Christmas Beers Bring Christmas Cheer

What would the holidays be without alcohol? Copious and copious amounts of alcohol in all forms to help you get through the insanity of family, shopping, holiday parties and the like. Fortunately, there are plenty of holiday appropriate beers to help you get through it all. Here’s what I enjoyed during this week.

After having our own mini Christmas at our new home, my wife and I drove back to my parent’s house in Georgia to celebrate Christmas with them. I have the good fortune of having an easy-going, non-dysfunctional family, so I don’t need a lot of alcohol to help me cope. But that didn’t stop me from bringing along a bottle of St. Bernardus’ Christmas Ale to enjoy and share with loved ones.

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At 10%, the spiced Belgian strong dark ale does plenty to keep you warm and toasty. A malty nose brings hints of cocoa, plums, caramel, black pepper, cloves and that classic Belgian yeastiness. A similarly complex taste follows, with a strong effervescent quality leading off flavors of berries, plums, cocoa powder, leather, tobacco, sweet bread, cinnamon and other spices. St. Bernardus always impresses me, but it also impressed my younger brother – a newly 21-year-old frat boy – and my dad, whose tastes lean toward “dark, heavy stuff.” It was a good way to warm up on Christmas Eve.

After returning home to Columbia on Christmas Day, my wife and I tucked in to some holiday selections from my cellar. We started with a 2009 bottle of Samichlaus Classic, a 14% doppelbock from Austria that previously held the title of strongest beer in the world.

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At 14%, there’s just a slight hint of booziness on the nose, accompanied by a big, sweet malt character, hints of rum-soaked raisins, caramel, figs and a bit of maple syrup and just a slight alcohol burn on the back. The alcohol certainly hits you more on the taste, but it fades quickly into this sweet, rich, full-bodied blend of caramel, toffee, butterscotch, figs and a big malty sweetness with an almost hard candy quality. The sweetness is definitely cut well by the alcohol, which you can feel warming in your chest after a few sips.

As we settled in for the annual Doctor Who Christmas special, I popped a bottle of the 2011 Santa’s Little Helper imperial stout from Port. Last Christmas, I enjoyed the bourbon barrel-aged version but help on to the standard version for this year.

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The coal-black 10% imperial stout presented with aromas of bittersweet chocolate, a touch of booze and a little bit of licorice, all underneath a cozy cover of big roasted coffee and espresso. Those roasted malts impart a big bitterness on the front of the tongue followed with a bitter coffee finish. There was a ton of espresso, dark chocolate, roasted malts and cocoa on it, but it’s not overly chocolatey or sweet at all. There may have been a slight infection in my bottle as there was this strange almost cough syrup quality on the finish. There was a phenolic burn on the back, kind of like the sweeter alcohol finish from NyQuil. It didn’t turn me off at all, and it honestly kind of worked with the bitterness.

The third of four Christmases this year was spent at my mother-in-law’s house on Wednesday. With all due respect to my in-laws, they are a bit more … eccentric than my family, and two little ones running around only add to the insanity. That’s why I was happy to walk in to the middle of a holiday beer tasting orchestrated by my sister-in-law, which included the St. Bernardus Christmas Ale, Rogue‘s Santa’s Private Reserve Ale, Grand Teton‘s Coming Home Ale 2012 and, for dessert, some Lagunitas Cappuccino Stout. I also got sent home with bottles of each, as well as a Rogue Farms Single Malt Ale and a Westbrook Dark Helmet. Add that to the two six-packs of SweetWater Festive Ale my brother got me and the SweetWater IPA and Terrapin Liquid Bliss “reinbeers” from my mom, and this was quite a holiday helping.

Whatever you celebrated this season, and whatever you’ll celebrate in the weeks to come, may your world be filled with delicious brews and good times. Cheers to all, and to all a good night.

Going Rogue at World of Beer

Holding festivals in Columbia can be tough during football season, but with the Gamecocks on the road in Kentucky this past weekend, there was a flood of events going in and around the city on Saturday. I opted to start my day with a 5K race and proceeding to gorge myself at Viva La Vista, an annual food festival that showcases all the restaurants in the Vista area of the city.

But the main event – for me, at least –  was a Rogue tap takeover at World of Beer featuring more than 30 different beers, including a lot of cask, nitro and vintage versions of some of the Oregon brewery’s heavier offerings. WOB’s had some great tap takeovers recently, with Allagash and Southern Tier sticking out in my mind, but Rogue’s offerings took it to a new level.

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I started off easy enough with OREgasmic Ale from the Chatoe Rogue line of beers. A 6% pale ale, it was one of the better organic beers I’ve had, with a spicy hop profile and a nice malt balance. I followed that up with the other end of the spectrum in a 2010 XS Russian Imperial Stout. What a phenomenal beer. Liquid velvet with a huge bitter coffee taste and an incredibly creamy mouthfeel.

After that was a nitro version of the Shakespeare Oatmeal Stout. It was a bit watery, but the bitter dark chocolate and big roasted qualities made up for it. After that was a cask version of the Brutal IPA. True to its name, it was brutal on the palate. Dank as hell with massive lemon and pine notes. I also got to sample some of the John John Juniper (smooth and with big juicy juniper and cucumber notes) and the Morimoto Soba Ale (a weird nutty and wheaty beer).

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I had the chance to meet fellow beer geek and Untappd friend Mike while I was enjoying my drinks, and as my wife and I were getting ready to leave, he let me know that Southeastern Rogue rep John Lasseter had stopped by with a box of hops and malts. What I figured would be a quick stop before heading out turned into a few more hours. And a few more beers.

I opted for an XS Old Crustacean Barleywine and a Double Chocolate Stout, the latter of which tasted like alcoholic dark chocolate milk. John was also nice to share another bottle of John John Juniper and the much despised – by everyone but me, apparently – Voodoo Doughnut Maple Bacon Ale. John and his wife were both really cool and happy to just sit and talk shop for the night.

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With any good tap takeover, the goal is to showcase a brewery and give people the chance to try beers they might not otherwise have access to. That said, Rogue’s event Saturday was an absolute success. I feel as if I’ve never given Rogue a fair shot in the past. While I’ve always liked their beers, it’s nothing I ever jump hurdles to try. But after last weekend, I have a newfound appreciation for them. Their beer and their people are both really solid and if they were looking to land a new fan, they’ve got one.