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  • The Angel’s Share: Gone in 7200 Seconds

    November 12th, 2007

    65 cases, 140 people, Gone in 2 hours

    Fall 2007 Release of Angel’s Share

    Yep, that’s all it took for last Saturday’s much-anticipated release of Angel’s Share to go from “available” to “sold out for 2007”.

    People started lining up at 8 am and by the 10 am opening the queue stretched across the parking lot. Fortunately, the details of the release — which was limited to 6 bottles per person — were thought out in advance, so the maximum number of people were able to get their share of the Angel’s Share.

    While in line everyone placed a reserve on the number of bottles they were purchasing. Once inside, one simply walked up to the counter, showed ID and made their purchase. Then they were free to enjoy a few pints of the many other beers on tap that day with the confidence that their allotment of the good stuff would be waiting for them in the lobby upon exit. It all made for a festive and very relaxed atmosphere.

    The most amusing note: A guy who couldn’t make the release, placed an ad on Craiglist for a stand-in. The stand-in’s name? Pabst.

    November 10th, 2007

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    November 9th, 2007

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    John and Mark

    Angel’s Share This Weekend!

    November 6th, 2007

    Yeah, the cat’s a bit out of the bag (I’ve seen the news on the beer forums), but if you hadn’t heard, Lost Abbey’s The Angel’s Share is out this Saturday, November 10th!

    Brewery doors open at 10am and everyone is limited to 6 bottles (and they’re taking ID, so don’t bother to try and come back for more). Cost is going to be $15/bottle and the supply is pretty limited, so get there early. (It’s not going into distribution — brewery sale only.)

    Full details are on the Lost Abbey website.

    We were there last weekend for th bottling. Here’s a few photos for your viewing pleasure:

    The Angel’s Share filling lineBaumer (left) lines up empty bottles on the left while Adam and Damien (center) fill and move them to the right

    Bottles lined up on the filler

    The Angel’s Share filling lineTomme (second from right) runs the corker and Bo (far right) the wire capper.

    The Angel’s Share bottles awaiting their wire capsCorked bottles awaiting their caps and wires. Is one of those bottles yours?

    Live blogging: At the Bardenay

    November 5th, 2007

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    Blogging from Table Rock

    November 5th, 2007

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    Business takes me to Boise Idaho today, but I’ve got a couple minutes so I’m at Table Rock Brewpub

    Angel’s Share bottling!

    November 3rd, 2007

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    Finally!

    Session 9: Beer and Music (Or “The story of my life according to Barley”)

    November 2nd, 2007

    This month’s Session is beer and music and comes to us courtesy of Lost Abbey brewer, blogger and good friend Tomme Arthur. Other Session 9 posts can be found here.

    It’s funny how beer and music come together to mark significant milestones in a life.

    There’s a picture of my brother and I that hangs in my parent’s living room. It’s a black and white photo taken when I was about five or six and my brother three or four. Our hair is immaculately combed and we’re wearing matching crew neck t-shirts that look a lot like the shirts Captain Kirk wore in the original Star Trek series. In it, my brother is staring intensely, maybe a little expectantly, at a can of classic Coors Banquet beer I have pinned against my body with my right hand as I attempt to wrestle the pop top off with my left.

    The year was 1969 and I remember when the photo was taken (a Sunday, right after church) because it was the first time my dad let me open one of his beers for him. I also remember that Johnny Cash’s Folsom Prison was playing on the scratchy Sears phonograph in our living room.

    Dad let me taste that beer once I’d wrestled off the pop top. It was sour and nasty. Something only adults would like. But the music, well, even a kid could love that. In fact, I still love that album to this very day.

    Flash forward a dozen years and I’m 17 — almost 18 — in college, and away from my parents for the first time. The first week of school there’s a party in my dorm and I wind up with a big, clear plastic cup of whatever beer they’re pulling out of the keg. I’m not a beer drinker and the stuff tastes sour and nasty, but it gets me introduced to the blonde girl who lives two floors up in the same dorm.

    We talked, laughed, we went to her room and she made a man out of me while Pink Floyd’s Dark Side of The Moon played in the background.
    It’s still one of my favorite albums. Never did find out what the beer was.

    Jump ahead to 1987 and I was out of school, in my mid twenties and back in Southern California. A couple of friends and I decided to head to Tijuana for a night of drinking and whatever. A cute blonde several years our junior tagged along.

    We went to clubs and ordered Coronas, Carta Blancas, Dos Equis, Tecates, and Pacificos with lots of tequila chasers. We drank it all to Duran Duran, The Cure, White Snake, New Order, Ratt, and more –all played at 110 decibals and above.

    We saw a cigarette show, a quarters show and a donkey show. Then we staggered back to America.

    We sped home at 70 miles an hour listening to Depeche Mode on the tape deck. Somewhere north of San Diego the cute blonde rolled down her window and barfed, etching my car’s paint permanently and creating a giant vomit fan for those who followed us on I 5.

    Two years later I married that cute blonde. You know her as Beer Molly. I still have the car and the Depeche Mode tape too. Sometimes as I’m driving I’ll listen to it and smile as I remember how I met my wife.

    » to be continued…

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