. So we followed two other rules-of-thumb, which I DO NOT RECOMMEND to anyone, anywhere, because there is no way to know if eggs are tainted with Salmonella, according to the FDA. However, my feeling is that cage-free chickens don’t lay Salmonella-tainted eggs, since cage-free chickens don’t eat their own shit. Mrs. Ferment believes that the alcohol will prevent Salmonella from blooming in the gut. There’s some support for this. Again, I do not recommend anyone rely on these. The FDA doesn’t want anyone eating eggs that haven’t been brought to 160°F. Eggs and alcohol have had a long tradition of going together—any drink that was called “Fizz” had egg whites to create the foam. But since the Salmonella scare, that tradition has been lost.

Yet the Tom and Jerry is quite delicious, if one is daring enough to make it. Our first serving was the high-octane recipe, which was creamy, rich, and was perfectly winter-friendly. The spices were warming but not overpowering. When there was less brandy in the second serving, the rum and brandy nicely sweetened the drink. We couldn’t make ourselves drink our third serving, because we were already tipsy and full. The remaining egg mixture, known as the batter, kept in the fridge, which I combined with milk, cold, and microwaved for two minutes the next day. It was creamy and custardy.

There’s eggnog aplenty on our grocery shelves, but the Tom and Jerry is unique in flavor and a great treat to make and serve, as long as one is willing to trust his fresh eggs.

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Samuel Adams Black & Brew

Sam Adams Black & Brew

  • Coffee and cocoa
  • Mild bitterness, subtly sweet coffee, chocolate overtones
  • Sweet and mild

Seasonal available in the 2011 Samuel Adams Winter Collection

Coffee in beer isn’t as odd as it may initially seem. I initially dismissed the idea of it when it was presented in The Drew Carey Show as Buzz Beer, possibly the first popularization of a micro/craft brew on television. At that time, I felt that adding caffeine to beer was a recipe for disaster as it would make drinkers feel more awake while being just as sloshed. Of course, now in the days of Four Loko, the idea of adding coffee to beer seems quaint.

A bottle of Sam Adams Black and Brew beer next to a Samuel Adams specialty beer glass filled with the dark Black and Brew stout.

It's a dark stout. Photo by Mrs. Ferment.

But more than caffeine in beer, coffee is often an ester-created flavor in stout beers anyway. A beer like Magic Hat Howl may have no coffee beans amongst its ingredients, but surely the flavor can be described as coffee-like. Oddly, many beers with coffee don’t actually have a very strong coffee flavor, but Samuel Adams Black & Brew keeps its label’s promise. It smells and tastes like coffee, sweet coffee at that. There are significant cocoa notes, too, which would make the stout a mocha-flavored brew.

The stout is rich and dark and has slight bitter tones, which would be expected from both a stout and coffee, but Samuel Adams makes Black & Brew easily palatable, and the bitter is mild. Like their Chocolate Bock, more of the flavor comes out when it is served a bit warmer than the fridge will make it, so it may be beneficial to keep it out a half-an-hour or so before pouring. Also like their Chocolate Bock, Black & Brew is a seasonal beer, and is currently available only in the Winter Collection 12-pack. To add the Black & Brew, Samuel Adams removed something that I can’t remember. Possibly the White Ale, which is no longer in this collection? I don’t remember, but the Black & Brew is definitely a winner, so I think we’ve gained on this season’s collection.

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Johnny Walker’s new ad campaig…

Johnny Walker’s new ad campaign is to give it for the holidays. May I say, Black or Blue label, please?

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We’re thankful for our writers…

We’re thankful for our writers including @melba_dnu @ssteigerwald @edroso and our wonderful readers. Happy Thanksgiving!

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Magic Hat Howl

Magic Hat Howl Black as Night Lager

  • Smokey, burnt wood
  • Bitter coffee and chocolate, mild smoke
  • Bitterness lingers

Magic Hat winter seasonal

There are some things that trouble me. If one were to look at the vast collections of reviews that I’ve written for our little site, one would find that I generally enjoy what I drink. There have been some wines or beers that weren’t to my taste, but I knew that millions of people would get more out of them than I would. (Note: We don’t have millions of readers, but that’s not my point.) So I try to be careful to note what I’ve tasted, without being terribly judgmental. I don’t have a particularly strong sweet-tooth and I’m not much of a whiskey drinker, but when I have a sweet wine or try a whiskey, I’ll let my readers know that those items are being judged on a bias.

To clarify, I don’t spend my time panning things that I don’t like. There’s just too much to drink and so little time for my liver to recover.

But, alas, the internet. So many places to comment; so many angered ejaculations of contempt. Now, while the commenters on this site are generous, upstanding drunkards and souses, the comment boards of many other sites are littered with unnecessarily impassioned sputtering. Which brings me to my current review.

Wait. Let me first say, Magic Hat Howl is wonderful. It is a classic black lager. When I tasted it, I was transported back to my third beer ever purchased at a bar. Back then, when we all huddled around the television by firelight in the caves, Guinness in a bottle was a totally different beast than the widgetized cans and bottles they serve now. It’s possible to find the old 12 oz. brown bottles with the yellow label, but very few people order it, because if you’ve tasted Guinness on draught, the bottle tastes almost completely, but not quite, exactly unlike the draught. That is, on draught the stout is smooth and silky and not very smokey, but in the old bottles it’s strong, bitter, and very smokey.

My third beer ever! And I couldn’t process the flavors at all. This was not just completely different from any other beer, it was completely different than any other liquid. I had no reference. I declared then that I wouldn’t have another. But we were shooting darts, and I had earlier made an oath never to drink Budweiser, so I went back to the Guinness after finishing my Heineken. (Ah, the old days, when Heineken was the reliable standby.)

The Guinness bottles were never my favorite, and a few years later they introduced the widgetized can, and the old bottles dropped off my radar. At the same time, my tastes in beers were changing—I’d like to say maturing, but who’s to say when old favorites are looked back upon with derision. Just a couple of years ago, Samuel Adams came out with their version of the black lager, and I enjoyed it. But what Samuel Adams does well is mellow the sharpness, which Howl has in spades. And the first sip of Howl knocked me back to that young fellow aiming for the double bull and tasting something he had no context to enjoy.

Now, I taste chocolate, bittersweet, and coffee with chicory. The smokiness lingers on the back of my tongue. Each swig is a bite off a beer that is richer than it should be. Unlike stouts, black lagers pour like water, but the flavor of Howl is all consuming. Drink it with a strong cheese or gamey piece of meat, and it’ll wrestle in the mouth for dominance. Drink it by itself and feel the punch of the smoke, not like bacon but like a hickory fire, and it’ll linger beyond the bottle. Howl is demanding as much as it is enjoyable. With dozens of holiday beers out there and about a dozen different flavors in my cooler, I continued to reach for the Howl again and again, each time thinking about the past and marveling at the complexity of flavors that I missed so long ago.

But, alas, the internet. My exhaustive research into my review subjects will take me first to the makers’ sites, Magic Hat being no exception. But Magic Hat is unusual. They have a space where one is free to comment on their beers. And thus, my sorrow. Howl is a complex beer. It is not the second beer someone should try if Magic Hat 9 is the first beer. It is not the second beer one has if all one consumes is Budweiser or Pabst or Miller Lite. But two out of the three comments for Howl are obviously from such beer drinkers. Here is the first, entitled “What the?” from Anonymous:

This new Black Lager isn’t even worth trying. After one beer, I had thoughts of pouring my remaining eleven down the drain and heading back to the beer store. The initial taste is ok, but the aftertaste is unpleasantly bitter and sticks to the back of your mouth for some time. Kind of causes you to “make that face” and shake your head. I would liken the taste and smell to burnt engine oil.

Maybe you guys should try to focus on making beers that people like and would buy again instead of trying to create brews that have weird colors and flavors added that are backed up by some pretty cool marketing. Every box I’ve bought has been a disappointment.E (sic)

This was not my experience with Howl at all. However, I have a suspicion that a beginning beer drinker might liken it to “burnt engine oil,” if only because the drinker does not have the same vocabulary. I’d also question why Anonymous above buys twelve-packs of beer from a brewer he has never had success with. Surely your favorite vendor has six-packs, Anon? Mix-and-match, maybe?

But first Anonymous is quite loquacious, where our second Anonymous is more blunt, with his missive, “This Beer Sucks.”

THIS BEER SUCKS. Literally you think it’s going to be good, but it isn’t. Too much syrupy goodness and way too much spice. It’s too many things into one. Too heavy. Too Spicy. Too much. If you want a crispy warm beer, try something else. Otherwise, keep working on it, Magic Hat. I have faith in you. Otherwise, I will be throwing out all of this winter shit soon.

Syrup? Spicy? Not in Howl. Howl has a touch of spice from the hops. There is no apparent added flavoring. I really have no idea what the above drinker was drinking.

But this is the crisis of the Internet. The only folks leaving comments are those that have strong opinions, and 66% (by this scientific sampling) of these folks are assholes. Again, I understand expressing disappointment when $20 worth of beer isn’t up to our finest expectations. I’ve had recommendations from trusted drinkers turn out to be some of the most difficult to finish. I’ll admit that it isn’t for me and move on. There are thousands of brewers, and each brewer often has a dozen varieties.

All this is obvious to you, of course: Readers of Drunk and Unemployed know the deal and leave the best comments on this site and others. We’re lucky to have you.

Howl is a delicious beer. It’s unusual, and some may not like the flavor that it presents, but for beer drinkers who are familiar with black lagers, it’s one of the finest, easily obtainable, examples of the style.

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Congratulations Cortland!

Congratulations to The Cortland on its one year anniversary, and thanks to Bobby for the invite!

20111119-174555.jpg

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Laird’s Applejack

As the snow fell outside my door (in October!), I yearned for something liquid to keep me warm. I headed out to my local liquor store to pick up a small bottle of Kaluha, but, as I was about to check out, a small bottle of Laird’s Applejack caught my eye.

Laird and Company has an impressive history. According to their website, they first started production of Applejack in Monmouth County, New Jersey in 1698. Around 1760, Applejack caught the fancy of one George Washington, who requested their recipe. When other distilleries and breweries shut down during Prohibition, some never to return, Laird and Company was granted a federal license under the Prohibition Act to produce apple brandy for “medicinal purposes.”

Applejack, however, is not just an apple brandy. It’s 35% apple brandy and 65% grain neutral spirits. As I poured it into a small glass for inspection, I could have mistaken it for a highly-filtered glass of apple juice. There was a hint of apple on the nose, but it was quickly overwhelmed by the vapors of alcohol, and the flavor is much the same. This wasn’t a sipping beverage—this liquor was made for mixing.

I went to the company website, and found a good list of recipes. A popular cocktail made with Applejack is the Jack Rose cocktail, but, missing grenadine, I decided to make the Applejack sour.

A lowball glass of Applejack sour next to a bottle of Laird’s Applejack

My first Applejack sour

Applejack Sour

  • 1 oz. lemon juice
  • 1 tsp. sugar
  • 2 oz. Laird’s AppleJack

Shake well with ice and strain into a sour glass. Add cherry and orange slice for garnish.

I really liked this drink—a nice blend of apples and sour lemon on my tongue without being overly hot on the finish. I cannot overemphasize the importance of that teaspoon of sugar, though. I made one with and without, and it really made a difference. Don’t be afraid of sugar in a cocktail; it’s like that pinch of salt in a dessert recipe.

I decided to go off the radar on the next drink. I had some cranberry/grape-juice cocktail in my fridge, and said “What the hell?” I mixed it half and half with the Applejack.

A glass of Cranjack next to a bottle of Laird’s Applejack

A perfect fall drink with Applejack

Melba’s Cranjack

  • 2oz of Applejack
  • 2oz of cranberry/grape-juice cocktail

Combine in glass over ice and stir.

I was pleasantly surprised by the combination. It was tart, fresh, not overly sweet, and had a wonderfully warm finish. The combination of the apples, cranberry, and grape made this the perfect fall drink. I’d like to try it with fresh ingredients and warmed over a stove in the future.

At $10.99 for 350ml at my local—and expensive—liquor store, I recommend Laird’s Applejack for anyone who comes across it. It won’t break the bank to try, which is always in style for any season.

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This follows my wine philosoph…

This follows my wine philosophy: http://t.co/yuqzlQH7 via @slate

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