• The Magazine
    • Current Issue
    • Back Issues
    • Features
      • Brewing
      • People
      • Culture
      • History
      • Food
      • Travel
      • Styles
      • Homebrewing
    • Departments
      • Coming Soon
      • Columns
        • Visiting the Pub
        • Behind the Bar
        • It’s My Round
        • The Beer Enthusiast
        • The Beer Curmudgeon
        • In The Brewhouse
        • Michael Jackson
        • The Taster
        • Beyond Beer
        • Your Next Beer
        • Industry Insights
      • What’s Brewing
      • Pull Up A Stool
      • Travel
        • Beer Travelers
        • A Closer Look
        • Beer Weekend
      • Stylistically Speaking
      • Home Brewing
      • Beer Talk
      • Beer Books
  • Events
    • World Beer Festival Raleigh – July 7, 2018
    • World Beer Festival Durham – Oct. 6, 2018
    • World Beer Festival Columbia – Feb. 17, 2018
    • Event Calendar
    • Brewery Tastings & Events
    • Beer Explorer
  • Reviews
    • Staff Reviews
    • Beer Talk
    • Flights
    • Book Reviews
  • Learn
    • What is Beer?
      • Water
      • Malt
      • Hops
      • Yeast
    • Styles
      • Lagers
      • British and North American Ales
      • Belgian and Continental Ales
      • Wheat Ales
      • Stouts and Porters
      • Seasonal and Specialty
    • Glossary
  • News
    • New on the Shelves
  • Web Only
    • Blogs
      • Daniel Bradford
      • John Holl
      • Acitelli on History
      • The Beer Bible Blog
      • Bryson
    • Video
    • Photos
    • Podcasts
Menu
logo
  • Advertise with Us
  • Subscriber Services
  • Retailer Services
Give a Gift Subscribe
Coming Soon

Coming Soon: February 2016

All About Beer Magazine - Volume 37, Issue 1
January 27, 2016 By Heather Vandenengel

Events

Feb. 5-6

Extreme Beer Fest

Boston, Massachusetts

How brewers and drinkers define “extreme beer” has evolved in the last decade, from super-strong stouts and high-IBU IPAs to barrel-aged, wild-fermented sour ales featuring all sorts of funk. Taste the bleeding edge of brewers’ experiments for yourself at the annual Extreme Beer Fest.

www.beeradvocate.com/ebf/

@BeerAdvocate

Feb. 11-20

Arizona Beer Week

Phoenix, Arizona

As if February in Phoenix doesn’t already sound appealing enough, the annual Arizona Beer Week makes a strong case for fleeing chillier climes. You can expect 10 days of beer events, dinners and tastings, plus the annual Strong Beer Festival on the 13th, with brewers from around the state and beyond.

www.arizonabeerweek.com/arizona-strong-beer-festival

@AZBeerWeek

Feb. 13

Festival of the Dark Arts

Astoria, Oregon

This self-proclaimed “Carnival of Stout,” hosted by Astoria’s Fort George Brewery, is the perfect pre-Valentine’s Day celebration. The one-day fest features a host of “dark arts,” including tattoo artistry, belly dancing, tarot card reading and tintype photography, plus, of course, plenty of deep, dark stouts.

www.fortgeorgebrewery.com/festivalofdarkarts

@FortGeorgeBeer

Feb. 24

NYC Brewer’s Choice

Brooklyn, New York

One of the main events of NYC’s Beer Week (taking place Feb. 19-28), the jam-packed NYC Brewer’s Choice features more than three dozen breweries, many of which brew a special beer for the event using New York- state-grown ingredients, a homebrewers’ pavilion, the “Local Beer Hero” Awards and more.

www.nycbrewerschoice.com

@NYCBrewers

Beer Releases

Oskar Blues Deviant DalesOskar Blues Brewery

Deviant Dale’s IPA

8% | Imperial IPA

While fans of Deviant Dale’s may be disappointed to find that the piney, resiny double IPA from Oskar Blues is no longer available year-round, the bright side is that it’s available for a limited release, from January through March, to maximize the freshest hops of the harvest. And you can now grab a sixer of it, as it’s making the switch from four-packs of 16-ounce cans to six-packs of 12-ounce cans.

Bell’s Brewery

Consecrator Doppelbock

8% | Doppelbock

Get an early taste of spring with Bell’s Consecrator Doppelbock, a well-balanced, full-bodied lager with hints of caramel and molasses. Consecrator, which undergoes a three-month lagering period, is brewed for a Fat Tuesday (Feb. 17) release, and is available on draft and in six-packs of 12-ounce bottles.

Shipyard Brewing Co.

Shipyard Blood Orange

5.1% | Belgian-style Wheat Beer

Portland, Maine’s Shipyard Brewery has a new blood-orange-infused unfiltered Belgian-style wheat ale. Brewed with pilsner, wheat and flaked white wheat malt, plus Cascade and Nugget hops, it features a “subtle orange aroma and hints of coriander and citrus on the finish.”

Brouwerij Lindemans

Lindemans Oude Kriek Cuvee ReneeOude Kriek Cuvée René

7.0% | Lambic

From Belgian lambic brewery Lindemans, Oude Kriek Cuvée René is a traditional lambic brewed with whole cherries, fermented by wild yeast, aged in oak and bottle-conditioned. Named for family patriarch René Lindemans, the lambic is a new regular addition to the lineup and is available in 750-mL bottles.

For Rogue, It’s All in the Hop Family

From Citra to Simcoe to Motueka, hop varieties these days have a following of their own, as drinkers seek out styles made with their favorites. But they also allow breweries to put a signature stamp on their pale ales, IPAs and more.

Rogue’s new Hop Family series aims to do just that, with a series of four IPAs featuring different blends of aroma hops grown at its farm in Independence, Oregon. The lineup consists of 4 Hop IPA (4.44%), 6 Hop IPA (6.66%), 7 Hop IPA (7.77%) and 8 Hop IPA (8.88%), and the hop varieties include Rogue strains like Freedom, Rebel and Independent.

4 Hop is packaged in six-packs of 12-ounce bottles, 7 Hop in four-packs of 12-ounce bottles, and 6 Hop and 8
Hop in 22-ounce bottles. The series debuts in January.

Rogue-Ales-Hop-Family

A Rebrand, and in cans, for Fort Collins Brewery

After a 10-year anniversary in 2014 and a shift in ownership (from original founders Tom and Jan Peters to their daughter, Tina Peters), Fort Collins Brewery is looking ahead and mixing things up.

To start, the brewery worked with a local artist to design all-new packaging for its core brands, seasonal beers and Brewers Lunch Box variety pack, and, for the first time, will be switching its core brands into cans. These include Red Banshee, a 5.3% red ale brewed with Magnum and Tettnanger hops, 1020 Pale Ale and Rocky Mountain IPA. Several recipes, including Red Banshee, are undergoing a revamp as well, according to Katie Nierling, national sales manager for FCB.

The brewery is also kicking off its new limited-release Savor Series of higher-ABV beers meant for cellaring. The line, packaged in 500-mL bottles, highlights brewers’ passion projects. The first release, a 10.5% American-style barley wine, is out in February and is brewed with Columbus hops and dry-hopped with El Dorado.

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Follow @allaboutbeer

Beer in your inbox

More Like This

  • Distribution in America
  • 18th-Century Campus Brewery Uncovered
  • Bridging the Beer-Wine Gap

Most Popular

  • All About Beer to Acquire Draft Publishing LLC
  • Funky Buddha Sweet Potato Casserole Strong Ale Arrives Sept. 1

The Magazine

  • Advertise with Us
  • Subscribe
  • Give a Gift
  • Staff
  • Subscriber Services
  • Retailer Services

Learn Beer

  • Reviews
  • Back Issues
  • Articles
  • Writer Guidelines
  • Internship Program

Events

  • World Beer Festival
  • Craft Beer Events
  • News

All About Beer

  • P.O. Box 110346
  • Durham, NC 27709
  • CONTACT