Matt Jordan wins inter-club competition!

The Underground Brewers hold onto the Connecticut Club Trophy with a win by Matt Jordan! His Munich Helles took Best Of Show in the CT Club Competition in March. The club keeps the hardware and Matt wins a carload of awesome prizes.

Huge thanks to Brew Haven for running a successful competition despite myriad COVID-related restrictions and difficulties. Thanks also to NEBCo for hosting and to all the judges.

Looking forward to next year. Can we make it a three-peat?

Moving Forward

It’s been a long time since our last post. Not because we haven’t been active. Just because, without our usual monthly in-person meetings, it’s hard to keep to a regular publishing schedule.

Since our last post, six months ago, we’ve had a number of safe in-person get-togethers. Most have been informal meet-ups, outdoors at local breweries. I, for one, was delighted to see familiar faces in real life. We also participated, with Brew Haven, in our annual bottle share while picking up apple juice at Beardsley’s Cider Mill. And a number of us have co-brewed at each others’ homes. We may not be having our regular meetings, but we are finding safe ways to carry on.

Winter brings special challenges since it makes outdoor activities more difficult. Co-brews are still happening, of course. But we will have to find a safe way to choose our 3 entries for the CT Club Competition without, you know, freezing to death. Meet-ups at breweries should resume once the weather gets warmer.

Now that vaccines exist and we have a rough idea of the schedule for administering them, we know that we won’t be able to resume all of our normal club activities until the fall. That’s a bit long to just keep “muddling through”, as we’ve been doing. So we plan to embark on a schedule of more formal zoom-based activities over the next 8 to 10 months. Brew Haven has been doing this rather successfully and we hope to learn from their example.

In short, we’re still here, still brewing, still getting together (if less formally). Watch this space for new developments as we regain momentum in the new year.

We’re still here!!

A lot is going on in the world right now. Like most clubs, we are still meeting digitally for the time being, which does limit what we can do in terms of giving each other feedback. We are also competing for attention and mind-share with other, arguably more important, events.

Regardless of that, we are still here. We are still meeting each month. We are still offering each other advice and support. Small sub-groups have started to meet in socially-distant ways.

If you brew and you live in New Haven or Fairfield Counties, and you would like to know more about us and what we do, please reach out. We’re here now, and we’ll still be here when we can meet in person again.

Social Distance, Emotional Bond

Just because we could not meet in person doesn’t mean we couldn’t meet at all. Club hero Andy Cox got us set up on Zoom for a night of talk and sharing a few beers. Huge thanks to Andy. We soldier on.

Not pictured: a brief appearance from Tom Fenton, all the way from Bangkok! Our first inter-continental meeting!

Pandemic, redux

Last time, it was kind of a joke.

Everybody had the flu in January. Had to cancel the meeting. Called it a “pandemic”. Ha ha.

This time, it’s real, I guess. And, while it’s not the Zombie Apocalypse, it’s bad enough.

The Governor and the CDC and every mom in America says, “Stay home!” So we’re staying home.

No meeting in March.

We’ll catch up in April. Until then, keep brewing and stay healthy.

Trappist Dreams

On Feb 19, the Underground Brewers gathered around the long tables in the Veracious Brewing tap room to perform a most solemn duty: to select the 3 beers which would move on to the next round of the CT Inter-Club Championship Competition. Since we hold the cup for the current year, the pressure was on to select 3 beers with excellent chances of winning.

There were 12 to choose from: 4 singles, 2 dubbels, 3 tripels, and 3 quads. (At least 2 other singles were known to exist but failed to arrive on the evening in question. We’ll never know if one of those could have bested the 12 on the table.)

The judges took their duties seriously. So seriously, in fact, that they were shaving half-points this way and that when assigning scores to the entries. There was some agreement, some disagreement, and some heated discussion.

In the end, 3 entries were duly chosen. The styles and the brewers’ identities should remain somewhat under wraps until the competition finals in late March. But you might be able to guess at some of them by perusing the tasting notes below.

With that task out of the way, the group went on to judge ANOTHER 8 or 10 homebrews. (And a few commercial beers. And some excellent Veracious beer left for us by Mark and Tess.) I won’t even try to decipher the scribe’s handwriting on these beers. You are free to check out the notes yourself.

Overall, a wonderful evening. As always, the club owes and enormous debt of gratitude to Mark and Tess, Maltose Express, and Veracious Brewing, for hosting and supporting us the way they do.

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Cider Tasting Exam

On the afternoon of Feb 16, 12 eager judges sat for one of the first BJCP Cider Judge tasting exams at Veracious Brewing in Monroe.

Our very own Andy Tipler was the driving force for this event, handling most of planning for the exam and for the several study sessions beforehand. James Link was the official Organizer, running the exam itself and interfacing with the BJCP. Eric Sforza was the cellarmaster, preparing and pouring a number of doctored ciders for us. Steve Victor and Mark Tambascio were our proctors.

Examinees included Underground Brewers new and old – some second generation – plus others from as far away as Boston and Syracuse.

For 2+ hours, we tasted and wrote and wrote some more, filling out our scoresheets as best we could. Each cider was subjected to rigorous analysis, each flaw dissected.

Now we wait, probably for 4 or 5 months, to find out if we passed.

Huge thanks to Andy, Jim, Eric, Steve, and Mark for making this possible. Thanks also to the Szamatulskis for the use of the Veracious tap room and to Ron Sansone of Spoke & Spy Ciderworks who provided tutoring, endless study samples, and encouragement.

Pandemic!

Where are the notes from the January meeting?

Clay was due to be our January host at his new(ish) house in Redding. But a wave of flu-like symptoms swept through the membership in the 24 hours before meeting time, resulting in a rash of cancelled RSVPs. We decided that the better course would be to call the meeting off.

We will reschedule with Clay for a future month.

Partying with Brew Haven

What could be better than a holiday party with a homebrew club? A holiday party with TWO homebrew clubs, of course! And that’s exactly what we had this year: a holiday party collaboration with Brew Haven.

Brew Haven took the lead here, negotiating use of the upstairs room at Counterweight Brewing. They also set the evening’s agenda and decided on all the activities. We were just along for the ride.

This did expose a bit of a culture mismatch between the two clubs. BH has this silly idea that club business – dissemination of calendars, discussion of upcoming competitions, etc. – should happen during club meetings. The UBC, of course, has followed a strict “no club business during club meetings” rule since its inception. But we can roll with it when on another club’s turf. No need to start a rumble.

With the boring administrivia out of the way, a number of BHers shared various stouts they had made. All were interesting; many were excellent. Much fruitful discussion of ingredients and techniques followed.

It’s very important in these situations to adopt the correct pose:

With the stouts judged and consumed, it was time to move on to the Yankee Swap. Another BH idea, and MUCH more fun than club business.

And finally, the food! A fantastic pot-luck, including fresh oysters from Cape Cod.

All in all, a great night with great beer and even better people. HUGE thanks to Brew Haven for including us. Already looking forward to next year!

British counter-invasion

Britain drinks beer. Everyone knows this.

When the Normans took over, they brought their effete wine-drinking ways to the royal table. But they could never convince the rest of the populace to give up their good, solid ale. Even decades of misguided tax policy, which weakened and degraded British ale into a ghost of its former self, couldn’t kill it off entirely. Eventually, the Brits invented CAMRA to revive and preserve their beer-drinking heritage. It just wouldn’t be Britain without beer.

So it is only right and proper that we have several Brits in our club. They may brew Belgian ales and even the odd sour. But they carry on the proud British tradition of ale-making bred into their DNA.

One such Brit is Andy Tipler, of course, host of our November meeting. We invaded the poor man’s house this past Wednesday, demanding good English ale and cider. And we were not disappointed.

As tends to happen at Andy’s, there were several kegs of beer and cider in the kitchen. The table was groaning under a huge spread of excellent food. Members who were “not attending the meeting” showed up and had a few tastes. It was a good time.

We even welcomed a new member into the club. Another Paul. (Some sort of differentiating prefix or nickname will be necessary here.) Facebook tells me that New Paul is a pastor. I think it’s pretty clear that we could use such a person in our little group. I just hope we don’t horrify him too much.

A number of truly excellent beers, meads, and ciders were judged:

  • Pils, Liam & Mara (Makehaven). Grain, husk, corn, a little butter. Perfumey hops and a little spicy phenols. Dry, bitter finish. Could use a few bubbles. 36
  • “Stone-smoked Kolsch”, Steve and Pierre. Just a kiss of smoke in aroma. Fruity but restrained. Much more smoke in flavor. Dry finish. VERY drinkable. Was brewed as a saison but heating element charred the wort in the boil. Sat for a year until drinkable. 40
  • Rye lager, Andy Cox. Spicy rye nose. Clean. Hint of sulfur. Very fruity in flavor. A little too sweet. Needs hops and bubbles. Very cloudy. 29
  • Dark mild, Eric. Toffee, caramel, nuts, earthy hops. Just beautiful to look at. So much flavor for a session beer. Dry finish. Super drinkable. 2.2%abv. 42
  • English porter, Pierre. Acrid, spicy. Caramel and bread dough. Cloudy. Astringent. Not enough base malt. Pierre says this is the first pint off the keg and rest will be better. Will bring to a future meeting. 27
  • Wee heavy, Eric and Andy. Syrupy sweet, sugary. Caramel, toffee, alcohol, dark fruit, grapes, burnt sugar, raisins. Ruby highlights. Chewy. Stone-brewed ale. Lots of kettle caramelization. Finished at 1.022. 42
  • Imperial stout, Mark. Not enough fruit character. Some roast, tobacco. Vinous. Well balanced. A bit light on flavor. Bitter finish. Needs bubbles. But quite drinkable. 36
  • English cider, Steve. Clear and yellow with a white head. A little barnyard. Andy likes it. Tannic, with bright acid. Fizzy. Extremely drinkable. Blend of heirloom apple juices from Cider Days. 39
  • Cyser, Pierre. Phenolic. Straw-colored and hazy. Bitter. Tastes a bit of raw honey with an alcohol bite. But actually quite drinkable. Blend of sweet and dry cysers. 33