This year's brewery trip was on the west coast.
Quick rundown of the trip:
Monday - Got into San Diego late and the closest brewery that was open and had food was a chain called Callahan's.
The place was about as expected, marginal but it would do the job after a long flight. An extremely drinkable, yet flavorful pale ale and a porter that currently escapes me (I think it was a chocolate porter, website doesn't help) certainly stood out as the only above average beers here. The food was substandard for sure, a cheese plate with sausage was regrettable for the next 12 hours or so. C- including expectations, probably a D overall.
The next day we walked a few miles to Ballast Point. I started out with their big eye IPA, which was very refreshing after the walk. We then headed on a tour of the brewery, which was appreciated but it was rather basic. I learned a few new things about distilling, though they were basic things I just did not know.
After the tour we dove into the rest of their lineup. The amber was rich and hoppy. The yellowtail pale ale felt like it was lacking to me, but now I'm reading their description and it says it is a kolsch style pale. I haven't really heard of anybody naming their beer xxx pale ale and it actually being a kolsch, a little strange to me.
The real highlight was the session ale they had on tap. It was around 3.5% and very well hopped. It went down like water, of course, but it wasn't a bad thing.
I have a 22oz of the porter I'm waiting on in the mail, I'll review that when it comes. My buddy had that one and really enjoyed it.
We had the Ballast Point Sculpin IPA at Stone the next day and were a little let down. The hype on that beer was pretty big and I just didn't enjoy the hop combination as much as I thought. It tasted like a Simcoe hopped beer to me, but not as intrusive as Simcoe usually tastes to me when it is heavily hopped. It wasn't unpleasant or anything, but nowhere near what everybody kept telling us (OMG DRINK THIS).
As far as the brewery goes, they only had a tasting room with no chairs, but did have bathrooms, complimentary pizza and a very nice staff. I will give them a B, maybe a B+ if you take into consideration expectations.
After this we got a ride to Pacific Beach ale house which was just north of Mission beach.
The amber, pale, ipa and cream were all above average, though none of them stand out now. They were out of both dark beers (stout and porter), so that was a bit disappointing, but their food was pretty good. Get the thai-style chicken wings, you won't regret them. My friend said the lobster blt with apple wood bacon was good as well.
We then walked 4+ miles up the beach to La Jolla brew house, a little brewpub a few blocks from the beach.
I wish I could say walking over 4 miles while approaching 10 beers before 3pm in 90+ degree heat was the biggest mistake of the day, but I would be lying.
La Jolla was easily the worst brewery we visited, and that is saying something with the likes of Callahan's in the mix. The latter was a chain, La Jolla is not. I had a flight of beer and had to finish a marginal heffe from 2 friends that met us there, which was not very rewarding.
To put this into simple terms, after being out in the heat, especially walking, almost any fresh/cold drink is going to be great to me. Bad beers taste ok to me and ok beers taste good. I still really disliked this brewery.
The environment seemed ok. It was kind of a sports bar, yuppy beach feel but I won't hold that against a place. It wasn't loud nor annoying, the beer was just poor. D, only because they have guest bottles so it's possible if I actually lived in La Jolla I could come here once a month.
Karl Strauss was next, in downtown San Diego. We met up with our ride's friend, as well as another old friend here in addition to 2p2er Indiana.
Strauss is a chain brewery, similar to Rock Bottom I believe, but with an even stronger reputation from what I've heard.
I had some belgian strong beer that tasted a little rubbery and young. It was similar to a few belgians we've made that were over-sugared, though I'm not sure if that was the off flavor I was getting. It wasn't terrible at all, and I could definitely see that negative aspect of the beer mellowing with age, but at a minimum I think it wasn't aged enough.
I think I had a pale and a red here as well, but I really don't recall. I hadn't met Indiana before and our friend from SD that met us there I hadn't seen in over 5 years, + the walking and drinking all day, I just can't remember what else I had or if it was any good. I'd likely remember if it was really poor or really good, so I'll just end this review with a C+/B-. I wish I had grabbed a few bottles here, but I totally forgot about it. Their food looked good but I didn't eat here.
To cap the night off, we headed to the Blind Lady beer bar.
I had found out earlier that Alesmith only had a tasting room and would not be open until Thursday afternoon, so I decided to have a speedway stout from them. This was quite a beer, deep and complex as most any imperial stout I've had. It was $4.50 for a small brandy snifter of this, and they gave you a piece of chocolate. I had 3, and at around 12% this finished me off for the night.
The pizza here was pretty good too. Unique, not incredible, but good. If you don't live in a good pizza area like NYC, Chicago or CT, you may like it even more. The rest of their tap selection was pretty standard, it wasn't ground breaking or anything but it was a very good beer bar. Points off for it being intrusively loud here though. I'll give it a B.
Wednesday we took it slow, since Tuesday was a bit much. We took 2 buses up to Escondido in the early evening and then a short cab ride to Stone.
Now, the only thing I really knew about Stone up until this point was that they had some good, but probably overhyped beer (c'mon, those IPAs have nothing on places like Floyd's and Arrogant Bastard is better marketed than William Shatner). I also saw a small thumbnail picture of a tree in the brewery and heard the food was pretty good. All in all I was expecting a good time, but nothing like this.
First of all, the place is massive. The parking lot was packed with at least 100 cars. This was a Wednesday evening. We walked into the store, which also had a small bar for to go bottles and growlers, very nice looking. We then walked into sort of a hosting area, where they get you a table. There's a big rock in here as well as some stuff (awards I think) on the walls. From there, you walk into the actual indoor restaurant/bar area. The indoor tree was very cool, as was another big rock with water sprinkling down the edge. One whole wall is glass and shows you the brewery. Another wall is stone and leads up to a 2nd floor, sort of banquet area. And the wall that separates it from the outside is actually glass that can be opened (and was later on) about 25 feet or so into the air.
The bar is a circle and everything is done very nice.
Now, for the best part, the outdoor garden. This is basically an oasis. There is a dining area in the main section, complete with a little stream and mini waterfalls and fire pit (with seating around the entire thing), tables and torch lights. An outdoor bar is sectioned off a little bit, yet still pretty much open, with another fire pit. Above that is an outdoor balcony that opens up from the indoor 2nd floor. Then there are paths, a few hundred feet at least that go around a lower field section. They were playing Indiana Jones in the lower field when we were there. The actual garden area had so much plant life, including hops, as well as a little cavern with falling water and a pond.
The food was also very good. I had a spicy beef dish, recommended by our waitress. We had these potato popper things for an appetizer. They were basically mashed potatoes deep fried, and were tasty, albeit a bit dry (sauce took care of the dryness and it wasn't anything that shouldn't be expected with potatoes and breading).
The beer was also good. ruination IPA, imperial stout (top notch), green flash belgian dipa on cask (++++), smoked porter (subtly smoky, very satisfying).
We split a Coronado Brewery IPA here. I was picking up fruity hops in this one, my friend more of sweet pine. Either way, the hops were interesting, the beer was good but not great in this one.
Beer B+/A-, food A-, brewery/garden A+. Overall this was the nicest brewery either of us have ever been to out of the 30-40 breweries we've visited.
We took a cab back to the hotel after this (impatience with the bus transfers trumped $50 expense) and just relaxed in preparation for Thursday's road trip.
Thursday we went to Ogie's pizza and brewery while waiting for our friend to pick us up for the start of the trip north. I ate the 5 cheese pizza with garlic oil sauce. It wasn't great, the feta cheese really stuck out over the others (fontina, parmesan, mozzarella and mild goat) but I wouldn't call it bad. I had a beer flight, they were mostly average beers, except the Torrey Pines IPA, which was good.
Unfortunately, we hit a massive nail about 2 hours outside of San Fran, which destroyed my buddy's tire. We didn't end up getting into SF until about 1am, at which point 21st Amendment was closed. We did get to see some of what I imagine is their red light district, the Tenderloin. Pretty shady, but interesting stuff there. I haven't seen such an active, yet seedy area in any cities I've been to. Most of the shady parts of town here in Chicago don't really have so many clubs, bars and normal people among the legions of bums, street walkers and corner dealers.
So, after getting a replacement tire in Concord (northeast bay suburb), we picked up some beers from a local store. We grabbed a 6 pack of 21st Amendment's brew free IPA. It's in the mail one the way to Chicago, but I was fortunate enough to split a can of this with a friend awhile back and remember it being very good.
Next up was Russian River, in wine country (Santa Rosa). The atmosphere of the place was pretty relaxed. A younger, somewhat attractive but dressed plainly crowd was here in mid afternoon.
I ordered a sampler, as did our driver. I believe it was 16, 2 ounce samplers, ouch. It was like a mix of heaven and hell, as it was mid afternoon and we still had about 10 hours of driving ahead of us.
As for the beers, simply divine. I'll start with the famous DIPA, Pliny the Elder. I had a small bit of a bottle of this one time and it was rather warm, but still superb. It was just as good as I remembered, right up there with my favorites, FFF Dreadnaught and 2x crooked tree. Blind pig and russian river are the other two IPAs (single ipas) that they have, I preferred river to pig, but it seems most people like blind pig best.
My next favorite beer after Pliny was Concecration. This is a dark ale aged in cabernet barrels with added bret for 6 months. I don't usually like beers with bret, or barrel aged beers in general, but this was so complex and felt incredibly balanced. I could pluck flavors out of this beer all day. The downside was that it was so overpowering that I could only sip it, so it took quite awhile to finish both 2 oz samplers (driver had to stop about halfway through the sampler). This would make the perfect dessert, an hour long 6-8 oz pour of this would be extremely rewarding.
Another noteworthy beer was a brown, which was the 2nd best brown I've ever had (Pullman from Flossmoor Station is #1 by a fair amount). The other beers were mostly interesting and ranged from ok to very good. If you like sour beers or barrel aged stuff, this is definitely a gold mine. If you like belgian beers, you're also in a good place. I'm not particularly keen on either style but I still felt this was the best beer we had on the trip. A+ beer, B+ environment. Beer pieces (appetizer) really hit the spot. Bought a cool looking growler of Pliny that I hope doesn't break to pieces in the mail.
We didn't quite make it to Portland that night. Ashland, Oregon, about 4 hours south of Portland, was our 11pm stop. We hit Standing Stone brewery first. Their pale rye was pretty good and very drinkable. Dry stout was outstanding, I have a growler of that on a friend's suitcase scheduled to arrive later this week. IPA and double IPA were both above average, but did not stand out. There were one or two other beers that were ok as well (amber and cream I believe).
Their food was excellent. The margarita pizza, which is really just a cheese pizza with tomato sauce, the chicken quesadillas and the chicken pizza with cream sauce were all excellent. We split those up amongst the 3 of us and we all agreed on the quality of these.
Next up was Caldera brewery, which was right around the corner from Standing Stone. Caldera is apparently less than 2 months old and is located in the basement of a restaurant. It has a college bar type feel to it, but everybody was really cool and relaxed here. I talked to the bartender a bit when I came in, he was a pretty good guy, at least for a packer's fan. Much like Standing Stone, all these beers were above average. Two of my favorites were dry hopped red and the ginger beer with hibiscus flowers. The latter was probably a little more bland and light than I usually care for, but was otherwise a very good beer. The dry hopped Orange was something both my friends really enjoyed. I didn't actually have one of these, unfortunately.
We hung out with the bartender and head brewer for an hour or so after closing here, they were both good people and we enjoyed many beers that night. I give the brewery a B+, beers were B, people A+, place C+ (it's in a basement after all).
Saturday we ventured on to Portland. We had to replace the replacement tire to match my buddy's other tires (they were out of stock in the bay area near us) so we didn't really have much time with an 11pm flight.
We tried to stop at Hair of the Dog since it was like 2 minutes from the hotel our driving buddy was going to be staying overnight at. It is apparently only open by appointment like Alesmith and Lost Abbey, so that was a bit disappointing.
We did, however, arrive at Deschutes for dinner. The brewery was very nice, a lot of wooden beams and intricate woodwork. They also win the award for most confusing and coolest bathrooms on this trip. The bathroom area winds around and has a ton of mirrors there. I passed the men's room the first time and I think my friend said he ran into a wall on the way in. Inside the bathroom they had some giant urinals and a pretty cool granite sink that arched down like a triangle into the long, flat drain.
Non bathroom wise, the food was above average. It wasn't a gourmet burger, but the basic burger with cheddar was fine. I had some lentil soup with a few things I can't recall in it. It tasted asian inspired and fairly good to me.
Their beers were all above average, but I was expecting more from them. The harvest ale (fresh hops added 2 hours after picking) was a little too mild and the hops were nowhere near as tasty as say, Goose Island's harvest ale (or SN for that matter). My favorite beer was the coffee stout, by far. B overall, B- beers, A ambiance, B food.
Our last stop was Rogue, which was literally around the corner. I wasn't expecting too much from Rogue, as they have been pretty hit or miss for me up until now (like Sam Adams kind of, except my expectations for Sam have always been lower).
I just had a Shakespeare Stout. It was really good, better than I remembered it (I think my last one was in a bottle 2 years ago). I had a small sample of the heffe, which tasted all right, and unfortunately didn't have time to grab anymore beers or spirits (they started distilling, much like DFH, ballast point and seemingly half the breweries on the West Coast).
Weighted lightly because of our lack of time here, but B+ beer, A ambiance (bartenders were both good guys, the shorter, animal house looking guy was cool) and food is N/A. So A- overall.
Some awards on the trip:
Best IPA - Russian River IPA
Best DIPA - Russian River Pliney the Elder
Best Stout - Alesmith Speedway Stout
Best Brewery (not beer) - Stone
Best Beer - Russian River
Biggest Surprise - Ballast Point, Caldera, Standing Stone
Biggest Disappointment - Deschutes
Best City - Portland (runner up SD and Ashland, Oregon).
Worst City - San Fran, I'd imagine a clean freak would have a heart attack in 5 minutes here.
Best Drive - Through the mountains in Sonoma from Santa Rosa to the interstate.
Best Food - Standing Stone
Adding pics when I get them up.