Tuesday, October 23, 2007

Ale and baseball


Rob Hardy, who recently returned from an extended stay in England, says he likes real ale. I've never been to England, but have come to enjoy ale and have been exploring some domestic brands. The eight ales listed below have all been sampled (read: consumed in sufficient quantities as to provide a more than adequate basis of comparison for someone who is not a connoisseur) in the past twelve weeks or so.

Sierra Nevada, Chico, CA (especially with Chico's favorite son Matt Garza on the mound)
Full Sail, Hood River, OR (first encountered in a waterfront bar not far from Giants stadium)
Summit Pale Ale, St. Paul, MN (all over)
Summit India Pale Ale, St. Paul, MN (ditto, especially at the Contented Cow pub)
Avalanche Amber-style Ale, Breckenridge Brewing, Denver, CO (during the Rockies' remarkable late-season winning streak, of course)
Schell's Pale Ale, New Ulm, MN (why is this hard to find when we live within spittin' distance?)
James Page Burly Brown Ale, Stevens Point, WI (a feature at The James Gang Hideaway)
Goose Island Hex Nut Brown Ale, Chicago (the father of a friend of my daughter is the CFO of Goose Island brewing, so we bought some just because we thought we should)

According to the kind folks at Cryptobrewology, an ale is a lager beer, except --

The main difference between yeasts used for lagers and ales is that ale yeast is a top-fermenting yeast, which means the yeast floats to the top and hangs around up there during most of the fermentation process. Lager yeast is a bottom-fermenting yeast, which means it hangs around the bottom of the fermenter. During both types of fermentation the active yeast does permeate the brew and eventually settles out on the bottom of the fermenter when it is done.

The other main difference in producing a lager or ale is in the temperature during fermentation. Most ales are fermented at a controlled temperature around 70 degrees Fahrenheit, although Sierra Nevada's Celebration Ale is said to be fermented at 65 degrees. Lagers, on the other hand, are fermented about 15 degrees lower, around 55 degrees.
I'll take their word for it. Baseball and beer are, of course, intimately intertwined: Miller Park, Coors Field, Busch Stadium. I remember going to a game at old Comiskey Park in about 1958 and being fascinated by the beer vendors hawking Hamm's. My uncle George worked for a time at the old Drewery's brewery (no kidding) in South Bend and would bring home a case a week, which he and my dad and my other uncles would consume in the back yard on a Sunday afternoon with a White Sox or Tigers game on the radio.

Right now, my vote goes to Sierra Nevada, with Schell's a very close second. Full Sail seems a little weak to me. Summit Pale Ale is very crisp -- good with pizza (B & L, anyone?) The Burly Brown and the Hex Nut Brown are, for me, just novelty brews. Good, though.

What say thee?


4 comments:

  1. One of my favorite ales is Boulevard Pale Ale by Boulevard Brewing out of Kansas City.

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  2. I agree that the Sierra Nevada is the most pleasant of that bunch. The closest you can get in Northfield to the real taste of English ale, though, is a pint of Fuller's London Pride or Old Speckled Hen at the Contented Cow. Real ale, in England, is "cask conditioned." It's unpasteurized, contains live yeast, and continues to ferment in the cask. There's nothing quite like it in America. My default ale in England was Wells Bombardier. There are also excellent regional ales, like the Jennings brewery ales in Cumbria and the Hop Back brewery ales in Wiltshire. The largest selection of ales on tap I've ever seen was at the Turf in Oxford (where Bill Clinton went for a pint during his Rhodes Scholar days). The only thing missing was baseball.

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  3. I've tried Fuller's at The Cow. I guess I'll have to try it again with my new-found knowledge of cask conditioning (tasty phrase, that).

    Kansas City has a new manager, so perhaps 2008 will be their year. I will try Boulevard, probably during the opening week of the baseball season, in an attempt to give the Royals a little boost. They need it.

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  4. Isn't it curious that a post about ale gets comments and a poem doesn't?

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I treid comment moderation but it was clumsy. I still reserve the right to delete offensive comments, so be nice.