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Which Imperial IPA is Better: Pliny the Elder or Heady Topper?

Pliny the Elder in the bottle, and Heady Topper in the can.

For an incredible eight years, Russian River's Pliny the Elder has topped Zymurgy magazine's list[1] of the top beers in America. We're not completely surprised at the imperial IPA's continued reign. The dry, ridiculously hoppy brew is the epitome of the West Coast India Pale Ale — a substyle that's extra heavy on hops and light on body.

PHOTOS: The 101 Best Beers in America[2]

Perhaps more impressive, however, is Heady Topper's rise to the third spot on the list. The Vermont-brewed imperial IPA from The Alchemist didn't even appear in the top 10 until 2014, and it moved up from last year's sixth place, now just behind the venerable Bell's Two Hearted.

While Pliny and Heady are both 8 percent ABV hop bombs, they couldn't be more different in approach. Instead of Pliny's all-hops approach, Heady Topper comes with a smooth barley backbone that its brewers believe gives them the foundation for more flavor. Both methods certainly produce world-class beers, but which one do you prefer? Let us know in the poll below.

Poll

References

  1. ^ list (www.homebrewersassociation.org)
  2. ^ PHOTOS: The 101 Best Beers in America (www.mensjournal.com)
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'Chef's Table' Director David Gelb Is Turning Food Porn Into an Art Form

David Gelb is supposed to be attending the Tribeca Film Festival, but he is playing hooky, as he often does, to search for good food. "I can watch a movie anytime," he says. A special meal, on the other hand, is sacred — whether in the forests of Scandinavia, the colonial squares of Kolkata, or his native New York. We are on the Lower East Side, sitting at a powder-blue picnic table in the back garden of Ivan Ramen[1], one of the hottest ramen places in the city. It's lunch hour, but the garden is nearly empty — it's a warm spring day, the kind of weather that sends people in search of ice cream rather than steaming bowls of noodles.

The staff recognize Gelb immediately, making solicitous small talk and sending us appetizers on the house. This is surprising: Gelb, 32, is a respected filmmaker but hardly a celebrity. If anything, he looks, with his sunglasses hanging on the neckline of his blue polo, like a guy you might have gone to college with and then forgotten about.

RELATED: Michael Pollan Doesn't Like Your Paleo Diet[2]

"We shot here last month," he explains. "They know me, probably better than they wish they did. I spent a week getting all up in their business — 'Can I turn off your music? Can I turn on even more lights?' " Ivan Orkin, the restaurant's owner, grew up on Long Island, moved to Tokyo, and became the first foreigner to make a name for himself in Japan's cutthroat ramen scene. He is, in other words, a perfect subject for Chef's Table[3], Gelb's Netflix show that is part food porn, part high art, and part vivid whirlwind tour through the world's most exclusive kitchens.

The show, one of the most highly praised of Netflix's many original series, has a new season that became available May 27. "Originally, a lot of people wanted Dave out on the road as a host, visiting the best restaurants in the world," Brian McGinn, a director and executive producer, told me. Gelb opted instead for a visually rich biographical style that looks and feels like nothing in the current glut of food programming. "He doesn't ask any clichéd questions. His interviews are four or five days long, and he really gets to the bottom of things," says Gaggan Anand, the chef-owner of Gaggan[4], a highly acclaimed Indian restaurant in Bangkok, who is profiled in season two. "He has a superpower where he gets people to tell the truth about themselves."

At the ramen shop, Gelb is somewhat humbler. He orders a red-rice ale, pork meatballs, and a "red-hot cold noodle" that's popular in the warmer months and says: "I'm not a food expert. I enjoy telling stories about chefs."

Gelb proved that point in 2012 with Jiro Dreams of Sushi[5], a feature-length documentary about Jiro Ono, considered by many to be the world's greatest sushi chef. The film made massaging a dead octopus look like a mind-altering ascetic practice, but it was saved from self-seriousness by the human drama: Jiro's stern glare giving way to a crinkled smile as he tastes a piece of tamago; the repressed sibling rivalry between Jiro's two sons.

Jiro was a hit on Netflix, so in 2014, with the company commissioning more ambitious, original content, Gelb pitched Chef's Table. The first season, which premiered last year, consisted of six episodes, each centering on a renowned chef: Francis Mallmann in Buenos Aires and Patagonia; Massimo Bottura in Modena, Italy; Niki Nakayama in Los Angeles. The second season profiles six more chefs, including Ana Ros in the Slovenian Alps and Alex Atala journeying into the depths of the Amazon. Seasons three and four are in production. "When he emailed me, I not only said, 'Yes, I'll do it,' I said, 'I've been waiting for your email for three years,' " says Gaggan, who traveled with Gelb in Bangkok and his native Kolkata. "I think every chef in the world is waiting for that invitation."

RELATED: The 13 Best Adventure Movies Now Streaming on Netflix[6]

Some episodes have the sweep and scale of a melodrama, with narrative stakes that can seem almost concocted. Grant Achatz — known for his bizarre experiments with molecular gastronomy (strawberries reconstituted to look like tomatoes, tomatoes reconstituted to look like strawberries, a pillow filled with the scent of nutmeg) — contracts tongue cancer and, at the height of his career, loses his sense of taste. Ivan Orkin, the American ramen master, will appear in season four. They shot for a week in New York and a week in Tokyo. "Ivan is obsessed with all Japanese food," Gelb says. "We went out to eat in Tokyo, and he orders this thing called shirako, which is basically cod sperm. Out comes this big bowl, and it's just, like, three big white sperm sacs, lightly seared. A bowl for each of us. I'm like, 'That's a lot of sperm, dude.' And Ivan, while he's eating it, goes, 'This is what it's like to give a fish a blow job.' "

Gelb was born in New York City to an illustrious family. His grandfather Arthur Gelb started working at The New York Times as a copy boy; eventually he became the paper's managing editor. Peter Gelb, his father, is the general manager of the Metropolitan Opera, the premier opera company in the country. "Dave's father always had great artists and musicians around, so Dave is comfortable around people at the top of their game," McGinn says. "The chefs on our show are great artists, so Dave knows how to connect with them, put them at ease, and make their personalities come through on camera."

Gelb got the idea for Chef 's Table as an undergrad studying film at the University of Southern California. "I was smoking a bong and watching Planet Earth," Gelb says, referring to the long-running BBC documentary series, beloved by birders and stoners alike, that attempts to explain the entirety of the natural world. "It just hit me: 'Planet Earth, but for the food world. How has no one done that yet?' "

Between trips for work and pleasure, Gelb lives in L.A. with his fiancée, a movie agent. He also works on fictional films, recently directing a sci-fi horror movie called The Lazarus Effect[7]. But the object of his devotion is Chef 's Table. "I would love to do this show forever," he says after a slurp of noodles.

"Do you worry about running out of material?" I ask him.

He answers quickly and simply: "No."

"But Planet Earth has a whole planet to work with," I say. "How many world-class chefs can there be?"

"We've done rough story outlines for probably 40 different chefs that haven't made it to air yet," Gelb says. "And I'm constantly getting recommendations about chefs with cool stories who are doing completely different things in different parts of the world, like this 60-year-old Buddhist chef in South Korea who cooks in a monastery, everything sourced from whatever she finds in her garden."

"It's a show about people," Gelb adds, "and you never run out of interesting people."

References

  1. ^ Ivan Ramen (www.ivanramen.com)
  2. ^ RELATED: Michael Pollan Doesn't Like Your Paleo Diet (www.mensjournal.com)
  3. ^ Chef's Table (www.netflix.com)
  4. ^ Gaggan (eatatgaggan.com)
  5. ^ Jiro Dreams of Sushi (www.imdb.com)
  6. ^ RELATED: The 13 Best Adventure Movies Now Streaming on Netflix (www.mensjournal.com)
  7. ^ The Lazarus Effect (www.imdb.com)
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Frozen Burger Patties Actually Worth Buying

Growing up, our burger knowledge was probably limited to whatever brand your family was throwing on the grill come summer. As we got older, our tastes developed. Not only did we learn the joy of the right burger build, we learned that the meat composition itself made a big difference. Burgers aren't just about what you put on top of them. What's inside them makes a big difference.

RELATED: What Happens When Gourmet Chefs Rethink Hot Dogs[1]

So, whether you are an avowed carnivore or just watching your weight, there's a great burger for you. Here's some of our favorites, and how to best enjoy them.

Laura's Lean Ground Beef
A lean, low-fat, all-natural option, this contains the same flavor as traditional ground beef, but without as much guilt. This beef has less than 10g of fat per serving, is humanely raised, vegetarian-fed, and free of hormones and antibiotics, making it a healthier alternative burger choice for people who don’t want to sacrifice taste. [2]

Grow & Behold
Kosher meat is known to be free of fillers and additives, making it a popular choice among even those who do not necessarily adhere to the religious dietary guidelines.[3]

Grow & Behold's glatt kosher pastured beef is lean and full of flavor. Don't be afraid to mix your meat for new flavors — you can lighten by adding veal, or intensify by adding lamb.

Omaha Steaks Filet Mignon Burgers
Sometimes you just need a next-level burger. This filet is buttery, tender, and extra juicy. These can be enjoyed on a grill, but we really love them pan-fried. Just sauté in a hot non-stick pan for seven or so minutes on each side.[4]

Beyond Meat Beyond Burger
[5]
The burger is made of pea protein and looks, cooks, and tastes like hamburger. It starts pink (like raw hamburger) and cooks to burger brown. Cooking this will be a lot like a traditional raw burger, but with less time: Season to taste and cook on preheated grill or pan-fry  on medium-high heat for three minutes per side.

The Original Skinny Burgers By Gold & Masters
[6]
This burger use a custom blend of chicken and grass-fed beef raised without antibiotics and no added hormones for their juicy, healthier burgers. These have 25 percent less fat, 40 percent fewer calories, 33 percent less saturated fat, and 10 percent more protein than typical 80/20, four-ounce burgers, and they do this without sacrificing taste via a patent-pending process that mixes the chicken and 100 percent USA grass-fed beef chuck and brisket. These burgers are best when prepared on a hot cooking surface and not pressed down. Preheat the grill, flat-top, fry pan, or other cooking surface to 350º and lightly coat it with an olive oil cooking spray. Place the burgers on the cooking surface and leave them for three minutes. Don’t press down. Flip burgers and cook for three minutes more. Don’t press down. Use a food thermometer to check for an internal temperature of 165º.

Babeth's Feast
[7]
Try their antibiotic-free lamb sliders for a nice bold change from your tradition of beef burgers. These are best enjoyed medium rare and well seasoned. Pair with some feta, mint, and garlic mayo to complement the flavors. Lamb is much more tender than beef or turkey and should reach a perfect medium rare after about five minutes on the grill.

References

  1. ^ RELATED: What Happens When Gourmet Chefs Rethink Hot Dogs (www.mensjournal.com)
  2. ^ Laura's Lean Ground Beef (www.laurasleanbeef.com)
  3. ^ Grow & Behold (www.growandbehold.com)
  4. ^ Omaha Steaks Filet Mignon Burgers (www.omahasteaks.com)
  5. ^ Beyond Meat Beyond Burger (beyondmeat.com)
  6. ^ The Original Skinny Burgers By Gold & Masters (www.mensjournal.com)
  7. ^ Babeth's Feast (www.babethsfeast.com)
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Wedding Season, Wedding Cakes

With the arrival of June, wedding season kicks into high gear with summer nuptials filling every calendar. With this being the most popular time of the year to tie the knot, odds are you'll be tasting wedding cake sometime in the next few months--or maybe you're in the process of selecting yours! Either way, cake is an incredible reason (apart from love and family and all that) to attend a wedding...as long as it's scrumptious.

If you've ever pushed a dry piece of frosted cardboard politely around a pastel plate, you understand the disappointment of being on the receiving end of a bad dessert. I've certainly sampled some stunning confections that ended up tasting like sawdust, confirming that no matter how pretty a cake is, it's worthless if it's not delicious. With around 5 million people each year getting hitched in the United States, the wedding industry is bigger than ever--and luckily that means hordes of talented bakers are making sure couples never have to choose between style and substance for their sugary centerpiece.

I pulled together some of my favorite wedding cakes of all time, including some non-traditional confections, to tantalize your palette and get you inspired for a summer of love...and desserts.

1. Michael and Patrick's Four Tiered Carrot Cake

Three years ago, I attended a casual beach wedding of two of my dearest friends. Michael is a surf instructor and Patrick is an environmentalist, so they spend a lot of time by the sea. They opted for a casual, shoes-off picnic-style wedding, complete with baskets stuffed with cheese, bread, fruits, and meat for each blanket. The vibe was incredibly friendly, homey, and fun, with some cheeky humor--such as chocolate "ants" decorating the guest book table, a watermelon seed spitting contest, and sand castles made by local artists. The centerpiece of their event, however, was a four tiered carrot cake made by Michael's mother, using a three generations old family recipe. Not only was the cake flawless with spicy notes, rich brown sugar sweetness, and juicy raisins, but the frosting was unreal. His mother insisted that it was just "a simple whipped cream cheese frosting," but it was light and just a touch saltier than most overly sweet cream cheese frostings. It melted into the cake so harmoniously, accentuating the subtle nutmeg and molasses. I've truly never seen a single wedding cake be completely finished by the guests, but this one was devoured before last call. While you can't have this exact cake, take this advice: if your family has an amazing recipe, duplicate it. The generations of love, the uniqueness of the dessert, and the familiar taste of home are exactly what celebrating new family is all about.

2. Shu-Che and Jack's Coconut Neapolitan Cake

Shu-Che was thrilled when Jack proposed, and before she showed any of her friends the ring, she was sending emails about cake. She had an entire Pinterest devoted to potential wedding cakes, ultimately spending about four weeks deciding on the perfect dessert and two hours on her dress. She knew exactly what she wanted to focus on, which was having an awesome meal. Not only was the catering beautiful, but her cake had people talking for months afterwards. It was three tiers of chocolate, vanilla, and strawberry cake, frosted with a thin glaze of coconut and topped with soft milk chocolate icing. The delicate coconut glaze brought out the richness of each cake flavor, mingling with the icing in a way that reminded me of truly incredible donuts. The cakes were dense and only semi-sweet, leaving plenty of space for the icing and glaze. She opted to serve it chilled, which only enhanced the well-crafted flavors.

3. Elizabeth and Karen's Eclair Mountain

Karen and Liz were clear from day one: no cake. Neither of them have much of a sweet tooth, and were leaning toward a fruit buffet in lieu of a towering treat. A month before their big day, Liz traveled to Boston for work. She discovered a small, family-owned bakery that served these eclairs that she described as "transcendent." She immediately ordered 150 mini versions for their wedding, explaining that it would be bad luck if they didn't have something cake-like. Luckily, Karen was as entranced by the tiny temptations as her wife. And let me tell you: they were to die for. Don't hesitate to consider a different dessert if cake isn't your thing--no one will miss it if the alternative is good enough!

4. Marko and LaDayne's Molten Cherry Cheesecake

Marko is a pastry chef and LaDayne loves cheesecake--you'd think it would've been easy for them to come to a cake decision early on, but this pair pushed it to the week before their vows. Marko was committed to the idea of making their cake (yes, crazy, I know) but couldn't figure out the perfect offering for their sophisticated spring wedding. Marko finally cracked the mold with a four tiered vanilla bean cheesecake topped with warm bourbon cherry sauce. Tangy, tart, and creamy, it was a definite crowd pleaser.

Hopefully my most memorable wedding cakes have inspired you, or at least made you a little more excited for any summer ceremonies you're attending. Happy caking!

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The Birth of a Beer

Stoudt's Brewing founder Carol Stoudt and Jason Oliver of Devils Backbone brew a Beer Camp test batch. Credit: Courtesy Sierra Nevada Brewing

Sierra Nevada's Beer Camp Across America launched in 2014 with a 12-pack of beer collaborations and a cross-country bus tour that required at least a year of recovery for all involved. In 2016, the California-born brewery relaunched Beer Camp, sans bus, inviting 30 craft brewers from Hawaii to Massachusetts to create the most epic six-pack of the year (now for sale, for a limited time; get it, seriously).

RELATED: The 101 Best Beers in America[1]

We were lucky enough to go behind the scenes and follow the nine-month collaboration process, from beer-fueled brainstorms to the hop-filled finish. The 30 brewers split into six teams (one for each beer), and we tagged along with the Northeast region — helmed by Dogfish Head's Sam Calagione — to find out how a one-of-a-kind beer comes together.

Step 1: Beer-Fueled Brainstorm

On September 14, 2015, the 30 breweries assembled at Sierra Nevada's Mills River, North Carolina, brewery. Sierra Nevada had picked six team captains and then left it to them to fill their rosters of collaborators — which ranged from legendary veterans to relatively new brewers so honored to have a seat at the table (a tear or two was shed during introductions).

Calagione picked his crew during a particularly reflective paddleboard session. "First, I wanted someone I thought never got enough credit as a craft trailblazer," he says. For that he called Carol Stoudt, founder of Stoudts Brewing, which has made bright, stunning German lagers without fuss or excessive fanfare since 1986.

After Stoudt, he looked north to a pair of the most cutting-edge operations in the country, Lawson's Finest Liquids and Trillium Brewing, both known for their ridiculously hoppy ales. And then to balance the crew, Calagione reached out to Virginia's Devils Backbone, a small operation with a slew of Great American Beer Fest medals.

Like the other regions, the brewers knew they wanted to represent their turf. Sitting around a patio table in Mills River, Calagione's group quickly tapped into its status covering America's original 13 colonies, and chose to brew what they call a "neo-colonial ale," a brew featuring ingredients and inspiration from the 18th century, with the benefits of modern brewing.

They rattled off options: open fermentation, honey, a new world lager, ingredients from every state. But there's no order until Sean Lawson speaks up, "What can we lend to the beer without making it a hodgepodge? For me, it's a hop character that shines through. If you lend your signature to a beer, what is it?"

"I'd like a blend of old and new hops," offers Jason Oliver of Devils Backbone. Now Cluster, the oldest variety of farmed American hops, are penciled in for bittering.

"Then let's also go to the absolutely newest hops, too," replies Sam.

The beer starts to come into focus now. In addition to the new and old hops, apple cider and rye, two beer-friend staples of the era join the rough recipe. 

"We just want it hazy, that's our contribution," jokes Trillium's JC Tetreault, before recommending a local maltster he uses with an old Polish rye called Danko. "It's twice the normal price. Is that a problem?” It's not.

As the brewers start building a hoppy beer with a cider component, more potential ingredients drop out. Brown and smoked malts, a common ingredient centuries ago are axed for potentially overpowering the apple character. 

Sierra Nevada's Scott Jennings and Carol Stoudt check a fermenter's temperature. Courtesy Sierra Nevada Brewing

The biggest struggle: naming the beer. Calagione, who's keeping a running list of potential beer names on his phone, leads the brainstorm by standing up and proclaiming, "I need another beer to keep the creative juices flowing." Five minutes later he returns with a server carrying a tray of eight Sierra Nevada Pale Ales.

After tossing names back and forth, there are a few promising suggestions. Scott Jennings throws out 13 O.G., for the 13 colonies, and O.G. being a brewing measurement — in addition to O.G., Sean Lawson counters with the Rye That Bines, referencing the bines (not vines) that hops grow on. Meanwhile, Sam googles each name to see if the trademark is taken. "Redhook has Live Free or Rye. Oh, we don't want that," he jokes. "They have lawyer money." (Redhook is partially owned by Anheuser-Busch Inbev, the world's largest brewer.)

As good ideas run out, Sierra Nevada brewer Scott Jennings, the man making sure the beer can be made, steers the conversation back to nuts and bolts, specifically, the bitterness units.

"In the 40s, but go big, go silly on the aroma," says Lawson, putting the bitterness slightly higher than Sierra Nevada's flagship pale ale. 

"How about 46?" says Calagione, his mind still on the naming and offering ideas faster (and he is fast) than he can count. "That's 13 times 2!"

Smiling, Lawson continues, "I like 39, but big on aroma. Let's do bittering hops, hop back, and torpedo [Sierra Nevada's proprietary dry-hopping device], but no mid-boil, I don't see the need."

Calagione's pale ales continue disappearing, and the group agrees on the hopping strategy, then Brian Grossman, son of founder Ken Grossman and manager of the Mills River brewery, appears to ask the innocent question, "So what are you guys brewing?" Without missing a beat, Calagione replies that they're making a hop-forward ale accentuated by cider and rye. The basics are set.

Step 2: The Test Batch

The rest of the details roll in later in the day and over follow-up emails and conference calls. Cider will be shipped in from Vermont and Delaware, via a press in Pennsylvania. Crystal malt from Virginia will add color. And Jennings found a hop variety so new, it lacks a proper name, going now by FZMR2. "It stands for Frank Zappa Neo-Mexicanus Rio-2," wrote Jennings. "Really, no shit."

The hop, which has never seen a commercial beer before, was a wild variety growing in New Mexico's Rio Grande Valley. One of Sierra Nevada's hop farmers began cultivating the breed in Washington's Yakima Valley — the beer world's Napa. While the exact music connection is unclear, the Zappa hop offers a unique character of peppery citrus and melon, and Jennings ordered the modest 600-pound harvest in whole.

Jennings also offers up lupulin powder, which piques the interest of IPA devotees Sean Lawson and JC Tetreault. For nearly every brew, Sierra Nevada proudly uses nothing but whole-cone hop flowers, instead of the more popular and efficient pelletized hops. The brewery believes the hops' lupulin glands, the little yellow sacks holding aromatic oils, are better preserved in whole cones. The powder, which isn't used in flagship Sierra Nevada beers, is only those preserved glands, separated from the hop flower at freezing temperatures. In effect, it provides the richer hop aroma of whole cone hops, but without the green leaves that can impart vegetable flavors in heavily hopped brews.

A month after first meeting, the group reconvenes in Roseland, Virginia, to brew the first pilot batch at Oliver's Devils Backbone. While cider is shipped in, Jennings drives up a car loaded with coolers of experimental hops from Mills River, and JC Tetreault flies down with 40 pounds of the Danko rye in tow — one hell of a carry-on.

Sampling whole-cone hops for Pat-Rye-Ot. Courtesy Sierra Nevada Brewing

On brew day, excitement gets the best of the crew, and a generous hand with hops more than doubles the targeted bitterness. The pilot batch also ferments farther than intended, but both issues can be easily adjusted in the second pilot batch at Sierra Nevada in November. Overall, the beer is a success. The rye and cider proportions let each ingredient shape the brew without dominating or disappearing. More impressively, the Zappa hops shine through over the other experimental varieties.

On the follow-up call to share tasting notes and ideas, the team spends roughly 10 minutes going over the beer and recipe — they like it but all agree it's too dry and bitter. Twenty-five minutes are spent on naming. Apple of My Rye is initially popular, but there are worries it could be mistaken for a fruit beer.

"You know how these beer geeks are," Carol Stoudt says of the hardcore beer enthusiast's disdain for fruit beer. "And we're not doing an apple beer." There's still no decision, but the group has steered into the colonial theme with Rye for Freedom, Freedonia, and Pat-Rye-Ot as leading contenders.

Step 3: Fine-Tuning 

When the group assembles for the second pilot batch at Mills River, the first order of business is finalizing the aroma hops. Standing in the brewery's cold room for hops (the freezing temps slow oxidation), everyone begins rubbing and smelling handfuls of roughly a dozen hops Jennings has laid out for their consideration. The Zappa hop and Equinox, a lemony, tropical-fruit-like variety that's only had a name for two years, are clear favorites. The brewers rub a base of one on their hand, covering their hands in the sticky yellow lupulin powder, then add a second layer of Centennial or another experimental hop to simulate how the varieties will work together in the aroma.

After wrapping up the pilot batch, the team closes the day with public meet-and-greet-and-drink at Asheville's Tasty Beverage bottle shop and a barbecue dinner around the corner. Now two months into the Beer Camp, and with the recipe nearly set, the group gets reflective over plates of pulled pork and hush puppies.

Carol Stoudt in particular feels energized by the experience. Her Stoudts Brewing nails pale ales, stouts, abbey beers, and lagers, but rarely paints outside stylistic lines. "I'm going to do a rhubarb beer, and a beer with pear." Her only potential hurdle is getting her brew team to deviate from traditional styles and tackle the hassle of fruit. With a big grin, Calagione offers a name for the rhubarb beer: "Fuck You, Whose Name Is On the Label?" in a not so subtle reminder of who runs the brewery.

The Northeast Region toasts its first pilot batch. From left: Carol Stoudt, Sam Calagione, Jason Oliver, Sean Lawson, Esther Tetreault, Scott Jennings. Courtesy Sierra Nevada Brewing

When the pilot batch finishes fermentation in December, the beer appears to be nearly ready to go full scale. (And pressed by the marketing team to finally pick a name, they land on Pat-Rye-Ot.) The bitterness is still too high in the second test brew, around 65 IBUs (International Bittering Units), but the Zappa and Equinox hops are working in harmony with the rye and cider. From here, the beer is in Jennings' hands to scale up from the last 20-barrel batch to a total of roughly 1,700 barrels — about 54,000 gallons, or 580,000 bottles of beer. Aside from dialing back the bittering Cluster hops, his big concerns are getting the Danko rye and crystal malt in, and making sure the cider arrives on time and without preservatives.

Brewing in March goes off with just one small hitch. Initially the crew had hoped to add the cider after the boil and initial fermentation to capture more apple character (sort of like dry-hopping). But the freshly crushed juice arrives at Mills River showing signs that it's fermenting on its own with wild yeast. Jennings adds the cider to the end of the boil to kill any bacteria that could spoil the batch. By April the beer is ready to bottle.

Step 4: Bottle and Pour

The final painstaking step in getting Beer Camp bottles out to stores is the repack. A similar shipment of a batch of pale ale would take two days from bottling to shipping pallet, says Jennings, but Beer Camp is different. The two Sierra Nevada breweries, Mills River and the original in Chico, brewed three of the six beers and packaged them in the variety cases — each case has 12 of the same beer. Now they have to ship roughly half of those to the other brewery to begin repacking each 12-pack with two of each beer. At the North Carolina brewery, it takes nine days with 22 additional staff working 10-hour shifts, says Jennings.

Soon the beer will hit taps and coolers, but the last leg of Beer Camp Across America is the six giant festivals[2] in each region this June. All the Beer Camp collaborators are invited to pour at the festival, naturally, but Sierra Nevada also put out an open call to every craft brewer in America to attend. So far, more than 800 brewers have signed up to pour their beers — that's 1 in every 5 American craft breweries.

For all their effort and months of work, the Pat-Rye-Ot will be served amid a massive sea of their peers, celebrated until those 580,000 beers run out (probably by the end of summer), and then likely never brewed again. But that long-term futility is what makes Beer Camp a celebration. The best brewers in America are giving up their time and creativity for a beer that lauds the innovation of their world. They're presenting the best beer they can possibly make, then walking away because, as they're proving, American craft beer can just make another amazing beer unlike anything you've tried next year.

References

  1. ^ RELATED: The 101 Best Beers in America (www.mensjournal.com)
  2. ^ six giant festivals (www.mensjournal.com)
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