MdV: Merchant du
Vin beer e-newsletter – Wednesday October 8, 2008: Non-Extreme Beer
MdV & fine beer in the news
Merchant du Vin's benchmark imports continue to gain more attention in
the media:
-Samuel Smith's Nut
Brown Ale was mentioned as one of the late actor Paul Newman's favorite beers
in the Sept. 15, '08 issue of the National Enquirer - take a look right here.
-Delta Sky magazine had a
nice review of Samuel Smith's Organic Cider in the Sept. '08 issue; noted
drinks writer F. Paul Pacult called it lovely & crisp, with a "clean,
yeasty flavor, apple-pastry aroma, saber-edged aftertaste . . . ".
-BeerAdvocate Magazine
gave
an "A" review to Ayinger Oktober Fest-Marzen in Vol. II
Issue 8 (Sept. '08).
-Samuel Smith's Organic Cider was "Beer of the
Week," in September at the
Beverage Testing Institute.
-The Seattle P-I featured
Ayinger Oktober Fest-Marzen with a nice photo in a Sept. 16, '08, roundup of
fall seasonal beers.
A full current news listing is always on our news
page; you can also check local beer tastings, dinners and festivals
on our national
events page and read previous html versions of this newsletter
at our e-news
archive. If you are interested in beer glassware, clothing and
collectables we also have an online
e-store.
Non-extreme beers
When you are talking about beer - whether you are a
friend talking to another friend, a beer writer posting an article, or a
brewery sales rep - you sometimes have to transfer information across the
boundary between subjectivity and objectivity: you are using words to express a
sensory experience.
How can anybody really know how something tastes to somebody else? (For that
matter, how do we even know that the color blue looks the same to one
as it does to another?) Furthermore, who made the rules about describing
taste? Are there rules?
Some food flavors can be used to describe other flavors: noting the flavor
"tomato" means something, for example, whether the tomato associated
is an heirloom variety out of your garden, sun-warmed & eaten off the vine,
or whether it's a canned tomato. Lemons, mint, pepper, oranges, berries -
there are many simple foods that have become flavor descriptors. And
while we may not be sure that a tomato tastes the same to all, we can at least
have a pretty strong clue: a group often agrees that something tastes
"tomato-y." Or lemony. Or minty.
Then there are prepared foods that have some approach to universal
understanding among people, or at least Westerners: sugar, caramel, toffee;
there are non-foods that have associations: hay, grass, leather, earth; there
are creative comparisons: Pad Thai, mole, Yorkshire pudding. (Hmmm . . .
why don't we ever use beers to describe other foods? "
Recently I had Yorkshire pudding that tasted like Nut Brown Ale. I
also had Chicken Mole at a nice Mexican restaurant that had distinct Rochefort 8 overtones . . . ")
But using words to describe a subjective sensual
experience can arouse another challenge. We've noticed that extreme
flavors - very strong, reeeeeeally bitter, extremely
sour, or roasty enough to peel the enamel off your
teeth - often draw the most raves and inflated hyperbole from beer
aficionados. In reviews they often rate extreme beers the highest,
similar to the way that some folks might want the Hottest Possible Hot Sauce so
they can then put Massive Amounts of it on their food. (Is this group
mostly young men, proving their
toughness?) In fact, two food categories that appear to reward "over
the top, shocking, extreme" flavors a lot are spiciness/hot sauce, and
non-mainstream extreme beers.
We like extreme beers sometimes - after all, we import Lindemans Cuvee Rene, Rochefort 10, and Samuel Smith's Imperial Stout - and
nothing is more perfect at the end of an evening. But we sometimes
wonder: what happened to subtlety? The vine-ripened heirloom tomato,
sun-warm, is certainly not an extreme over-the-top flavor. What
distinguishes it from an average tomato is really somewhat subtle. The
perfect potato - baked, fried, or whatever - is not extreme; the finest dessert
is not the most strong-flavored; the greatest salad is not the one with the
most vinegar in the dressing.
Maybe we see this trend because objective measures are easier to write
about. For example, "I like bitter beers. This one is more bitter than the last one. Therefore I like this
one better than the last one." Perhaps a high ration of beer
reviewers are young & in their "more equals better" years.
And possibly some beer reviewers are boasting - in what they consider is a
subtle way - by pointing out their more developed palettes: "Oh, it took
me a while to grow into these full-flavored beers. You'll get there some day."
But let's celebrate the wide range of styles and flavors in beer. Let's
not take the easy way by going for the most, all the time. Let's raise a
toast to subtlety in flavor:
Elegance and subtlety are damned hard to build into a beer. If there
is a tiny flaw to the flavor, it'll show up - think of a pure food like a
cantaloupe slice, or a simple prepared food like fresh-baked French bread or a
perfectly fried egg. Seek a beer that offers you some hints, some nuances
- a beer that paints flavors with a fine soft brush, not with a
sledgehammer. Try a Samuel Smith's Nut Brown Ale and enjoy the hints of
nuttiness. Drink an Ayinger Altbairisch
Dunkel and find subtle malt complexity. Reach
for a Westmalle Dubbel, a Zatec
Bright Lager, or our newest release, Pinkus Organic
Jubilate. Refresh yourself with a non-beer - Samuel Smith's Organic
Cider.
What's that? You are getting a nuance of flavor in your non-extreme
beer? Is it just a subtle hint, a suggestion, of a vine-ripened heirloom
tomato, sun-warm and just picked off the vine in your back yard?
Now that is worth talking about.
Samuel Smith’s Winter Welcome is here now
The nineteenth edition of Winter Welcome - the 2008 -
2009 bottling - has arrived and is appearing in great stores, bars and
restaurants across America now. The original imported winter ale, this
hearty brew greets the change of the seasons each fall. We have a news
release on our website as a 379 KB .pdf, right here.
The illustration on the label changes each year;
the current 08 - 09 art is entitled "Fishing Buddies."
Ayinger Oktober Fest-Marzen
This year's release is at great beer spots now,
and is wowing beer drinkers and beating sales expectations across the
country.
Sold in half-liter (16.9 oz.) bottles as well as on
draft, Oktober Fest Marzen
is a deep, rich amber lager. Marzen - in
German, meaning the month of March - is a beer style that was first brewed
in March, stored in cool caves for the summer, then
served in the fall. Ayinger follows this
tradition today, using temperature-controlled vessels instead of caves.
This extended secondary fermentation & conditioning period leads to a clean
finish that allows the pure beauty of malt and hops to shine in the flavor.
Ayinger Brewery, located in the Bavarian village of Aying,
was founded in 1878 and is still family-owned. They produce a full range
of Bavarian specialty beers, including Celebrator Doppelbock,
Brau-Weisse, Ur-Weisse, Jahundertbier, and Altbairisch Dunkel.
An Oktober Fest-Marzen press release can be found as a 364 KB .pdf right here.
Zatec bright Lager – from the Czech Republic
With the news of brewery consolidations in the Czech
Republic, and with distributor changes here in the US, there's plenty of beer
news to talk about.
The Czech brewery that has not changed --
one that is providing a real taste of history to American beer lovers --
is the historical and independent Zatec Brewery,
producing a classic lager from the heart of the Czech Republic's
hop-growing region: Zatec Bright Lager. The current Zatec Brewery opened its doors in 1801, but there are
records of brewing taxes paid in the town of Zatec in
1004 and the Society of Priveleged Brewers was formed
there in 1261. Zatec Bright Lager is a deep
gold color with a solid, hearty malt middle and
an elegant hop aroma from Saaz hops - all of which
are grown in the fields around the town. ("Saaz"
is in fact the German translation of the Czech word "Zatec.")
You can read more about Zatec
on our
website.
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Merchant du Vin, America’s Premier Specialty
Beer Importer Since 1978
http://www.merchantduvin.com