Dragoon Base

Connecting the Troopers of Today with the Veterans of Yesterday.

Information

The Two Beer Limit

All things beer. Dedicated to the two beer limit (Border Camp, Grafenwoehr, BNCOC at Hohensfel, etc) Share your favorite beer stories or beer news or beer anything. Beer, beer, beer, beer, beer....

Members: 15
Latest Activity: Nov 20

Discussion Forum

Jason Hastings

Dragoon Base beer group needs a theme song 5 Replies

Started by Jason Hastings. Last reply by Michael N Sawick Aug 2.

Comment Wall

Add a Comment

You need to be a member of The Two Beer Limit to add comments!

Dave Gettman Comment by Dave Gettman on November 20, 2009 at 12:04pm
They only tried twenty biers, and picked the top eight from that??!!!

That's like shooting twenty terrorists and saying you have wiped out the heads of Al-Qaeda!!

Thanks for the article Jason, but I wouldn't drink a French beer if I was dying in the desert.

My #2 son drinks that Frambozen a lot. If nothing else, it comes in BIG bottles. Took some getting used to, but wasn't bad after awhile.
Jason Hastings Comment by Jason Hastings on November 20, 2009 at 8:06am
An Amber or an Ale should go well with Thanksgiving-Jason

Serious Beer Pairings for Thanksgiving
Posted by Maggie Hoffman, November 19, 2009 at 1:45 PM
"Malty beer resonates with the caramelized skin of a turkey and brings out the herbal flavors in stuffing."
If you want to eat like the Pilgrims this Thanksgiving, you should probably get busy hunting for deer and wild ducks. But if you want to drink Pilgrim-style, you just need to get yourself some beer!
The colonists believed that beer was usually safer to drink than water and worried about drinking their barrels dry. After dithering too long over where to locate their settlement, the passengers of the Mayflower finally chose Plymouth just before a harsh winter began. William Bradford wrote, "We could not now take much time for further search [for an ideal destination,] our victuals being much spent, especially our beer." They urged the next boat of Separatists headed toward Plymouth to bring about 10,000 gallons of ale and some malt for homebrewing.
Historical accuracy aside, beer works with Thanksgiving food. Malty beer resonates with the caramelized skin of a turkey and brings out the herbal flavors in stuffing. Beer's carbonation and bitterness cleanses and refreshes the palate between bites.
But not just any beer will play nice with classic Thanksgiving dishes. Hoppy IPAs (and other beers on the bitter end of the scale) are out of sync with the sweet and earthy flavors of the Thanksgiving feast. But a wide variety of styles pair beautifully with turkey, stuffing, and even sweet potatoes. We tasted 20 bottles of beer (over the course of three nights) with many plates of Thanksgiving food and came up with these eight stellar pairings to be thankful for.

Recommended Thanksgiving Beers
• Bière de Garde (Southhampton Brewery)
• French Style Country Ale (Two Brothers)
• Ashland Amber (Caldera Brewing)
• Singel Ale (Witkap Pater)
• Kerberos Tripel (Flying Dog)
• 2° Below (New Belgium)
• Frambozen (New Belgium)
• Levitation Ale (Stone Brewing)
Following Brooklyn Brewery brewmaster Garrett Oliver's recommendation, we started our Thanksgiving experiments with a few examples of Bière de Garde. This earthy French-style farmhouse ale is a beautiful gold color and sometimes comes in festive Champagne-style bottles. We particularly loved Southampton Brewery's version, which had a nutty caramel flavor that matched up well with sweet potatoes. This beer is smooth but a little funky, with hints of sweet fermented apple. It's a little musky and toasty—very nice with food. We also really enjoyed the Domaine DuPage French Style Country Ale from Two Brothers Brewing in Illinois, which was a little fruity but dry, with restrained bitterness and hints of apricot. The caramel flavors in both of these beers were lovely with the crisp skin from the turkey.
A slightly less musky option for Thanksgiving pairing is a good American amber. We liked how Caldera Brewing Company's Ashland Amber complemented the earthy flavors in the meal, particularly the mushrooms in the stuffing.
Two other very successful pairings were Belgian (and Belgian-inspired). The Singel Ale from Witkap Pater was bright and yeasty with a pronounced pineapple-juice flavor. This hazy golden beer had notes of thyme and sage (as well as hints of banana) that worked well with both cranberry sauce and turkey (a difficult feat.) You could serve this refreshing, festive beer in champagne flutes, and even non-beer drinkers would probably enjoy it. The Kerberos Tripel from Flying Dog was another hit, complementing the stuffing with its rich buttery flavor and hint of sweetness.
Two surprise hits were provided by New Belgium Brewing in Colorado. Their winter warmer, 2° Below, was festive and interesting. Walnut and maple syrup notes added another dimension to the stuffing. This beer isn't a pushover, but it complemented the meal seamlessly. New Belgium's Frambozen was rosy red and smelled like raspberry jam, but it was more subtle than we expected, and not too sweet at all. The fruity flavor was fun to taste with the turkey and the stuffing—it was almost a stand-in for cranberry sauce without reminding us of melted Jolly Ranchers.
While we're not sure we'd recommend it to non-beerdrinkers, we think the Levitation Ale from Stone Brewing also deserves a place at the Thanksgiving table. This intense brew has herbal, piney flavors and lingering toasted malt. A hint of cinnamon and peat make this earthy beer a good companion for turkey and stuffing
Jason Hastings Comment by Jason Hastings on November 16, 2009 at 7:50am
Most Expensive Bottle of Beer Fetches Over $16,000 At Auction by Deb West (RSS feed)

A bottle of beer rescued from the crash of the Hindenburg recently sold at auction for over $16,000 according to This is Wiltshire in the UK. This is significantly above the estimate placed on the bottle of $4,000 - $8,000. The airship crashed on May 6, 1937 over Lakehurst, New Jersey where the bottle and other memorabilia was found by fire Chief Leroy Smith at the scene of the disaster.

Apparently the fire chief found a total of six scorched bottles and a pitcher at the scene. He buried his treasures and then came back afterward to dig them up and hand them out as souvenirs to his colleagues. No one knows where the other bottles are located except for one, which chief Smith gave to the Lowenbrau brewery in 1977, where it remains today. He kept one bottle and the pitcher, which bears the logo of the Deutsche Zeppelin Reedrei airline that operated the Hindenburg. Both pieces are scorched and were sold with letters of provenance and an account of how the items were acquired.

Auctioneer Andrew Aldridge of the British auction house Henry Aldridge and Sons has been quoted as saying "It is the most valuable bottle of beer ever sold." Even though one can still see the contents of the Lowenbrau bottle, the remnants of the beer would be undrinkable. The auction house specializes in relics of disaster and has been the largest auctioneer of memorabilia from the Titanic.
Jason Hastings Comment by Jason Hastings on November 14, 2009 at 12:09am
Pledge now to help buy the Pabst Brewing Company

http://buyabeercompany.com/
Jason Hastings Comment by Jason Hastings on October 29, 2009 at 6:58am
Top Ten Best Beer Names

http://www.columbusalive.com/live/content/features/stories/2009/08/06/ca_u_list.html?sid=108
William COleman Comment by William COleman on October 16, 2009 at 12:13am
ONe of the most unique beers was Bamberger Schlenkerla Rauch Bier. Very heavy smokey taste and absolutly perfect for BBQ parties( Good Marinade)
William COleman Comment by William COleman on October 16, 2009 at 12:12am
Beer Beer Beer said the private...Merry men are we..... So goes the one my favorite marching cadences. My time in Germany left me with a very good appreciation of the more than 5000 different brews in Bavaria alone. I never did taste them all but my my my how I tried.
Dave Gettman Comment by Dave Gettman on October 12, 2009 at 8:41am
One of those rare times you'd like to see the little woman pack on a few extra pounds!

Jason Hastings Comment by Jason Hastings on October 12, 2009 at 8:36am
Natinal Wife-Carrying Championship held in Maine

http://www.sunjournal.com/node/294584/

Winner receives wife's weight in beer, 5x her weight in money. God Bless America
Jason Hastings Comment by Jason Hastings on October 10, 2009 at 10:08pm

 

Members (15)

Mike Kultgen Dave Gettman Michael N Sawick carl kreitzer James F. Burgos Jason Hastings Thomas   Blaszkiewicz Edward (Gene) Beck Tommy E. Nester Roger Troxell Eric Heller Harry Warner michael t ward Jim Ward William COleman
 
 

About

Robb Russell Robb Russell created this social network on Ning.

Create your own social network!

 

© 2009   Created by Robb Russell on Ning.   Create Your Own Social Network

Badges  |  Report an Issue  |  Privacy  |  Terms of Service

Sign in to chat!