Posts Tagged ‘Hopocalypse’

Surviving the Hopocalypse

Tuesday, February 5th, 2013

The dust has settled, the port-o-potties are gone, and the forklifts are milling about like any other day. The Hopocalypse occurred, and you survived it. Because you, sir or madam, are a winner.  You looked it square in the eye, and it blinked.  And then you took a swig of the biggest, baddest IPA the East Bay has to offer.  So here’s to every last one of you craft beer drinkers and Hopocalypse survivors. Thank you all for coming out this weekend, as well as to Fist of Flour, Me So Hungry, and Fiveten Burger for helping everyone take on our hops.

And if you missed out, don’t fret. Hopocalypse Green Label will be out in stores, bars, and other beereries in the not-too-distant future, and we will have a few more Brew Rhino kegs trickling out first-come-first-served style through the Barrel House, so you can check in when it opens back up on Wednesday.

Now… get to stocking up on bottled water and cab fare, because SF Beer Week starts Friday. But in the meantime, check out our Hopocalypse photo gallery below (or on Flickr or Facebook, if that’s how you roll). Oh, and our apologies to the guy who told us he was supposed to be at work.

Hopocalypse Release 2013

Wednesday, January 2nd, 2013

It’s in the tanks. It’s preparing for the onslaught of thirsty beer hoards. It will be ready. Will you?

Drake’s Hopocalypse DIPA and Hopocalypse Black Label Triple IPA will be returning on Saturday, February 2nd, 10am to 9pm, at Drake’s Barrel House.

Doors will open to the Barrel House at 10am.
Hopocalypse DIPA (9.3% ABV, 100+ IBUs) will be available on tap, on cask, in 22 oz bottles (1 case per person limit), in growlers (2 per person), and in Brew Rhino kegs (limited availability, first come first served).
Hopocalypse Black Label (12.5% ABV, 100+ IBUs) will be available on tap, on cask, and in 22oz bottles (2 per person limit) at the Barrel House only.

For the hungry, Fists of Flour Wood-Fire pizza, Me So Hungry, and Fiveten Burger will be stopping by to crank out good grub for your beer-filled stomachs.

Expect casks of Hopocalypse, brewery tours, great food, Hopocalypse swag, and enough hops to send you to the end of days tasting the dank hoppy deliciousness forevermore.

Drake’s Goes to Yakima- Alex’s Hop Selection

Wednesday, December 12th, 2012

*Post by Alexandra Nowell, Drake’s Lead Brewer*

It’s one of my favorite times of the year to be a brewer.  The 2012 American harvest hops are beginning to arrive at Drake’s, and being the hop-forward brewery that we are, fresh hops and new varieties are exciting!  This year, I got to travel to Yakima Valley in Central Washington to hand select all of our American grown hops and make sure we get exactly the aromas and flavors we want from each variety.

The Yakima Valley is the largest hop growing region in the United States, 2nd largest in the world, and home to the growers who are leading the innovation of new hop varieties.  Imagine farm after farm, both large and small, with rows of hops as far as the eye can see, where during harvest time almost everywhere you go smells like hops. This is the Yakima Valley.  Basically, I got to spend a few days running around like a kid in a candy store.

Hop Selection
How hop selection works: You set up an appointment with your hop vendor (we buy our hops from multiple sources, so in this case, I had more than one appointment to attend).  When you arrive at the selection location, you are led into a room with a large table.  Then selection begins.  For each hop variety, anywhere from 2 to 10 different brewers cuts of whole hops representing a hop grown in a different location, are placed in front of you.  This is when you tear into the cut, rub the cones between your hands and deeply inhale the aromatics of the hop, analyzing and deciding whether this is the lot you want or if you want to smell the next one in line… or both.  With certain lots, you know immediately whether or not it’s up to your standard, but some are so close to the other that you want to smell each of them 3 or 4 times before making a decision.  Once you figure out which lot you want, the next variety and a new set of brewers cuts appear and you start the process over again.  We selected 9 varieties of hops this year, and all lots were of amazingly high quality, making some of my selections incredibly difficult. But that’s not exactly a bad problem to have, is it?

The Harvest
If you are not familiar with how hops are grown and harvested, allow me to introduce you to the process.  The hop plant, Humulus lupulus, is planted in the early spring.  It emerges from the ground as a vine and trained to grow up on vertical trellises.  The hop cone, which is the only part of the plant used in the brewing process, develops on the vine and continues to grow and mature throughout the growing season until harvest time, which usually begins towards the end of the summer and continues for several weeks.  The hops are picked from their vines at their peak of maturity and immediately sent to large kilns to be dried in a manner that doesn’t compromise the delicate essential oils that brewers value so highly.  Afterwards, the dried hops are baled and either sent off to be stored in freezers until they can be processed into hop pellets or sent off to breweries that use hops in whole form.

Hop Farm Visits
While the work in the small selection rooms was the main cause of my visit to Yakima, I also wanted to take the opportunity to see the farms and meet the farmers that would be supplying our hops.

I had the pleasure to spend a day at CLS Farms while they were harvesting Chinook (which just happens to be one of my favorite hop varieties).  The air was thick with dank hop aroma, and from where I stood, I could watch truck after truck roll up to the pickers, packed to the brim with vines of Chinook.  I spent a lot of my day in educational seminars about the state of the hop industry, but I also had plenty of time to wander the fields, pickers, and kilns.  Hops as far as the eye could see. It was a happy day.

Also on the itinerary was a trip to BT Loftus Ranch, one of the larger Yakima hop growers, where I was given a tour by 4th generation hop farmer, Patrick Smith.  They were harvesting Ahtanum that day and had just finished drying the new hop, Mosaic (sidenote: I am stoked for this hop – wait and see what we do with it next year).

Loftus Ranch has one of the coolest things I’ve ever seen – a small experimental hop yard.  A few vines of this, a few vines of that, some familiar names and hops that you just don’t see anymore, but many of them are known only by a number.  This is the part of the tour when I get really excited.  Knowing my interest in new and exciting hop varieties, Patrick takes me to hops that smell of pineapple, coconut,  vanilla, mango, papaya, sweet pine forests, and more.  Amazing!

Patrick Smith smells the hops at BT Loftus Ranch.

After my trip had concluded, I was left with a lingering feeling of how awesome and crucial it was to be able to connect with the growers and the environment of such a personally important brewing ingredient.  My first hop selection is an experience I will never forget.

That’s about it kind drinkers of Drake’s.  We’re excited about this year’s hop harvest, which means you should be too!  Beers with 2012 harvest hops are already starting to roll out of the brewery, so drink up.

Cheers,

Alex

 

 

 

Restaurant Thir13en Sacramento Beer Dinner with Chef Adam Pechal

Friday, March 2nd, 2012

When it comes to a day that appears only once every four years that just so happens to land smack in the middle of Sacramento Beer Week, we figured it was the perfect excuse chance to have a tremendous, Epicurean night of food and craft beer. Chef Adam Pechal has been making a name for himself in his role as head chef of two of Sacramento’s more inventive restaurants Tuli and Restaurant Thir13en, so when he brought up the idea to do a beer dinner at Thir13en, we jumped at the opportunity to put it together.

With a contagious exuberance that likely hasn’t waned much since he was a small boy and an undeniable talent in the kitchen, Chef Pechal worked with our Head Brewer Brian Thorson and created a 5-course menu of sumptuous dishes each paired with a different Drake’s beer.

As guests began to arrive early in the evening, we poured our light and crisp Kolsch-style Blonde ale, to pair with the first dish of the night: Lobster and Blonde Beer Fritters with Meyer Lemon Aioli.

Hungry from set-up and the choice to eat very lightly throughout the day pre-beer-dinner, the intoxicating smell of these delicious golden puffs of beer batter and lobster made it difficult to keep from promptly stuffing four into our mouths and washing down with a full Blonde, but we refrained. Good thing too, because the hits just kept on coming.

Chef Pechal finally instructed us all to take our seats for the next course and introduced to the crowd our owner John Martin and Brian. Then, when the opening remarks were complete, the wait staff brought in dish and beer number 2. Drakes Amber paired with 12 Hour Pork Belly with Honey Amber Mustard, Toasted Pistachios, sauteed Blueberries, and Red Mustard Frisee.

After the delicious and almost mandatory infusion of pork belly, we moved on to course three: House Made Squid Ink Pasta with Grilled Monterey Squid, Calabrian Chilis and Arugula paired with 1500. The lightness of the 1500 and the citrus in the hops perfectly paired with the richness of the pasta, lightness of the squid and the spice from the chilis.

Now that we had hinted at the hops and the spice, the fourth course took it to the next level. Glasses of our seasonal Hopocalypse Double IPA made their way to each guest as servers dropped vintage martini glasses filled with Fort Bragg Rockfish Ceviche with Blood Oranges, Habeñero, and Hopocalypse-Avocado Mousse garnished with a crispy corn chip.

Then, the night got even more interesting. In a mad scientist turn, Chef Pechal brought a table to the front of the room and had his sous chef bring in a large metal container filled with liquid nitrogen. After donning protective gloves and goggles the two chefs began to pour the -320 degree liquid nitrogen into a container filled with a hefty amount of our latest sour Theia (an American Strong Ale aged in Chardonnay Barrels with Brettanomyces), thus creating tableside sorbet. Fog from the liquid nitrogen billowed out of the top of the container as Chef Pechal stirred the mixture to a perfect sorbet consistancy– the perfect palate cleanser for a beer dinner. Chef Pechal served small spoons of the Theia sorbet with garnish of carbonated blood oranges (made by putting oranges and beer into a keg and cranking up the psi to carbonate the juice inside the oranges) and a glass of the non-frozen Theia.

After the entertainment of the evening was finished, and all of our palates thoroughly cleansed, servers began to bring out the fifth pairing: Black Robusto Porter with Porter Braised Beef Shortribs with Crispy Fingerlings, Carnival Cauliflower, and Toy Box Carrots. We had no words…

Nearly stuffed, a bit red faced, and very happy at this point, every cheerfully welcomed the final pairing for dessert that was both delicious and inventive. Dessert paired our well-named Barrel-aged Barleywine blend, The Good Shit with Apple-Barleywine Bundt Cake with Cardamom Ice Cream and Apple Barleywine Granita.

We left that night full, completely satisfied, and absolutely certain to dream about the foods and beers we had had. Both Brian and John agreed it was one of the more excellent pairing dinners they had ever had the pleasure to experience, and if Chef Pechal wants to do another dinner with us… you can be sure that we’re in.

Quick shout out to the servers and staff that made the dinner as wonderful as it was. Probably going to dream about this food again tonight. Cheers.

An Epic Hopocalypse Day at Drake’s

Monday, February 6th, 2012

An air of excitement hung in the air as the sun rose in San Leandro on Saturday. Cases and kegs of our Hopocalypse Double IPA and Hopocalypse Black Label Triple IPA sat in the cold box waiting for thirsty craft beer fans to arrive and get the first taste of the hoppy-goodness and grab a few bottles for home.

At 8:20 am the first folks arrived to start the line which by the time the doors opened at 10 am had stretched back into our parking lot and started to curve toward the brewery.

At 9:55, the whole crew gathered inside the Barrel House for a celebratory toast of Hopocalypse to start the day, and at 10am sharp the doors opened unleashing a wave of hop-heads anxious to get their first sips and take home 22 oz bombers, growlers, and Brew Rhino kegs of the Hopocalypse Double IPA and the limited release 22 oz bombers of the Hopocalypse Black Label TIPA.

From 10am until 8pm the crowd at the bar never really died down with hop-heads from all over the Bay Area and beyond gathering across the width of our 30 ft. bar to get their Hopocalypse fix. Delicious smells of smoked ribs and tri-tip from Bourbon Bros. BBQ wafted over the patio all day long as folks casually relaxed sipping on both levels of the Hopocalypse or sampling one of the other 22 taps of our beers available in the Barrel House. Brewery tours ran throughout the day giving folks a chance to get a look inside the brewery itself and taste a bit of our next batch of the Hopocalypse DIPA straight from the tank.

The Hopocalypse kegs to-go were the first to go out the door, but do not fret. We will be getting more with each new batch of the Hopocalypse DIPA to come out. So, if you missed your chance Saturday, there will be a few more Brew Rhinos coming. Unfortunately, however, that’s not the case with the Black Label bombers that sold out of our entire supply of roughly 700-800 bottles on Saturday by around 5:30 or 6pm. If you missed your chance to grab a bottle for home, the Black Label will stay on tap here at the Barrel House for a brief while longer, so come on down sometime this week or next to indulge in the latest huge hoppy monster we’ve created.

Live Music got going around 2pm, starting off easy with a low-key acoustic duo and finishing the night with local band Rough Waters who rocked out the Barrel House until the bitter end inspiring some to break out their dancin’ shoes and celebrate the day. Fists of Flour pizza came by round 6 with their killer wood-fired pizza to satiate the dinner crowd and teach us all once again that craft beer and great pizza really were meant to be together.

As the final glass was poured at the end of the day the whole crew heaved a deeply satisfied sigh at the success of the day. We had a tremendous day that exceeded all of our expectations all due to our awesome fans that showed up in force to support and have a great time in the process.

To everyone that made it out, Cheers to you. It’s the craft beer fans out there that make it all possible, and ours are among the best. Can’t wait to see you all next week for SF Beer Week, and really can’t wait for next year’s release.

The Hopocalypse Approaches…

Tuesday, January 3rd, 2012

We can’t tell you whether you need to worry about the Apocalypse in 2012, but we can say definitively that the Hopocalypse is imminent. Clear room in your fridge; designate your driver; and prepare your tastebuds. On Saturday, Feb. 4th, the End is Beer.

Yes, the Hopocalypse hit the tanks today. Jeff stirred the mash of batch number two as Chris gleefully added the last of four massive hits of hops to the batch number one, and the whole brewery buzzed with an energy that comes from brewing this beer.

This seasonal orange beast boasts a hop arsenal of Magnum, Chinook, Simcoe, Citra, and CTZ and a three-hop dry-hop that will convert all who drink it into hop-heads and send its devotees into the beer rapture with its tantalizing, heady aroma and crisp slap of citrus and pine… Alright, so maybe we’re waxing poetic a little… we get that way about this beer.

The Hopocalypse is one of our favorite brews each year, and this year’s batch will the biggest yet. We are set to brew more of the Hopocalypse than ever before, and for the first time we have brewed what we have christened the Hopocalypse Black Label- a Triple IPA at 12.5% ABV with huge amounts of 5 different hops that will be available on draft and in a limited release of 22oz bottles only at Drake’s Barrel House.

Alex brewed the Black Label just before the New Year filling the mash tun to the hilt, but only filling the boil kettle two-thirds full to reach the level of Plato needed to hit the 12.5% ABV mark. Now the Black Label is tucked safely in its fermenter where it will be for the next month slowly transforming into a dangerously, delicious beer.

The Hopocalypse and the Black Label will burst forth from the brewery with force February 4 to greet all you patiently waiting hop-heads with a special all day release at Drake’s Barrel House. Mark your calendar. The Hopocalypse approaches.