Archive for the ‘Beer’ Category

It’s medal time at GABF

Tuesday, October 16th, 2007

GABF Silver Medal
At the Great American Beer Festival (GABF) in Denver last weekend the John’s Generations White Ale earned Millstream Brewing a silver medal in the Belgian-Style White/Wit category. The beer competed against 47 similar beers to earn 2nd place at the largest beer festival in the United States.

This is fourth year in a row Millstream has won a medal and the first for the John’s Generations White Ale. All of us at John’s are really excited that what started our 9 years ago as a little brewing project to celebrate our 50th anniversary has turned into such a success.

Relevant links:

Saving lives one drink at a time

Sunday, September 23rd, 2007


Another Iowa City Brewfest has come and gone. Yesterday, September 22, marked the 12th Annual Iowa City Brewfest and it was the largest event ever. Everyone at John’s, Old Chicago, and the American Heart Association were thrilled with the turnout. The two factors leading to the great attendance were the perfect weather (mid to high seventies) and the late start of the Iowa Hawkeye football game (7 P.M.). The final numbers aren’t available yet, but only a couple of hours into the event the big tent was packed. I’m was told we did have to send a volunteer to purchase additional spools of tickets twice so patrons were purchasing plenty of drink tickets. We really didn’t try to do anything new this year and it is very pleasing to see that our tried and true formula works.

Check out photos from the event.

If you missed out on the Iowa City Brewfest, there is still time to get tickets for the annual Brewnost at the National Czech and Slovak Museum in Cedar Rapids. See the details here.

New Belgium Rollout

Thursday, September 13th, 2007

Fat Tire label
This past Monday marked a very important day for the Beer Staff of John’s Grocery. It was the day we could finally answer the question “When are you guys gonna get Fat Tire from New Beligum?” with a resounding “check out the big towering display of beer behind you!”. Yes, that’s right Fat Tire is in the house. Bright and early Monday morning a parade a bicyclists rode from Old Capital Brew Works to the John’s Grocery parking lot, with Elvis on the official Fat Tire retro bike in the lead, to rollout the New Belgium Brewery line here in Iowa.

Currently, the only labels from the brewery that are available in Iowa are: Fat Tire Amber Ale, 1554 Brussels Style Black Ale, and the Mothership Wit.

Check out photos of the rollout

Popular travel writer Rick Steves visits Trebon

Friday, August 31st, 2007

Tribune Media Services picked up this piece by Rick Steves, the popular travel writer and host of numerous PBS travel shows. He was in the Czech Republic in August and wrote a nice piece about beer in the Czech Republic.

Visit Rick Steve’s blog

Tentative itinerary for May 2008 Czech trip

Friday, May 18th, 2007

We’ve hashed it out some of the details with the staff from the National Czech and Slovak Museum and we’ve put together a tentative intinerary for the May 2008 group trip to the Czech Republic. The dates may change a little bit and we don’t know about pricing yet. If you are interested the dates below would be good to reserve on your calendar. We’re in the process of trying to arrange ground transportation in the Czech Republic so if you are really interested, then drop us a line at “beerroom@johngrocery.com” so we can better judge interest.

  • Wednesday, May 21 Depart for Prague.
  • Thursday, May 22 Arrive in Prague – Go to Plzeň, the Capital City of Beer, for a welcome dinner – overnight in Plzeň.
  • Friday, May 23 Tour Pilsner Urquell Brewery & Museum. Time on your own to visit the historic sites of Plzeň. Dinner and overnight in Plzeň
  • Saturday, May 24 Travel to The Chodovar Family Brewery in Chudová Planá, the oldest brewery in Western Bohemia. Try the optional spa treatments including soaking in a beer bath. Dinner and return to Plzeň for overnight.
  • Sunday, May 25 Travel to BÅ™eznice to tour the Herold BÅ™eznice Castle Brewery and the BÅ™eznice Castle. Dinner. Overnight in BÅ™eznice.
  • Monday, May 26 Travel to ÄŒeské BudÄ•jovice to tour the Samson Brewery and the world-famous Budvar Brewery. Dinner. Overnight in ÄŒeský Krumlov.
  • Tuesday, May 27 Free day to enjoy the sights and tour the castle of ÄŒeský Krumlov. Optional visit to nearby Hluboka Castle. Overnight in ÄŒeský Krumlov.
  • Wednesday, May 28 Travel to Jaroslav Svoboda’s glass studio in the village of Karlov outside of ŽĎĂR nad Sázavou. Then on to visit the Želiv Monastery Brewery in Humpolec Želiv.
  • Thursday, May 29 Travel to Prague. Optional city tour. On your own for sightseeing and shopping.
  • Friday, May 30 Optional guided tour of The Musaion, folk museum. Farewell dinner.
  • Saturday, May 31 Depart.

Final day of our Czech experience

Tuesday, March 27th, 2007

Today was our last day in the Czech Republic. We were awoken by the door buzzer as a construction crew was going flat to flat trying to find out who parked their blue Skoda in the no parking spot out front. They needed to bring in their big crane and couldn’t get it through. We were driving a blue Skoda. To the other residents of Podvinny Mlyn 16, we are sorry for waking you up.

Our friend J.C. not only woke up this morning to the sound of the door buzzer, but also with a nasty cold so we decided to have a low-key day and forgo our hour and a half trip to Kunta Horna to see the bone church. Maybe next trip. Instead, Doug and I ventured back to the center of Prague to visit the Museum of Communism. We’ve been fascinated this whole trip with the personal stories people we’ve met have conveyed to us of their experiences living under the Communist regime. It was interesting to see an entire collection of items and stories about the 41 year Communist rule. We would highly recommend the museum to anyone who has an hour or two to spend in Prague’s center.

For lunch, we stopped at the Plzeňská Restaurace at the historic Obercnîm Domě. The restaurant was at time Pilsner’s Urquell’s largest beer hall in Prague. It has beautiful Art Nouveau architecture and traditional Czech food. It’s a bit pricy compared to the other traditional Czech meals we’ve had, but the ambiance is really nice and the food was great.

After the lunch, J.C. picked us up at a nearby metro station and took us about 30 minutes east to her weekend cottage in the Czech National Forest. A lot of Czechs keep a weekend or summer cottage which is handed down from generation to generation. The cottages are small and very rustic. Perfect to decompress after a busy week of working in the city.

Back in the city we prepared to fly home tomorrow and reflected on our experiences in the Czech Republic. For starters, we sampled 31 different beers totaling about 30 liters. Every beer we had, with the exception of an accidental non-alcoholic Radagast and a skunky bottled Budvar, has been excellent. Doug and I both agree that the B.B. Bürgerbraü strong dark lager was our all-around favorite. Straight from the lagering vessel in the cellars of the brewery, this beer had the most intensive malt flavor with wonderful smoked peat notes.

All along the way, we’ve been mapping out how we would plan the itinerary for the official May 2008 beer tour. The one thing we plan on adding that we didn’t get a chance to do on this expedition is a trip to a hop farm to see how hops are grown and harvested. We can say that this fact-finding mission has been a complete success. Our immersion in the Czech culture has taught us a lot that will come in great use when trying to lead a group of 20 beer enthusiasts around the Czech Republic.

See the last of our photos.

Na zdraví!

Pivo underdogs

Monday, March 26th, 2007

This morning we again awoke to the sun shining and left Český Krumlov and headed north 30 minutes to České Budějovice. Today, our objective was the Budějovický Měšťanský Pivovar (aka Samson Brewery) who brews B.B. Bürgerbräu. Unfortunately, the only map we had of the city didn’t have any street names (much like the streets themselves), so we ended up getting quite turned around in the city center trying to find the brewery. Eventually, we found a nice person who directed us to the brewery when Doug looked really lost and said “Sampson Pivovar?”.

The Samson brewery is the real “Original Budweiser”. The brewery is the city’s original community brewery who has the documents to prove that they predate Budweiser Budvar by ten years with a founding date of 1795. The brewery has been undergoing a good deal of renovation during the past ten years and more planned for the future.

As we talked with people from the brewery, we got this general feeling that they feel like the underdog against the bigger breweries. They have a capacity of 400,000 hectoliters but are currently only producing 150,000 and having to battle the bigger breweries like Pilsner Urquell and Budvar for each liter. Like some of the smaller breweries we’ve visited, they don’t have the cash required to buy on-premise accounts. Our host told us that a new restaurant down the block recently opened and Budvar paid the restaurant owner $70,000 to be the exclusive brewery for the restaurant. The small breweries just can’t compete in the big boy’s game.

On of the effects of Samson’s claim to be the original Budweiser is a ton of litigation with Budvar and Anheuser-Busch over the use of the term “Budweiser” or “Budweiss”. This has led the brewery to develop several different brands. They have three current brands, B.B. Bürgerbräu, 1795, and Samson. B.B. Bürgerbräu used to be known in the United States as Crystal until Miller Brewering sued them on cause that the beer might be confused with a Peruvian brand they owned by the name of Crystil. Um, yeah. B.B. Bürgerbräu is leagues better than Budvar. We sampled it straight from the closed stainless fermentation casks and found to be very malty with a dry crispness. The real treat was sampling their new strong dark beer they are brewing for the Nordic markets. The brew lagers for three months and has an incredible malty sweetness with a notable smoked peat flavor like you would find in some Scotch ales. We are crossing our fingers they can get it to America soon.

We left České Budějovice after a quick lunch of Indian food with our host from the brewery and headed back to Prague for a relaxing evening with our friend J.C..Tomorrow, we’ll be enjoying our last day in the Czech Republic visiting the center of Prague.

Check out today’s photos.

An incorrect assumption

Sunday, March 25th, 2007

In 1999 when we visited Europe, we always seemed to be prevented from visiting some monument or castle because it was undergoing repair. Today, we discovered that on Sunday, Český Krumlov is essentially closed. We assumed, incorrectly, that Sunday would be a big day for tourism as Český Krumlov is a large tourist attraction. Several souvenir shops were open, but virtually all the museums and specialty shops were closed. This also included the main attraction of the Český Krumlov castle which we were prevented from seeing in 1999 because it was undergoing repair. Thwarted again!

We did make a stop at the tourist information center where Doug picked up a pamphlet on an armory museum he would like to see. He asked the clerk where it was and she mapped it out on a map of the town. After lunch we decided to go find the museum as on the pamphlet it said it was open to 5 PM. After walking on the rough cobblestone for a quite a while we just could not find the museum. We went up and down twist streets, with our feet hurting more with each step and we could not find it. We went back to the information center and asked another clerk where the museum was and he pointed at the back of the pamphlet. The museum is in Prague. Today just wasn’t our day. At least we saw the sun all day. The first time the entire trip.

Tomorrow morning, after procuring another recharge card for our cell phone, we will be heading back to České Budějovice for our last brewery tour. Hopefully, we’ll get a straight answer from the Sampson brewery on who is the really the original Budweiser. Hint, it is not Budweiser Budvar.

View photos from today’s “sorry, we are closed” adventures.

Hanging with the brothers

Sunday, March 25th, 2007

This morning we awoke to the cold and rain of a late Czech winter. We left the Equitana Resort without having a chance to ride horses or do any hunting, but we had a monastery to find. As I’ve said before, our rental car is a small Skoda (a Czech-version of a Volkswagen). Specifically, we have the smallest model with a little 1.2 liter engine. Despite its small engine, Doug still thinks it is a rally car and we spent the entire trip from Březnice to Želiv on two wheels as raced through all the gears taking hairpin corners on the Czech country roads. No four-lane highways for us on our adventure.

We arrived in Želiv and easily found the monastery. The monastery dates back to 1149 which would make it the second oldest brewery in the world if it weren’t for the Communist-takeover in 1948. Much like an American microbrewery, much of the equipment in Želiv’s brewhouse is handmade. The fermenters and kettles are only two years old and they are producing three micro-brewed beers. They have a very limited capacity and are happy selling to local patrons and a couple specialty restaurants in Prague. Father Richard has been in talks with one the American importers we do a lot of business with and we are hopeful they can work out a deal for a very limited distribution in the States.

As a working Abbey with 7 priests in residence and 26 priests in the parish, the beers they produce are truly Abbey ales. The members of the Abbey are not in the Trappist order, but rather the Premonstrian order. Their flagship ale, Gottschalk, is named after Father Gottschalk who founded the abbey in 1149. We sampled it straight out of the secondary fermenter in its unfiltered glory. It is a dubbel with a rich chocolate character a significant hop bite. The brewmaster, who we chatted with through Father Richard, said they used a combination of Saaz and some other rare type of Czech hops whose name did not translate into anything Doug nor I was familiar with. Nonetheless, it was an awesome beer. The second beer we tried was a mixture of Gottschalk and Slovakian mead called Castulus. This drink had a bizarre aroma and made the Gottschalk even more drinkable while lending it a bit of sweetness and a thinner mouthfeel. Their third beer, which we did not sample, is a brew infused with sour-cherry.

After a quick lunch of soup and spaghetti with father Richard and his fellow priests and novices, we were given an incredible tour of the monastery. When you get up close and personal with the Czech and Slovak people, it is just incredible to imagine the tyranny they faced under the Communist regime. In 1948, the Communists gathered-up priests from around Czechoslovakia and imprisoned them here at the abbey for two years. Then, in 1950, they turned the monastery into a psychiatric facility. During the next 41 years, the Communists would destroy much of the original furniture and other religious artifacts in the buildings. Some very important pieces were smuggled out of the abbey and kept safely hidden by locals in their homes. Finally, in 1991 the psychiatric hospital was closed and the monastery was returned to the church.

Surprisingly, some areas of the monastery were left unharmed. Our tour of the building included the library, rectory, and several other significant rooms which had frescos that looked like they were recently conserved, but haven’t been touched since the 17th century. Other areas, like the main church, are undergoing extensive reconstruction with the help of the European Union. By the beginning of the next decade, this monastery will be one of Bohemia’s crown jewels.

Father Richard offered us their guest room in the cloister so we decided to spend the night with the brothers. After a few hours of kicking back in the abbey to “rest and reflect”, we attended the 52nd birthday of one of the priests in a nearby parish of the abbey. It has been a tradition for the past ten years on his birthday to have a smoked pig and Father Richard promised it would be very tasty. A lot of the priests at the abbey are Slovakian so instead of offering us the traditional Czech before-dinner shot of Becherovka, they gave us Slivovice (sp?) which is a pear brandy. It does not taste like Christmas and we’ll leave it at that. It was a very interesting night being surrounded by Czech and Slovak priests, brothers and the abbot of the monastery. Father Richard was kind enough to share many stories with us including the following:

  • He has been on the Tonight Show with Jay Leno twice (while we was preaching in Hollywood). Apparently, his sermons were televised and he was known as a wacky Czech priest.
  • Fifty Cent (the rapper) and several other celebrities have stayed at the monastery’s hotel.
  • The Bin Laddin Construction Company (yes, that Bin Laddin) has tried to buy the monastery several times. Each time Father Richard has refused.
  • Father Richard is happy that Brent Favre will be returning to the Green Bay Packers. He used to be a visiting priest in Green Bay.
  • The father for whom we were celebrating his birthday was imprisoned by the Communists and tortured.
  • Father Richard would very much like to buy a Harley Davidson motorcycle.
  • When we woke up this morning, we knew we would be going to a monastery to sample some beer, but we had no idea we would end up being immersed this deeply in Czech/Slovak culture. Tomorrow, we will be driving south to ÄŒeský Krumlov for a day of sightseeing.

    View photos from today’s spiritual adventures.

    Lost in Bohemia

    Friday, March 23rd, 2007

    Today we left Prague in search of the Herold Brewery in Březnice.We had carefully mapped our route and were confident that we could get there without a problem. When we finally found the little village of Březnice we discovered it to be a small farming village with no sign of a brewery. Since we couldn’t find the brewery on our own, we called our contact, David, at the brewery and asked where it was exactly. He asked if we could see any landmarks. I could clearly see the distinctive cooling stacks of a nuclear power plant off in the distance so I relayed that bit of information to him. He responded by saying that there was no nuclear power plant anywhere close to Březnice. Turns out there are three towns called “Březnice” in the Czech Republic and we were clearly in the wrong one. We were in southern Bohemia close to České Budějovice and the Březnice we were looking for was in western Bohemia closer to Plzeň. Opps. A quick drive across the country brought us to the slightly larger Březnice and home of the Herold Brewery.

    The brewery was founded in 1503 and has been constantly brewing uninterrupted since. Under the Communists, the brewery was used mainly as a laboratory where it received some hand-me-down parts now and then, so the brewery’s equipment is ancient. Most of it is steam-powered by a large coal-fired boiler. They cannot operate their bottling line, brewhouse, and malting area at the same time because there is simply not enough steam power to drive it all. The brewery is now owned by a group of American investors who are trying to turn it around and make it profitable which is no easy feat.

    It was very interesting to see a small Czech brewery like Herold operating in comparison to a incredibly large brewery like Pilsner Urquell. When you see the equipment at Herold and you taste the end-product, it really makes you wonder how they extract such a wonderful product out of such “well-used” equipment. The brewhouse was last refurbished in 1952 and the kettles in the room are clearly a decades, upon decades older. Most of the historical papers about the brewery were destroyed by the Communists. Walking through their cellars, which are currently undergoing a maintenance cycle, you find it amazing that the lagering tanks don’t have leaks from the all the rust that forms in the damp cellars.

    David, the brewery director, told us he would love to install a new brewhouse with half the capacity the current brewhouse has so he could produce some more novel beers for the Czech market. Currently, Herold produces basically four beers; two traditional Czech blond lagers and two dark Czech lagers. They are known for their dark lagers as it is virtually unknown for a Czech brewery to bottle or keg dark beer. The Czech beer market is just beginning to open its eyes to the wider variety of beer styles in the world and Herold wants to be on the forefront of that awakening.

    Right next to the brewery is a castle. In fact, the town of Březnice used to have two breweries. Herold was the castle brewery and the other was the municipal brewery. The castle was closed by the time we finished touring the brewery, but he assured us it was certainly worthy of a stop if we could find the time.

    We are spending the night at the Equitana Hotel Resort 2 km outside of Březnice. It is a modern hotel with modern amenities like a pool, whirlpool, bowling alley (bowling is big in the Czech Republic), high-speed Internet access and horse riding. We had dinner in the hotel’s restaurant (more pork) where I finally managed to get a salad that consisted of more than a few carrot shavings and some cabbage. I also learned the word for non-alcoholic beer the hard way. I didn’t know the Czech people would even attempt to make such a foul-tasting liquid. After two sips I ordered a Pilsner Urquell. Surprisingly, they didn’t serve Herold beer. David said that there is a very strong relationship between pubs, restaurants and breweries with the breweries giving the owners of the eating and drinking establishments significant cash payments to insure exclusive serving rights for their products. Herold, being a smaller brewery, simply cannot afford those cash payments.

    After being immersed in Czech culture for a total of five days now, I can now understand why Bohemians are the brunt of so many jokes around the world. Between the quirky language that has very few similarities to other Slavic languages, bribes that grease the wheels of government and business, and a laid-back attitude about life in general, it is amazing to both Doug and I that this country has made the great strides it has since 1989. We really can’t complain that much. The beer is good, the food tasty, and the people are nice. What more do you need?

    Tomorrow, we are on the road again to the Želiv monastery which I’m sure promises to be an interesting experience. It might be a couple of days without a new post as I don’t think we’ll have Internet connectivity until we reach our hotel in České Krumlov on Sunday.

    See photos from today’s wanderings around Bohemia