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Have you guys heard the good news?

The Bake & Brew is moving to St. Louis!

Things have been happening lately. Lots of great and amazing things. One of these is that I was fortunate enough (after a lot of hard work and dedication) to find a fantastic new job that I am so stoked about, which is taking me to St. Louis for the next year. I cannot express how incredibly excited I am.

I want to get back to the beer for a little bit here on the blog, partly because I miss writing here a lot and partly because I am anticipating all the amazing beer I’m going to try in St. Louis over the next year. So if you, or anyone you know is in the city, get at me. (@thebakeandbrew on Twitter) I’m incredibly thrilled about meeting new people and drinking new beer.

Let’s get to it!

Terrapin Rye Pale Ale

Terrapin Rye Pale Ale
Terrapin Beer Company
Athens, Georgia
American Pale Ale
5.3% ABV

All in all…
Pleasant. Today is the FIRST HOCKEY GAME SINCE FOREVER that I’ve been able to watch (I’m looking at you Gary Bettman), and I wanted a laid-back, pleasant beer. I didn’t want anything heavy or dark, or too hoppy on the other hand. I was bracing myself for something that was far too hoppy, but I was pleasantly surprised. This pale ale has just enough hops to give it a slightly biting flavor, but not too many that it’s overpowering. Well done fellows. This is a good balanced pale ale. And it smells delightful.

Recommend to a friend?
Yes, I really would.

Lightweight safe?
At 5.3% ABV it’s lightweight safe.

Plus one?
Mos def. You bet I’ll be having a second one in the next period of this Blackhawks game.

Six pack?
Yes, this one would be great to have in your refrigerator as a six pack. I don’t think I would get tired of this having it several nights in a row.

If I was to look back on this Osiris six months from now, I would remember that it smells like humid and hazy North Carolina mountains at 6 AM. Not earthy, but evergreen sweet – an entire day in the sun and on the water ahead of us. Soft flowers out front. The damp wood of the porch swing.

Unless a beer is simply out of this world with powerful features, it’s challenging to remember all the unique tastes and facets I noticed about it without writing anything down. So I try to mentally note at least one unique feature or reaction I had such as…

Left Hand Milk Stout = smooth, amazing label. go-to beer.
Hopslam = so hopped up I saw stars
Thomas Creek Vanilla Cream Ale = pheeewww (that’s my interpretation of a balloon deflating)
Stone Ruination IPA = I want to take you home tonight
5 AM Saint = you sir, get waffles in the morning

Most of those are reactions, but I personally find it is a more effective way of recalling and conveying how I felt about a beer. Plus, if I’m out and my friend asks me what I thought about a certain beer, I’d rather say “hellsyes. I wanted to run out in the streets and tell everyone how amazing it was,” than “hellsyes. It had a light and airy note of pencil shavings.” Okay okay please call me out if I ever say anything like that, but I hope you see what I mean. Of course if I had to choose between two similar beers I’d hope that I would have enough sensory memory to compare the two in more depth than with one immediate reaction, but my beer brain capacity has some developing to do.

I’ll remember that the smell of this Osiris was like stepping into a greenhouse.

Back to the basics
Sun King Brewery – Indianapolis, Indiana
American Pale Ale
5.6% ABV
Bought at Friendly Package Liquors, Muncie

All in all
Clear, yellow-orange color (a pretty orange, not Philadelphia Flyers orange…sorry dudes, that is not a good color), with a soft white head that disappeared quickly, but left a thin layer until about ¼ of the beer was gone. The hops & tart grapefruit taste were satisfying and hit square on the center of my tongue…It felt very clear, but was equally dry, leaving me wanting something more quenching-perhaps a glass of water or that juicy grapefruit? Overall it was very sharp, and worked until the end when it left a bitter penny taste at the back of my mouth. Did anyone else try to use pennies as a way to make your temperature read higher when you wanted to stay home from school “sick?” Just me? It didn’t work at all. But using a heating blanket did. Shhhh…

Recommend to a friend?
I would tell them about the great aroma, but the aftertaste & dryness makes me hesitate in recommending it to someone who isn’t a fan of pale ales.

Safe for lightweights?
5.6% ABV – yay!

Plus one?
Sure thing.

And look out for my next cookie recipe on Sunday!

All in all...ooh la la mon cherie.

That’s all you need to know. Except that I wish I had many more of these to share with everyone.

If you must know, the New Glarus Moon Man is a delightfully bright pale ale that smells like Christmas trees. And it has sent me over the moon…get it? eh eh? Did I mention I am in love with horrific puns and plays on words? You’ll have to forgive me. (dear word-oriented friends, do you know what the plural of play on words is?)

P.S. This was part of a New Glarus sampler that my father gave me from a trip to Wisconsin. One of the best gifts ever. I squealed.

Recommend to a friend? Yes yes yes!

How much snow are you willing to scrape off your car for this?  (5) Dig through a Minnesota blizzard. I thought it was amazing tonight.

Safe for lightweights? 5% ABV. No excuses! You must try this if you get the chance.

Plus one? I’ll take another please!

Together the pale ale and gingerbread cookies are good, but they don’t necessarily heighten the flavors of the other. I was hoping that maybe some of the hops in the beer might bring out the spices in the gingerbread, but perhaps I would need something with a more prominent hop presence like an IPA. Recommendations, anyone?

In other news…I made these amazing cookies this weekend, and this recipe is permanently being kept in my back pocket to pull out at Christmastime every year. These gingerbread cookies have a perfect amount of spice to them, but not too much so that they have an odd or off-putting flavor, and enough sweetness that they are perfectly wonderful even without icing.

Now I have very little patience in baking, and up until recently, I avoided any recipe that took more than thirty minutes of prep time. But I was missing out on some great recipes. So I’m not going to lie to you and say these are quick and easy. They’re easy, but to make the perfect batch, they need some time and loving.

My schedule for these: Mixed the cookie dough Saturday afternoon, let the dough chill while I ran errands. Then that evening I watched a movie, during which I had a rotation of baking, rolling, chilling, cutting, chilling, baking, etc. Then this morning I did all of my icing. The first time I ever made cut out cookies, it took me a lot of time (and frustration) to figure things out, but I think that providing more details on the process helps cut down on that time a lot.

Gingerbread Cookies with Royal Icing

Recipe from The Smitten Kitchen, cut in half
Yields 40 cookies, varying in sizes from two to four inches wide.

3 cups all-purpose flour
1/2 teaspoon baking soda
1/4 teaspoon baking powder
2 teaspoons ground ginger
2 teaspoons ground cinnamon
3/4 teaspoons ground cloves
1/2 teaspoon finely ground pepper
3/4 teaspoon course salt
1/2 cup unsalted butter, at room temperature
1/2 cup packed brown sugar
1 large egg, at room temperature
1/2 cup unsulfured molasses

(1) In a large bowl, whisk all dry ingredients together. In mixing bowl, cream butter and brown sugar together until it is smooth and light. Crack egg in a small bowl & separate egg white. (if you’ve never separated an egg watch this tutorial) Add to mixing bowl. Add molasses, mixing on low until fully incorporated and smooth again.

(2) Keep the liquid mixture on low and using a large spoon, add flour a little bit at a time. When flour is mostly incorporated, add another spoonful. Repeat this until the beaters get too chunky, or the mixture starts flaking apart. Stop mixer, scrape beaters, and using a spatula, mix in the rest of the flour until it all stays together in one piece. Mix just until the flour is fully incorporated, or you will overwork the gluten in the flour and your cookies may become tough. Tear off a small piece of plastic wrap and press onto dough for a few seconds. When you remove it, if a lot of dough gets torn off, mix in more flour.

(3) Lay a 10-12 inch piece of plastic wrap on the counter, and put half of the cookie dough down on it. Lay a similar sized piece of parchment paper on top, and lightly press the cookie dough down until it is about 2 inches thick. Then, using a rolling pin, roll the dough out until it is 1/2 inch thick. Take parchment paper off, lay another piece of saran wrap on top, seal around the sides, and place in the refrigerator to chill for 1 hour. Repeat this for the second half of the cookie dough.

(4) After chilled, take one of the discs out of the refrigerator. Remove one piece of plastic wrap and replace with the parchment paper you used. Flip the disc over so that the parchment paper is resting on the counter with the saran wrap on top. Then roll out dough until it is about 1/4 inch thick. Repeat with second disc. Put both back in the refrigerator for another hour. Remove and cut out shapes with cookie cutters, and place on greased cookie sheets. With excess cookie dough from cutting out shapes, roll back into a ball and repeat step 3 (you can chill dough for about 15-20 mins).

(5) If the cookie sheet will fit in the refrigerator, preferably you would put the cookie shapes in the oven to chill another ten minutes before baking. This helps them hold their shape instead of spreading out too much. It is not imperative though, and the cookies can be put straight in the oven to bake for 10-12 minutes at 350. If you like your cookies chewy, take them out after ten minutes. But all ovens vary, and so I recommend taking them out after ten minutes to see how tough they are.

(6) Frost with Royal Icing. I’ll have a post on my easy recipe soon I pinky promise. Until then I recommend Brown Eyed Baker‘s wonderful tutorial, and using Martha Stewart‘s recipe, but cutting it in half.

The trick I have found for cookie cutter recipes is chill chill chill. Any time you do anything to the dough, chill it! It may seem tedious, but it helps make the dough much easier when cutting, and helps the dough keep its form when baking. For example, if you don’t chill after rolling the dough out, when you go to cut your cookies they stick annoyingly to the parchment paper instead of staying in the cookie cutter so you can transfer them to the baking sheet! Revelation!

I meant to post this eons ago, but I’ve been adjusting to a new schedule of

1. Training for my 10K on October 23rd. THREE WEEKS. I’m not sure I should have looked at the calendar. There’s not enough time!

2. Trying my hand at cyclocross with my new bike (see above for a blurry picture of Kona Jake the Snake): it’s loads of fun, but man am I wiped. I’m currently working on my mounts without looking like a chicken with its head cut off, and desperately searching for some leg strength to get me up hills without falling over sideways.

Try fitting all of this in between work and sunset, and with legs that are only used to mayyybe one or two “workouts” per week. And try balancing training for the 10K with wanting to do a few cross races at the same time. Yeesh. In over my head much? But as long as I’m having fun with it all, I can’t complain. I wish I could be one of those people who can go run 4 miles just out of the blue, or who can bomb up crazy hills with legs of steel, but alas, I wasn’t born with that superpower.

Speaking of superheros…

Last Saturday afternoon was spent with New Belgium‘s Kick (part of their Lips of Faith series) and X-Men First Class. It was awesome. You should’ve been there. You’d have been all about Michael Fassbender as Magneto as well.

All in all… But really, about this ale. What I can’t get over is how wonderfully the pumpkin/cranberry is infused in this sour ale. The Kick isn’t all about the pumpkin flavor. It isn’t an all out fall pumpkin ale. (Even though there are some cool Jack-O-Lanterns on the bottle) It isn’t a cranberry fruit ale. This is a great sour ale, that is heightened and enhanced by a pumpkin and cranberry flavor. Its identity as a sour ale doesn’t have to take a backseat to having other organic flavors in the mix. And what I love and am always dazzled by with sour ales, is that with a truly splendid ale, the flavor literally dances around and sparkles. Cheesy maybe? But it’s true. Really, I would love to know how this magic happened. My hats off to you brewers. You are truly gentlemen and ladies.

Recommend to a friend? With the tall boy size, find a friend to split this with…cheers! I had a hard time wasting some of mine but…

Safe for lightweights? At 8.5% slow yourself down a little bit.

When and where… Leave this out of the refrigerator for a few minutes before pouring it – at refrigerator temperature the tartness, the little tongue curl at the end is softened, muted almost. It’s best still a little cool, but I enjoyed it more towards room temp than truly chilled.

And a very special shout out to another fantastic bottle design (and beer!) by Rogue

Right, so I don’t have a picture of today’s beer as I enjoyed a Gumballhead at the Heorot which has just horrific lighting if you’re attempting to take any sort of picture. However, I’ve included a picture of tomorrow’s beer below…tada!

This one’s going to be simple

(1) Because Gumballhead…well I think that you either love it or you hate it. I happen to be on the I Love It side, but it’s not something that someone else can decide for you. You can’t say “If you like such and such, then you’ll like this…” You just need to try it for yourself and be your own judge.

(2) Because I got run over by a bike today and it’s just time for me to crash in my comfortable bed.

What’s that? You got run over by a bike?

Well it’s my own darn fault. See, I’m fairly uncoordinated anyways, but when I ride my bike all kinds of things tend to go wrong. Especially having clipless pedals…just disaster waiting to happen. Normally any decent rider will fall over once because they forgot to unclip…nope, this has happened three…count ‘em…three times. Today I was riding with super friend Marie on the Greenway, I went to put my water bottle back, and don’t ask me what in the world happened. But my bike slowed wayyy down, and I couldn’t unclip in time.

Ouch.

Down I go.

Marie can’t go anywhere else, and can’t avoid me.

Rebecca gets run over by a bike for the first time. Marie runs over someone for the first time.

Both bikes and both girls okay. Whew! But I’m going to have a nasty bruise here, a couple scrapes, though I really wish there had been one solid black tire mark on my jersey. Needless to say I needed a beer after that, but for now I’m putting my uncoordinated behind back in bed.

(tomorrow!)

“3 Floyd’s flagship beer, Alpha King is a big American pale ale that pours a deep amber with a creamy head. This ale is brewed with Centennial, Cascade, and Warrior hops giving it an intense citrus aroma and a crisp hoppy finish.” from Three Floyd’s

All in all…


Dear Alpha King,

This is a thank you note/love letter. Though my mother taught better and thank you notes should really be handwritten please don’t think less of me. I’m pretty sure you’re great enough to excuse me for that.

Though Hoegaarden was my first beer love, you were the first pale ale that demonstrated how many other incredible beers there were out there and really made me fall for Pale Ales/IPAs. Oh Alpha King, how you totally swept me off my feet. After each sip I shake my head…it’s just so wondrous! Yes, if we’re looking at Pale Ales/IPAs Ruination has the most “kick you in your teeth knock you flat on your face” flavor, but I’m not looking for that every day – this has the perfect balance.

I was sipping my coffee this morning, trying to think of some different ways I could make the end of The Thirsty Thirty more interesting. Why not try to figure out what beer I could drink from here to eternity? You’re in the running, let me tell you.

Recommend to a friend? If someone buys you a six pack of Alpha King, you know they’re a great friend to keep around.

Safe for lightweights? 6.something% Don’t worry about it, just have one of these.

See love letter above.

Plus one? I’ll take another good sir!

And a little endnote on this one…eight more days ‘till The Thirsty Thirty is done, and I’m getting pretty excited and frankly nervous. See I’m notorious for creating grand goals, resolutions, ideas, whatnot and abandoning them fairly quickly. So this is going to be rather momentous for me – actually monumental…but no pressure right? I’m excited that I’ll have really completed a goal that I put in front of me, excited that it’s something I’m truly passionate about and that other friends are passionate about as well. Through this I’ve honestly become a lot more open to trying every beer I can as well. And I’m nervous that I’ll miss a day between here and day 30, but I have twenty-two days behind me and eight more fabulous beers ahead of me!

from Founders Brewing – “A testament to Cascade hops in a bottle, this medium-bodied pale ale has a refreshing citrus flavor and a distinctive floral hop aroma due to the aggressive addition of hops during fermentation. You’ll notice a slight malty sweetness with a balanced hop finish. Perfect to enjoy anytime, anywhere.”

All in all Simple and average pale ale. Nothing to hop (pun intended…hehe) and skip over. But this one didn’t provide a whole lot of inspiration.

Recommend to a friend? Maybe, but I think there are some better pale ale’s that you can go for.

Safe for lightweights? 5.4% Easy-drinking

I’ll give it a C.

LabelingLove love love the illustration. Reminds of Mucha and really makes drool over these tattoos…and now that makes me want to get another one myself. Hmmm maybe this beer is a bad (or great) influence on me.

Plus one? I’ll be switching to something else for my next beer.

“…a combination of the finest Midwestern malts and American hops, creating a refreshingly crisp, citrusy, and slightly bitter taste. Named for the Greek sun god, Helios Pale Ale is a great choice for those who like a lot of personality and individuality in their beer.” from Upland

All in all One of my absolute favorite-oh-my-god-so-amazing-can-I-live-there breweries is Upland so I’m a little biased. I’m pretty heartbroken that I wasn’t able to get any of the Lambics they just brought out (and sold out of in 2.5 hours). I tried my first “holy scheisse this is fantastic” sour ale from the New Glarus brewery and I’ve been excited to try another great one ever since (I was able to have the New Glarus and Pliny the Elder all in one afternoon…I was one lucky girl).

Anyways, back to the Helios…insert smile here.

Recommend to a friend? Do you like Pale Ales? Do you believe the Greek god Helios is a badass who drives a chariot of blazing horses across the sky? Then YES.

Safe for lightweights? 5.2% A-okay.

Cheers.

LabelingJust what the Helios needs.


Favorite t-shirt ever…