Silicon Valley Beer Week is Coming

The Silicon Valley Sudzers played a key role in last year’s Silicon Valley beer Week, conducting a brewing demonstration in the middle of the KraftBrew Fest in downtown San Jose. This year, the Sudzers will also participate in the Fest, with a special collaboration with Gordon Biersch Brewery – stay tuned for details. For more information on SV Beer Week, please see the press release below.

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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE Contact Information:

April 18, 2014 Jennifer Anderson

408.200.1317

jennifer@svbeerweek.com

Introducing the Second Annual Silicon Valley Beer Week, the regions ultimate beer-lovers event. Taking place July 25-August 2, 2014. With the success of our first year in 2013, we invite venues who are passionate about the spirit and progression of craft beer to be a part of this event.

San Jose, CA: Silicon Valley Beer Week takes place July 25–August 2, 2014 and highlights all venues, restaurants, and breweries that are passionate about craft beer. The week will kick off with an exclusive opening party in San Jose, then feature seven days of hosted events all over Silicon Valley. The popular Kraftbrew Summer Fest, held on Post Street in Downtown San Jose, will be the closing event taking place on Saturday, August 2, 2014.

Silicon Valley Beer Week is a celebration of all the vibrant brewing and culinary traditions that Silicon Valley has to offers. Whether you’re a high end restaurant, or a 50+-tap pub, we welcome you to be apart of this celebration and invite beer lovers of all types to experience your venue.

La Pastaia’s Director of Food and Beverage, Morgan Slade writes:

SVBW was not only well organized, but proved to be great fun! We are well known for our wine list, but the event allowed us to show off our beer selection as well by bringing in new customers and starting a fresh dialogue. We are looking forward to the next one so that we can expand on our event offerings.

Morgan Riccilli Slade

Director of Food & Beverage

The Hotel De Anza

Along with the elegant La Pastaia participating, we had a variety of venues participate such as Original Gravity, Scott’s Seafood, Steins Beer Garden, Birk’s Restaurant, Martin’s West GP, and Refuge. During the week, venues throughout the valley hosted events that featured craft beer such as tap takeovers, tasting events, food pairing, new release nights and other themed-events. Venues will have a chance to promote their event on the official Silicon Valley Beer Week website and program guide that will be distributed on July 23 in Metro Newspaper. Silicon Valley Beer Week is presented by Metro Silicon Valley and Giant Creative.

Participating venues, events and other news will be announced on the official website, Facebook and Twitter:

SVBeerWeek.com

Facebook.com/svbeerweek

Twitter: @svbeerweek

Instagram: @svbeerweek

Venues wishing to list an event can do so at SVBeerWeek.com

For sponsorship opportunities: Jennifer Anderson 408 200-1317, jennifer@svbeerweek.com

Sudzers June meeting notes

First time attendees Shirley, Paul, Jack, Angel, Lara, and Gerry were welcomed.

The June 19 Thirsty Third Thursday meetup will be held at Clandestine Brewing in San Jose. Clandestine is a new brewery opened by four local homebrewers, and initial reports about their beers are exceptional. They are not normally open on Thursday evenings, but are willing to open especially for the Sudzers on June 19 – let’s make it worth their while!

Also on the evening of June 19, Derek W and Doug W, along with Andy C from the Headquarters Homebrew Club, will present an Intermediate Homebrewing workshop, sponsored by Palo Alto City Library, at the Lucie Stern Community Center in Palo Alto.

Following the tasting on May 16 of the first twelve “off flavors” in the Siebel tasting kit, the club will taste the remaining twelve flavors on June 27. This event is limited to paid club members.

As a reminder, the July meeting will be moved from the first Friday to the second Friday to avoid the July 4 holiday. The July 11 meeting will be the judging for the club’s second Session Beers competition. Ribbons will be awarded for the top 3 beers in the hop-forward category, as well as the top 3 non-hop-forward beers. Beers must be 5% ABV or less to be eligible for entry.

Following the success of the brewing demonstration at last year’s KraftBrew Fest in San Jose, the Sudzers have been invited back as a partner in this year’s fest, which will be held August 2 at the Gordon Biersch production facility in Japantown. Dan Gordon has agreed to a collaboration with the Sudzers for this event – the club will brew an Oktoberfest lager to be served side by side with Gordon Biersch’s Oktoberfest at a tapping party in late September. Justin, Jim W, and Rich K volunteered to bring their equipment to brew on August 2.

Charles S provided an informative presentation on carbonation, including the science behind force carbonation and bottle conditioning. He provided a number of side by side samples of beers that he had carbonated both ways, including a Belgian brown ale, Biere de Garde, Tripel, and Belgian Blond. All of the beers were outstanding, but particularly for these Belgian styles the desirable flavor profiles were more pronounced in the bottle-conditioned versions. Charles’ presentation slides will be made available on the website.

Homebrew evaluations included:

Chris L’s ESB

Nic M’s Brown Ale

Nic M’s Black IPA

Mikael & Bill’s Red Bread Red Ale

Steve H & Derek H’s 3 Threads Coconut Porter

Derek H & Steve H’s Sleight of Hand Belgian Black IPA (a homebrew clone of the commercial Sierra Nevada Beer Camp Beer #94 developed by Derek H and his team)

Rich K’s Smoked Scotch Ale

Shirley T’s Presentable Chocolate Porter

Justin V’s Brett Belgian Stock Ale

Mike C’s Hoptos IPA

Tim T’s Farewell to Xilinx Rye IPA

Charles S’s Blazing World IPA

Adam C’s Barrel Aged Dubbel

Off Flavors Tasting part 1

Notes from the “off flavors” tasting 5/16/14.

Thanks to Tyler for organizing this and preparing the samples.
We obtained the kit from Siebel with 24 flavor samples. We tasted half of those in this session, and will do the other half sometime in June.
The kit is intended to produce each flavor at about 3x the typical threshhold of detection. This threshhold is going to vary from person to person, and I think for most of us there were some that we didn’t pick up at all. The flavors were added to Coors Light since it has so little flavor of its own to get in the way of detecting the test flavor.

Several of these flavors aren’t necessarily “off” depending on the style of beer, so it wasn’t purely a joke when some people described them as improving the Coors. Only a couple (Butyric and Earthy) were universally perceived and hated.

We’ll eventually put the slides from the presentation up on the website. These are some less technical notes and personal comments.

In the order we tasted them:

1.  Acetaldehyde – green apple flavor, described by some as the signature flavor of Budweiser.

2.  Acetic – at the test level perceptibly sour, but no big vinegar aroma like some sour beers.

3.  Almond – not referring to any nutlike flavors from the malt, this is an oxidation flavor.

4.  Butyric – rancid butter flavor and aroma. Very unpleasant.

5.  Diacetyl – the standard description of this is “butterscotch”, which many of us could not pick up although we perceived something wrong, especially in the aftertaste.

6.  D.M.S. (Dimethyl Sulfide) – generally described as “cooked corn”. I wasn’t the only one who had trouble detecting anything off at the test level.

7.  Earthy – some hops are described as “earthy”, the word is also often used for Italian red wines. Those are not bad things; this is. It seems most of us have a clear idea what dirt tastes like and have no trouble recognizing it.

8.  Mercaptan – the classic skunk aroma caused by exposure to light. The test level was definitely lower than a typical bottle of Corona or Heineken.

9. Ethyl Acetate – described as “fruity” or “solventy”; I knew I didn’t like it but couldn’t recognize either of those qualities.

10. Ethyl Hexanoate – apple flavor, wrong for a lager but not unpleasant.

11.  Spice – again, wrong for a lager but not unpleasant. 10 + 11 were the ones often described as “improving the Coors”.

12.  Metallic – nothing else to say about this one.

There were some good-tasting things consumed though! Steve C. very generously shared some unusual spirits with us, the “R5” and “S” whiskies made by Charbay from Bear Republic beers (Racer 5 and Stout). The flavor of the original beer came through clearly in both, really delicious.

June 6 Sudzers Meeting Agenda

Our June meeting will be held Friday, June 6 at 7 pm at Nick’s house. Need the address or directions? Email moresimcoe@sudzers.org. Don’t forget to carpool if possible to make sure there’s enough parking to go around.

Meeting agenda:

7:00 Social Time

7:15 Club Business/Upcoming events:

-Thirsty Third Thursday June 19 – Clandestine Brewing
-Intermediate homebrewing workshop at Palo Alto Library June 19
-Members-only off flavor tasting June 27
-Club Session beers competition July 11
-Kraftbrew Fest Sudzers collaboration with Gordon Biersch August 2
-Fall beer pairing dinner – need volunteers

7:30 Presentation – Charles on force conditioning vs bottle
conditioning, with several samples

8:00 Homebrew evaluations. Reminder: Bring your recipe – club members
will have lots of questions! Sign your beer in on the whiteboard along
with your name and statistics (IBU, ABV, etc. – optional, but helpful
in determining tasting order)

After homebrew evaluations: more social time/informal commercial brew
sharing. Always welcome: homebrews from any style to share.  Don’t have any
homebrew on hand right now? Feel free to bring other interesting brews
you’ve picked up. Don’t have a beer to bring? Please bring some snacks
to share.

May Meeting Notes

First time attendee Pranab was welcomed to the group.

Derek H reported on the AHA Rally at Heretic Brewing in Fairfield, which included a free wort giveaway to anyone who brought a carboy or keg. About 10 Sudzers attended and 6 or 7 got the free wort, which has been fermented with various yeasts and added ingredients – will be fun to taste all the variations starting with truly identical wort. It’s like the biggest split batch experiment ever, since Heretic gave away 20+ bbls of wort, 5 gallons at a time.

Chris Q hosted a successful brew day on April 19. Chris provided tasty grilled refreshments and brewed a Northern English Brown Ale, while Doug attempted to recreate the amazing doppelbock from the spring 2010 club brew.

2014-04-19 12.32.38 2014-04-19 12.30.49

Thirsty Third Thursday meetup was scheduled for TL Beer Garden in Sunnyvale on May 15.

The date for the second club session beer competition judging was set for July 11 at 7 pm. This will take the place of our regular July meeting (moved to the second Friday to avoid meeting on July 4.) Ribbons will be awarded for the best hop forward beers and the best non-hop forward beers. All beers must be under 5% ABV to be submitted.

Derek H met the proprietors of the San Francisco Mead Company and will invite them to a future meeting.

Members-only event with the Siebel off flavors kit will be held May 16 at Nick’s house, 7 pm.

Justin gave a very informative presentation on mash temperature, which will be posted on the website soon.

Tyler visited the new Faction Brewing brewery and tasting room, and generously brought growlers of their pilsner, Winter IPA, and Carlo’s Stout to share.

Charles will do a presentation at the June meeting providing side by side comparisons of several beers in which batches were split in order to compare the effects of bottle conditioning vs keg conditioning.

Steve H has about 6 styrofoam wine shipping containers that someone can use for shipping or to keep beer/bombers semi-insulated. He will bring to June meeting.

Congratulations to Sudzers winners in Alameda County Fair competition, including Jim & Jason’s Best In Show!

Congratulations to the following Silicon Valley Sudzers for outstanding results among the 256 entries in the Alameda County Fair homebrew competition (BABO).

Best In Show: Jim & Jason Williams, George G. Williams, Scottish Export 80/- (also took first in Scottish & Irish Ales)

1st Place: Justin Vincent, English Porter, Robust Porter

1st Place: Justin Vincent, Red Sky at Night, Flanders Oud Bruin

2nd Place: Jim & Jason Williams, Smoken Chipotle Oak Smoked Porter, Spice/Herb/Vegetable Beer

3rd Place: Justin Vincent, Belgian Summer IPA, Belgian Specialty

3rd Place: Justin Vincent, Northern Nutter, Northern English Brown Ale

Cheers, gentlemen!

Sudzers at AHA Rally at Heretic Brewing

Several Sudzers enjoyed the American Homebrewers Association rally at Heretic Brewing in Fairfield on April 26, and at least 6 club members participated in the “free wort giveaway.” Heretic brewed 750 gallons (about 25 bbl) of a brown ale wort, which they gave out to the first 150 homebrewers to sign up for 5 gallons apiece. White Labs provided five different yeast strains for homebrewers to choose, and no doubt the Sudzers will come up with many creative finished products that they can claim as co-brewed with Jamil Zainasheff.

2014-04-26 13.44.21 2014-04-26 13.44.39

Sudzers meeting agenda Friday, May 2

Hello Sudzers! Our April meeting will be held Friday, May 2 at 7 pm
at Nick’s house. Need the address or directions? Email
moresimcoe@sudzers.org. Don’t forget to carpool if possible to make
sure there’s enough parking to go around.

If you would like to pay your 2014 dues, entitling you to many club
benefits, including a 10% discount at MoreBeer and member-only events,
please bring $25 cash.

Meeting agenda:

7:00 Social Time

7:15 Club Business

-Recent events:
-Spring club brew day at Chris Q’s
AHA Rally at Heretic Brewing

-Upcoming events:
-Thirsty Third Thursday May 15 – TL Beer Garden, 769 N. Mathilda, Sunnyvale
-Members-only off flavor tasting – May 16
-Session ales competition in July – date

7:30 Presentation – Justin V on mash temperatures

7:45 Brewery visit report with samples – Tyler on Faction Brewing

8:00 Homebrew evaluations. Reminder: Bring your recipe – club members
will have lots of questions! Sign your beer in on the whiteboard along
with your name and statistics (IBU, ABV, etc. – optional, but helpful
in determining tasting order)

After homebrew evaluations: more social time/informal commercial brew
sharing. Always welcome: homebrews from any style to share.  Don’t have any
homebrew on hand right now? Feel free to bring other interesting brews
you’ve picked up. Don’t have a beer to bring? Please bring some snacks
to share.