11 Below Brewing - Houston Beer Guide https://houstonbeerguide.com Online beer news and reviews for the city of Houston Fri, 19 Nov 2021 16:49:36 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=5.6.14 Beer Review: 11 Below Brewing Oktoberfest https://houstonbeerguide.com/beer-review-11-below-brewing-oktoberfest/ https://houstonbeerguide.com/beer-review-11-below-brewing-oktoberfest/#respond Thu, 26 Aug 2021 21:36:02 +0000 https://houstonbeerguide.com/?p=4287 #HoustonBeerMonth Guest Submission from Ronnie Risner When I started my craft beer journey I was lucky enough to start when märzens were in season. One of my favorites for the last three years has been 11 Below’s Oktoberfest and I have bought each years stein to hoist in the air filler with their beautiful golden

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#HoustonBeerMonth Guest Submission from Ronnie Risner

When I started my craft beer journey I was lucky enough to start when märzens were in season. One of my favorites for the last three years has been 11 Below’s Oktoberfest and I have bought each years stein to hoist in the air filler with their beautiful golden brown almost copper colored lager. Oktoberfest looks beautiful in this year’s steins which holds two cans or pints!  You will want to slap on a lederhosen or dirndl and throw down a few liters of Oktoberfest while polka plays when you first sip Oktoberfest!

Seasonal Release of Oktoberfest Marzen from 11 Below Brewing


The first smell is sweet, wheaty, and reminds you of fall! When I took my first sip it provides a malty mouth feel along with a hint of caramel but what really makes the beer stand out in a crowded beer style is the bite of hops to shine in between the time you finish your sip and taking your next. I let Oktoberfest breath for ten minutes which enables the hops to be a bit more prevalent. Some how Oktoberfest manages to go down even smoother after ten minutes than it does when ice cold! The hops really stand out when you allow it to breathe Oktoberfest and really wakes your mouth up for a party that only polka, this märzen, and bratwurst will cure.

I cannot wait until 11 Below Brewing has a chance to hold their Oktoberfest event as I will be there downing liters amongst friends and the friendly staff! I look forward to holding out a full stein until my arm feels like falling off or racing without spilling a drop of this precious beer.

Prost!

#HoustonBeerMonth Guest Submission from Ronnie Risner

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A Crispy Lil’ Snack from 11 Below Brewing https://houstonbeerguide.com/a-crispy-lil-snack-from-11-below-brewing/ https://houstonbeerguide.com/a-crispy-lil-snack-from-11-below-brewing/#respond Tue, 03 Aug 2021 17:51:36 +0000 https://houstonbeerguide.com/?p=4103 In the hot days of August, I always find myself reaching for the crispiest of crispy beers. I have a few standbys, but I’m always looking for something new to try. I”ve seen 11 Below’s Lil’ Snack in years past, but hadn’t tried it yet so I decided to have that to start Houston Beer

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In the hot days of August, I always find myself reaching for the crispiest of crispy beers. I have a few standbys, but I’m always looking for something new to try. I”ve seen 11 Below’s Lil’ Snack in years past, but hadn’t tried it yet so I decided to have that to start Houston Beer Month.

It pours fairly clear with a golden hay hue. The fluffy white head lingers a little bit, but not as long as I was hoping, leading me to think it will have a slightly less hoppy backbone than most craft pilsners.The aroma is bready with a hint of herbal hoppyness which leads into the malty flavor with that same herbal note on the back end.The beer leaves a little sweetness in the aftertaste, but isn’t cloying. A light and refreshing mouthfeel rounds out this beer, making that sweet aftertaste enjoyable instead of off-putting. 

I will put a little disclaimer that this is the tail end of this seasonal, with their oktoberfest hitting the market soon, so the lack of bitterness and hops was probably present when the beer was fresh. That being said, I did not find it lacking, and in fact the beer was a perfect pilsner for our hot nights, so don’t be afraid to grab it up!

Cheers and Happy Drinking!

11 Below Brewing Co – Lil’ Snack Pilsner

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Our Favorite Beers of 2017 https://houstonbeerguide.com/our-favorite-beers-of-2017/ https://houstonbeerguide.com/our-favorite-beers-of-2017/#respond Wed, 10 Jan 2018 16:21:55 +0000 https://houstonbeerguide.com/?p=3399 Year in Review 2017 was a transformative year for craft beer in Houston. We saw the rise of the NEIPA (thanks in large part to Larry’s “Who will be Houston’s Tree House or Trillium?” essay) with 8th Wonder, 11 Below, B-52, Baa Baa, Copperhead, No Label, Spindletap, Texian, Whole Foods Market, and others trying their

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Year in Review

2017 was a transformative year for craft beer in Houston.

  • We saw the rise of the NEIPA (thanks in large part to Larry’s “Who will be Houston’s Tree House or Trillium?” essay) with 8th Wonder, 11 Below, B-52, Baa Baa, Copperhead, No Label, Spindletap, Texian, Whole Foods Market, and others trying their hand at the style.
  • Saint Arnold celebrated their 23rd anniversary and 5 local breweries made their own versions of classic Saint Arnold beers.
  • We saw Texian and 160ft Beerworks close up shop. Texian plans to return.
  • Baileson, Bearded Fox, Great Heights, Texas Leaguer, Vallensons’, and Wicked Boxer opened their doors to the public.
  • Both Buffalo Bayou and Saint Arnold are (still) offering Free Beer For Life.
  • Chris complained about the lack of on-demand craft beer delivery, and HopDrop delivered in response.
  • And in the wake of Hurricane Harvey our city came together, reached out to one another, and got to work helping each other recover. Just about every brewery stepped up in a variety of ways. 8th Wonder used their high clearance vehicles for water rescues. Eureka Heights, Saloon Door, and countless others became donation centers. Saint Arnold spearheaded #ReliefBeers, and breweries from around the country donated $1 per beer sold to the Houston Food Bank, raising $35,000. Spindletap became a local distribution center, even attracting the superstar of Harvey relief – JJ Watt – into the tap room to sort and load supplies on to trucks. Hurricane Harvey will be a rallying point for our community for years to come.

Our Favorite Beers

We like to wrap the year up by sharing our the best local and non-local beer we had in the last year. It’s not an original idea, but it’s fun. We’d love to hear your picks as well!

Chris White

Eureka Heights ‘Mini Boss’ – To think, there was a time I didn’t think much of Eureka Heights’ beers. Dumb names, I said. Boring styles, I said. I was wrong, and Mini Boss represents everything I was wrong about. This beer explodes with citrus, finishes with a balanced bitterness and is enjoyable all the way through. Eureka took the megatrend of 2017 – hopping late with Mosaic and other big flavorful hops (in this case Citra) and hit it out of the park. It’s become a beer I seek whenever a new batch is released.

Listermann Brewing Company ‘Tricky’ (Cincinnati, OH) – I love all of Listermann’s series of NE-style IPAs with old school rap names, but I think Tricky has become the single example by which I have come to judge all comers in this style. Blending the aromatic elements of Mosaic with the pineapple/tropical flavors of Galaxy, it brings hop flavor and aroma from first pop of the 16 oz can and has very little perceptible bitterness – just a soft, clean, juicy finish. Listermann has a special place in my heart because 2017 was also the year I established a beer trading partner in the Cincinnati area (THANKS SAM), and so have been fortunate enough to get my hands on these delicious goodies.

Honorable mention: Galveston Island Brewing DIPA #7, MIA Brewing MEGA MIX Pale Ale, Urban Artifact Gaslight, Societe The Swindler, Odell Rupture Pale Ale, Grand Teton Brewing Teton Range IPA

Tim Spies

Saint Arnold Brewing ‘Icon Red Märzen’ – I am always excited to try a modern take on a classic style. And while there are many misses in the world of beer, Saint Arnold Brewing has proven more than capable in the handling of such styles. So as I expressed in my review of Icon Red Märzen, I was more than pleased with the results. A great representation of the style, and one that I hope will return with their regular fall lineup every year.

The Answer Brewpub ‘I Like Turtles’ (Richmond, VA) – Maybe it’s just me, but rarely do collaborations work out as well as I hope or expect. Two great breweries combining must always produce great outcomes, right? But sadly, seldom do such high expectations equal results. I Like Turtles is an extraordinary gem that greatly exceeds such desires. This collaboration between The Answer Brewpub and Bottle Logic Brewing is a delightful stout with caramel and southern pecan coffee and toasted coconut. This beer sets a deliciously high standard I hope more collaborations can meet.

Alice Hicks

Eureka Heights ‘Mini Boss’ – In short: liquid gold. I should not be surprised how good Mini Boss is given the strength of Eureka Heights’s output so far, but I was struck by its deliciousness at first sip. A grapefruit nose gave way to crisp, clean citrus and tropical flavors dancing on my tongue. At 6.8% ABV I am glad I don’t have to worry much about crushing too many of this double dry-hopped wonder, but it’s still dangerously drinkable.

Great Notion ‘Double Stack’ (Portland, OR) – I confess I had never heard of Great Notion Brewing before a friend mentioned it, which is actually a bit of a surprise since I visit Portland, Oregon and the surrounding area every other year. But with 70 breweries in Portland proper alone, it’s not hard to miss one. Now I know where I am going next time as soon as my plane hits the tarmac! Double Stack is a decadent treat. An imperial breakfast stout brewed with Portland’s Clutch coffee and Vermont maple syrup, Great Notion nails the flavor: the brew makes me feel as if I have been transported back to childhood and stuffed myself with stacks of syrup-doused pancakes.

Nathan Miller

B-52 ‘A Tart Frenchie – Peach & Apricot’ – Admittedly, I didn’t get to try as many new Houston beers this year as I’d like, but most of the ones I did try in my few trips back home or from boxes sent to me were very good. I think that my favorite was probably B-52’s “A Tart Frenchie – Peach & Apricot,” which was lightly tart, very well-balanced, and extremely refreshing, without hiding any of the delightful fruit flavor. It reminded me a little of some of the beers I’ve had from California’s Good Beer Co, which are absurdly delightful for many of the same reasons. It’s clear from this beer and others that I’ve now had from the growing Conroe brewery that B-52 is a force to be reckoned with, having already earned my vote for Houston’s second best brewery, rising with a bullet.

Cantillon ‘Nath’ (Brussels, Belgium) – December 1st, 2012, I was sitting at the Avenue Pub awaiting my taste of that year’s “Zwanze,” a special beer created by the Brussels brewery once a year. That year, it was a lambic with rhubarb added, and I recall not getting a lot of rhubarb flavor but still immensely enjoying it. Fast forward to August 26 of this year, and I’m sitting at Cantillon, trying my first bottle of Nath, the newest rhubarb lambic. This time, there’s a lot more rhubarb, with a fantastic balance, an incredible aroma, and an amazing lambic “canvas.” I was fortunate enough to try Nath one more time this year, on tap a month later (again at Avenue Pub for Zwanze day), and found the rhubarb slightly more muted, serving as a bridge to that memory from five years ago. And of course, it doesn’t hurt that it has such a great name…

Jose Luis Cubria

Eureka Heights ‘Mini-Boss’ – My favorite Houston IPA, and the beer that made me forget about Yellow Rose’s quality-control issues. It’s deliciously fruity, and the tropical/citrus notes hit you the moment you start pouring. It’s scary how quickly a crowler of this can disappear. (Honorable mention: the various barrel treatments of Saint Arnold DR17.)

Boon Geuze ‘Mariage Parfait’ (Halle, Belgium) – On the short-list for my desert-island beer, and an insta-buy every time I see it. The fact that this is now a Houston shelf beer blows my mind. For my tastes, it’s a perfect gueuze, and a perfect beer.

Kenneth Krampota

Whole Foods Market Brewing NEIPAs – Ok, I realize this isn’t one beer, it’s a bunch of them, but Whole Foods is crushing the NEIPA game in Houston. If you had to nail me down to a specific one, it’d probably be Earn It, but Hop Explorer, NEAF IPA, and the weekly limited Wednesday fruit/shake releases have almost all been on point and delicious. The only problem with them is having to go near the Galleria to pick them up, but it’s well worth it for a fresh crowler.

Funky Buddha ‘Last Buffalo in the Park’ – This beer has been around a couple of years now (previously named Snowed In), but I finally got my first taste this year and it absolutely blew me away. I’m a fan boy of most things Funky Buddha for that matter. Where many breweries fail with trying to make a beer taste like something specific, they execute. From the pie crust you get in Lemon Merinque Pie to the marshmallow you get in Sticky Treats, nothing comes across as fake or off their target. Last Buffalo in the Park stands out the most, a liquid version of a mounds bar with the right amount of bourbon barrel coming through. If you like your mounds bar without the bourbon, find a Last Snow, the non-BBA version of the beer that’s almost as delicious. It’s worth the hunt.

Josh Frink

11 Below ‘Big Mistake’ Barrel Variants – My notes for these beers are in some box packed hastily while gathering what could be salvaged post-Harvey, so I’ll keep it brief. This year’s Big Mistake was aged in a blend of Bourbon and Rye Whiskey barrels from Yellow Rose distillery. I was shocked at how much of a difference there was between the flavors from the two different barrels, and how great Rye Whiskey and Russian Imperial Stout are when combined.

Frederiskdal Kirsebaervin Cherry Wine (Harpelunde, Denmark) – My wife and I traveled to the Shelton Brother’s Festival in Atlanta this year. Choosing a favorite non-local beer is next to impossible. This wine is made with a special variety of Danish cherries, and is most similar to a nice port – sweet, but surprisingly balanced. It’s distributed locally by Flood and pops up around town on occasion. And it’s almost as good as the Cheer Wine soda I re-discovered on our Atlanta trip.

Larry Koestler

Anything NEIPA – So a year ago I was griping to anyone who would listen about my frustration about the fact that no one in Houston was brewing New England-Style IPAs, forcing me to have to regularly import boxes of Trillium, Tree House and Other Half to satisfy my needs. You may have even read an essay about it. Never in my wildest dreams did I expect what would happen in the aftermath of writing that piece — including being asked to collaborate with SpindleTap on what would end up being one of my favorite beers of the year, and among the best New England-Style Double India Pale Ales brewed in Houston to date, the aptly-monikered Juiceton — and the fact that I’m typing up a favorite local beer of the year entry that includes mentions of multiple beers brewed in Houston is a huge testament to how far the local scene has come in a very short amount of time with regards to producing NEIPAs on par with some of the best in the country. Props are due to B-52CopperheadWhole Foods and No Label for all releasing bangin’ beers that represented the style well this year. But for my palate, the local NEIPA leaders are SpindleTap and Baa Baa Brewhouse. Beginning this summer Baa Baa kicked off a damn impressive run of new, delicious canned NEIPA after NEIPA in what at times felt like a near-weekly basis. The one that I enjoyed the most was In a Galaxy Far, Far Away, one of the purest expressions of Galaxy hops I consumed all year. As for SpindleTap, they were along the first to kick off the canned NEIPA revolution, and cemented their status early on with the outstanding Houston Haze, a beer that somehow continues to get even better. The aforementioned Juiceton is my top local DIPA of the year, and I’d say the same even if I wasn’t involved with it. But if I had to pick just one for favorite local beer of the year, I’d go with SpindleTap & Parish’s flawless collab, Operation Juice Drop, which delivered everything I want in the style and then some. Preposterous hop flavor on a silky smooth ultra-creamy canvas along with the multiple-waves-of-flavor complexity of the very best beers in the style made for one of the most memorable drinking experiences I had all year. I knew OJD was a special beer when I followed a can of it with Trillium’s Double Dry-Hopped Congress Street — a top 3 all-time beer for me — and found DDH Congress’ flavors to be muted(!) in the aftermath of the full-on hop warfare of OJD. For the completists out there, here’s a link to the complete list of my top beers of 2017.

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What are HOU drinking? – July 2017 https://houstonbeerguide.com/what-are-hou-drinking-july-2017/ https://houstonbeerguide.com/what-are-hou-drinking-july-2017/#respond Tue, 01 Aug 2017 01:08:03 +0000 https://houstonbeerguide.com?p=3209&preview=true&preview_id=3209 When the Allen brothers named this city after the foremost Texas hero, they fated that Houston would be a city with a “personality” as big as his. So it should come as no surprise the big Texas spirit and big Texas taste is present in Houston’s beer scene. To celebrate beverages that would make The

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When the Allen brothers named this city after the foremost Texas hero, they fated that Houston would be a city with a “personality” as big as his. So it should come as no surprise the big Texas spirit and big Texas taste is present in Houston’s beer scene. To celebrate beverages that would make The First President (Sam Houston, of course) himself proud, we are thrilled to ask each month, “what are HOU drinking?”

 

Josh Frink – Editor-in-chief, Houston Beer Guide

Neve & Denise, B-52 Brewing Co, Wild Pale Ale, 5.5% ABV

I’m extremely comfortable saying this is the best Wild Pale Ale that I’ve ever had. It uses the same strain of wild yeast as the classic Belgian beer Orval, and it nails the flavor. The barnyard and leather flavors from the wild yeast blend surprisingly well with the citrus and tropical fruit aromas added by the Mosaic and Galaxy hop varieties. This beer is only available at the brewery’s taproom for now, but this beer is well worth the drive.

 

Casey Motes, Assistant to the Regional Manager, Eureka Heights Brew Co.

River Beer, Hops and Grain Brewing, Lager, 5.2% ABV

A beer like this embodies the full life cycle of a craft beer drinker. After going from pale ales to aggressive IPAs then boozy stouts, I usually find myself reaching for something sessionable. The fact that a world-class brewery decided to make an old school American lager might seem odd, but I think it’s a great example of a beer that brewers want to drink. The aroma starts with a soft floral, then quickly changes to Saturday morning corn flakes. Flavor is light grainy, simple and clean. Finish is crisp and dry. Makes you want to take another sip.

Plus we swear the production floor gets scrubbed way better after one of these.

River Beer | Photo: Casey Motes for Houston Beer Guide

River Beer | Photo: Casey Motes for Houston Beer Guide

 

Eric Sandler – Food Editor, Culture Map

Weisstheimer, 8th Wonder Brewery, Traditional German Hefeweizen, 5.4% ABV

With the summer’s heat in full effect, I want a beer that’s light, refreshing, and makes me feel a little cooler. Recently, I’ve found myself reaching for 8th Wonder’s Weisstheimer, and not just because the brewery sponsors my podcast. As Chris White noted in his HBG review, the new beer isn’t “8th Wonder’s version” of a hefeweizen; rather, it keeps things pretty classic with nicely balanced banana and clove flavors. A slight tang even makes it food-friendly.

 

Chris White – Writer, Houston Beer Guide

Lame Duck, 11 Below Brewing Co., American Pale Ale, 5.5% ABV

I’ve got a beer box pal in the Cincinnati area and he really likes APA, so I’ve been sending him what Houston has to offer. That process has led me back to some local beers I’ve had a couple of times, but haven’t exactly filled my fridge with for whatever reason. One of these that has earned its way back into my regular rotation is 11 Below’s excellent Lame Duck Pale Ale, which stands out as a really focused and crushable brew, perfect for these hot Houston summer days. It opens a little grassy, hits hard with some nice floral flavor and finishes clean with just a tinge of bitterness. At just over 5% ABV it’s not so strong that you can’t take a few down on a weeknight. I’m happy to share this with others as a standout Houston beer and to keep some for myself as well.

 

Jeremy Jordan – Owner, Half Yankee Workshop

Millions of Peaches, Brazos Valley Brewing Co, Peach Witbier, 5.2% ABV

It’s usually this time of year when it’s hot as hell all the time that I start to stray from my mainstays of Pale Ales and IPA’s. This month I fell in love with Millions of Peaches. A light and refreshing Witbier, it clearly tastes of peaches with a light sweetness, but a lot more subtle than you expect when you first get a peach-heavy whiff of it. It’s with a slight touch of sour, yet without the tart mouthfeel. “Moving to the country, gonna eat me a lot of peaches!”

Jeremy Jordan is a Craftsman that specializes in making tap handles and bottle openers, along with enjoying all the amazing craft beer Houston has to offer. Check out his creations at www.halfyankeeworkshop.com

Millions of Peaches | Photo: Jeremy Jordan for Houston Beer Guide

Millions of Peaches | Photo: Jeremy Jordan for Houston Beer Guide

 

Kenneth Krampota – Writer, Houston Beer Guide

U-P-G-R-A-Y-E-D-D, B-52 Brewing Co., Double Dry Hopped American IPA, 7% ABV

I got a crowler of the standard, and a pour of the raspberry shake version, and both were outstanding. I felt the raspberry version came off so differently than the standard because the acidity of the raspberry killed off the citrus flavors of the standard. Both excellent, but very different animals. What they did have in common was that soft pillow mouth feel that you want in the NEIPA style. Worth seeking out.

 

Josh Stewart – Host of the Interbrews Podcast & Co-Host of Liquid Lunch

Millions of Peaches, Brazos Valley Brewing Co, Peach Witbier, 5.2% ABV

People may not think about Brazos Valley Brewing in Brenham when they think Houston area brewing, but they should. Josh Bass and the crew at BVB are making some killer beers. Millions of Peaches in like a biscuit with peach marmalade. An American wheat beer with a metric s*#t ton of peachy goodness. It screams front porch enjoyment. This peachy wheat goodness has been in my heart, mouth and belly and on my mind when it’s not in my hand.

Josh is the host of the craft beer centric podcast Interbrews and Co-Host of the live beer show Liquid Lunch. Checkout past shows and subscribe on your platform of choice at http://interbrews.com/ and http://liquidlunchshow.com/

Millions of Peaches | Photo: Josh Stewart for Houston Beer Guide

Millions of Peaches | Photo: Josh Stewart for Houston Beer Guide

 

If you’re interested in contributing to next month’s roundup, whether you’re a beer maker, a beer writer, or just a beer drinker, send an email to info@houstonbeerguide.com to be added to next month’s roundup.

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What are HOU drinking? – June 2017 https://houstonbeerguide.com/what-are-hou-drinking-june-2017/ https://houstonbeerguide.com/what-are-hou-drinking-june-2017/#respond Fri, 30 Jun 2017 12:02:35 +0000 https://houstonbeerguide.com/?p=3092 When the Allen brothers named this city after the foremost Texas hero, they fated that Houston would be a city with a “personality” as big as his. So it should come as no surprise the big Texas spirit and big Texas taste is present in Houston’s beer scene. To celebrate beverages that would make The

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When the Allen brothers named this city after the foremost Texas hero, they fated that Houston would be a city with a “personality” as big as his. So it should come as no surprise the big Texas spirit and big Texas taste is present in Houston’s beer scene. To celebrate beverages that would make The First President (Sam Houston, of course) himself proud, we are thrilled to ask each month, “what are HOU drinking?”

 

Josh Frink – Editor-in-chief, Houston Beer Guide

Art Car, Saint Arnold Brewing Co., American IPA, 7.1% ABV

I couldn’t start this series and not pick the beer that’s always in my fridge. It leans into the piney West Coast IPA style with an apricot and orange undertone. It has a gorgeous deep gold color, but most of the time I just drink it straight from the can. It’s been a such solid and consistent option since it was released that it’s a no-brainer pick at the grocery store when I find it reasonably fresh.

Art Car | Josh Frink for Houston Beer Guide

Art Car | Josh Frink for Houston Beer Guide

Theodore Crawford – Co-Host, What’s Good Houston Podcast

Hooked Paw, City Acre Brewing Co., Coconut Stout, 4.5% ABV

My knee-jerk reaction was definitely Houston Haze from Spindletap, but that seems too easy. That’s an amazing brew, but it’s been showered with praise so much at this point that it feels uninspired to have that as my choice.

So with that being said, I have to go with ‘Hooked Paw’ from City Acre Brewing Co. as my favorite beer for the month of June!

‘Hooked Paw’ is billed as a coconut vanilla stout, and it certainly lives up to it! Pours a sublime dark brown with a luscious inch-thick head and a deliciously coconut-y nose. Tastes just as good as it looks and smells – I’m not sure if it’s the vanilla or the choice of grains used, but it makes for a very rich, earthy, and roasty brew. If they’ve still got it on tap, do yourself a favor and grab a pint!

Theo is a co-host of the “What’s Good, Houston?!” podcast. Episodes drop every Tuesday and feature an interview with a local guest, a little sports talk, local news, concerts/events, and plenty of laughs! Find it on iTunes, Soundcloud, or www.wghpodcast.com.

 

Jose Luis Cubria – Editor, Houston Beer Guide

Mini Boss, Eureka Height Brewing Co., Double Dry Hopped IPA, 6.8% ABV

I’ve been mildly obsessed with this beer for the last two months. It’s intensely fruity, and the tropical/citrus notes hit you the moment you start pouring. It’s scary how quickly a crowler of Mini-Boss can disappear.

Mini Boss | Photo: Eureka Heights Brewing

Nick Willard, Host, BrewstonTX on The H Podcast

Art Car, Saint Arnold Brewing Co., American IPA, 7.1% ABV

The mainstay in my house, what with it being June and all, is Saint Arnold’s Art Car IPA, though I know it’s hackneyed and trite. Wafting the glass gets you aromas of grapefruit and orange, with an under-lying biscuit. From the first sniff to the final swig, you’ll find a beautiful consistency between the aroma and flavor, which means you’ll find flavors of orange, citrus and biscuit, creating a light, crisp and refreshing summer brew.  Because of its accessibility (both in finding and drinking it) Art Car is my go-to brew for June.

Nick Willard (@thebrewstonian) is a Houston craft beer-lover and host of the segment #BrewstonTx on @thehpodcast – a podcast about the people and places that make Houston, Houston.

 

Chris White – Writer, Houston Beer Guide

Eureka Heights Mini Boss, Double Dry Hopped IPA, 6.8% ABV

It’s true. While I was optimistic when Casey Motes left Saint Arnold and started this Shady Acres brewery, I was generally unimpressed with the first few offerings that came flowing from their fermenters. Mini Boss represents everything that’s changed about my opinions of Eureka Heights and their beers. A bright west coast orange, this seasonal IPA is chock full of Five Alive citrus aromas. That smell turns into flavor alongside the sticky, blueberry, floral greatness that is the signature of the hop-of-now-and-forever, Mosaic. It finishes clean and crisp, with a nice earthy crack on the back of the palate that belies that up-front crash of citrus. I literally can’t get enough. It’s amazing, and it’s seasonal, so go get some right now – and bring me a crowler too, if you please.

 

Nick B., Contributor, Beer Chronicle

Lame Duck, 11 Below Brewing Co., Pale Ale, 5.5% ABV

Say hello to your new favorite pale ale. Lame Duck has a light, smooth mouthfeel that hits you with flavors of lemon, and pine resin. Bready flavors balance out the hop profile in the best way. At 5.5% ABV, a few won’t leave you looking like the duck on the label. Find the cans at liquor and grocery stores all over Houston. Cheers!

Nick is a contributor to Beer Chronicle. Read his full review here: beerchronicle.com/11-below-lame-duck/

 

Kenneth Krampota – Writer, Houston Beer Guide

Bishop’s Barrel 18, Saint Arnold Brewing Co., Rye Barrel Aged Oat Wine, 12.8% ABV

The Rye Barrel is strong on the nose, but doesn’t overwhelm the beer. It’s an oat wine, which to me tastes like a barley wine with a bit of oatmeal cookie coming in from the oats and Barrel. It’s not over the top with booze as this could have turned out to be, its only fault is that it is a bit thin. Pour one for dessert one night, you’ll be happy you did.

Bishop's Barrel 18 Cases

BB18 | Photo: Saint Arnold Brewing

 

If you’re interested in contributing to next month’s roundup, whether you’re a beer maker, a beer writer, or just a beer drinker, send an email to info@houstonbeerguide.com to get the criteria.

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7 Canned Beers to Drink This Summer https://houstonbeerguide.com/drink-some-canned-beers-this-summer/ https://houstonbeerguide.com/drink-some-canned-beers-this-summer/#respond Mon, 26 Jun 2017 12:31:47 +0000 https://houstonbeerguide.com/?p=3048 There’s a variation on Stockholm Syndrome that Houstonians know all too well: when summer is in full swing, dashing any hope of escape from the sweltering heat. It’s time for outdoor barbecues (huddle around the shade of that one tree, it might help), weekends by the pool, trips to Galveston, and of course, the greatest

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There’s a variation on Stockholm Syndrome that Houstonians know all too well: when summer is in full swing, dashing any hope of escape from the sweltering heat. It’s time for outdoor barbecues (huddle around the shade of that one tree, it might help), weekends by the pool, trips to Galveston, and of course, the greatest refreshment of all: canned beer. I’ve reached out to a few Houston breweries to find out what cans they’re particularly proud of this summer, providing a nice little roundup of some of the city’s best offerings.

11 Below Lame Duck

Brand new can alert: this week, the first adorable-duck-adorned cans of 11 Below’s pale ale hit the market, so this one is good to get fresh asap. Bryce Baker, 11 Below co-founder, states that it’s “quickly become a favorite among staff and customers.” And although the can was designed by a Dallas firm (Caliber Creative), I have to agree with Bryce that “the artwork is pretty badass.” It’s hard to imagine a better beach can design, and the beer inside speaks for itself as well, as kegs move pretty fast all over town.

SpindleTap Houston Haze



I never expected to see Houstonians wait in line to take beer home from a brewery, but if it’s going to happen, it makes perfect sense it would be for SpindleTap Houston Haze, an insanely crushable NEIPA that blows away any other Houston attempts at the distinct and delicious style. “The excitement surrounding Haze has been fantastic and consistent,” founder Adam Wright says. And while this is likely the hardest acquire to get from this list, that will only get easier over time: “every batch we’ve brewed has doubled in size … Haze is the champ of the cans we sell out of the brewery.” The can features art apt for the oilfield-centric brewery: “the downtown skyline with a shadowed offset against a refinery outline,” with a “purple spectrum” that reflects the “haze” imagery. There may be nothing about an oil derrick or refinery that suggest cooling off, but in this case, as with so many buildings in Houston, the coolness is inside.

8th Wonder Weisstheimer

No summer is complete for me without cans of Live Oak Hefe, and now 8th Wonder brings some local competition: a “ridiculously drinkable and delicious Hefeweizen,” in the words of Ryan Soroka, 8th Wonder co-founder. At 5.4% abv, this summer seasonal is just strong enough to make you forget the heat for a little while and still light enough to allow enjoyment of a few cans in one go. The cans are pretty slick too, a play on a historic style Houstonians will recognize from the blue tiled street signs still present all over the city. 8th Wonder’s cans are all designed by local branding agency GoodProject, but for this project they also teamed up with the Blue Tile Project for additional art and signage.


Bakfish Defying Gravity



Bakfish planned to can their beers from before they even opened, acknowledging that cans are better for the environment, better for portability, and thanks to their ability to eliminate sunlight, better for the beer. Defying Gravity is just one of the canned offerings available now, not only beloved by fans on tap and in cans, but also co-founder Brian Allen’s personal favorite. The focus is a hoppy beer with some light caramel tones mixed in, “but dominated with tropical fruits like mango, papaya, and pineapple mixed with citrus fruits like mandarin oranges and tangerines.” If that doesn’t sound like summer refreshment to you, I don’t know what does. The cans feature art by Houston-based Brenden Polk Designs, and are available to-go directly from the brewery in Pearland as well as at nearby stores.

Southern Star Buried Hatchet

Southern Star has been canning beer in Houston since before most other breweries in this post even existed. “First to Can Craft in Texas” is a badge Southern Star happily displays on their cans, and they’ve earned that right. If you can imagine now, when the can explosion has taken over craft beer across the nation, there was once a time when Southern Star faced retailers that refused to carry their beer “because we did not have beer in bottles,” owner/founder Dave Fougeron recalls. Of course, you might not think of a rich, smooth stout as a “summer beer” but until very recently, no one thought of it as a canned beer either, and as far as I’m concerned, it’s always stout season in Texas. Buried Hatchet is a true classic, one of the state’s best beers, and the beer that Dave is happy to say he’s “most proud of,” and in his opinion is “one of the best stouts in the country.” I can’t say I’d argue against that. Interestingly the artwork on the can is the inspiration for the name, and not the other way around. Art director Michael Draper drew the now iconic buried hatchet, and from that image, the beer was named. Dave points out “an old pull ring buried in the dirt” as an homage to the beer can’s long history.


Brazos Valley Willin’

If you know me, you know I love Mosaic. It’s my favorite hop, or as I call it, the “cheat code.” So Brazos Valley Willin’, a new mosaic pale ale that also features comet hops, hits the spot, “crushable yet hop forward and perfect for the Texas heat,” according to Production Manager Avery Clayton. The can features a “strong, take no BS, Texas woman,” also prominently displayed in all Brazos Valley Brewing artwork, and designed by Evan Hill, a childhood friend of the brewery’s founders. Willin’ joins a family of Texas IPAs designed to cool you off better than air conditioning, and this particular can gives Houstonians a great reason to visit the brewery in Brenham – after all, I can’t think of anything else out there that could be so refreshing.

Saint Arnold Raspberry AF

Of course, no list would be complete without a beer from Houston’s oldest brewery, Saint Arnold, and no list of summer-friendly cans would be complete without something as refreshing as Raspberry AF. Raspberry AF, according to brewer Aaron Inkrott, was a “truly collaborative effort,” and unlike many fruited beers, actually uses “100% fruit” ensuring it’s “great to drink again and again.” Of course, Saint Arnold’s cans are fairly iconic, but the artwork designed by in-house marketing guru and freestyle rapper, Jeremy Johnson, truly conveys summer. The art is supposed to invoke “a peaceful, serene picnic scene abruptly interrupted by the AF,” according to Jeremy. Saint Arnold only recently started canning, but their cans have really taken off, with many releases being can-only. And it’s paid off: Raspberry AF, with its juicy, “pleasantly tart,” flavor that built off the excellent Boiler Room, is an incredible beer perfectly packaged for a picnic or anywhere else your summer takes you.

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Houston Beer Guide Bracket 2017 https://houstonbeerguide.com/houston-beer-guide-bracket-2017/ https://houstonbeerguide.com/houston-beer-guide-bracket-2017/#comments Thu, 16 Mar 2017 13:53:01 +0000 https://houstonbeerguide.com/?p=2539 Contributions by Nathan Miller, Jose Luis Cubria, Kenneth Krampota, Josh Frink and HBG Staff (Click here to for a zoomable version) Yo that IPA Region is stacked! Mostly Harmless got screwed, though. Pumpkinator vs. Rocket Fuel in the Sweet 16 is gonna be brutal. I’ve got EZ7 as my Cinderella. Think Yellow Rose can win it all

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Contributions by Nathan Miller, Jose Luis Cubria, Kenneth KrampotaJosh Frink and HBG Staff

(Click here to for a zoomable version)

Yo that IPA Region is stacked! Mostly Harmless got screwed, though. Pumpkinator vs. Rocket Fuel in the Sweet 16 is gonna be brutal. I’ve got EZ7 as my Cinderella. Think Yellow Rose can win it all again?

Welcome to the 2017 edition of the Houston Beer Guide Bracket. Last year’s bracket was a blast, with some nail-biters, a ballot-stuffing scandal, a handful of upsets, and Lone Pint Yellow Rose ultimately cruising to the title.

We’ve made some changes compared to last year, when we used weighted Untappd rankings to fill out the field from 1 to 64. This year, we still leaned on ratings, but we also opened up the selection process to the HBG staff, our own version of the NCAA’s selection committee. We awarded “automatic bids” to breweries that wouldn’t have qualified based solely on rankings. We eliminated one-time releases (no Divine Reserves, Bishop’s Barrels, etc.). And we limited the field to independent craft breweries — you know what that means.

Enough with the pregame analysis. Let’s get to the #HBGBracket. Voting for the first round ends Monday night, March 20th. The second round will begin Tuesday, March 21st. We’ll update results on Facebook and Twitter.

Update #1 – Round of 64 recap:
The first round has wrapped up and there were quite a few surprises. 12-seed SpindleTap Hop Gusher took down 5-seed Saint Arnold Endeavour, with a respectable win of 56%. In our far north vs. far south matchup, 14-seed B-52 Double IPA beat 3-seed Galveston Island Citra Mellow. Copperhead King of Terrors managed to eke out a win against Buffalo Bayou Vanilla Mocha Sunset, in a match decided by just 13 votes. In the battle of Clear Lake, Texas Beer Refinery’s Gulf Coast Gose held its ground against BAKFISH I Tell You Wit. Unfortunately, Texas Beer Refinery Catalyst wasn’t able to repeat last year’s Cinderella run. Yellow Rose continued last year’s tradition of dominating the competition, knocking out newcomer Running Walker Texas Reserve. Check out the rest of the results at the bottom of the page.

Update #2 – Round of 32 recap:
Well that was certainly interesting. The majority of this round went to chalk, with the 1-seeds doing especially well. Dig into the middle of the field a little bit, and you’ll see some very surprising results. 12-seed SpindleTap Hop Gusher continued its Cinderella run, leading 4-seed Brash Pussy Wagon the entire round. At the 24-hour mark, Brash Vulgar Display of Power vs Brash Cortado was exactly 50/50, but lower-seeded VDoP eventually won out. 11-seed Copperhead King of Terrors managed another narrow victory, this time over 3-seed No Label Nightmare on 1st Street. There were no upsets in the Easy Drinking region, dashing the chances of a Pilsner head-to-head between Back Pew and Saint Arnold. How will old-standard Buried Hatchet fare against new-hotness Raspberry AF in the next round? Last year’s champion, Lone Pint Yellow Rose, faces Cinderella; is there a stunning upset on the horizon? Will King of Terrors be able to sneak past Brash EZ-7 and into the Elite 8? It’s all up to you.

Update #3 – Sweet 16 recap:
Let’s start with the fun parts: Almost every one of the match up in the Sweet 16 ended within 100 votes. For nearly 1,500 votes, that’s pretty impressive. Brazos Valley 7 Spanish Angels overcame Saint Arnold 5 O’Clock Pils by 107 votes, 4-seed Lone Pint The Jabberwocky upset 1-seed Brash Abide with 92 votes, Saloon Door Tasty AF beat Brash Vulgar Display of Power by 39 votes, and Pumpkinator vs Rocket Fuel was decided by just 32 votes. Every beer included in the Sweet 16 deserved it’s place this far into the tournament. SpindleTap found a post in one of the beer groups by someone bragging to have voted for Hop Gusher several hundred times in a short period Monday afternoon. Unfortunately, there is no way for us to undo the damage that was done. After a discussion with the team at SpindleTap, they offered to forfeit the game to Yellow Rose. At the T-11 hour mark, SpindleTap had the lead, and they appeared to gain more ground in the morning. As stated earlier, we believe that every beer that made it to the sweet 16 deserved to be there. Hop Gusher beat Endeavour and Pussy Wagon without any intervention, and there is a very strong likelihood that it would have beat Yellow Rose as well. Yellow Rose faces some stiff competition in the next round with Saint Arnold Art Car, as do all of the beers in the Elite 8.

Update #4 – Elite 8 recap:
The giants have fallen. Saloon Door rounded up their supporters to knock out 1-seed Saint Arnold Pumpkinator. Brazos Valley had a late surge of support: 7 Spanish Angels rallied from being down 49/51 at the 24 hour mark to come out ahead 54/46 and take out 1-seed Southern Star Buried Hatchet. 1-seed Yellow Rose clobbered 2-seed Art Car in a round that was expected to be more of a challenge for last year’s champion. Brash’s 7-seed EZ-7 avenged 1-seed Abide’s earlier elimination and trounced Lone Pint The Jabberwocky. Lone Pint Yellow Rose is the only 1-seed that remains in the tournament – how will it fare against the Saloon Door posse, which has already overcome some quite impressive opponents? Will EZ-7 or 7 Spanish Angels be the lucky one to advance to the finals?

Update #5 – Final Four recap:
Yellow Rose, our last 1-seed and last year’s champion was bested by the chocolate & peanut butter stout from Clear Lake, Tasty AF. 7 Spanish Angels, the coffee brown ale from Brenham, rallied its supporters to eliminate Brash EZ-7. It’s all come down to this: Saloon Door Tasty AF versus Brazos Valley 7 Spanish Angels. Peanut butter & chocolate vs coffee. Both beers eliminated some very impressive challengers along the way. Which beer will be crowned the best beer in Houston by the readers of Houston Beer Guide?

Update #6 – Championship recap:
Wow, that was a surprisingly close match. Saloon Door’s Tasty AF is now the reigning ‘Best Beer in Houston’ as chosen by the readers of Houston Beer Guide. If you haven’t tried it or any of the other 63 beers included in this year’s bracket, I highly recommend that you seek them out.

The changes we made to the beer selection process this year were a direct result of the conversations we had with our readers last year. If you have suggestions for ways we can make it even better next year, shoot us an email, we’d love to hear your ideas: info@houstonbeerguide.com.

Championship Results:

Saloon Door v Brazos Valley (1,800 votes)
Tasty AF – 51.3%
7 Spanish Angels – 48.7%

The Final Four Results:

Game 1: Lone Pint v Saloon Door (1,280 votes)
Yellow Rose – 45.9%
Tasty AF – 54.1%
Game 2: Brash v Brazos Valley (910 votes)
EZ-7 – 47.8%
7 Spanish Angels – 52.2%

Elite 8 Results:

Game 1: Lone Pint v Saint Arnold (1,205 votes)
Yellow Rose – 65.9%
Art Car – 34.1%
Game 2: Saint Arnold v Saloon Door (1,450 votes)
Pumpkinator – 46.8%
Tasty AF – 53.2%

Game 3: Lone Pint v Brash (1,128 votes)
The Jabberwocky – 35.1%
EZ-7 – 64.9%
Game 4: Southern Star v Brazos Valley (1,275 votes)
Buried Hatchet – 45.6%
7 Spanish Angels – 54.4%

 

Sweet 16 Results:

Game 1: Lone Pint v SpindleTap
(1) Yellow Rose
(12) Hop Gusher
Game 2: Buffalo Bayou v Saint Arnold (1,584 votes)
(6) More Cowbell – 31.1%
(2) Art Car – 68.9%

Game 3: Saint Arnold v 8th Wonder (1,542 votes)
(1) Pumpkinator – 51.0%
(4) Rocket Fuel – 49.0%
Game 4: Saloon Door v Brash (1,651 votes)
(6) Tasty AF – 51.2%
(10) Vulgar Display of Power – 48.8%

Game 5: Brash v Lone Pint(1,444 votes)
(1) Abide – 46.8%
(4) The Jabberwocky – 53.2%
Game 6: Copperhead v Brash (1,402 votes)
(11) King of Terrors – 40.8%
(7) EZ-7 -59.2%

Game 7: Southern Star v Saint Arnold (1,473 votes)
(1) Buried Hatchet – 58.3%
(4) Raspberry AF – 41.7%
Game 8: Brazos Valley v Saint Arnold (1,749 votes)
(3) 7 Spanish Angels – 53.1%
(2) 5 O’Clock Pils – 46.9%

 

Round of 32 Results:

Game 1: Lone Pint v. 11 Below (1,451 Votes)
(1) Yellow Rose – 80.6%
(9) Color Blind – 19.4%
Game 2: SpindleTap v Brash (2,093 Votes)
(12) Hop Gusher – 52.7%
(4) Pussy Wagon – 47.3%

Game 3: Buffalo Bayou v B-52 (1,441 Votes)
(6) More Cowbell – 52.2%
(14) Double IPA – 47.8%
Game 4: Brash v Saint Arnold (1,530 Votes)
(7) Cali Green – 40.1%
(2) Art Car – 59.9%

Game 5: Saint Arnold v Lone Pint (1,427 Votes)
(1) Pumpkinator – 64.1%
(8) Knecht Ruprecht – 35.9%
Game 6: Eureka Heights v 8th Wonder (1,433 Votes)
(5) Moo Caliente – 43.4%
(4) Rocket Fuel – 56.6%

Game 7: Saloon Door v Buffalo Bayou (1,466 Votes)
(6) Tasty AF – 59.0%
(3) Gingerbread Stout – 41.0%
Game 8: Brash v Brash (1,305 Votes)
(10) Vulgar Display of Power – 51.1%
(2) Cortado – 48.9%

Game 9: Brash v Copperhead (1,339 Votes)
(1) Abide – 64.5%
(9) Medusa – 35.5%
Game 10: Southern Star v Lone Pint (1,269 Votes)
(5) Blood Belt – 44.1%
(4) The Jabberwocky – 55.9%

Game 11: Copperhead v No Label (1,244 Votes)
(11) King of Terrors – 51.6%
(3) Nightmare on 1st Street – 48.4%
Game 12: Brash v Galveston Island (1,339 Votes)
(7) EZ-7 – 62.1%
(2) Double Citra – 37.9%

Game 13: Southern Star v Texas Beer Refinery (1,290 Votes)
(1) Buried Hatchet – 73.9%
(8) Gulf Coast Gose – 26.1%
Game 14: 8th Wonder v Saint Arnold (1,292 Votes)
(5) Haterade – 39.8%
(4) Raspberry AF – 60.2%

Game 15: Back Pew v Brazos Valley (1,192 Votes)
(11) Blue Testament – 41.3%
(3) 7 Spanish Angels – 58.7%
Game 16: B-52 v Saint Arnold (1,325 Votes)
(7) Imperial Watermelon Berliner – 39.2%
(2) 5 O’Clock Pils – 60.8%

 

Round of 64 Results:

Game 1: Lone Pint v Running Walker (995 Votes)
(1) Yellow Rose – 86.0%
(16) Texas Reserve – 14.0%
Game 2: Whole Foods Market v 11 Below (866 Votes)
(8) DL Double IPA – 40.2%
(9) Color Blind – 59.8%

Game 3: Saint Arnold v SpindleTap (1394 Votes)
(5) Endeavour – 44.0%
(12) Hop Gusher – 56.0%
Game 4: Brash v Eureka Heights (942 Votes)
(4) Pussy Wagon – 72.0%
(13) Space Train – 28.0%

Game 5: Buffalo Bayou v Texas Beer Refinery (923 Votes)
(6) More Cowbell – 62.5%
(11) Catalyst – 37.5%
Game 6: Galveston Island v B-52 (907 Votes)
(3) Citra Mellow – 41.3%
(14) Double IPA – 58.7%

Game 7: Brash v Southern Star (907 Votes)
(7) Cali Green – 59.9%
(10) Half Nelson – 40.1%
Game 8: Saint Arnold v Copperhead (987 Votes)
(2) Art Car – 74.0%
(15) Striker – 26.0%

Game 9: Saint Arnold v Fetching Lab (940 Votes)
(1) Pumpkinator – 72.3%
(16) Bound & Determined – 27.7%
Game 10: Lone Pint v City Acre (825 Votes)
(8) Knecht Ruprecht – 64.2%
(9) Raven Hill Pumpkin – 35.8%

Game 11: Eureka Heights v Cycler’s (845 Votes)
(5) Moo Caliente – 63.0%
(12) Bourbon Barrel Palmares – 37.0%
Game 12: 8th Wonder v Platypus (897 Votes)
(4) Rocket Fuel – 75.3%
(13) Stars at Night – 24.7%

Game 13: Saloon Door v Brazos Valley (872 Votes)
(6) Tasty AF – 56.2%
(11) Big Spoon – 43.8%
Game 14: Buffalo Bayou v No Label (844 Votes)
(3) Gingerbread Stout – 54.3%
(14) Peanut Butter Chocolate Time – 45.7%

Game 15: 11 Below v Brash (857 Votes)
(7) Negative Space – 39.3%
(10) Vulgar Display of Power – 60.7%
Game 16: Brash v Holler (831 Votes)
(2) Brash Cortado – 72.8%
(15) Looyah Tooyah – 27.2%

Game 17: Brash v Back Pew (815 Votes)
(1) Abide – 66.0%
(16) 9th Circle – 34.0%
Game 18: Town in City v Copperhead (807 Votes)
(8) City Porter – 41.9%
(9) Medusa – 58.1%

Game 19: Southern Star v Sigma (789 Votes)
(5) Blood Belt – 67.6%
(12) Murry Chrimmus – 32.4%
Game 20: Lone Pint v Eureka Heights (819 Votes)
(4) The Jabberwocky – 54.1%
(13) Mostly Harmless – 45.9%

Game 21: Buffalo Bayou v Copperhead (793 Votes)
(6) Vanilla Mocha Sunset – 49.2%
(11) King of Terrors – 50.8%
Game 22: No Label v Under the Radar (760 Votes)
(3) Nightmare on 1st Street – 69.9%
(14) Porter Authority – 30.1%

Game 23: Brash v Huff (792 Votes)
(7) EZ-7 – 75.0%
(10) French Oak Pale Ale – 25.0%
Game 24: Galveston Island v Platypus (743 Votes)
(2) Double Citra – 71.2%
(15) Ruck ’n Maul – 28.8%

Game 25: Southern Star v 8th Wonder (815 Votes)
(1) Buried Hatchet – 73.6%
(16) Mission Control – 26.4%
Game 26: Texas Beer Refinery v BAKFISH (736 Votes)
(8) Gulf Coast Gose – 55.6%
(9) I Tell You Wit – 44.4%

Game 27: 8th Wonder v Texian (740 Votes)
(5) 8th Wonder Haterade – 67.2%
(12) Texian Aurora – 32.8%
Game 28: Saint Arnold v Huff (779 Votes)
(4) Raspberry AF – 72.8%

(13) Orange Blossom Saison – 27.2%

Game 29: Town in City v Back Pew (730 Votes)
(6) White Oak Wit – 37.8%
(11) Blue Testament – 62.2%
Game 30: Brazos Valley v Whole Foods Market (736 Votes)
(3) 7 Spanish Angels – 59.9%
(14) Post Oak Pale Ale – 40.1%

Game 31: B-52 v Under the Radar (733 Votes)
(7) Imperial Watermelon Berliner – 67.7%
(10) Radar Love – 32.3%
Game 32: Saint Arnold v Galveston Bay (812 Votes)
(2) 5 O’Clock Pils – 76.4%
(15) Ghostship Gose – 23.6%

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Houston Beer Guide Bracket 2016 https://houstonbeerguide.com/houston-beer-bracket-2016/ https://houstonbeerguide.com/houston-beer-bracket-2016/#comments Thu, 17 Mar 2016 12:46:07 +0000 https://houstonbeerguide.com/?p=1351 It’s March! For college sports fans, it’s time for basketball, beers, and brackets. This year, while Houston hosts much of the basketball action, Houston Beer Guide asks you to fill out a different type of bracket: Houston beers! Using the same methodology as the Beer Ranking posts, the seeds below are based on the top

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It’s March! For college sports fans, it’s time for basketball, beers, and brackets. This year, while Houston hosts much of the basketball action, Houston Beer Guide asks you to fill out a different type of bracket: Houston beers!

Using the same methodology as the Beer Ranking posts, the seeds below are based on the top 64 rated beers in Houston based on weighted rankings.

Voting for the Round of 8 ends Thursday night, March 31st. The Round of 4 will begin Friday, April 1st. We’ll update results on Facebook and Twitter as well.

[Direct link to the full-sized bracket here]

Update #1:

Well the first round is in the books and it appears the seeding wasn’t as absurd as some thought: chalk won almost every matchup, with just two exceptions. The contenders from B-52 and Texas Beer Refinery live on, winning as underdogs and heading to the Round of 32 below. Maybe we were right when we said, “You should be drinking Texas Beer Refinery.”

Update #2:

After the relatively predictable Round One, the Round of 32 went a lot differently, with several upsets. While Texas Beer Refinery continues their Cinderella story as a 13-seed (now facing a very tough Vanilla BBH 1-seed), the joy hasn’t been shared by everybody: Buffalo Bayou, Brash, B-52, and No Label were each eliminated in the bloodbath. One clear takeaway as we enter the Sweet Sixteen: the commonly “hyped” styles are clearly winning. Of the remaining sixteen beers, only two are styles other than IPA or Porter/Stout, and both of those, BB10 & FUN 013, are barrel-aged (as are five others at this stage). What will make it out of this round on Sunday to enter the Elite Eight of Houston Beers? There’s no certainties at this point, though I certainly hope my Yellow Rose is still alive!

Update #3:

As we enter the Elite Eight, the bracket tells two very different stories. On the right side, an unexciting previous round led to all the highest seeds progressing, and this round pits Black Crack against Yellow Rose, as well as a face-off between two Saint Arnold stouts. On the left side of the bracket, however, a completely different drama has unfolded with the Cinderella story TBR Catalyst knocking out one of my expected Final Four picks, and the fourth overall seed Vanilla BBH. It faces a heavy competitor in Bishop’s Barrel #10, but don’t be surprised if the magic continues. Meanwhile, another upset occurred in the previous round and the juicy newcomer Art Car IPA advances to face off against the number one overall seed and competition favorite, BBH. Vote below and come back on Thursday when we enter the Final Four.

Update #4:

With so much drama in the HBG, it’s kinda hard being a beer bracket referee. We’re down to our last four beers, and as the Final Four comes to Houston in the basketball sense, we’ve also got the Final Four here. Sadly, the Cinderella story from TBR didn’t make it past the last round, but nonetheless it lives on in my heart. On the left side of the bracket, number one overall seed Karbach BBH faces off against Saint Arnold BB10 in a battle of two bourbon-barrel-aged beers: a porter and a barleywine. The bourbon champion will move on to face a non-barrel-aged winner from the right side of the bracket, where my favorite, Lone Pint Yellow Rose (fingers crossed y’all), goes up against the annual autumn delight, Saint Arnold Pumpkinator. Who will make it to the championship? Vote below and come back on Saturday afternoon for the championship matchup!

Update #5:

This is it! From a field of sixty-four competitors, only one shall be victorious. Who will take home glory and who will take home defeat? (Except, not real defeat, because, either way both competitors are delicious.) We’re down to the final competition: Lone Pint Yellow Rose and Karbach Bourbon Barrel Hellfighter. Two of Houston’s most beloved beers and two of the country’s most exciting styles: bourbon-barrel-aged anything and mosaic-hopped anything. Vote below for your pick.

Update #6:

That’s it for our inaugural Houston Beer Guide Bracket. Obviously I’m thrilled with the result (read: WOO YELLOW ROSE FTW) and I hope you are too. What would you like to see us change next year? How can we make this bracket even better? Sound off in the comments below!

Championship Results:

Championship – Karbach vs. Lone Pint (903 Votes)
Bourbon Barrel Hellfighter — 42.4%
Yellow Rose — 57.6%

Final Four Results:

Game 1 – Karbach vs. Saint Arnold (592 Votes)
Bourbon Barrel Hellfighter – 56.3%
Bishop’s Barrel #10 – 43.7%

Game 2 – Saint Arnold vs. Lone Pint (637 Votes)
Pumpkinator – 23.7%
Yellow Rose – 76.3%

Elite 8 Results:

We had a little bit of a hiccup with this round. Someone decided to vote 2000+ times in an attempt to ruin it for everyone. We pulled the poll early, so there were fewer overall votes. We took the raw voting data and filtered it for 1 vote per IP address. Going forward the polls will self-regulate to one vote per IP address. We will also “check the tapes” before we publish the results.

Game 1 – Karbach vs. Saint Arnold (588 Votes)
Bourbon Barrel Hellfighter – 55.1%
Art Car – 44.9%

Game 2 – Texas Beer Refinery vs. Saint Arnold (619 Votes)
Catalyst – 41.4%
Bishop’s Barrel #10 – 58.6%

Game 3 – Saint Arnold vs. Saint Arnold (562 Votes)
Pumpkinator – 52.5%
Divine Reserve #15 – 47.5%

Game 4 – Southern Star vs. Lone Pint (610 Votes)
Black Crack – 31.3%
Yellow Rose – 68.7%

Round of 16 Results:


Game 1 – Karbach vs. Saint Arnold (2316 Votes)
Bourbon Barrel Hellfighter — 56.3%
Bishop’s Barrel #11 — 43.7%

Game 2 – Saint Arnold vs. 8th Wonder (2026 Votes)
Art Car — 52.1%
Rocket Fuel — 47.9%

Game 3 – Karbach vs. Texas Beer Refinery (2842 Votes)
Vanilla BBH — 46.4%
Catalyst — 53.6%

Game 4 – Karbach vs. Saint Arnold (2510 Votes)
Three Legged Lab — 49.1%
Bishop’s Barrel #10 — 50.9%


Game 5 – Saint Arnold vs Karbach (2510 Votes)
Pumpkinator — 52.8%
F.U.N. 013 Kentucky Habit — 47.2%

Game 6 – Karbach vs. Saint Arnold (2528 Votes)
Rodeo Clown — 47.9%
Divine Reserve 15 — 52.1%

Game 7 – Southern Star vs. Karbach (2454 Votes)
Black Crack — 51.7%
Chocolate BBH — 48.3%

Game 8 – Saint Arnold vs. Lone Pint (2050 Votes)
Endeavour — 30.8%
Yellow Rose — 69.2%

Round of 32 Results:


Game 1 – Karbach vs. 8th Wonder (1579 Votes)
Bourbon Barrel Hellfighter — 71.8%
Dream Shake — 28.2%

Game 2 – Saint Arnold vs. Brash (1494 Votes)
Bishop’s Barrel #11 — 70.1%
Abide — 29.9%

Game 3 – Saint Arnold vs. No Label (1673 Votes)
Art Car — 59.1%
Perpetual Peace — 40.9%

Game 4 – Karbach vs. 8th Wonder (1591 Votes)
F.U.N. 012 Trigave — 38.7%
Rocket Fuel — 61.3%

Game 5 – Karbach vs. Buffalo Bayou (1515 Votes)
Vanilla BBH — 77.5%
Vanilla Mocha Sunset — 22.5%

Game 6 – Southern Star vs. Texas Beer Refinery (2150 Votes)
Buried Hatchet — 49.3%
Catalyst — 50.7%

Game 7 – Karbach vs. Brash (1490 Votes)
Three Legged Lab — 55.6%
Cortado — 44.4%

Game 8 – Brash vs. Saint Arnold (1444 Votes)
Cali Green — 37.3%
Bishop’s Barrel #10 — 62.7%


Game 9 – Saint Arnold vs. Karbach (1631 Votes)
Pumpkinator — 60.2%
Yule Shoot Your Eye Out — 39.8%

Game 10 – Brash vs. Karbach (1472 Votes)
Pussy Wagon — 49.0%
F.U.N. 013 Kentucky Habit — 51.0%

Game 11 – Karbach vs. Brash (1550 Votes)
Rodeo Clown — 56.9%
Vulgar Display of Power — 43.1%

Game 12 – Lone Pint vs. Saint Arnold (1472 Votes)
The Jabberwocky — 33.2%
Divine Reserve #15 — 66.8%

Game 13 – Southern Star vs. Buffalo Bayou (1417 Votes)
Black Crack — 60.8%
More Cowbell — 39.2%

Game 14 – Saint Arnold vs. Karbach (1555 Votes)
Bishop’s Barrel #12 — 47.4%
Chocolate BBH — 52.6%

Game 15 – B-52 vs. Saint Arnold (1458 Votes)
Breakfast Stout — 42.4%
Endeavour — 57.6%

Game 16 – Brash vs. Lone Pint (1431 Votes)
EZ-7 — 20.9%
Yellow Rose — 79.1%

Round of 64 Results:


Game 1 – Karbach vs. Fetching Lab (1341 Votes)
Bourbon Barrel Hellfighter — 84.6%
Bound & Determined — 15.4%

Game 2 – 8th Wonder vs. Brash (1311 Votes)
Dream Shake — 53.4%
Prestige Worldwide — 46.6%

Game 3 – Saint Arnold vs. No Label (1314 Votes)
Bishop’s Barrel #11 — 73.8%
Elda M. Milk Stout — 26.2%

Game 4 – Brash vs. Brash (1120 Votes)
Abide — 59.9%
Milk the Venom — 40.1%

Game 5 – Saint Arnold vs. Buffalo Bayou (1313 Votes)
Art Car — 73.7%
Buffalo Sunset — 26.3%

Game 6 – No Label vs. Buffalo Bayou (1248 Votes)
Perpetual Peace — 69.6%
Chai Porter — 30.4%

Game 7 – Karbach vs. Karbach (1277 Votes)
F.U.N. 012 Trigave — 50.7%
El Hopadillo Negro — 49.3%

Game 8 – 8th Wonder vs. Galveston Island (1296 Votes)
Rocket Fuel — 73.6%
Citra Mellow — 26.4%

Game 9 – Karbach vs. Southern Star (1241 Votes)
Vanilla BBH — 74.9%
Honesty of Reason — 25.1%

Game 10 – Buffalo Bayou vs. Buffalo Bayou (1136 Votes)
Vanilla Mocha Sunset — 68.6%
Pumpkin Spice Latte — 31.4%

Game 11 – Southern Star vs. 11 Below (1256 Votes)
Buried Hatchet — 71.2%
Negative Space — 28.8%

Game 12 – Buffalo Bayou vs. Texas Beer Refinery (1591 Votes)
Gingerbread Stout — 42.4%
Catalyst — 57.6%

Game 13 – Karbach vs. Buffalo Bayou (1241 Votes)
Three Legged Lab — 70.6%
Turtle Murder — 29.4%

Game 14 – Brash vs. Karbach (1229 Votes)
Cortado — 56.2%
Krunkin Pumpkin — 43.8%

Game 15 – Brash vs. Buffalo Bayou (1171 Votes)
Cali Green — 63.7%
Smoke on the Bayou — 36.3%

Game 16 – Saint Arnold vs. Town in City (1184 Votes)
Bishop’s Barrel #10 — 78.4%
City Porter — 21.6%


Game 17 – Saint Arnold vs. Galveston Island (1225 Votes)
Pumpkinator — 74.8%
Nightfall — 25.2%

Game 18 – Karbach vs. Buffalo Bayou (1214 Votes)
Yule Shoot Your Eye Out — 72.7%
Saigon Sunset — 27.3%

Game 19 – Brash vs. Lone Pint (1177 Votes)
Pussy Wagon — 61.8%
UndeadHeadEd — 38.2%

Game 20 – Karbach vs. No Label (1187 Votes)
F.U.N. 013 Kentucky Habit — 63.7%
Boomstick — 36.3%

Game 21 – Karbach vs. Brash (1212 Votes)
Rodeo Clown — 62.7%
Black Meddle — 37.3%

Game 22 – Brash vs. Karbach (1250 Votes)
Vulgar Display of Power — 56.8%
Fieldworks Belgian Tripel — 43.2%

Game 23 – Lone Pint vs. No Label (1169 Votes)
The Jabberwocky — 63.0%
BA Elda M. Milk Stout — 37.0%

Game 24 – Saint Arnold vs Lone Pint (1170 Votes)
Divine Reserve #15 — 71.5%
Zythophile Enigma — 28.5%

Game 25 – Southern Star vs. Buffalo Bayou (1133 Votes)
Black Crack — 79.4%
Black Raz — 20.6%

Game 26 – Buffalo Bayou vs Buffalo Bayou (1089 Votes)
More Cowbell — 71.4%
Lenin’s Revenge — 28.6%

Game 27 – Saint Arnold vs. Saint Arnold (1,124 Votes)
Bishop’s Barrel #12 — 64.3%
Icon Blue Coffee Porter — 35.7%

Game 28 – Karbach vs. Saint Arnold (1154 Votes)
Chocolate BBH — 68.0%
Sailing Santa — 32.0%

Game 29 – No Label vs. B52 (1109 Votes)
Nightmare on 1st Street — 49.0%
Breakfast Stout — 51.0%

Game 30 – Saint Arnold vs. Buffalo Bayou (1147 Votes)
Endeavour — 77.2%
Mud Turtle — 22.8%

Game 31 – Brash vs. Brazos Valley (1089 Votes)
EZ-7 — 62.2%
Big Spoon — 37.8%

Game 32 – Lone Pint vs. Lone Pint (1177 Votes)
Yellow Rose — 89.0%
Po-cha-na-quar-hip — 11.0%

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New Year’s Resolution: Drink (Somewhat) Healthier Beer! https://houstonbeerguide.com/new-years-resolution-drink-somewhat-healthier-beer/ https://houstonbeerguide.com/new-years-resolution-drink-somewhat-healthier-beer/#respond https://houstonbeerguide.com/?p=639 We’ve officially reached the beginning of a new calendar year which means it’s time to reflect and aspire to a better 12 months than the previous. Beware of all your friends on social media with that unoriginal “new year, new me”, though. Most of us want to make improvements in things such as relationships, career,

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We’ve officially reached the beginning of a new calendar year which means it’s time to reflect and aspire to a better 12 months than the previous. Beware of all your friends on social media with that unoriginal “new year, new me”, though. Most of us want to make improvements in things such as relationships, career, travel, health, etc. Me? I want to drink more beer in 2016!

Let me explain…

I too want to improve my fitness and decrease my waistline this year but I don’t want to sacrifice my beer drinking in order to do so. Beer is deceptively high in calories — it’s often difficult for me to find an IPA with less than 200 calories per 12 ounce bottle. We always think twice about consuming nachos or pancakes but rarely do we put our beer mug down because of the caloric intake. There must be a way for all of us to continue enjoying our heavyweight beers without becoming heavyweights ourselves, right? I’ve attempted to dissect the local craft beer scene in order to find a resolution for you beer-loving fitness enthusiasts (or hopeful enthusiasts) by looking at calories and alcohol by volume, ABV.

The reason for looking at calories is obvious; the reason I also look at ABV is because nutrition facts are not required on beer labels and there’s a lot of resistance to making the information known. Alcohol content is probably the best indicator of calories since every gram of alcohol contributes about 7 calories towards your beer. It can get a lot more complicated than this due to the amount of sugars and the fermentation process, but this is a simple approximation. I utilized two sources for the information: www.myfitnesspal.com & The Next Glass (iOS app). Simply finding caloric information for craft beer is extremely difficult and my findings are only as good as the data available.

I’ve highlighted my 5 favorite healthy brewery options + a “cheat meal”. If you’re still thirsty for more there is a longer list towards the bottom. All calorie amounts are per a 12-ounce serving.

Saint Arnold

Saint-Arnold-Logo-150x150
Saint Arnold’s Marketing Director, Lennie Ambrose, actually provided their exact nutrition facts. The SA beer with the least amount of calories is the new Boiler Room Berliner Weisse with 120 per 12oz, which I must say is awesomely refreshing. Other good options are Fancy Lawnmower, Weedwacker and Santo, which all clock in at 149 calories each. You shouldn’t have a problem finding any of these on store shelves.

 

Karbach

Karbach-Logo_400x400_png
I found Love Street Kolsch to have 123 calories and Weisse Versa Wheat, 156 (according to Next Glass). Both are very solid beers, especially in the Texas heat. Also, Staycation with only 4.8% ABV or Zee German Pils with 4.9% ABV will keep you light and tight. The Zee German Pils was released last week.

8th Wonder

8th-wonder
8th Wonder has quite the assortment of beers available but finding nutrition facts on them is tough. A safe bet would be to keep it light with some Dome Faux’m, which is a cream ale at only 5.2% ABV.

 

Buffalo Bayou

Buff Brew
I wasn’t expecting to find a healthy option from a brewery that creates beers such as Bananas Foster, Mud Turtle, Gingerbread Stout and Red Velvet Stout, but they provide a selection of beers across the spectrum. For instance, their 1836 Copper Ale claims only 171 calories (Next Glass), while the Summer’s Wit hoists 180 (Next Glass). I highly recommend the toasty 1836 to be paired with a lean burger for the ideal post-workout reload. Beer hydrates, right?

 

No Label

nolabel
They tout quite a number of beers under the 200 calorie mark. No Label has the lowest average calorie count of all the breweries I looked at. Your fittest bets would be the 1st Street Blonde Ale with 150 calories and 5% ABV, or El Hefe Hefeweizen with 165 calories at 5.5% ABV (all stats from Next Glass).

 

Brash (CHEAT MEAL)

images
Let’s be honest, you don’t drink a beer from Brash because you’re looking to cut back on calories and they don’t make beer for that reason either. Consider a Brash Cortado, Abide, or Smoglifter Stout as your cheat meal. You earned it. If you want to be picky then search out their EZ-7 pale ale with only 5% ABV.

 

The following is a list of more local beers under 6% ABV or 200 calories per 12 ounces to fit your fitness goals:

B-52

The Payload Pilsner: 5.1% ABV
Schwarzbier: 4.3% ABV & 129 Calories
Wingman Wheat IPA: 5.7% ABV

 

Southern Star

Bombshell Blonde Ale: 5.3% ABV & 157 calories (Next Glass)

 

 

Lone Pint

Zeno’s Pale Ale: 5.9% ABV
Yellow Rose IPA: 6.8% ABV & 215 calories.

Whole Foods Market Brewing

Vienna Lager: 4.9% ABV

Town in City

Mosquito’s Revenge Pale Ale: 5.5% ABV

Spindletap

The Boomtown Blonde Ale: 5.5% ABV
Toolpusher Pale Ale: 5.5% ABV

Galveston Island

Tiki Wheat: 5.6% ABV

Texian

Vaquero Mexican Dark Lager: 5.2% ABV
Travis Pale Lager: 5.2% ABV

11 Below

7-Iron Session Ale: 4.5% ABV

 

And there you have it. Houston craft brewers are gaining a reputation for producing truly awesome BIG beers but as you can see there are plenty of lighter beers you can enjoy while trying to cut back on calories.

While my list is extensive, it’s not comprehensive, so if you would like to include any breweries that I missed or find faults in my arguments please leave a comment below.

The feedback is always much appreciated. Cheers y’all and I hope you’re able to enjoy plenty of beer while sticking to your resolutions in 2016. Let us know how it goes.

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Where are Houston’s flights? https://houstonbeerguide.com/where-are-houstons-flights/ https://houstonbeerguide.com/where-are-houstons-flights/#comments Thu, 27 Aug 2015 15:00:19 +0000 https://houstonbeerguide.com/?p=388 Last week, I drove from my lovely Midtown castle to the faraway lands known as “The Heights” in order to sample the new beers at Town in City Brewery. Though the journey was far and perilous (traffic on 45N), I rested easy knowing that soon, I’d get to try some new-to-me and new-to-Houston beers, almost

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The flight at Drake's in San Leandro, CA - One of my favorite flight presentations

The flight at Drake’s in San Leandro, CA – One of my favorite flight presentations

Last week, I drove from my lovely Midtown castle to the faraway lands known as “The Heights” in order to sample the new beers at Town in City Brewery. Though the journey was far and perilous (traffic on 45N), I rested easy knowing that soon, I’d get to try some new-to-me and new-to-Houston beers, almost making the prospect of driving worth it.

As a responsible driver and frequent ticker, I had two goals: drink every beer that Town in City offered and subsequently drive home sober. So I asked the same question I ask every brewery I visit: “do y’all offer flights?”

The answer, sadly, was no. Town in City offers three sizes for on-premise consumption: 10 ounces, 20 ounces, and 60 ounces. With five beers on tap, that meant I either had to consume 50 ounces of beer (not driving-friendly) or send a lot of half-drank glasses back to be poured out. Because my desire to be safe trumps my desire to drink, I opted for the latter.

Thankfully, my friendly bartender at TiC understood my dilemma and rather than waste beer, poured me smaller samples. I was able to solve all my problems through the benefit of excellent customer service. However, it immediately brought a question to my mind: where are Houston’s brewery flights?

I am fortunate enough to travel frequently, for work or pleasure, and when I do, I visit breweries. According to untappd, I’ve been to 155 breweries since August 2012. And at those breweries, in places as wide-ranging as London, San Diego, Miami, and Boston (and many places in between), the answer to my question above, “do y’all offer flights?” is usually, “Of course! The details are…”

To illustrate my point, here’s a breakdown of the most recent 15 breweries I’ve visited, in 7 locations:

  • Town in City; Saint Arnold; 11 Below — Houston, TX — No flights or tasters offered
  • Galveston Island — Galveston, TX — Flights of four at a time
  • La Cumbre; Marble; Nexus; Chama River; Bosque — Albuquerque, NM — Flights of four/five at a time
  • Firestone Walker; Barrelhouse — Paso Robles, CA — Flights of four at a time
  • Ladyface Alehouse — Agoura Hills, CA — Flights of five/six at a time
  • Oasis Texas; Pinthouse Pizza — Austin, TX — Flights of five/six at a time
  • Other Half — Brooklyn, NY — Single 4oz tasters

Obviously this is a small list, but notice something interesting here: only the three Houston breweries stand out as not offering flights or tasters. Even our neighbors a county over in Galveston have flights (and they come in little adorable Ball jars), and our friends in Austin offer tasters or flights as well. Yet, for some reason, Houston seems to be missing this typical brewery offering.

Admittedly, Whole Foods Market offers flights. And as a ‘brewpub’-style establishment, I’d be shocked if they didn’t. But otherwise, I can think of no Houston brewery that offers flights. If we’re going to get serious about beer tourism in this city, I think that our breweries need to address this gap. Especially in a city as car-centric as Houston. So rather than asking “do y’all offer flights?” at my next Houston brewery visit, I intend to ask: “where are Houston’s flights?”

 

Update: A couple of breweries have reached out over Twitter. Saint Arnold offers flights during their regular lunch hours and 8th Wonder offers flights Sunday-Thursday. A Twitter user tells us Southern Star also offers flights.

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