New to Shelves: Prairie Artisanal Ales

prairie artisan alesEastern Iowa should be seeing a brewery from Oklahoma hitting the shelves. Prairie Artisanal Ales out of Kress, Oklahoma should have their bottles on our shelves soon (possibly today). Here’s the brewery description:

Welcome to the world of Prairie Artisan Ales. A company started by two brothers. We didn’t start it due to a lack of good beer, or whatever people like to say in this part of their website. We wanted to do something that was awesome. We have the talent, and most importantly the years of experience needed to get it done. So we did it. We have funded the company on our own, and only want to work with people that care about beer, super good beer. Our goal is to show people what is possible when you start with “step one”.

They have many different Saison styles beers and a bourbon barrel aged stout. A very promising brewery if you dig saisons. Check this link to read more on their brews: http://www.prairieales.com/Beers.html.

Beer Review #99: Goose Island Bourbon County Stout

bcsThe very first barrel-aged beer America stills stands strong today as Goose Island’s Bourbon County Stout continues to make beer headlines nationwide as one of/if not the best barrel-aged beer around. I got up very early on a cold Iowa Tuesday morning to capture the prize of a few four-packs of this brew, and was glad I did. As I have slowly evolved into a barrel-aged beer lover, I’ve come to appreciate what the booze offers a really good crafted stout. Earlier in my beer drinking days, I would have scoffed, and possibly spit this beer out proclaiming it to be too boozy and downright undrinkable, but now, I relish the opportunity to taste the vanilla from the bourbon and oak flavor from the barrel.

Goose Island has made many headlines in the beer world this last few years as the Evil Empire that is AB-InBev bought them out, and as much as I avoid buying the big 3, I’ve also come to appreciate that Goose Island hasn’t sacrificed their quality of product with the buyout…. yet, and I hope they never do.

From the brewery:

“I really wanted to do something special for our 1000th batch at the original brewpub. Goose Island could have thrown a party. But we did something better. We brewed a beer. A really big batch of stout-so big the malt was coming out of the top of the mash tun. After fermentation we brought in some bourbon barrels to age the stout. One hundred and fifty days later, Bourbon County Stout was born-A liquid as dark and dense as a black hole with a thick foam the color of bourbon barrels. The nose is a mix of charred oak, vanilla,carmel and smoke. One sip has more flavor than your average case of beer. It overpowers anything in the room. People have even said that it’s a great cigar beer, but I haven’t yet tried a cigar that would stand up to it.”

I will be letting a few four packs age and hopefully at some point I can put together a vertical tasting of this beer, but as I was sipping the last one, (about 2 weeks ago), and as it warmed, it might have been the best barrel-age I’ve tasted. The aroma of the vanilla shines through the longer this beer sits, and as I finished the last half of it, it started tasting like a liquid form of an almond joy candy bar. Anyone else get that flavor? Such a great beer to sit and sip on, especially on a cold winter night! The alcohol warms you up nicely but does not overpower the fantastic flavor of this wonderfully well-crafted brew.  Cheers!

REVIEW

Style: Imperial Stout

ABV:15%

Purchased at: Hy-Vee

Pour: Viscous black pour, very thick.

Aroma: Bourbon sweetness, vanilla, coconut.

Flavor: Chocolate flavor, the bourbon is there, coconut is well. Liquid almond joy (that can get you drunk)

Ratebeer.com rating: 100/100

Beeradvocate.com rating: 100/100

Overall: A

My recommendation: A fantastic beer, proceed with caution as a few of these could put you on your ass pretty quick. If you are not into barrel-aged beers this would be something great to try with a group of people at a tasting event.

Distribution News: Oskar Blues, Lagunitas, Deschutes, Southern Tier, more!

southern tierIt’s been awhile since talk of a few big craft breweries were going to be making their way to Iowa. I had a few sources tell me that Oskar Blues and Odell would soon be in Iowa, and also rumblings about Surly heading down south. I don’t have news on Odell or Surly but after reading about Oskar Blues distributing to Indiana I decided to get the contact book out again. Here’s the news I got today regarding distribution. Mostly good news, hopefully we will start to see the wheels put in motion and by summer having some new breweries on the shelves.

oskar blues*It sounds like Oskar Blues won’t be in Iowa until 2014. I will keep posting updates if I hear anything different.

*Deschutes and Lagunitas are possibly going to make it to the Eastern Iowa market sometime during the summer. lagunitas

*Southern Tier is aiming for a 3rd quarter release in Iowa. (1st I’ve heard of this!)

*Goose Island is releasing Sophie Paradisi in a few months. It is a saison with a grapefruit punch.

*Backpocket will have a Russian style imperial stout that will be blended with their oak aged stout that has been siting in Cedar Ridge Barrels at the brewery for the past 6 months.

toppling goliath*And, hopefully we will be seeing Toppling Goliath in stores by the end of April.

That’s it for this week, some great news above, but like before it could totally change. As hard as it is to be patient, that is my advice. Over time we will be seeing some great beer coming from other states and also some fantastic beer coming from our own Iowa breweries! Stay tuned!