Thursday, August 1, 2013

Turned Timber Brewery - Stepping Up the Homebrew System

My parents moved back to my homeland of Pennsylvania last year, building their new house.  My father, along with usually just one friend, did all of the principal construction; in seven months, their home was livable.  No small feat!  The house is gorgeous, well thought out, and expertly designed.  Mrs. Absalom and I have had the chance to visit it in its completed glory for the first time this summer, and I've enjoyed spending quite a few weeks here this season.

Building to my parents' specifications allowed for some very particular design elements.  My mother is a quilter; thus, she has a quilting studio with ample layout space, storage, etc.  For my father, the energy went toward woodworking and homebrewing.  He's set himself up with plenty of space for his woodturning and just about any other project he'd like to take on with a standalone shop; the brewing space doesn't occupy its own structure, but it sure isn't small.  Based on his woodwork background, he's christened the operation the Turned Timber Brewery (TTB).

The brewery, part of the main house, is done in tile and includes lots of drainage, two sinks, and plenty of power.  The table space and cabinetry are all handmade.  The most exciting part of the setup, however, is the all-electric HERMS brewing rig.  The system is built from specs from the Electric Brewery; my dad ordered
the control panel components and built the box himself. The whole deal is based around three twenty-gallon Blichmann SS kettles and two March pumps, along with a hood and fan assembly to draw out the steam generated while brewing.  While it can produce as little as five gallons of wort, it's designed to regularly produce ten to fifteen gallons, I believe; the batches we've done normally average around eleven or twelve gallons of finished beer.  It is an absolute dream to use; there's still plenty of manual labour involved, but many of the normal all-grain processes become easier to navigate, thanks especially to the pumps.  Like any new system, it's taken a while to dial in procedures--along with figuring out how to properly hook up the pumps for each step in the process, fly sparging is a new experience--but it's been an incredible experience brewing on it.


Along with the range of carboys he's collected over the years, TTB also includes two fourteen-gallon Fermenators, which tend to see the lion's share of fermentation.  For temperature control, the brewery
houses a couple refrigerators: one equipped with a Johnson temp control that switches between acting as a fermentation chiller and as cold storage, the other normally used for storing ingredients and bottled beers.
Outside of that, there's the central heating system; while the brewery doesn't run entirely on its own, it's on a grid with just the garage, meaning the rest of the main house is unaffected by settings for fermentation.  For serving, some beers are still bottled, particularly higher-gravity ones; in general, though, my dad's moved to kegging and is not looking back wistfully on bottling.  He currently has a two-tap kegerator and will set up a second two-tap unit in the near future.

The brewing setup is nothing short of amazing, but the best part is having a chance to once again brew beer with my father.  A few short years ago we were making Mr. Beer kits, trying to avoid stovetop boil-overs and cleaning my mother's kitchen like mad after each batch.  A lot has changed in a short amount of time, and very much for the better.  We've brewed a number of batches already, and have at least a couple more planned before Mrs. Absalom and I head back west; the batches I designed will be detailed on my personal blog soon.  We've supplied beer for a couple private parties, including a 4th of July weekend bash at the new house.  If only every brewday could be as fun as the ones at Turned Timber; once we depart, I'll be left feeling impiously envious for now...


- Br. Absalom

Thursday, July 11, 2013

Sixpoint 3BEANS Tasting


While there are other posts still in the works, this seemed an opportune moment to get down some midsummer tasting notes.  Looking for a special beverage to share with my father, Abt. Absalom, to mark the U.S. Day of Independence, I came across 3BEANS in a local bottle shop.  Having learned of this beer some time ago via one of the coolest beer promos I've seen, I was already primed to like it; my father and I both enjoy dark beers, further making it a good choice.  Its small serving size (delivered in such a cute little can) also meant that its 10% ABV wouldn't destroy us on a day that would include the consumption of several other fermented concoctions.  Though a stout, especially a big one like this, is not the first thing I seek out on a hot summer day, it went down easily relaxing in an air-conditioned homestead.

Speaking of posts in the works, coming soon will be the unveiling of the Abbot's impressive brewery works.

Sixpoint Brewery
3BEANS

 Date: 4 July 2013

Venue: Turned Timber Abbey (my parents' house)

==========

Appearance - Deep, dark brown, not quite black.  Nice red-brown highlights at the edges of the glass.

Smell - Restrained coffee, a little chocolate.

Taste - Similarly restrained coffee, some alcohol.  A bit of cocoa in the finish.  The coffee is the "signature" flavour without taking over the drinking experience; well done!

Mouthfeel - Smooth and a bit creamy, but doesn't overstay its welcome; finishes dry and clean.

Overall - Very nice; one of the best coffee beers I've had, bearing in mind that I don't like to be clubbed over the head with coffee when it's a component.  The alcohol is present but isn't hot or overbearing despite its ABV.  This won't become an everyday beer, but it's well made, intriguing, and great for special occasions.

- Br. Absalom

Wednesday, July 3, 2013

Avenues Proper: New SLC Brewpub


This is no longer the news it once was; Avenues Proper Restaurant and Publick House has been open for over two months now.  But we local beer nerds spent the prior year hotly anticipating this new brewpub opening.  Former Epic brewer Rio Conolly (namesake of Rio's Rompin' Rye) is one of the three owners, and is now brewing on premises.  I had the good fortune to meet Rio in the past year and learn of his plans for this new venture.  It became even more exciting when I found out it would be right in my neighbourhood, the Avenues--it's all of six blocks from our house.  Through the winter and spring, I took to walking the dog by the site to watch the construction progress.  And in late April, I managed to catch wind of their open house coming up on an early afternoon just prior to opening night and checked it out.


The space is gorgeous and impressive; it's much bigger than the shoebox I feared it would end up being.  Much of the furniture (including the bar) are locally made, a focus that also shows in the food.  The menu of bites, salads, and small and large plates feature a plethora of local and seasonal ingredients.  At the open house, they provided samples of the duck fat popcorn and pretzel sticks with stone ground mustard; excellent stuff.  The brewhouse is compact, but looks like a heck of a lot of fun.  No house beers were ready for prime time for the opening, but their bottle menu keeps up the local theme with a heavy focus on Utah breweries.  Also on hand for the opening were local coffee roasters Charming Beard, who specialize in sustainably grown single-origin coffees.  I had a couple cups of wonderfully fruity and aromatic coffee, and have since sought out their beans for home enjoyment.  The Proper staff were all very friendly and approachable; upon request, a couple friends and I even got a tour of the spacious and well-planned kitchen and prep area.  A great first impression overall.


Mrs. Absalom and I got out that night to try the full menu on their opening service.  The menu is admittedly higher end than we normally have when eating out, but the food was really excellent. We enjoyed the hell out of several small plates and bites; the marinated olives were particularly tasty.  Paired with fine libations (including gluten-free options for Mrs. Absalom) it was an excellent night out.  We've been back a couple more times and have been similarly impressed with the food, drinks, and atmosphere of the place; they've even managed to keep pretty busy in the middle of the week!  It very well may end up being the perfect neighbourhood hang for a few of our friends and us when we want a drink out.  All that's left is to try the beer; it can take some time to get a new system dialed in, but Rio should be just the man for the task.  I look forward to getting a taste when we get back to town.

- Br. Absalom


Saturday, May 11, 2013

PNW tastings, part 2

This, unexpectedly, is the wrap-up of this tasting series. I'd originally planned to break it into three installments, but hey, things happen. After part 1, using the picture box (which keeps falling apart) for photos went by the wayside. And I'll admit that the final two bottles we brought back from our trip were consumed with friends this past weekend. Here's the rundown on those: the bottled version of Green Flash's Imperial IPA lived up to my recollections from having it on draft some time ago, and Russian River's Supplication is, well, a hell of a fruity sour beer that I'll seek out again as soon as possible. Hope you enjoy the remaining five reviews.

Gigantic Brewing Company/3 Floyds
Axes of Evil

Date: 12 April 2013

Venue: My house

==========

Appearance - Brilliant yellow-gold; massive foamy head that hangs out for most of the drink.

Smell - Super bright citrus; not huge, but slightly soapy.

Taste - Starts orange, followed by sharp pine resin. Orange and lemon sits on the back of the tongue. A little peach, pineapple, and soapiness in the finish.

Mouthfeel - Surprisingly light body and well carbonated; it works out well.

Overall - Fresh, big-ass DIPA; the alcohol doesn't take long to take effect, but it's not noticeable in the taste. Almost too light in the body, but lots of fruitiness, which I much prefer to a pure bitter bomb. Not having looked into this beer much, my guess is the soapiness is from one or more Citra additions, which can give that impression. I wouldn't turn down another of these, though. Excellent collaboration, folks.

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Double Mountain Brewery
Hop Lava Northwest IPA

Date: 13 April 2013

Venue: My house

==========

Appearance - Deep orange, a little hazy.  Rocky foam head.

Smell - Some tropical fruit (pineapple), citrus, a bit of malt.

Taste - Dominant grapefruit rind bitterness early with a long tail.  Some orange and malt in the middle.

Mouthfeel - Light body with prickly carbonation makes this very easy drinking.

Overall - Bitterness is the dominant feature in this beer, but it's still pretty enjoyable.  One per sitting is enough for me, though, especially in the 500 ml bottle.

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Russian River Brewing Company
Pliny the Elder

Date: 14 April 2013

Venue: My house

==========

Appearance - Clear, deep burnished orange.  Sticky, orange-yellow tinged head leaves a bit of lacing down the glass.  Exquisite.

Smell - Pours out orange rind and pine; dank.

Taste - Solid wall of dank that resolves to long, evenly fading tail of firm bitterness.  A little malt, dominated by resin and a bit of grapefruit.  It actually numbs the tongue a bit; really packs a wallop!  More luxurious malt presence upon warming a little; firm bitterness at the end.

Mouthfeel - Not heavy at all; firm carbonation contributes to its tongue-numbing quality and gets it moving over the palate.

Overall - The classic double IPA for a reason.  This is a magnificent beer.  The hops are utterly dominant, but despite the slight numbing quality, it doesn't punish with bitterness.  It's worth getting back to California just for more of this.

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Eel River Brewing
Triple Exultation Certified Organic Old Ale

Date: 17 April 2013

Venue: My house

==========

Appearance - Clear, red-brown hue with orange-red highlights.  Fluffy red-orange tinged head.

Smell - Malt, malt, and more malt.  A little alcohol.

Taste - A little bread, but a ton of straight-up malt.  It's dry enough, though, to avoid being cloyingly sweet.  It's really not sweet at all, just malty.  This is balanced with a clean, firm bitterness that doesn't overpower; it does linger at the very back of the tongue for quite a while, but it only makes itself known when swallowing.

Mouthfeel - Only medium, not really as heavy as the style can run.  Carbonation may be a bit high.

Overall - I'm very happy with this beer.  I tend to avoid old ales because I liken them to barleywines, which are usually heavier than I want to drink regularly.  Triple Exultation reminds me that there's a difference between them; this is much more attenuated than most barleywines I've had, which is very welcome.  A great beer for a cool spring evening.

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Joseph James Brewing Co.
Red Fox Russian Imperial Stout

Date: 26 April 2013

Venue: My house

==========

Appearance - Deep, dark black with red and brown undertones.  Thick, luscious mocha head that drops back, leaving a marshmallow-like layer.

Smell - Candied fruit, dark chocolate, a little herbal hop.

Taste - Excellent balance of sweet malt and hop bitterness; moderate roast follows, with alcohol in the middle.

Mouthfeel - Nice and thick, smooth carbonation.

Overall - Pretty tasty.  The bitterness and alcohol can get sharp and heavy on the back of the tongue as it warms, however.

- Br. Absalom

Sunday, April 7, 2013

PNW tastings, part 1

A few weeks ago Mrs. Absalom and I spent a week on the road as part of a music tour that took us through the Pacific Northwest, about which I plan to regale you in some detail in the near future.  In the course of this tour, we managed to procure a number of beverages for later sampling.  Having never excelled at really considering all the aspects of the drink in my glass, and having long looked forward to partaking of these fine libations, I set myself the goal of taking proper tasting notes and photos of all of them.

Having come down with a raging illness shortly after returning from the tour, I held off on delving into these beers for a couple weeks.  Now back up to speed, here is the first installment of these tasting notes.

Ninkasi Brewing Company
Tricerahops DIPA

Date: 4 April 2013

Venue: My house

==========

Appearance - Clear yellow-orange, head drops back buy leaves sticky lacing.

Smell -  Not as present as I'd suspect; candy, light floral, orange.  After it warmed a bit, some malt sweetness came out.  Mrs. Absalom described it as "a small young evergreen bush."

Taste - Resounding pine, followed by clean malt.  A long, lingering, welcome bitterness that hangs out anchored to the back of the tongue.  The bitterness is right in line with the West Coast style.  Crisp, not bloated.  The malt fills out as it warms.

Mouthfeel - It's a big beer, no doubt about it, but the body isn't overly heavy; it's not a Berliner weisse, but falls nicely into a medium-light category.  Medium carbonation isn't overdone, as it doesn't have to do a lot of work to lighten the body.

Overall - This is a lean and mean West Coast DIPA; it's dry and packs a bitter punch.  More like this, please.

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Heretic Brewing Company
Gramarye Rye Pale Ale

Date: 5 April 2013

Venue: My house

==========

Appearance - Deep, clear red-gold.  A little head that leaves some lacing.

Smell - A bit of malt, some citrus.

Taste - Prominent cracker, biscuit.  Some rough-around-the-edges malt character, presumably from the rye.  Firm, lasting bitterness.  Lingers for just a couple of seconds before vanishing.

Mouthfeel - Medium body; easy, medium carbonation.

Overall - Very pleasant, malty pale ale, though I don't get a ton of particularly rye character from it, more just an enjoyable roughness to the malt.  That, of course, may just be my inexperience showing through, but the character of this beer is a bit different from what I've experienced from rye before.

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Heretic Brewing Company
Shallow Grave Porter

Date: 6 April 2013

Venue:  My house (seeing a pattern...)

==========

Appearance - Deep, dark brown-black with very slight brown highlights when held to the light.  The thick head of small to medium bubbles hangs around for quite a while, developing into bigger, uneven bubbles.

Smell - Cocoa, sweet malt, alcohol.

Taste - Restrained roast, nice cocoa character, smooth alcohol, balanced hop bitterness.  A little alcohol and hops in the short finish.  The booze comes out even more as it warms, along with a sweet caramel character.

Mouthfeel - Heavier body, though not to Baltic porter levels.  Low-medium carbonation.

Overall - A decent robust porter, though the booze character is too prominent for my tastes.  The alcohol isn't burning, just forward.  I wouldn't turn away another.

- Br. Absalom

Sunday, March 10, 2013

Knowing Goodness



“A taste for better stuff is cultivated only through experience.”

     -Barbara Kingsolver

“The baguettes don’t take long to bake in the hot stone oven. After about fifteen minutes we take them out and cut them open. The smell is enough to make you give up on cooking a gourmet meal and just eat bread instead.”

     -Camille Kingsolver

These two quotes are much more related than seems at first glance. Okay, maybe first glance is enough. It’s pretty obvious.


I’ve long been perplexed those willing to eat supermarket tomatoes in the winter. I suppose I’ve been one of those people myself at times, but that was less about ignorance and more about desperation, and a futile attempt in denial to have what I wanted when I wanted it. Perhaps it was also a sort of personal food Rumspringa. (I’ve mentioned my upbringing before, our kitchen at times more closely resembling that of an Amish household than its typical American counterpart.) I have a vivid memory of being in the Jewel-Osco (grocery chain in Chicago) on Ashland and Wellington in the winter of 2003-2004 with the ill-fated intention of buying tomatoes. (This probably happened more than once.) I wanted that magical July-August experience. A pesto pasta punctuated by bright, warm bursts of acidic-sweet cherry tomato sublimity. I knew in my heart of hearts that it was an empty pursuit, but like I said, I was in denial. I know I bought romas, brandywines, or whatever the hell variety supermarkets refer to as “vine-ripened tomatoes,” (as though there should be any other kind). “Insipid imports...anemic wedges that taste like slightly sour water with a mealy texture.” That’s actually a rather nice way of putting it. And if these insipid imports are all you know of as “tomatoes,” I can see why your feelings about tomatoes in general would be rather lukewarm at best, or even negative.


One of 2012's prized gems
But if you’ve ever had a fresh garden tomato, if you’ve walked up to a tall, gangly cherry tomato vine stretching its limbs like a yawning cat, unabashedly sunning itself in your backyard, and picked one of those warm, red jewels hanging from its crowned blossoms, popped it into your mouth, bit down with your front teeth, and received an explosion of flavor (and texture) that you forgot or never knew was possible, I don’t know how you would ever trust one of those insipid imports again.


I’ve spent a good portion of my adult life realizing just how bad a lot of the food we eat is, and wondering why so many people are okay with eating it. And I think it’s because they haven’t had enough experiences such as those described above. If a taste for better stuff is cultivated only through experience, does a good experience guarantee a taste for better stuff? I think we know that it doesn’t. The words “only” and “cultivated” in that statement are powerful words, accounting for the people who are mysteriously unaffected by such experiences, as well as for those who don’t have the experiences frequently enough, allowing appreciation and love for quality to grow. What’s the missing link? Surely there is some reason that someone experiences a truly superior tomato, India Pale Ale, or slice of artisanal cheese, but for whatever reason registers no more of a reaction than the “meh” that is normally elicited by the impostor immigrant counterparts.

Homegrown Yugoslavian heirloom variety - 2012
Was it a good enough experience? Walking into a good bakery and eating freshly baked bread is one thing, but when you were in the kitchen when it was in dough form, smelled it baking, cut into it and saw the steam rise from the crack like a volcanic fissure, and bit down on what was the freshest baked bread that any human has ever tasted, is that enough to make the difference? To never want to eat another slice of the double-wrapped, fisher-price resembling, aisle 3 stand-by again? I would think so, but then again, I know of people who have uttered a facial “meh” at such experiences, leaving me to wonder, how could you be so blinded to the truth that just jumped up and smacked you right in the face?

Admittedly, I don’t know many people who have denied such a tastebud affirming experience. Most of the dinner guests at my parent’s house in my youth frequently gasped at the sight of our vegetable garden, uttering laments of you’re so lucky and to eat like this every day...

I’ll just have to go on being like one of those charmingly obnoxious Pink Floyd fans, who upon discovering that you don’t really like Pink Floyd, confidently declare that you just haven’t heard the right album yet. It’s the only way I can reconcile the fact that for you and tomatoes, “‘kinda reddish’ is qualification enough.”

-Br. Thelonious

*Quotes taken from Barbara Kingsolver’s Animal, Vegetable, Miracle

Some of our 2012 deck garden's production

Sunday, February 17, 2013

Un viaje a Chile


I haven't done a great deal of international travel, but I'm happy to take advantage of opportunities that present themselves.  Just such a one came up this past October: I accompanied two of my music professors (of composition and trombone) to Santiago, Chile, to provide tech support for an electronic music concert and to give a few brass master classes.  It was an enjoyable week, getting to know just a little bit about Chile's history, culture, and people.  The roots of the indigenous people and the descendants of the Spanish
conquistadores are deep, but influxes of German and Middle Eastern immigrants last century have also made their marks on the country.

The "Chicago school" concepts introduced by economists trained at the University of Chicago and adopted as policy by the Pinochet regime raised the country's international economic standing considerably while simultaneously creating widespread unemployment and poverty.  The divide between rich and poor is still quite stark, and it seems that those of the middle class many times struggle to subsist.  In the last few years, Chile has experienced sustained student protests demanding deep reform of the public education system.  Despite the hardships, the students I met and worked with at the Universidad de Chile, all from middle class families, were very friendly, receptive to new musical concepts, and really quite fine players.  I gave two master classes to the tuba studio, the first a solo class and the other on chamber playing, and did a little coaching
of the trombone choir; it was very rewarding to hear the players make progress during our short time together.  I also greatly appreciated their patience with my terrible grasp of Spanish; the composition professor who was on the trip is Chilean and was on hand to translate for all the master classes, and often had to figure out how to re-translate what I had tried (and failed) to tell the students in their own language.

After all the teaching and accompanying translating that went on--the trombone teacher at the U. de Chile managed to wring a lot out of our trombone prof, having him give something like six or seven master classes and coachings during our stay--the concert almost came barreling up out of nowhere.  Our trombone professor performed a piece for bass trombone and live electronics by (of course) our composition professor as part of the Ai-Maako Chilean Electroacoustic Festival, which took place at several venues across Chile over the course of a couple weeks in mid-October.  Tired as we all were, the rehearsal and performance--which took place in Santiago--came off without a hitch and the piece was well received.


While we spent quite a bit of our time at the U. de Chile in downtown Santiago, it was great to get out into several other areas of the city as well.  The trombone professor and I stayed in a hostel in the Los Leones neighbourhood, which has apparently moved from being primarily residential to having more of a commercial vibe in the last couple decades.  The architecture in this area varies from a more Old World style of some of the remaining houses to the very modern high rises that are currently under construction.  Out exploring the neigbourhood one afternoon, I discovered a multistory building that exclusively housed
tattoo & piercing parlours, skate shops, anime boutiques, and small punk/hardcore music & clothing stores.  Within a block were several of the city's premier department stores.  A fascinating place.  Other interesting venues visited included the tenth-floor apartment of the composition professor's mother, where I experienced my first earthquake (it was just a little one, but exciting nonetheless); a quiet--and admittedly somewhat touristy--open-air market for handcrafted Chilean items; and a Communist-themed bar for a night of tango music.

Spring was just beginning when we visited, so we enjoyed a few lunches at outdoor cafés near the university or our hostel.  Much of the fare was very meat and bread-centric; fairly massive hot beef and cheese sandwiches with ají--a spicy red chili sauce--were regular staples.  Ordering coffee was an interesting experience; the normal cup of café was actually instant Nescafé, so if you wanted a regular cup of coffee you would order "café café."  The favourite of our trombone professor became a cortado ("cut" with milk).  We also had many wonderful meals at the homes of our Chilean professor's family.  One evening at a birthday
party we had an incredible wok-prepared shrimp curry; another night I was fed so many homemade dolmathes that it pained me to think of eating Greek food at all for several weeks afterward.  Accompanying a number of meals, of course, was alcohol.  Chilean wine was the common fermented beverage on the table, but the most renowned local drink is pisco, a grape brandy most often served with a sour mix.  Along with a few of these pisco sours, I also had a chance to try some top-shelf pisco over ice; I'm far from a connoisseur of liquor, but it was quite good.

As one should always assume with me, though, my eyes (and tongue) were peeled for local beer.  German immigrants several generations ago brought their lager brewing tradition, and lager was the drink of choice at the outdoor cafés.  Being a proud participant in the American craft beer revolution, I've long held a bias against lagers; sure they have a place, like at a cookout on a scorching summer day, but they don't normally end up in my fridge.  The (dare I say) authentic German lagers of Chile really made strides to change my mind, however.  In particular, I had an amber lager--whose name I can't recall, much to my regret--with lunch one day that was just perfectly malty, crisp, and balanced, without any of the unpleasant aftertaste I associate with lager beer.  My other experiences with Chilean lager, while not as revelatory, were far from displeasing; from a bottle of Austral at another café to a can of Baltica at a family dinner, I was happy to partake in this "dark side" of beer culture.


Of course, I didn't go all the way to the Southern Hemisphere without researching the local microbrew culture.  This article from Beer Magazine gave me a little primer for hunting down some cerveza artesanal in Santiago.  The grocery stores carried a wide selection of beer, both local and international (read: European).  From Kross Brewery I tried their ESB, Lupulus, and their fifth anniversary strong ale, Kross5.  The ESB was light and well balanced, the moderate hop bite and aroma very pleasantly contrasting the breadiness and faint yeast character; Kross5 was malty and warming, and went down well back home a few weeks later in the deepening autumn chill.

The "Bones of Oak" Stout from Cerveceria Rothhammer didn't make as good an impression when I cracked it open in SLC; despite the name, it came across as a fairly insipid stout without any noticeable wood character.  The "oak" may have just made for a good beer name in the brewery's eyes, but it set up certain expectations for this gringo, at least.  The most unfortunate Chilean craft beer experience I had, though, came at the aforementioned Communist-themed bar in the form of a bottle of stout from La Casa En El Aire.  I'm not sure if it was an off-flavour or if the brewery perhaps intentionally tried to add a touch of
"Guinness-ness" to their stout, but even very cold the beer had a pronounced tang that made it very difficult to return to the glass for another drink.  I'm not sure if I ended up with a bad bottle, but it's true that not every new, ambitious brewery--here in the US or anywhere else--puts out high quality product.

Fortunately, my overall impression of the cerveza artesanal Chileno scene is actually very positive.  Let me contrast my toughest experience in Santiago with my best: a visit to the Cervezeria Nacional brewpub.  I ended up making the trip on my own one evening to a neighbourhood that was probably not the safest for a fairly obvious tourist.  However, I arrived none the worse for wear, and eager to try some local beer.  The pub was small but had a great, warm atmosphere; I ended up sitting at the small bar, chatting with an off-duty waitress, exchanging my broken Spanish for her broken English.  My first pint, a
"blonde" that was really a red, redeems my later-diminished impression of Rothhammer; a little sweet, nicely malty, with a good balancing bitterness.  My second pint was the house IPA (which they pronounced "eepa"); while not a West Coast-style face melter, it was plenty hoppy, harmonizing with the malt base.  My take on the beer may have been coloured by the cozy environment, but I couldn't have asked for a more inviting setting to get a taste of the local brewing scene.  They even made sure I got out the door in time to make the last metro, saving me from trying to navigate the city by cab.  Definitely worth a repeat visit.

I don't know when I'll have a chance to return to Chile, but I look forward to some day revisiting the wonderful people, places, and flavours I discovered a few months ago, as well as exploring new ones.  I'm particularly keen to get up into the mountains, which loomed imposingly behind Santiago during our stay.  I always marvel at the places I've been fortunate enough to visit because of my vocation; here's to future adventures in music, travel, food, and beer.

- Br. Absalom











Thursday, February 7, 2013

A Reluctant Goodbye to City Provisions

Cleetus Friedman's collaboration brew with New Holland
 Brewery - Marsha Mallow's Malted Milk Stout.
I’ve only written two blog posts so far on here, and as it happens, they’ve both been about places I like to patronize. One of those places just closed its doors for good. 

City Provisions was one of a kind. It began over four years ago as a catering company, and quickly expanded to comprise elements of a deli, coffee shop, cafe, restaurant, bar, and artisanal market. It was a local business in the truest sense. Cleetus Friedman, the chef/proprietor, had incredibly high standards for the sourcing of his ingredients and supplies. Much has been said about the food movement of the past several years, and the buzz words are used sincerely as often as they are in jest - sustainable, local, seasonal, ethically raised, environmentally friendly, organic - but all of those words could have been easily and honestly applied to City Provisions, and they were. What is often lost in the conversation about these concepts is that they are not for themselves, but are intrinsic to food that is, simply put, great. It’s obvious to anyone involved in the production of food that fresh tomatoes are only worth eating in July, August, and September, and any fresh tomato in February is invariably a spongy impostor. Cleetus embraced sustainability and all that it implies, but the reason sustainability is such a good idea when it comes to food is because it makes the best food. Chefs at fine dining restaurants already know this, and have known this for many years; seeking out the farmers themselves in many cases, buying directly from the guys growing the stuff, and only when it’s worth eating. Cleetus was doing it in a neighborhood cafe and deli. His place was excellent in the most ordinary way, which is exactly what made it extraordinary.
One of my all-time favorite City Provisions pictures. A 
delicious Americano on one of their beautifully imperfect
wooden tables.
Small businesses come and go. Restaurants come and go. Good places come and go. Places I like have come and gone, but this one was different. 
Almost two years ago, I experienced a paradigm shift in my philosophy about and daily approach to food. At the risk of sounding hyperbolic, reading Michael Pollan’s Omnivore’s Dilemma changed my life. I would imagine I’m only one of the many who have made such a statement. Grass-fed, pasture-raised, local, seasonal; for me these words became guiding principles in the grocery aisles, not simply disingenuous marketing terms.
A sinfully delicious cuban sandwich, Oct. 6, 2012
I grew up eating good food, and participating in lots of the types of activities that Barbara Kingsolver describes in Animal, Vegetable, Miracle. Things like freezing, canning, and pickling. June activities like pulling the tops off of 25 pounds of strawberries that we picked ourselves for eating throughout the summer, and freezing for use until the following June. August activities like shucking 50 ears of sweet corn, boiling them all, and then cutting the cooked kernels off of the cob and stuffing them into ziploc bags to be stashed in the freezer, hopefully to last until the following August. Activities such as these marked the passage of time, the changing of the seasons, and held an important place in our lives. Food was important to us in a way that was, unbeknownst to me, unusual. Restaurants were something we did twice a year on I-94 in between Minneapolis and Milwaukee. At home my parents cooked every meal we ate. But not all of them were based on entirely sustainable, ethically produced, seasonal ingredients. Many were, but not all. We didn’t buy grass-fed beef or pastured poultry. The produce wasn’t organic necessarily. We sure as hell didn’t buy fresh berries in January (an oxymoron if there ever was one), but it wasn’t out of ecological or ethical principle, it was because fresh berries in January suck. My parents cared about the quality of good food, and made choices accordingly. It just so happened that good food often meant those other things as well. But after reading Omnivore’s Dilemma, the memory of my parent’s passion for all things food related made it easier to return to what I grew up eating, and even go beyond to what Pollan was advocating. In a sense it was easy, because I knew how important it was that I do it. 
Smoked pork heart/tongue tacos, Oct. 27, 2012
When it came to restaurants it was more difficult in some ways. I’ve always loved restaurants, everything about them: the various ways to create atmosphere, the lighting, the decor/furniture; the presentation of a menu be it elegantly showcased in a tri-fold leather portfolio with reinforced metal corners, a simple white piece of paper with a sans serif font, a giant chalkboard above a deli, or just the food itself sitting behind glass; the entirely unique aroma of a particular place created by both the building and the kitchen; the people of the staff and the relationships you can forge through something as common as needing to eat; and obviously, I loved the food. Now there were so many good restaurants at which, because of my new rules for myself, I could no longer eat. No more Al’s #1 Italian Beef. No more Philly’s Best. It wasn’t that I was so much depriving myself of things I loved, but rather that I knew I wouldn’t enjoy them anymore, knowing more about their food’s origins. When I found City Provisions about a year into my new food life, I almost couldn’t believe it. My brother (who visited it for the first time only a month ago) said “it’s perfect.”
Corned beef ruben, Oct. 30, 2012
I proudly brought my family there on visits from out of town. I brought friends there and bragged about how close it was to my apartment, “just a three minute walk!” I introduced them to Cleetus, the warm, incredibly hospitable, friendly proprietor extraordinaire. I became a regular along with my wife, and we got to know the rest of the wonderful staff as well. I spent hundreds there over the past 12 months without giving it a second thought, and would spend twice as much in the next 6 months given the chance. This place was special.
Who knows, six months from now I may not even be living here in Chicago anymore. But wherever I end up, I envisioned myself returning to Chicago frequently, going back to City Provisions again and again. It was the only place that I felt completely confident that I could buy anything on the menu without contributing to the industrial food economy in any way. It was the only place I felt that I could order any meat on the menu without worrying about where it might have come from. (And yet I usually asked anyhow because not only did they know, but they loved to tell you all about its provenance.) It was the only place I felt confident that everything I bought and ate or drank was produced, grown, cultivated, butchered, hand-processed, hand-crafted, cooked, pickled, smoked, brewed, grilled, braised, baked, pulled, assembled, and served with the utmost care and passion. It was the only place like it.
A City Provisions specialty: Sunday Brunch. Simply the best 
eggs benedict I've had anywhere. Ever.
Part of why this one bothers me so much is because it feels like a defeat. Defeat of the “food movement” (whatever that means) in some small way. Cleetus himself said, “I found that sustainability - an undying commitment to what that means - wasn't sustainable.” I’ve spent so much time talking to people about food, our food culture, our food industry, and everything that I think is wrong with it, and everything that I’d like it to be. Many of the arguments against such a dramatic change in the way we do things have been economically based, and I’ve tried to argue that they’re unfounded, that doing things differently is economically viable. What has happened here has raised the uncomfortable question, “well, are they?”
cp italian, with Carburetor Rye Bock.
Cleetus Heetus Aquavit Bloody Mary 
with charcuterie spear.
On Sunday afternoon, January 27, 2013, at about 2:30 p.m., I was headed back into the city from Glenview, hungry for a belated lunch. It occurred to me that they were open until 3 pm on Sundays, and a sandwich from City Provisions sounded perfect. I called in and talked to Eric, one of the guys who had been working there as long as I had been going there. I ordered a cp Italian: “assorted cured and smoked meats, parmesan, seasonal vegetable giardinera, oregano balsamic, baguette.” They had been out of the giardinera for a little while, which I knew, and as such they hadn’t been serving too many cp italians as of late. But I really wanted one anyhow and pressed on. Eric suggested getting it with some pickled red onions in lieu of the giardinera, and although the giardinera is an integral part of it, in my yearning for a cp italian I accepted his suggestion. I picked it up at about 2:58 pm, right before they closed. I briefly chatted with everyone as usual. Then I took it home, cut it in half, carefully plated it up like I always do with all take out - always - and enjoyed the hell out of it, sandwich, delicious homemade chips, wonderfully and curiously spiced pickle spear and all. Of course it was delicious. 
The last "cp italian," and the last
sandwich made by City Provisions.
I don’t know if I would have preferred to have known that it was the last sandwich that City Provisions would make. I probably would have been more sad while eating it, and thus unable to really enjoy it. I supposed I’m glad it happened the way it did, if it had to happen at all. I was the last customer at City Provisions, and as soon as Cleetus figures out what he’s doing next, I’ll do whatever I can to make sure I’m one of the first customers at his next stop.
Cheers to you, Cleetus. Thanks for an incredible place!