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All About Beer Magazine September 2016 Issue

Volume: 37 - Issue: 4

Issue Title

Features

Trade Secrets: The Highs and Lows of Beer Trading
Culture

Trade Secrets: The Highs and Lows of Beer Trading

by Oliver Gray

In the fall of 2013, I bought a six-pack of Sierra Nevada Brewing Co.’s Flipside Red IPA. It wasn’t a crazy hyped or rare beer, but something in the combination of lemony hops and caramel malts matched up perfectly with my taste buds. I went back to the store to get more, only to discover... View Article

Pretzel Necklaces and Beyond: Beer Lovers Get Serious About a Festival Essential
Culture - Food

Pretzel Necklaces and Beyond: Beer Lovers Get Serious About a Festival Essential

by Bryan Roth

Cindy Cox-Siedlarz considers herself a crafty person, skilled at creating costumes, scrapbooking memories and crocheting and knitting clothing. But of all her creations, one has a particularly lasting impact, and it has nothing to do with cloth, yarn or household items. Instead, this art is more about sweet and salty with a touch of savory... View Article

Pretzel Necklaces and Beyond: Beer Lovers Get Serious About a Festival Essential
Culture - Food

Pretzel Necklaces and Beyond: Beer Lovers Get Serious About a Festival Essential

by Bryan Roth

Cindy Cox-Siedlarz considers herself a crafty person, skilled at creating costumes, scrapbooking memories and crocheting and knitting clothing. But of all her creations, one has a particularly lasting impact, and it has nothing to do with cloth, yarn or household items. Instead, this art is more about sweet and salty with a touch of savory... View Article

Slow Beer: The History of Aging Beer
Brewing Features - History

Slow Beer: The History of Aging Beer

by Ron Pattinson

Barrel-aging may be all the rage at the moment, but giving beer time to mature is nothing new. And it wasn’t done by halves. While a modern lager might spend a few weeks aging and a barrel-aged beer sits a couple of years in wood, in the past, beers could mature for decades. Stock Ale... View Article

Slow Beer: The History of Aging Beer
Brewing Features - History

Slow Beer: The History of Aging Beer

by Ron Pattinson

Barrel-aging may be all the rage at the moment, but giving beer time to mature is nothing new. And it wasn’t done by halves. While a modern lager might spend a few weeks aging and a barrel-aged beer sits a couple of years in wood, in the past, beers could mature for decades. Stock Ale... View Article

Brew U: Educational Institutions Strive to Keep Up with Demand
Brewing Features

Brew U: Educational Institutions Strive to Keep Up with Demand

by Bo McMillan

Dave Gardell has owned the Ruck, a beer bar in Troy, New York, for the last 11 and a half years. He’s worked there for the past 18. At his job, he says, he makes special effort to “have a deeper understanding and appreciation of the product I’m serving,” even “pounding the pavement” himself to... View Article

Jasmine Rice with Cucumber Yogurt Sauce
Chefs' Pairings - Food - Recipes

Jasmine Rice with Cucumber Yogurt Sauce

by Ryan Laufenburger

Cucumber can be a difficult flavor profile to isolate, never mind to add to a beer with any success. Vegetables, being mostly water, sometimes get lost in the boldness of malt, hops and yeast in beer. The refreshing beers featured below would go great after a day of outside chores or playtime. They would pair... View Article

Columns

Two Breweries, Two Different Experiences
Behind the Bar

Two Breweries, Two Different Experiences

by John Holl
Eyes on Texas: Big Market, Lots to Gain (or Lose)
Industry Insights

Eyes on Texas: Big Market, Lots to Gain (or Lose)

by Christopher Shepard

Departments

48 Hours in Brooklyn
Beer Weekend

48 Hours in Brooklyn

by Sarah Annese

Maybe it’s your grandmother who was born there; or it’s Francie Nolan, whose coming-of-age story, told in Betty Smith’s novel A Tree Grows in Brooklyn, depicts early 20th-century Williamsburg. Could be the DIY movement, gentrification or plaid shirts. Whatever your impression of Brooklyn, it has a thriving and quickly expanding beer scene. During this weekend... View Article

Homebrewing: Experimental Design
Home Brewing

Homebrewing: Experimental Design

by K. Florian Klemp

Once modern American brewers mastered a few of the basic beer styles, the urge to experiment kicked into high gear almost immediately. It’s why we now have such extraordinary and vast choices. Nailing down the basics before tackling the adventurous and radical is sound advice for homebrewers as well. This inquisitive itch often comes early... View Article

Classic Beers Find Second Life with Modern Audiences
What's Brewing

Classic Beers Find Second Life with Modern Audiences

by Bryan Roth

In 2015, there were about 11,300 packaged beer brands scattered across stores in all 50 states, according to market research company IRI. That’s 32 different beers for every day of the year. But at a time when those numbers continue to creep up and breweries look forward to new tastes and trends, some are glancing... View Article

The Reinheitsgebot Celebrates its Quincentennial
Beer Travelers

The Reinheitsgebot Celebrates its Quincentennial

by Brian Yaeger

Few American brewers adhere to the Reinheitsgebot—the Bavarian Beer Purity Law of 1516 that to this day mandates, in order to be called “beer,” a brew can only consist of barley malt, hops and water (although it currently allows for wheat and, naturally, yeast). But 500 years on, the world’s oldest food law is alive... View Article

Wood & Beer: A Brewer’s Guide
Book Reviews

Wood & Beer: A Brewer’s Guide

by John Holl

Wood & Beer: A Brewer’s Guide By Peter Bouckaert and Dick Cantwell $19.95, Brewers Publications Lucky are we, the drinkers, who will soon benefit from the inspirations that brewers will get after reading this book. Written by two respected brewers, this is an exhaustingly comprehensive examination into a style that gets a lot of attention... View Article

The Fermented Man: A Year on the Front Lines of a Food Revolution
Book Reviews

The Fermented Man: A Year on the Front Lines of a Food Revolution

by John Holl

The Fermented Man: A Year on the Front Lines of a Food Revolution By Derek Dellinger $28.95, The Overlook Press At times it may seem that we’re living only on beer, but for an entire year brewer Derek Dellinger sustained himself exclusively on fermented food and beverages (not just beer) and documents the journey in... View Article

CRAFT: THE CALIFORNIA BEER DOCUMENTARY
Book Reviews

CRAFT: THE CALIFORNIA BEER DOCUMENTARY

by Jon Page

CRAFT: THE CALIFORNIA BEER DOCUMENTARY Directed by Jeff Smith craftbeerdoc.com, DhicPhace Films LLC This documentary begins on a personal note from director Jeff Smith—who left his pregnant wife at home for a month during filming—but the story is wisely told by brewers, owners and representatives of 80 breweries in California. While the focus is on... View Article

Colorado Excursions with History, Hikes and Hops
Book Reviews

Colorado Excursions with History, Hikes and Hops

by John Holl

Colorado Excursions with History, Hikes and Hops By Ed Sealover $21.99, Arcadia Publishing The Rocky Mountain State has long been a destination for beer and nature enthusiasts, and this collection of drinking spots and hiking trails peppered with colorful prose and important tips is worth a place in any daypack. Reading in advance of an... View Article

Pull Up A Stool With John Kimmich
Pull Up A Stool

Pull Up A Stool With John Kimmich

by John Holl

This interview appears in the September issue of All About Beer Magazine. Call this the house that Heady Topper built. This July, the Alchemist Brewery was to open a new space in Stowe, Vermont, where enthusiasts and cult followers can once again pick up the famed double IPA (which is largely credited with spurring the... View Article

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