Wednesday, January 31, 2018

99 Breweries on the Shelf: Navigating Boston’s Craft Beer Sections

In many respects, it’s never been a better time to be a craft beer consumer, especially in a market like Boston. Gone are the days where there were a few “destination stores” where people would make pilgrimages to do their craft beer shopping; the proliferation of the segment means that nearly every store that sells beer has a section devoted to craft, and those sections tend to be decent at the very minimum. Pretty much every style can be found year-round, and there have never been as many breweries to choose from. Dozens of different breweries jockey for limited space, and new ones are entering an already crowded market all the time. Great news, right? Well, sort of. Craft sections can be intimidating for the shopper who’s just starting to broaden their beer horizons, and even seasoned craft drinkers can sometimes shop with blinders on. Here are a few basic guidelines to make the most of your beer shopping experience:

Take a deep breath and put down your phone.

There are many apps and sites that are chock-full of information about the beer you’ll be potentially buying and they’re generally comprehensive resources. Users provide ratings, descriptions, and pictures, so all you’ll really be discovering is how the beer tastes to you—and that’s a good enough reason to not rely on those platforms when you’re making your selection. Drinking beer is a subjective thing: not all recipes taste the same to everyone, people’s individual preferences differ wildly, and when confronted with a whole bunch of reviewers who think one thing about a beer, those who think differently might not be as eager to offer up that information (who wants to look like an idiot on the internet?). Developing your palate takes more than cross referencing a potential purchase against a database; it involves noticing what you see, smell, feel, and taste and using that information to determine where your particular taste lies.

Get to know your friendly neighborhood beer merchant.

Don’t be afraid to spark up a conversation with staff members who spend a lot of time in the beer section. They’re often working there because, just like you, they love beer. Talk to them about what you like, and ask for their opinion—the more information you give them about what you’re into, the better suggestions you’ll get. They also talk to supplier and distributor reps like it’s their job, so they’re always privy to cool releases coming down the pike. This could come in handy the next time Really Big Deal Brewing Company comes out with their small batch, tightly allocated Tickle Me Elmo DIPA— instead of being one of the many nameless rare-beer hunters who call or show up only looking for that one beer, be the regular who scores a six pack because you’re a loyal customer.

More Ways to Make the Most of Your Beer

The Role of Your Beer Glass Is More Important Than You Think
A Guide to Gluten-Free Beers
Campfire Beer Pancakes

Drink for your occasion.

Whether it’s a 12 pack of low-ABV lager for a cookout or a cork-and-caged 750ml bottle of Russian Imperial Stout to drink by the fire on a cold, late night, think about what you’ll be doing when you drink the beer you’re about to buy. How long you’ll be drinking for, the time of the day, any activities involved, and even the weather are all potential factors to consider when you’re making your selection. If you’re planning on pairing the beer with a meal, keep in mind “the three Cs” of beer and food: flavors that complement each other, flavors that are accentuated through contrasting elements, and how physical characteristics of beer like carbonation can cut through physical aspects of the food you’re eating (think a highly carbonated pilsner up against the grease and sauce from BBQ chicken wings).

Take a mix-six for a test drive.

Many stores have designated shelf areas which hold loose beers that customers can select from to build their own 6 packs—some shops, like locally-based Craft Beer Cellar, extend this option to every beer available in the store. It’s an excellent, low-stakes way to explore different styles and breweries.

Code dates are important, but…

Nearly all breweries offer dates on the package, and it’s important to know how old your beer is. Beer is a perishable product, after all! You might not want to buy a six-month old IPA as the bright hop flavors and aromas will have degraded past anything the brewer intended. However, there are many high alcohol (usually 8% ABV or higher), darkly malted, sometimes barrel-aged beers available that benefit from a little bit of aging. This isn’t exactly news to most, but this practice can be watered down into everyday buying. With so many different beers in and out of rotation all the time, stores can sometimes be sitting on a few six packs of something that’s about to code out, or a couple cases of something that’s perceived to be out of season. This is good beer, but if a store is trying to move through it and puts it on the discount rack at a couple bucks less, that’s better beer.



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Drink an Eye-Popping Margarita with Actual Eyes at This Australian Restaurant

One Australian eatery has taken eye-catching cocktails to a whole other level. Faros Tapas, a new restaurant in Australia’s Museum of Old and New Art, serves a black margarita with a rather unusual garnish: a literal eyeball. Now you can watch your drink while it watches you back! We’re guessing this is what the Addams family drinks during happy hour (Or is it sad hour? Maybe it’s spooky hour?).

The restaurant’s website claims the eye’s from bulls, though one restaurant critic claimed he was told they were from pigs. But let’s not get bogged down in this minutia. All that matters is that if you order the beverage, you’re drinking something with part of a face in it, regardless of what part of the farm it came from.

Supposedly the restaurant’s wait staff is instructed to tell patrons to drink the margarita as quickly as possible, so as to not let the frozen eye melt into the beverage. You wouldn’t want the taste of an animal’s visual receptor to contaminate an otherwise normal cocktail, right?

But beyond the freaky garnish, the margarita actually sounds pretty delicious. It’s made with tequila, lime, mezcal, and oh so trendy charcoal powder, which lends to its dark color. There’s also black salt on rim, a subtle complement to the eye inside. So goth.

The black margarita is also only part of the restaurant’s overall artsy and adventurous vibe. Customers literally have to sign a waiver and then, as one restaurant critic put it,  lie “on a bed, in an enclosed metal sphere, for about 15 minutes” while being accosted with flashing lights. The whole concept sounds like a weird, post-modern experience that seems a lot deeper than it is. I mean this is a restaurant in an art museum, so we shouldn’t expect any less.



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Double Chocolate Cupcakes

Double Chocolate Cupcake Recipe

Chocolate cupcakes were one of the first recipes I became obsessed with perfecting.

To me, the ideal chocolate cupcake is moist with a deep chocolate flavor. The recipe also should produce exactly one dozen cupcakes in a standard muffin tin, no more and no less.

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