Beer Fests; Love 'Em Or Leave "Em?
Posted: Sat Jan 17, 2015 12:25 pm
So today they're holding the third annual beer fest in Mankato. I'm not going. The wife is concerned. She thinks that maybe I'm coming down with some kind of serious illness. And she may be right. That is if you consider common sense as a serious illness.
I went to the beer fest last year. I had a good time. But I would have had a better time if they hadn't crammed over four thousand (my estimate) into an arena meant to hold only three. I paid $35.00 to get through the door and stand in line after line to get a three ounce sample of - once in a while - some pretty darn good beers. I figured that in the end I consumed probably 36 oz of beer. Works out to be $10.50 a bottle. But the vast majority of them were beers that I had already had in the past or beers that I would never buy again. Of course it would have taken me a lot longer to find this out if it weren't for sampling them at the beer fest. Then there was the fact that all the really good beers went first. The crowd around the Laguitas' (sp) tent was nearly over whelming and I only got one sample of their "Sucks". Goose Island didn't even bring any of their "Bourbon County Stout" to the show. "We don't need to give that away to sell it," is what they told me. And the thing that really turned me off was the fact that I try very, very hard not to come across to anyone as a "beer snob". Apparently that doesn't cut it at these beer fests. I was actually laughed at by a person I had never met before because I stated how much I liked the Schells' Brewery "Chimney Sweep" (linky: http://schellsbrewery.com/beer/chimney-sweep/ ). (Schells' is a local brewery that, for some reason, is derided by a lot of the locals. In the past they had made some rather "not good" beer - I still do not like their "Original" - but they now make several very good craft brews and I anxiously almost all of their seasonals all year long. All of their beers are of German origin.) And there were more than a few who sounded more like we were at some kind of a wine tasting rather than a beer fest as they seemed to try to "out taste" the others in their groups.
I don't know. I like beer. I love good beer. And while my tastes seem to stay somewhere in the simple range I know a great beer when I drink it and I appreciate it for what it is: A great beer. I don't feel I need to break down and identify all the of the different flavors and then argue with who-ever may not agree with me. (I'll give you an example of one of the conversations I over-heard; I was not the only one to be dissapointed by Goose Island not have their "Bourbon County Stout" at the show. But there was more than one other brewer there that had a bourbon stout as a sample. At one of these brewers' tents - I don't remember which one - I heard one guy tell his buddies that that particular stout was not as good because the oak used in the barrels that the beer was aged in wasn't oak from the eastern United States and didn't have as good of tannins as the barrels used in Goose Islands'. And then one of his buddies had the audacity to tell him that, "oak is oak no matter where it comes from." Well let me tell you, it was on from there. ).
So, no. I'll save the $35.00 and put it in the gas tank of my Jeep and LOML and I and go out on a winery/brewery (winery for her, brewery for me)cruise and try the samples at our own pace.
I went to the beer fest last year. I had a good time. But I would have had a better time if they hadn't crammed over four thousand (my estimate) into an arena meant to hold only three. I paid $35.00 to get through the door and stand in line after line to get a three ounce sample of - once in a while - some pretty darn good beers. I figured that in the end I consumed probably 36 oz of beer. Works out to be $10.50 a bottle. But the vast majority of them were beers that I had already had in the past or beers that I would never buy again. Of course it would have taken me a lot longer to find this out if it weren't for sampling them at the beer fest. Then there was the fact that all the really good beers went first. The crowd around the Laguitas' (sp) tent was nearly over whelming and I only got one sample of their "Sucks". Goose Island didn't even bring any of their "Bourbon County Stout" to the show. "We don't need to give that away to sell it," is what they told me. And the thing that really turned me off was the fact that I try very, very hard not to come across to anyone as a "beer snob". Apparently that doesn't cut it at these beer fests. I was actually laughed at by a person I had never met before because I stated how much I liked the Schells' Brewery "Chimney Sweep" (linky: http://schellsbrewery.com/beer/chimney-sweep/ ). (Schells' is a local brewery that, for some reason, is derided by a lot of the locals. In the past they had made some rather "not good" beer - I still do not like their "Original" - but they now make several very good craft brews and I anxiously almost all of their seasonals all year long. All of their beers are of German origin.) And there were more than a few who sounded more like we were at some kind of a wine tasting rather than a beer fest as they seemed to try to "out taste" the others in their groups.
I don't know. I like beer. I love good beer. And while my tastes seem to stay somewhere in the simple range I know a great beer when I drink it and I appreciate it for what it is: A great beer. I don't feel I need to break down and identify all the of the different flavors and then argue with who-ever may not agree with me. (I'll give you an example of one of the conversations I over-heard; I was not the only one to be dissapointed by Goose Island not have their "Bourbon County Stout" at the show. But there was more than one other brewer there that had a bourbon stout as a sample. At one of these brewers' tents - I don't remember which one - I heard one guy tell his buddies that that particular stout was not as good because the oak used in the barrels that the beer was aged in wasn't oak from the eastern United States and didn't have as good of tannins as the barrels used in Goose Islands'. And then one of his buddies had the audacity to tell him that, "oak is oak no matter where it comes from." Well let me tell you, it was on from there. ).
So, no. I'll save the $35.00 and put it in the gas tank of my Jeep and LOML and I and go out on a winery/brewery (winery for her, brewery for me)cruise and try the samples at our own pace.