Archive for the ‘IPA’ Category

Beer Review- Highland Kashmir IPA. AKA, A Love Letter to NC.

I’ve had this six pack in my fridge for the past month.  It hurts to look at it.  The story of how I came by it is one fraught with heartache and disappointment that is still lingering.  This blog isn’t the place for me to launch into a sob story, but suffice to say that it was some of the highest highs, followed by some of the lowest lows that I’ve experienced in a long, long time.

For those that don’t know me very well, I’ll give you a little history.  I moved to North Carolina in 2004 to roar out my twenties and see what kind of adventures I could get myself into.  I had lived in MA all my life up to that point, and it was high-time to get out and experience a different area and culture.  Due to a good friend already being down there, the decision was easy.  So here I am in downtown Raleigh, running my own business and learning how to be a man.  Said business just happened to be a block away from a great beer bar called The Flying Saucer.  I had never experienced anything like it before.  They had 81 drafts and a whole bunch more in a bottle (over 200). My craft beer knowledge was pretty limited at that point, relegated mostly to Sierra Pale and Allagash White.  I liked beer, I just hadn’t had an opportunity to try a lot of it.  The Saucer changed that.  I was there so much I became like a piece of furniture.  When my business venture started to shit the bed, I pestered one of the managers for a bartending gig (Hi Erik).  He finally relented, and I worked there for the back half of my four year stint in NC.  This was where I gained a lot of my beer knowledge and became friends with many wonderful people, one of those being the young lady who brought me this beer.  I’ll be honest, I really miss NC.  They have an excellent craft beer scene and quality people that are involved in it. It’s really accessible, and I count those years as some of my best, especially from a life-education standpoint.

Highland Kashmir was one of the first new beers that I tried when I first started going to the Saucer in 2004.  Highland is a great brewery in Ashville NC, about four hours from Raleigh.  They’ve got a pretty good bead on quality beer-making, having been in the business since 1994.  My friend Mark had talked the Kashmir up so much that I finally relented to try it-I was not an IPA drinker then-and was summarily blown away by its complexity and deliciousness.  “Holy shit, this is what I’ve been missing?” “Yup”, Mark said.  Apparently this is the beer that turns me into a hophead.

I know it's not a Highland glass, but it's the best I had to rep NC

Kashmir is 5.6% and 60 IBUS.  It pours a very light wheaty hue, but slightly hazy as well.  The barest of heads is complemented by a super aromatic malty sweetness, not a lot of bitterness in the nose at all.  The first sip gives you a good hop wallop on the ol’ tastebuds, which is unsurprising as it has five varietals in it.  Medium bodied, with a wonderful mouthfeel and a clean finish that is difficult to find with a lot of IPAs, west coast stuff in particular. Kashmir gives you good feelings in the lower depths.  It’s refreshing and quaffable (I freaking love that word), and there is some awesome lacing going down the glass as I drink its bittersweet goodness. Warming up, more of the malty nose takes over and it becomes a little more balanced, further cementing its place in the heart as one of my favorite beers.

To be blunt, I had a lot of trouble writing this review.  Playing the four years over in my head-plus recent developments-had me stopping, starting over, revising, freaking out and generally just being a wreck for a few days.  Simply put, I owe my love of craft beer and the community that surrounds it to that state, and I’m thankful that I was able to have that knowledge with me as I moved back to MA.  It’s very easy to take things for granted.  I mean let’s face it:  Life is difficult, sometimes overwhelmingly so.  But most of the time, all you need is a good friend to raise a glass with and the universe rights itself again for awhile.  So I’ll take this time to say cheers and thank you North Carolina, my life wouldn’t be what it is today without you having been in it.

10.0.  Nuff said.

Check out Highland Brewing here:  http://www.highlandbrewing.com/beerstyles.htm

Note to the reader:  If you made it this far, thank you as well.

VIDEO ROUNDTABLE #7 – RAHR AND SONS BREWING ASS KISSER IPA

This week we try out Rahr & Sons Brewing Ass Kisser Double IPA. A buddy of ours gave this to us to try and we couldn’t resist. Is everything bigger and better in Texas? Watch and find out.

Thanks,
Joe, Mike and Paul

Beer Review – Hoppin’ Frog Hoppin To Heaven IPA

Hoppin’ Frog.  That is the name of the brewery I’m sampling today.  Weird, huh?   Why not name it ‘Limpin’ chicken’, or ‘Runnin’ donkey’?   Maybe they were high?  Or, maybe it’s because they are from Ohio.  That’s it, they’re from Ohio!  Those wacky midwesteners are always coming up with kooky stuff.  Hoppin’ Frog is the brainchild of brewmaster Fred Karm.  He apparently has ‘designed and prouced more award-winning beers than any other professional brewer in Ohio since 2000’, according to their site.  He’s also a lifelong resident of Akron OH, which is second only to Beirut in ‘Bombed out and depleted-ness’.  Dubious at best.  I heard that you get tetanus from going within 5 miles of that place.   Anyway, they have a college and he graduated from it.  So that’s something.

Today I have a 22oz. of Hoppin’ Frogs IPA, Hoppin’ To Heaven.  What the shit does that even mean!?  I just don’t get the name scheme.   Maybe after a long night of huffing paint and gettin’ loose on the mean streets of Akron, Fred finally hit his point of toxicity, tore off his clothes and started screamin’,  ‘HOPPIN’ FROG!!!!!!!! ARGGGGGGGHHHHH!!!!!!!111’.   And then a midwestern legend was born.   I dunno, maybe it was the chemicals in the water.  Seriously, everything I’ve heard about Akron makes dinner and tummysticks with R.Kelly sound like a free trip to Disneyworld.  On the bottle the damn frog walks on two legs like a biped, and is able to hold a mug of beer.  Frogs don’t have opposable thumbs! Stupid frog, there is no way you could hold a mug of frothy beer!  It’s got one hell of a smile on its face though, so maybe it knows something that I don’t.

H2H is 6.8% ABV and 68 IBUs.  The gigantic loose head starts to form as soon as the beer leaves the bottle and almost jumps out of the glass.  The color is a cloudy russet with a hazy golden hue around the edges.  It smells orangey/lemony as all get out, but is countered with some nice subtly placed maltiness too.  Faint, like the towel brushing against your junk as you are drying off.   Almost gets you hot and bothered, but you gotta go to work, so…  Man, that head just hangs around.  It’s kind of like the one night stand that ended up being as cool as your drunk ass remembered last night.  She just lays on your couch watching TV in your T-Shirt lookin’ all cute while you make breakfast; you are all feelin’ like a million bucks because you just had sex, and you are now about to have bacon too.  Pleasant.   This beer is a citrusy blend of malty scrumptiousness.  The first sip tickles your tongue like butterflies and foreplay, and then settles into a sensual balance of hops, ethereal citrus fruit and the faintest caress of clean malt sweetness.   It’s not super hoppy and just sticks it to me with righteous flavor.  Excellence.  No doubt, this brew is unique in its ability to ride that fine line that denotes the apex of the style.  Medium bodied, quenching, no aftertaste.  Hits all the right buttons, and even touches me in my no-no place a little bit.  I’m so glad I have a 22 of H2H, b/c I want more than one glass.   If someone said “What is a great example of a textbook IPA?”, I would hold up a bottle of H2H and start jumping around in my best imitation of the beers namesake.  Awesomeness scale?  Hopefully I’ll be greeted at the pearly gates with a glass of this tasty beverage.

9.5.  Stonkin’ good show HF, I’m pleased as punch to have an IPA blow me away like this one has.    If it’s on the shelf at your beer store, buy it.

Check em’ out here:  http://www.hoppinfrog.com/