Cycler's Brewing - Houston Beer Guide https://houstonbeerguide.com Online beer news and reviews for the city of Houston Fri, 24 Jun 2016 15:26:25 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=5.6.14 Houston Firkin Fest 2016: A Firkin Good Time https://houstonbeerguide.com/houston-firkin-fest-2016-a-firkin-good-time/ https://houstonbeerguide.com/houston-firkin-fest-2016-a-firkin-good-time/#comments Fri, 24 Jun 2016 12:30:03 +0000 https://houstonbeerguide.com/?p=1747 Sponsored by Saint Arnold, Real Ale, Freetail, Deep Ellum, and Texas Beer Bus, and run by the Texas Craft Brewers Guild, the third annual Houston Firkin Fest on June 18 represented the creative depth of some of Texas’s best breweries. After being moved from its original date in April due to a threat of severe

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firkin cupSponsored by Saint Arnold, Real Ale, Freetail, Deep Ellum, and Texas Beer Bus, and run by the Texas Craft Brewers Guild, the third annual Houston Firkin Fest on June 18 represented the creative depth of some of Texas’s best breweries. After being moved from its original date in April due to a threat of severe weather, the organizers of the Firkin Fest did a fantastic job with the rescheduled event. The volunteers were friendly and knowledgeable, and the accompaniments to the beer such as the spicy food provided by Reigns and the buoyant Americana tunes from the band Strayhearts were enjoyable.

Held under the pavilion at Hennessy Park next to Saint Arnold Brewing Company, the small venue was a perfect setting for this bite-sized festival. The 10.79-gallon firkins used for the event allowed brewers to offer a small batch for experimentation to add adjuncts to, creating concoctions with fruit, spices, chocolate, coffee and other special ingredients. Fifteen Texan breweries brought firkins full of beer featuring everything from peanut butter to peppers.

Freetail’s Double Cherry Bexarliner was a hit. Though I prefer their more refreshing peach version, the tart Michigan Montmorency cherries in the latest of their Berliner Weisse fruit series paired well with the lactic tang of the beer. An improvement over the too-restrained single Cherry Bexarliner, which was served on the festival’s specialty tap wall, the extra cherry punch of the Double was just what the Berliner needed. Also fruity and refreshing was the addition of grapefruit to Real Ale’s White, a dry-hopped Belgian wit. Crisp with a subtle grapefruit finish, it hit the spot at the hottest time of day on the summer afternoon.

The popular variant vanilla earned high marks in its starring roles in New Republic’s Vanilla Sky, based on their Skylight dunkelweizen, and Lone Pint’s vanilla and chicory variation of their standby brown ale, Gentleman’s Relish. Though a bit overpowering in the dunkelweizen, the vanilla was a natural complement to the typical banana flavor of the hefeweizen yeast, and it tamed the boldness of the chicory in the brown ale.

No Label brought two cocktail-inspired beers: Old Fashion Ridgeback Ale and Dark & Stormy 1st Street Blonde. The Old Fashion was the more successful of the two. Bourbon cherries, bitters and orange peel added complexity to the dark amber brew and nicely accented its existing caramel notes and roasted malt. The rum-soaked ginger and lime enlivened the blonde, but the lime finish was too intense.

Cycler's FirkinArguably the most audacious experiment, Cycler’s Ryed Hard (Reubenized) was the brewery’s take on a Reuben sandwich. Their rye ale was made over with mustard seed, star anise, juniper berries, dill seed, bay leaves, ginger, cloves, cardamom, allspice, coriander and mace to taste like a Reuben without the corned beef: an odd beer, but it worked well.

Like any experiment, the results can vary. Sometimes the result is something you want to replicate, and sometimes it falls flat. In my opinion, Deep Ellum’s Very Berry Dallas Blonde, 8th Wonder’s Peanut Butter Chocolate Rocket Fuel, and Real Ale’s modified Real Heavy Scotch ale were misses. The Very Berry Blonde tasted like a watered-down berry lemonade, the Peanut Butter Chocolate Rocket Fuel was thin and had hardly any discernible peanut butter flavor, and the Real Heavy with English tea tips, candied figs and dried apricot had too many flavors to focus on.

A late entry in the Fest, new kid on the block Eureka Heights really impressed me with My Stoutrifice, an incredibly well-balanced milk stout brewed with Mexican cinnamon and peppers. It’s one of the best pepper beers I’ve ever had.

Other highlights included (512) Café au Lait, their venerable Pecan Porter with a coffee kick; the sarsaparilla-spiked Brazos Valley NYF Silt Brown, a dead-ringer for its namesake, Not Your Father’s Root Beer; Deep Ellum Tongue Punch, a solid tropical twist on their standard IPA; and the luscious, creamy Nutella®-like evolution of Southern Star’s Buried Hatchet Stout, Deez Hazelnutz.

Those standouts were a warm-up for my vote for Best in Show: Karbach Bourbon Barrel Hellfighter Horchata. The welcoming, warm cinnamon nose invited me to drink the imperial porter. Bourbon upfront with a grainy backbone and a cinnamon finish, it was a perfect symphony of flavors and one of my favorite BBHs to date. I really hope Karbach releases this one, at least in limited batches, so more people can try it.

Though most of the beers at the Fest were variation of standards from their regular beer lines, some breweries brought unaltered brews, showing off the richer, smoother character of cask-conditioned beers. Karbach offered their lupulin bomb, Hop Delusion Double IPA; Southern Star’s newish IPA, Conspiracy Theory, made an appearance; the revered Saint Arnold Divine Reserve 15 Russian Imperial Stout came out of retirement for the occasion, and 8th Wonder’s tasty limited-release gose, Haterade, was also featured at the Fest.

One of my favorite aspects of this festival was the signage. Too often at festivals you are left on your own to figure out what you are actually drinking. Firkin Fest featured signs labeling the style, ABV, IBU and a detailed description of each beer and its transformation from its normal base into its firkin alter ego. Even better, some of the brewers were on hand to ask questions about their beers. The intimacy of the event allowed for longer discussions with the brewers, which I very much enjoyed. I’ll be back next year.

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Houston Firkin Fest – Preview https://houstonbeerguide.com/houston-firkin-fest-preview/ https://houstonbeerguide.com/houston-firkin-fest-preview/#respond Wed, 20 Apr 2016 13:30:27 +0000 https://houstonbeerguide.com/?p=1443 The third annual Houston Firkin Fest will be held on April 30 at Hennessey Park next to Saint Arnold brewery. So, what exactly is a firkin? According to Webster Dictionary a firkin is, “a small cask used chiefly for liquids, butter, or fish.” It is also a specific size holding 72 imperial pints or 10.79

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firkinFest-houThe third annual Houston Firkin Fest will be held on April 30 at Hennessey Park next to Saint Arnold brewery. So, what exactly is a firkin? According to Webster Dictionary a firkin is, “a small cask used chiefly for liquids, butter, or fish.” It is also a specific size holding 72 imperial pints or 10.79 US gallons (because this is America after all). It can be wooden or metal, and if you’ve ever seen one tapped, you would probably remember it. To open the air sealed firkin, the cask is laid on its side and a spout is driven into it with a mallet. It’s pretty cool if you ask me and one of the exciting things to watch for at the festival.

Why would a brewery use a firkin over a regular keg? Well, the firkin lends itself better to allowing natural conditioning and makes the beer have a smoother finish because of the lack of CO2 needed. It is also an outlet for a brewery to try something special like adding fruit, chocolate, coffee, spices or any other adjunct that the brewery wants to experiment with. Breweries now a days seem to like to use these to add an adjunct to a beer that they commonly brew, and that is what makes this festival so exciting. These beers will be unique. Yes, some of the breweries will have firkins of something they regularly sell, but just putting that in the firkin will change it a bit. In addition, this year there will we a draft wall with 10 limited releases from the participating breweries.

Speaking of participating breweries, it’s a who’s who of the Texas craft beer scene. The festival is actually run by the Texas Craft Brewers Guild, so in many ways it’s the breweries putting this on. The following breweries are planning on participating: Real Ale Brewing Company, Saint Arnold Brewing Company, Freetail Brewing Co., Deep Ellum Brewing Company, Brigadoon Brewery & Brew School, (512) Brewing Company, Cycler’s Brewing, Karbach Brewing Co., No Label Brewing Co., 8th Wonder Brewery, Lone Pint Brewery, New Republic Brewing Company, Southern Star Brewing Company, Brazos Valley Brewing Company and Buffalo Bayou Brewing Company.

Check back as the festival nears as we will update this article with the full beer list, and check back after the festival as I will be writing up a review. I’d love to hear about what you’re drinking and enjoying most that day. So, write a comment after the festival, or better yet, come say hello if you see me; I’ll be out there enjoying it.

 

Firkin List:

(512) Brewing Company

(512) Indian Pale Ale
(512) Six Anniversary Dubbel

8th Wonder Brewery

Peanut Butter Chocolate Rocket Fuel
Haterade

Brigadoon Brewery & Brew School

Black Plague Ale (Aged in a Ranger Creek Whiskey Barrel)

Buffalo Bayou Brewing Co.

Mao Cowbell
Maple Chili Jam

Cycler’s Brewing

Ryed Hard
55-11 Special

Deep Ellum Brewing Company

IPA Tongue Punch
Very Berry Dallas Blonde

Freetail Brewing Co.

Mandarina Helles
Double Cherry Bexarliner

Karbach Brewing Company

BBH Horchata
Hop Delusion

Lone Pint Brewery

The Jabberwocky
Gentlemans Relish

New Republic Brewing

Kacao Kadigan
Dammit I’m Dry

No Label Brewing Company

Old Fashion Ridgeback Ale
Dark & Stormy 1st Street Blonde

Real Ale Brewing Company

White (Cask Conditioned White with Fresh Grapefruit)
Real Heavy

Saint Arnold Brewing Company

Grapefruit Technique
Divine Reserve 15

Southern Star Brewing 

Deez Hazelnutz
Conspiracy Theory IPA

If you get the urge for more carbonation, this year Firkin Fest is offering some traditional draft options as well.

 

(512) Brewing Company

(512) THREE

Cycler’s Brewing

Palmares Bourbon Barrel

Deep Ellum Brewing Company

Numb Comfort

Freetail Brewing Co.

Cherry Bexarliner

Karbach Brewing Company

Hellfighter 

No label Brewing Company

Off Label Series: Peanut Butter Chocolate Time!

Real Ale Brewing Company

Lux Aeterna

Saint Arnold Brewing Company

Bishop’s Barrel 10

Southern Star Brewing

Spring Pils

For more detailed descriptions, check out http://houstonfirkinfest.com/

 

Location: Hennessey Park, 1900 Lyons Ave, Houston, TX  77020

Time: 2 — 6 PM with VIP entrance starting at 12:30 PM

Parking: Free at Saint Arnold as well as on street

Tickets: VIP, General Admission and Designated Driver tickets are available at: Https://www.eventbrite.com/E/Houston-Firkin-Fest-Tickets-21216080869

 

Website: houstonfirkinfest.com

Twitter: @htxfirkinfest

Facebook: www.facebook.com/houstonfirkinfest

Facebook Event RSVP: Https://www.facebook.com/events/1686760454925906/

 

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