Just In Time For Summer: A Clean Look At The Shower Beer

•June 23, 2014 • Leave a Comment

Two Hearted In The ShowerIt’s funny how one of life’s most practical routines – taking a shower – can become immensely more enjoyable under the right conditions.  Getting ready for work?  Unremarkable.  Just finished mowing the lawn in sweltering, eighty degree heat?  Nearly celebratory.  Preparing for bed?  Just a step in the process.   Coming back inside from a long day spent on the beach?  A perfect way to end a glorious summer day in the sun.  A shower with your better half?  Well, that’s a different blog topic altogether, for a different kind of blog I would think.

However, there is one particular “condition”, or in this case, specific activity, that can be added to most any shower (and which I can write about here) that can instantly take bathing from the banal to the blissful – the shower beer.  To this day, I can still remember my first experience.  It was a sweet addition to one of those very times listed above – a long, relaxing day on the beach – and though I can’t tell you exactly what beer I had, I do remember how purely satisfying it was.  Yes, I’m sure part of it was the fact that I was on summer vacation.  And true, there is nothing quite like washing off the remnants from the salt air after a wonderfully relaxing day on the sand.  So yes, it was a combination of all of the above.  But I’ll also I assure you, that to this day, that beer was one of the best I’ve ever had.  (Whatever it was.)

While I don’t recall from where, or from whom, I first heard of the “shower beer”, I do remember thinking some time later – incorrectly, I’ll add – that the idea seemed like one that might be restricted to a select few.  As if the shower beer was some urban myth quietly come to life, a closely guarded secret passed along only by rumor, and I was somehow one of the lucky ones who had somehow heard of it.  Little did I know just how many people do enjoy a shower beer from time to time until I ran across one particular Facebook post from Dogfish Head.  It merely said something along the lines of “who enjoys a good shower beer?”.  Figuring the thread would go on for maybe a couple dozen responses, it instead lasted a couple days.  It seems I was not alone in my suds upon suds enjoyment.

Several shower beers later, I now consider myself a bit of an expert on the topic.  Not that this is an area which requires much expertise.  There are, or course, a couple pieces of common sense which are obvious right away – it is a shower, there is soap, it can be slippery anyhow, and those enjoying shower beers are most likely naked…so no glass should be present…and things such as that.  (Yep, aren’t cans amazing?)  But consider that shower beers can actually be educational as well.  For example, I tend to pick beers for the shower that I usually allow to warm a bit anyway – pales, IPAs, for example – and the shower is a great way to expedite the process of warming up a beer.  After all, the beer is in there with you, so it will warm, unless taking ice cold showers are your thing.

For any shower beer newbies out there, I guess I might say that partaking in one is a bit like that age old idea of having a glass of wine while taking a bath, but for real people.  I mean, who does that?  Plus, it requires a lot less preparation than the imagined wine and bath experience, yet with all the relaxing, non-imaginary benefits that one might expect.  Simply put, there’s something that’s fun and wonderfully off key about the occasional beer in the shower.  In the end, it’s just a beer that when combined with those showers you look forward to the most – post lawn mowing, perhaps after a bad day at work – often becomes, regardless of style or the name on the label, one of the best beers you’ve ever tasted.

Cheers!

Weekend Tap Update: One of Virginia’s Finest Ales, Perennial Brewing’s Regalia Kick Off The Weekend

•June 20, 2014 • Leave a Comment

Williamsburg Alewerks Bitter ValentineMost Virginia craft beer fans would not likely argue that Williamsburg AleWerks’ Bitter Valentine is one of the among best Virginia produced beers in the state, and certainly one of our finest Imperial IPAs, if not beyond.  Tonight, Blue 5 is adding the well rated beer to their draft line up along with a couple from Allagash, their Victor and Victoria ales.

Bitter Valentine is a gorgeous beer first off, sporting a vibrant orange-red/amber color that seems to glow from a light within the beer.  After pouring, piney and grapefruity aromas can often be picked up from arms length and the taste is deliciously more of the same.   A thread of sweetness runs throughout, complimenting instead of overpowering the dialed up grapefruit and orange like flavors, which is too often the case with bigger Imperial IPAs.  I never cease to be impressed with this beer, and without a doubt is a standout for at least the region.  If you haven’t tasted Bitter Valentine yet, and pride you definitely owe it to yourself to try this well made beer out.

Local Roots has just added Perennial Brewing’s Regalia to their own draft line up.  The St. Louis brewery labels Regalia as inspired by farmhouse/saison type ales, and at 8.5% abv, you could consider this an “Imperial Saison” if you like.  But enough with labels.  The beer has a lot going on in it, including flavors of bright, orange-ish citrus, a swift hint of funk  (it is brewed with Brettanomyces) , and some bready, powdery yeasty flavors as well.  Bigger and a little sweeter than you might expect, again, it tastes a bit like an amped up saison, without the dry-ish nature, and provides an interesting tasting experience.  Local Roots also still has the latest Stone Enjoy By release on tap as well.

Allagash’s Victor and Victoria Ales both use a substantial amount of crushed grapes (Chardonnay for the Victoria, Cabernet Franc for the Victor, according to the brewery’s website) to produce a couple of highly rated ales that straddle the line between wine and beer.  Multi-dimensional in flavor and aroma, the Victor is even fermented with a wine yeast strain.  Both rate in the mid to high 90’s on RateBeer.com.

Roanoke’s downtown summer event First Friday’s continues to delve deeper into craft beer as it will feature, among others, three different DuClaw (Maryland) beers tonight.  Funk, a blueberry wheat beer, as well as their Bare Ass Blonde and Sweet Baby Jesus Chocolate Peanut Butter Porter will apparently all be on hand.

New Beers Coming From Chaos Mountain

•June 16, 2014 • Leave a Comment

Chaos Mountain BrewingOne of Roanoke’s newest breweries, Chaos Mountain, continues to keep things interesting with new beer releases.  Building upon their “core” group of beers of Squatch Scotch Ale, Mad Hopper IPA, and Cocoborealis Stout, the brewery recently produced a Biere de Garde style ale which was available in their tasting room and at a couple of restaurants around Roanoke, and also began releasing their Quad, 4 Mad Chefs.  Wedged somewhere in between these was a lager, released around the beginning of May.  So what’s next?  A Czech Pilsner and quite possibly a Hefeweizen are on deck, both of which should be available in the coming weeks.  The Pilsner stands to be the more certain release of the two, and primarily uses the well known hop variety Willamette, known for its soft bittering qualities well rounded flavor and aroma capabilities.

Weekend Tap Update: Stone Brewing, A New Beer From Three Brothers, and An Upcoming Festival at the Lake

•June 13, 2014 • Leave a Comment

A Stone Brewing tap takeover event kicks off the weekend at Cork & Crust in downtown Roanoke, with four confirmed beers and “maybe” some special tasting opportunities also, according to the restaurant’s Facebook page.  Stone’s Saison, Arrogant Bastard strong ale, and IPA are listed as beers to be available. A “very special limited release IPA” will also make an appearance, which I can only assume would be the newest Enjoy By release, with the possibility of Collective Distortion (a recent collaborative IPA release with elderberries and coriander added) as a second possibility.

3 Brothers BrewingWhile you’re out and about downtown, think about stopping by Jack Brown’s to taste a newer release from Harrisonburg’s Three Brothers Brewing, their Virginia Dark Black IPA.  Personally, “Black IPAs” (or ‘hoppy browns’, or most hop forward beers using darker than usual malts) are often a muddled mix between the hop and malt profiles with no clear harmony between the two.  That’s not to say that there aren’t a few surprises out there, and a quick check of comments and reviews on line show most folks rate Virginia Dark quite highly, so it looks like we have one of those rare standouts right here in our backyard.  This would be a definite beer to seek out for the weekend.

There are also a few Roanoke area upcoming events beyond the weekend as well to note, not the least of which is (Smith Mountain Lake) Lakefest 2014, a “craft beer, food truck and music festival”, coming up on June 28th, at Bernards Landing Resort and Conference Center.  A listing of breweries scheduled to be represented is on the event’s website, as well as ticket information.

Upcoming tap takeover events at Jack Brown’s will feature Michigan’s New Holland on the 18th and Virginia’s Port City on the 25th.

Cheers to the weekend!