Recipes

Born in America: Indigenous Hybrid Beers

By K. Florian Klemp Published January 2011, Volume 31, Number 6 0 Comments | Post a Comment

Brewing Our Own American microbrewers have done more than their share in the past 30 years to enrich and enliven the brewing tapestry. They have reintroduced literally all of the traditional styles, put a unique Yankee twist on some of them and even invented a few of their own.

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Holiday Brews

By K. Florian Klemp Published November 2010, Volume 31, Number 5 0 Comments | Post a Comment

As the season turns, so does the weather, and of course, so do our beer preferences. For some, wintry brewery offerings make the long, cold months tolerable. Brewers design them as a means to capture the season with a warming and more formidable character, or with a bit of panache to pair with the fare and ambiance of this time of year. Read More…

Go With the Grain

By K. Florian Klemp Published September 2010, Volume 31, Number 4 0 Comments | Post a Comment

Experimentation is much of the appeal of brewing, and methods of integrating alternative ingredients such as spices or assorted sugars into a recipe are fairly clear cut. Unmalted grains, on the other hand, are a bit more complicated, and are essentially useless handled incorrectly.

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Brewing With Cocoa

By K. Florian Klemp Published January 2010, Volume 30, Number 6 4 Comments | Post a Comment

Few of life’s simple pleasures are as evocative and savored as chocolate. Everything from strength and health to aphrodisiacal prowess has been attributed to this magical mana. Though much of this is pure legend, perhaps it is the very power of suggestion that has elevated chocolate to such lofty status throughout history, and no one can deny the mood-altering authority that chocolate so lustily induces.
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Beer Marches On

By Randy Mosher Published March 2009, Volume 30, Number 1 0 Comments | Post a Comment

It’s spitting sleet. The sky is a sheet of lead. The wind, damp and raw, burns the flesh. But amidst the gloom of March, there are signs of the unstoppable change of the seasons. Birdsongs share the air with the heavy perfume of well-rested earth. Trees flush a ghostly green, preparing to burst forth with new life. For brewers, these signs announce that warmer weather is approaching, and it’s time to get the last batches of serious beer in the tanks, luxuriously pouring resources into a beer that will sleep all summer to be tapped as a celebration of the harvest, a reward for work well done and part of the grand cycle of seasons.

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Export Lager: A Long-Distance Love Affair

By Randy Mosher Published November 2008, Volume 29, Number 5 0 Comments | Post a Comment

For at least a thousand years, the ability to brew beer in excess of local needs and ship it off to distant drinkers has been a valued source of both prestige and cash. Beer is a serious claim to fame in the otherwise unexceptional towns of Burton-on-Trent and Pilsen.

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