PDA

View Full Version : Quaffology 101: How to really appreciate a beer



thedrifter
06-16-05, 04:27 PM
borrowed from my Mark aka The Fontman



Quaffology 101: How to really appreciate a beer
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
By Charles Perry and Sang Yoon
Special to The Times
June 15, 2005

Oh, you think you already know how to drink beer. Grab the bottle from the fridge, pop the top and pour it down the hatch.

That's not drinking beer. It's just getting it inside you. Sure, after mowing the lawn, maybe that's all you're after, but some of this stuff actually has flavor.

Quite a lot of it these days, in fact. Not only can we get the great English and Belgian ales, but out here on the West Coast we have a bright new generation of craft brewers. Last year, sales of craft beers in the United States were up 7%, a higher growth than imported or mainstream beers enjoyed.

So we know you're buying a lot of good beer. You might as well enjoy the flavor.

You were right about the first step - taking the beer out of the fridge. But now put it on the counter and leave it there five or 10 minutes before drinking it. Sure, beer is fragile and needs to be refrigerated, but when it's ice cold, it has scarcely any aroma. It should be about halfway between refrigerator temperature and room temperature, around 50 degrees for lagers and up to 60 for ales.

And you were right about opening it, but once you do, don't chug it straight from the bottle - not if you want to taste it. Beer is largely about the bubbles, and the bubbles need to run free, and that means in a glass.

As long as the beer is under pressure in a bottle (or keg, or cask), it's stable; the water and carbon dioxide molecules stick together. But when the beer is poured out, it gets shaken, and the agitation makes the bonds break, releasing the CO2 as bubbles.

In a glass, those bubbles form a head, and that's where the aromatics in the beer congregate. The bubbles loft them into the air, just as they do in Champagne. If you drink from the bottle, or pour without creating a head in the glass, they can't do their job, and you miss out on most of the flavor.

One of the differences between bottled beer and draft is that by the time draft is poured into your glass, it's already been agitated by traveling through the hose to the tap. So in effect, it's been poured twice, and this is why draft beer is known for being aromatic and having a soft head.

But that doesn't mean draft is automatically better. If everything's done right, bottled beer can have just as much aroma, and its pricklier carbonation gives it more liveliness. (This is why a brewer will package the same beer differently for bottle, under higher pressure, than for draft.)

So pour boldly at first - splash it right in there to make a good head of foam. Then pour the rest of the bottle gently down the side of the glass under the head, because you want to leave plenty of carbonation in the beer. Beer doesn't have the attractive fruit acidity that wine has. Without bubbles exploding in your mouth, it's flat - bland and syrupy.

Beer is not terribly picky about what kind of glass you use, as long as the mouth is wide enough for the aromas to spread, but not so wide that they dissipate (a giant frosted beer mug is for chugging, not tasting).

Likewise, the glass should be deep enough that the head doesn't rise to the rim, taking up all the room for the bouquet to develop.

One thing: If you want a good head of foam, the glass has to be squeaky clean. Oil or soap residue interferes with foaming. In fact, if a glass starts to bubble over, you can stop it by touching the foam with your fingertip, just because of the oils in your skin.

Now swirl the glass a little to get the whole aroma. You'll get that dry, crisp, bready effect of lager or the spicier aroma of an ale, maybe with some dried fruit aromas. And, of course, the resinous, bay leaf-like smell of hops.

If a beer is made with one of the fancier varieties of hops, there may be pine or citrus notes. Some West Coast craft brewers use the ultra-piney Cascade variety of hops, which can also have flowery notes.

Here's something you don't want to smell: skunkiness. That's when the beer smells unpleasantly organic, like rotting cheese, say. Or when a beer smells warm and "cooked" even though it's cold. It can develop when a green bottle is exposed to sunlight, because one of the acids in hops goes nuts under light in the blue-green spectrum and attacks other components in the beer, creating the skunk smell. Beer in brown bottles doesn't have such a problem.

Skunkiness is quite common. Some Americans think it's a natural part of the flavor of certain imported lagers that come in green bottles. It isn't, and if you go to Europe, you'll see those same beers being sold in brown bottles. Why brewers have decided Americans prefer beer in green glass is a mystery.

It happens in domestic beer too. One glass in a six-pack might be skunky and the rest all right, or they might all have a stink. Here's all you can to: Avoid green bottles and do what you can to keep beer away from sunlight.

Another thing you don't want to smell is the flat, cardboard-y aroma of oxidation, the tombstone that stands where the lively flavors of fresh beer once flourished. Avoiding skunky and cardboard-y smells may be why so many people drink beer straight from the bottle.

Oxidized beers also develop a harsh taste in the mouth, unlike the bracing bitterness of hops. The TV ads denouncing "bitter beer" are probably a response to this nasty flavor.

The fact is, distributors often mishandle beer. They leave it in warehouses for weeks, or out on loading docks in all sorts of weather, the way it would never occur to them to treat wine (which can actually take rougher treatment than beer can).

One reason that draft beer has such a good reputation is that casks and kegs are stored and shipped under refrigeration. Bottled beer, because it's likely to be handled carelessly, is usually pasteurized in the hope of protecting it from the worst of this sort of treatment, but pasteurizing takes out part of the flavor. (One reason that Sierra Nevada has such a following is that its beer, unpasteurized like most craft beers, is shipped only under carefully controlled refrigeration conditions.)

The final step - we know you've been waiting for this, pally - is to take a mouthful of the beer. Slurp it and suck a little air through it to bring out the flavors - the caramel-like sweetness of the malt, the bitterness from the hops, the mouth-coating savoriness of the malt proteins. Savor the aromas of the hops and the roasted qualities of the malt a second time as the fumes rise from your mouth into your nose.

You know what? You may find that you won't just chug the bottle down, no more than you'd wolf a good steak. You'll relish every mouthful.

You've earned this. You've treated the beer with respect, and it should be treating you well in return. Beer can be your buddy.

Ellie

thedrifter
06-17-05, 06:35 AM
Beer Fires Up Flavor In Grilled Foods
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Lisa Morrison, Staff Writer
UPDATED: 11:00 am CDT June 16, 2005

For many outdoor cooks, "grilling with beer" means flipping burgers with one hand and sipping an ice-cold brewski with the other. But a growing group of skilled grillers are finding that a well-crafted beer can be more than just an accompaniment to hot dogs and hamburgers.

Lucy Saunders, whose Web site BeerCook.com features extensive research on grilling with beer, and sauces and marinades with beer, says using beer as part of grilling foods can be tricky.

"Truth is that grilling demands constant attention and quick reflexes to keep food from scorching," she says, adding that it also doesn't take long to add the flavor of beer to food.

"Craft beer offers lots of caramel and roasted-grain flavors that enhance the caramelized proteins of grilled meats, and some craft beers offer fruity tastes from yeasty esters that offset the herbal flavors of sauces and spices," Saunders says. "I also think the slightly bitter edge of a well-hopped ale extends the heat from chilies and hot spices."

Saunders enjoys making beer-based marinades (you can find the recipe for one below and several more on her Web site), which allow the meat to become infused with the beer's flavors as it is being tenderized.

"I like to experiment with adding beer-based sauces at different times when grilling," she says. "Marinades made with beer offer just a hint of hops and malt taste. Often, you will get the truest taste of beer by basting on a sauce or glaze right before serving ... Some grill cooks just put beer in a spray bottle and keep it by the grill to manage flare-ups -- a quick spritz with beer will douse the flame and add a bit of flavor at the same time."

According to Saunders, a good beer-based marinade should incorporate some oil for moisture, beer for flavor and acidity (for tenderization), a bit of sweetener and aromatic and flavorful herbs and/or fruit for flavor.

Vegetarians also can get in on the beer-and-grilling act: Saunders touts asparagus, grilled in a light marinade of olive oil and framboise (a raspberry-flavored beer) as a perennial favorite.

Here is one of Lucy Saunders' beer-baste sauces -- which she enjoys on fish or chicken. She likes a crisp, fruity pale ale to go with it during the meal, though she says she would use a strong golden maibock or dubbel in the baste.

Thai Basil Ale Baste with Golden Ale and Coconut
from beercook.com

1 C. coconut milk
¼ C. unsweetened coconut flakes
½ C. chopped Thai basil, packed (Thai basil has smaller leaves and spicier taste than Italian basil)
2 Tbsp. minced scallion (white base only)
1 Tbsp. minced garlic, peeled and chopped
1 Tbsp. fresh grated ginger
1 tsp. ground white pepper
Pinch kosher salt
1 Tbsp. palm sugar or golden cane syrup
1 C. strong golden ale
1 Tbsp. golden rum

Blend all ingredients in a blender until very smooth. Place in saucepan and cook 5 minutes over very low heat to meld flavors. Use to brush on skewers of grilled shrimp. Makes about 2 cups.
© 2005 Lucy Saunders

The next step, of course, is to determine which beer to serve with your grilled creation. A good rule of thumb is to use the same beer in which you marinated your meat (or veggies). If you decided to save the beer only for sipping with your supper, though, here are some suggestions:

Compliment

A beer made with a touch of smoked malt can really enhance the goodness of grilled meats and smoked salmon. Try smoked porters, German rauchbiers and a rather obscure style of beer known as steinbier or "stone beer" (because the brewer throws hot rocks into the liquid).

Ambers and brown ales also pick up some of the sweet, carmelized flavors of grilled meats and vegetables.

"The malty, hoppy notes in beer are natural partners to the caramel and spicy flavors of lots of barbecued and grilled foods," Saunders says. "The carbonation in beer adds another level of enjoyment. It is quenching and refreshes the palate for the next bite."

You can compliment textures as well as flavors: A spritzy, slightly spicy witbier or a citrusy wheat beer could be the perfect selection for a lightly textured fillet of grilled fish (halibut, cod or mahi-mahi). A silky-smooth stout with a richly marbled grilled steak is magical for some people.

Contrast

Contrasting flavors work well, too. Crisp, slightly bitter to highly bitter beers often work especially well with heavier-fat fares.

"Sometimes with grilled steak, for instance, you almost want a lighter beer like a pilsner or kölsh," says Tom Dalldorf, editor and publisher of Celebrator Beer News, the country's oldest "brewspaper." "That also might be when it's time to pull out the IPAs and pale ales."

Dalldorf says one of his favorite combinations is crab legs steamed whole on the grill, paired with a hoppy American pale ale. The sweetness of the crab contrasts perfectly with the slight bitterness of the beer.

"It's a flavor combo not to be denied," he says.

The key is to experiment different "flavor combos" until you find the ones that ring true for you. Research has never been quite so fun -- or so tasty!

Ellie