Archive for January, 2008

Jan 21 2008

Fireworks Pizza Beer Dinner - January 28 - 7pm - Leesburg, Virginia

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Fireworks Pizza in Leesburg, Virginia is hosting their first Beer dinner on Jan. 28th at 7pm. It is a well known craft beer restaurant and has Flying Dog’s Old Scratch on Tap and Double Dog and Gonzo Imperial Porter in bottles. THe beer dinner is a 6 course meal consisting of their specialty…Wood Fired Pizzas and other wood-oven creations. For more information, call Fireworks Pizza at 703.779.8400

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Jan 18 2008

Full Sail Brewing Announces Winter Brewmaster Dinner Menu featuring Prime Rib

Published by Josh under Oregon, Full Sail Brewing, Beer Dinners

Hood River, Oregon - Full Sail’s Brewmaster, Jamie Emmerson and Chef, Ron
Penrose have teamed up to create a hearty winter menu as a part of Full
Sail’s continuing weekly Brewmaster Dinner series. The new winter
Brewmaster Dinner menu will be available every Thursday, beginning January
10th, at Full Sail’s Tasting Room and Pub. The four course menu features
savory and sweet seasonal fare paired with four of the brewery’s award
winning brews.

Appetizer
Porcini Stuffed Crimini Mushroom - drizzled with a sage crème fraiche.
Paired with Amber Ale

Salad
Mixed Greens Salad - with chevre cheese tossed with raspberry vinaigrette.
Paired with Session Premium Lager

Main Dish
Dry Rubbed Prime Rib - Mt. Shadows Natural Meats 6 oz. prime rib topped with
horseradish compound butter. Served with stone ground mustard mashed
potatoes and grilled vegetables. Paired with Slipknot Imperial IPA

Dessert
Ganache Filled Chocolate Brownie & Vanilla Tillamook Ice Cream - drizzled
with Session Reduction caramel sauce. Paired with Full Sail LTD 01.

Just order the Brewmaster’s menu and Full Sail’s pub staff will serve their
current celebration of food and beer while you sit back, take in the view
and enjoy. Each menu will feature comments by the Brewmaster and Chef on
why the pairings were chosen. The cost of the dinner including beer is only
$25 per person. The menu will be served every Thursday, from 4:00PM to
8:00PM in a self-guided format. No reservations are needed. The regular
menu will also be available. Quantities are limited. The Full Sail Tasting
Room and Pub is open daily @ 11:30AM serving lunch and dinner. Brewery
tours are available daily, free of charge at 1:00, 2:00, 3:00 and 4:00 PM.
For more information about the dinners call the Full Sail Tasting Room and
Pub at 541-386-2247. To view the current menu visit
www.fullsailbrewing.com.

The independent and employee-owned Full Sail brewery is perched on a bluff
in Hood River, Oregon, overlooking the most epic wind and kite surfing spot
in the world. At this very moment 47 specialists in the liquid refreshment
arts are crafting barley and hops into your next beer. The Full Sail crew
has been fermenting godlike nectar since 1987. Their award winning brews
are now available in nineteen states. The Full Sail Tasting Room and Pub is
open seven days a week. Swing by for a pint, grab a bite, tour the brewery,
or just soak up the view.

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Jan 12 2008

Best beer dinner ever?

Probably not the most objective title, but I had a great time at the Big Beers, Belgians and Barley Wines Festival Brewmaster’s Dinner this evening. The food was spectacular, and the featured breweries were Odell and The Lost Abbey. The pairings were wonderful and the beers were unbelievable. My favorite brew was the Lost Abbey Veritas 002, a blend of Old Viscosity, Avant Garde, and Redstone Meadery’s Raspberry Mead, all barrel-aged together. Tomme Arthur said there were only about 20-25 cases of this made (600 bottles!). I took some photos and made a few tasting notes, I’ll aim to have something online in the coming days.

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Jan 04 2008

The Session #11 - My Doppelbock Beer Dinner

The session logoThis month’s session is about Doppelbocks. Seeing as I work for Flying Dog and we just released our Collaborator Doppelbock, I figured this would be a nice time to make a Beer Dinner featuring our Doppelbock with the main course. I’ve been reading Garrett Oliver’s “The Brewmaster’s Table” periodically over the last 6 weeks, and there’s a great section on Bocks and Doppelbocks (pages 268-279). I was going to talk about the history of Doppelbocks here, but there is already lots of information out there, so check the following sites for some background. As with most beers, Bocks and Doppelbocks have an amazing history.

Bock/Doppelbock on Wikipedia
New York Times article on bocks

According to Oliver, here are a few foods that go well with Doppelbocks:

Venison (Oliver says this is the best combination)
Duck
Goose
Pork
Traditional Mexican dishes (like Mole)
Custards (flan or creme brulée)

So yesterday I decided to make something with pork tenderloin that could be paired with our Collaborator Doppelbock. More on that later. You can’t skip the earlier course, especially the tasty salad I made!

The first dish in this simple beer dinner was a Pear and Toasted Walnut Salad with In-Heat Wheat Hefeweizen Vinaigrette, paired with In-Heat Wheat Hefeweizen.

Pear and Toasted Walnut Salad

I’m not one to always follow the recipe, so instead of just red pears, I used one red pear, one asian pear (yellow), and one green pear. This added some color to the dish. You can also add blue cheese crumbles if you wish, but I decided to skip this part. It was interesting to reduce beer in a pan (from 3/4 cup down to 1/4 cup), the process took only about 5 minutes compared to the 10 minutes the recipe says. And with the walnuts, toast them right as you’re about to serve the dish so that they’re warm. The vinaigrette worked great with In-Heat Wheat, and I’ll definitely be making this again. Total prep time for the salad was about 10 minutes.

Now, to the pork and Doppelbock! I was specifically looking for something that wasn’t too difficult and something that I could grill. I had considered making a mole sauce, but the ingredient list was too long, and I wanted something that was more easily doable for more people. A search on food.com resulted in a very nice recipe for Grilled Pork Tenderloin with Mustard, Rosemary & Apple Marinade. The link has the full recipe and directions. A few things that I did differently (you don’t always have to follow the recipe). I kept the fat on the tenderloin, I think that when you grill it, the fat adds flavor and helps keep the meat moist. I used fresh thyme instead of rosemary because the supermarket I went to was out of rosemary. Instead of port or brewed black tea in the shallot sauce, I decided to use Doppelbock instead. The results were pretty decent. We cooked one 12 ounce tenderloin on Medium on our grill 10 minutes per side (20 minutes total). The tenderloin came out between medium rare and medium and I think it was perfect. We decided to add a side of broccoli to this dish, but feel free to add mashed potatoes, instead.

Grilled Pork Tenderloin with Mustard, Thyme & Apple Marinade

I felt that the malt sweetness of the Doppelbock complemented the pork wonderfully. Some Doppelbocks tend to be too smoky flavored for my tastes, but the pork really brought out the subtle smokiness that Collaborator has. The total prep time for this course was about 30 minutes, with an additional 20 spent cooking the tenderloin. I’ll definitely be making this dish again!

For dessert, I decided to make the Beer Float that Chef Scott made for a previous beer dinner of ours (it’s the last course, obviously). Being an equal-opportunity blog, I decided to use Ska Brewery’s Ten Pin Porter. I melted some Ghirardelli 60% Bittersweet chocolate in the microwave (1 minute) and chocolate covered some beautiful fresh strawberries and a few of the leftover pear slices, put them on some wax paper and let them cool. When dessert came around, I threw a scoop of vanilla and a scoop of chocolate ice cream into a wine glass and poured Ten Pin Porter over the ice cream.

beer float with strawberries and pears

The first spoonful of the float was intensely bitter, due to the hop bitterness of the porter. I found that this was perfectly offset if you took a bite of the chocolate covered strawberry and then took a spoonful of the float. The pears were a nice touch, too. It’s imperative that if you make this float to offset the bitterness with some sort of sweet fruit. Total prep time was about 15 minutes, just to dip the fruit into melted tasty chocolate.

All in all, including taking photographs of this beer dinner, it took about 2 hours to prepare and eat. The total cost for 3 people was about $50, but we had a bunch of the ingredients already. But you get an exquisite meal at the fraction of the cost that you would, if you went out to a fancy restaurant.

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