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Spiking Beer: As Intended, As Brewed?

May 5, 2015 · by Oliver Gray

If the gadgets popping up in the beer world are representative of some growing trend, drinkers harbor a strange desire to “change” the beer they’re drinking. “Change” is usually couched cozily in “enhance” but this time around, I can’t help but read it as “mess with a good thing.”

I suppose modifying already brewed beer started with Dogfish Head’s Randall, a device you pass your beer through to infuse it with the matter you’ve managed to mash into the plastic chamber – coffee beans, fresh herbs, Fruit Loops, Oreos – whatever your depraved, drunken mind can think of. Although some might argue it’s just a product of American cross cultural contamination, the Randall (and it’s home-based Jr. version) might have been the lead catalysts in spawning the “dump random crap in your casks” craze that plagues perfectly good beer engines across the country. Thanks, Sam.

And then came Synek, the “beer Keurig” wanting to change how growlers worked, and how you drink beer at home. Then that baffling OnTap flavor enhancing goo, which we’d all do our best to forget. Then, as if we hadn’t had enough, came Fizzics, a bizarre device with a micro-filter that’s supposed to provide a much better head on your beer. And now we’ve got Hop Theory Sachets, basically tea bags full of hops and other dried ingredients, meant to “improve” your drinking experience with some post-brew modification.

Cool!

I guess.

Right?

Like, it’s cool we have options and can spend a bunch of money and wile away out leisure hours spiking beer with random stuff. Variety is the spice of life, and we’ve certainly got some potent spices to work with these days. I’ll be the first to admit I’ve quite enjoyed some augmented cask beers, even some totally not beer-ish ones like gold ale with orange peel and vanilla. I’d be hypocritical to not agree that the novelty of these gadgets makes for a fun little Saturday after you’re done at Home Depot.

I do get the appeal; brewing is a remote mountain many can’t or won’t climb, and these devices put some control back into the hands of the consumer. But, cultural industry announcement! The consumer is not the brewmaster. No matter how many Reddit articles they’ve read, or how many unique check-ins on UnTappd. I don’t want the norm to slowly be ok with changing beer that’s already finished. Therein lies the less favorable rub of gadgetry; every single one of these devices, despite a positive message of gustatory freedom, carries with it a secret. An encrypted code deeper and more important than just, “change your beer!”

All of these devices suggest that beer fundamentally should be changed – and by the consumer no less! – a concept I find insulting to brewers, and disconnecting for drinkers.

Beer isn’t always perfect. Any homebrewer can tell you some diacetyl laced horror stories. The problems aren’t automatically fixed when scaled up to multiple BBLs either. We’ve got quality assurance and consistency issues in a lot of start-up breweries. A lot of beer coming out of the fledgling “craft” movement sings a song of avoidable defects. There are some beers that downright lack, that need all the help they can get to not scorch or sting the palate.

Acknowledged, appreciated, archived.

That still doesn’t mean we, as consumers, should be willing to or responsible for somehow righting brewhouse wrongs.

Brewing is science wrapped in art. The equipment must be cleaned and the temperatures must be monitored, but the amount and type of malts and hops, and ultimately the flavor of the beers, are up to the brewer’s discretion. Like a chef, the oven and the pans are standard; the ingredients and processes where they create signature tastes. Even the worst production beer is the result of a planned recipe, an entire brew cycle, someone’s missed vision. To brew beer is a difficult labor of love; failures in the brewhouse mean missed intentions, not opportunities to perform first aid.

And that presumes these devices are intentionally marketed at poorly made beer, which I’ll argue they’re not. They’re marketed at all beer, including world class examples of styles. Some of these will be used in or on beer that is already delicious and on-point, already a manifestation of the brewer’s will and skill. To pass even a mainline, year-round beer from an award winning brewery through some random device is to suggest you know better than the brewer when it comes to the flavor of the beer. Unless of course you are a trained brewmaster. Then I guess by all means you crazy bastard.

I know, I know, I sound like a purist beer regressivist, decrying innovation because it’s scary and new. But you don’t take your own sauces and spices to a restaurant, ready to add them to a chef’s dish just because you think you can make it better. Part of paying for a product is accepting that it is packaged how the manufacturer intended it should be. When you pay for a beer, you’re paying for the the expertise, training, and creativity of the brewer, not just the liquid itself. Many brewers have formal educations or have spent years apprenticing to be able to bring you delectable decoctions of fermented flavor, and you should appreciate that every time your pop a top or slip a sip.

If you really must channel your inner Warhol by trying to elevate the existing, I’m not one to stop you. Just make sure you’ve tasted the beer as it is supposed to be, as the brewer wanted you to taste it, well before you introduce it to any gadget de l’amélioration. Drink beer as beer is, as it has evolved from years of trial and error, as the yeast made it through vigorous bubbly labor. You’ll be a better beer citizen, and brewers will thank you for taking the time to appreciate their art.

yesno

Left yes, right no.

Go Go Gadget Beer: GrOpener Bottle Opener

July 8, 2013 · by Oliver Gray

Invention never understood her mother, Necessity. The single mom, a widow of the late Responsibility, provided everything the family needed but with noticeably lacking creativity. Everything was always exactly as it was supposed to be, measured and metered, with no extravagance or artistic flair, all very Puritan and unforgiving in its overwhelming perfunctitude.

Invention didn’t like that. She had dreams of increased efficiency, fresh designs, enhanced functionality. She thrashed against her mother’s plainness, using it as a catalyst for the creation of her own clever contraptions. As she changed the world with her work, Invention realized that without her mother, without her frank displays of never-changingness, she would have never been inspired to engineer the future.

It could be argued that we don’t need any new ways to open a bottle. Without really trying, I can wrench cap from bottle, send it flipping end over end towards trash-can oblivion as the C02 comes rushing out of the narrow neck. I can use almost anything: a lighter, a densely folded piece of paper, a flat-head screwdriver, my teeth, the hard edge of a flat surface, my belly button (twist off only). If the cap is my only obstacle to drinking, it won’t bar my way for long.

And all of those options are impromptu beer-hacks, designed by enthusiasts in the field who are left without the formal ways to open a bottle:  churhkeys, wall-mounters, blade-openers, and those long-handled speed-uncappers that dangle like ceremonial blades from the hips of barkeeps all across the world. It seems that we as humans have mastered the simple machines, found plenty of levers to pry and pop our beer to freedom.

It seems we’ve mastered it. And yet, there are people out there, scientists and engineers, engitists and scienteers, actively trying to make the bottle opener even better.

With the GrOpener (grab+opener), I dare say they have achieved the impossible.

gropener2

This is more than just a bottle opener, it’s a straight-up beer tool. It belongs right there next to my hydrometer, my pH meter, my laser thermometer. It is a marvel of well thought out practicality and style.

The GrOpener has two major advantages over traditional openers: 1) It’s designed to be used one-handed, and 2) it has a powerful magnet to help align with/catch the cap.

The one handed thing might not seem like such a big deal, but as the GrOpener website mentions, this caters to disabled people who may only have on arm available to open a drink. With no second arm to brace the bottle, I can imagine using a traditional bottle opener is quite challenging. It’s also just pretty damn cool to grab and open a bottle in one fluid motion, with one hand, while your friends ooh and aah at your mastery of all things bottle related.

The magnet is probably the best part of the design in terms of pure invention, as it keeps the bottle cap firmly stuck to it after opening, preventing an infomercial style disaster where the bottle cap flies across the room, hits some poor party goer in the head, and sends them toppling into a towering spread of chips and assorted dips.

The only drawback I can really find is the price. While these are made from what appears to be a single piece of pretty sturdy metal, $16 for a bottle opener might be a little out of some people’s range. I got mine during the original IndieGoGo campaign, assuming the price included some extra financial support for the creator. It’s a pretty cool novelty though, and after ~100 opens, mine is only showing very minimal signs of wear.

To recap:

Pros –

  • Opens beers
  • One-handed
  • Magnet!
  • Fun to use
  • Looks cool
  • Bonus can opener duck-tail thing

Cons –

  • Name sounds a little like “groper”
  • Cost
  • No way to easily hook it onto my utility belt

If you’ve got some extra cash to spend and are into opening things in a big way, I highly recommend this piece of beer-technology.

Go Go Gadget Beer: Flavor “Enhancing” Goo

June 24, 2013 · by Oliver Gray

I am a novelty whore. I voluntarily ate both spawns of the Doritos Locos Taco. I actively sought out (and drank!) Rogue’s Voodoo Donut Maple Bacon ale and DuClaw’s Sweet Baby Jesus Peanut Butter porter. If it’s unorthodox for the sake of oddness, chances are very high that I will want to try it. Once.

Beer gadgetry isn’t something new. The ancient Egyptians had kegerators built out of crudely dug clay ditches and special insulated pots. The Vikings turned pelts and animal horns into particularly badass drinking vessels, because screw regular old cups. In the dizzying whirl of the information age we’ve got Beer Keurigs, beer-chilling rods, flavor-infusers, pressurized growlers, and now, beer enhancing goo:

OnTap Liquid Beer Enhancer – Pale Ale
Makes 18 “beers” – $4.99

beergoo

Here’s the idea: You’re a craft beer person, out gallivanting in the social wilderness like craft beer people are apt to do. You somehow, against your best efforts, find yourself in a place where there is no craft beer, and you’re super bummed about it. Your friend offers you a Miller/Coors/Bud light from the overstocked cooler and you cringe; even the idea of all that the corn or rice adjunct burns the back of your tongue. But fear not! In your pocket is a little white egg of brownish-orange goo that can save you from the tragic blandness. A few squirts and that faded yellow becomes decadent amber, the fizzy weak flavor becomes an orgy of delight happening directly on (top of) your tongue.

It’s a solid premise. Make not so good beer into OK beer so that you can force it down without too much gagging or too many audible “ughs.”

Unfortunately, the proposed premise is not properly perpetuated by the product.

Don’t Knock it ’till you try it; then knock it

I tapped (get it!?) my neighbors to find some beer that needed enhancing. After digging through their fridges like some classless drunk, I managed to score an MLB themed Budweiser, an amazingly engineered Miller Lite (with Punch Top™ for extra flow), and a classic can of Pottsville’s finest Yuengling Lager.

003

I didn’t waste any time. I jammed one of my good kitchen knives into the Miller Lite Punch Top™ and let that baby flow, smooth as buttercream frosting, into my glass. Then I squirted a generous blast of OnTap Pale Ale goo into the beer, using the instructional video as a rough guide.

028

There are no instructions with this stuff. There should really be some instructions. It says to “always dilute in a full glass of beer,” but that’s like an omelette recipe that says, “maybe add some eggs or something.”

I think I used too much. Got too zealous with my squeezing. The Miller turned from well-hydrated-piss yellow to a pretty decent amber color. The pure white head was tinted sort of orange, but not in a gross way. It certainly looked more appetizing.

And then my nose, like a catcher taking a 105mph fastball to the ribs, caught a whiff of what it smelled like. Stale malt, bananas so old they’re completely black, party-favor lip gloss. Maybe some over steeped Darjeeling in a rusty tea pot. Nothing beer-like. Definitely nothing enhanced.

The taste was horrible, with special emphasis on the “horr” part, as in its flavor was the horrifying result of a horrific bargain with a cosmic horror. It was mainly malt, but behind that there were clear notes of potting soil, burlap, and shrimp toast. It was in no way appetizing, and actually made me not like beer for one very, very, very brief moment.

But, I had used what seemed like a lot of this stuff, so I attributed the overwhelming badness to user error. Maybe it’s not compatible with MillerCoors products and I missed that in the extensive documentation.

I gave it another go. This time with America’s favorite pale-lager and America’s favorite pastime.

043I used a lot less, but got pretty much the same deal. Yellow to gold. Smells so alien they belong in a H.R. Giger painting. Tastes like eating chemicals off of a factory floor. I couldn’t finish either beer and ended up breaking one of my hardcore beer rules: I poured them down the drain, saluting them as the washed out into some Potomac river tributary.

I can’t believe I’m going to say this, but I think I’d prefer to drink either of these beers without trying to make them better. At least they are shameless in their roles as tasteless vehicles for alcohol.

I didn’t even bother adding any goo to the Yuengling. I drank it quickly, with purpose, as a palate cleanser. Best Yuengling I’ve ever had, except for maybe the one I had at my wedding reception.

After about an hour of puzzling over the smells and tastes, putting little droplets of the goo concentrate of my fingers to study it, I realized what this stuff is. It’s liquid malt extract – the kind that comes in big cans used by homebrewers – watered down to a point where it can be squeezed out of a little bottle. I have no real proof of this of course, but the similarities are uncanny.

There is so much more to beer than malt. Even kits that use malt extract are boiled for at least an hour and have hops and other goodies added to them. Beer is the culmination of the brewing process; it can’t be faked or “enhanced” or recreated with chemicals and colorants. Without each step, done carefully and skillfully, the end result is not beer. Some weird thing wearing a beer mask, trying to talk and act like beer maybe, but definitely not real ale or lager.

I sort of admire this company for trying something new, but unfortunately, I can’t recommend this stuff. If you’re forced to drink something decidedly uncrafty, just smile and be a cool dude about it. I’d rather be the guy grimacing every few minutes than the obnoxious guy who has to inject all his beer with mysterious liquids to make them “good.”

Better to put the $4.99 this stuff costs towards a six-pack of real pale ale.

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