Showing posts with label beer dinners. Show all posts
Showing posts with label beer dinners. Show all posts
Saturday, May 21, 2016
1st notice: Fall City/Gospel Bird beer dinner will be on Tuesday, May 31.
There are no details yet, but we expect to hear more next week. It's happening, so put it on the calendar, and you'll know more when we do.
Falls City Beer: "In 1905 a group of bartenders and grocery store owners had had enough with being forced to buy, serve, and sell beer produced by a local beer monopoly. So they got together and created Falls City Beer. At that moment of rebellion and independence, Louisville’s first craft beer was born. Falls City Beer is once again, regionally, leading the way with a variety of well-balanced, highly-drinkable, and innovative craft beers that include traditional styles, bold new flavors and non-traditional ingredients."
Gospel Bird: "Gospel Bird is a full-service restaurant in southern Indiana focusing on the cuisine of the south and regional flavors." Read the Courier-Journal review:
"Gospel Bird’s chicken is a don’t-miss, can’t-go-wrong choice, but on our visit there were no wrong turn choices. Now and then, biting into the fried chicken will spurt juices that dribble down your chin. Dab with a napkin or forget your manners just long enough to relish the unfancy-schmancy, well-seasoned, crispy fried chicken. Pair it with a side of flavor-walloped chorizo baked beans."
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New Albany Craft Beer Week Calendar, 2016
Sunday, May 29
Boomtown Ball & Festival
New Albanian Brewing Company’s Houndmouth Ale will be available for purchase.
Tuesday, May 31
Beer dinner at Gospel Bird with Falls City Beer (details TBA)
Wednesday, June 1
Surf & Turf Tap Takeover (Sierra Nevada and The Exchange)
Thursday, June 2
Monty PINT-thon Night at Floyd County Brewing Company
Saturday, June 4
Keg Liquors Fest of Ale
100+ Breweries, 7 Craft Beer Distributors, 8 Fine Wine Distributors, over 250 craft and import beers, wine, food, charity raffle and more.
Saturday, June 4
The official Keg Liquors Fest of Ale after party will take place at The Exchange pub + kitchen.
__
Friday, April 18, 2014
Another enriching beer dinner, this time at MilkWood.
As usual, my sloppy iPhone photo doesn't do it justice. Pictured above is the main course (lamb shoulder) at the MilkWood/NABC beer dinner on Thursday, April 17. In honor of the occasion, I pulled a Dylan Thomas quote; the restaurant is named for his play, “Under Milk Wood.”
"I liked the taste of beer, its live white lather, its brass-bright depths, the sudden world through the wet brown walls of the glass, the tilted rush to the lips and the slow swallowing down to the lapping belly, the salt on the tongue, the foam at the corners."
I can't say enough about the eatery's staff, those who attended, and the meal itself. For those who have yet to check it out, MilkWood is downstairs at Actor's Theater on Main Street in Louisville. It accurately describes itself like this:
Chef Edward Lee's newest venture, MilkWood, is a restaurant celebrating how Southern cuisine and Asian ingredients can be friends.
Go there.
Tuesday, April 15, 2014
Halfway to LCBW, all the way with NABC to MilkWood this Thursday.
(Wednesday update: Here's the menu)
For those readers in or near Louisville, I'm told that a complete list of sponsors and events will be in a special section within tomorrow's LEO Weekly. It's also at LouisvilleBeer.com
I'm not sure whether NABC is listed anywhere, but if not, we will be doing a beer dinner at MilkWood on Thursday, April 17. The menu hasn't gotten to me yet, so what I know is this:
I'll be there with Blake, saying subversive things about beer and enjoying the meal at one of Louisville's finest restaurants.
For those readers in or near Louisville, I'm told that a complete list of sponsors and events will be in a special section within tomorrow's LEO Weekly. It's also at LouisvilleBeer.com
I'm not sure whether NABC is listed anywhere, but if not, we will be doing a beer dinner at MilkWood on Thursday, April 17. The menu hasn't gotten to me yet, so what I know is this:
MilkWood Welcomes the New Albanian
Thursday, April 17th, 6:30pm
Four courses paired with five beers, $55
Call 502.584.6455 for reservations
I'll be there with Blake, saying subversive things about beer and enjoying the meal at one of Louisville's finest restaurants.
Halfway to Louisville Craft Beer Week starts Wednesday, by Kevin Gibson (Insider Louisville)
Hard to believe we’re already halfway there. But hey, any excuse to drink a local craft beer is a good excuse. So let Halfway to Louisville Craft Beer Week commence.
Saturday, March 22, 2014
One fine beer dinner at 610 Magnolia.
On Thursday, I teamed up with Blake Montgomery for a beer dinner at 610 Magnolia in Old Louisville. To be specific, the dinner was held in The Wine Studio, a few yards across the street.
Welcome to The Wine Studio @ 610 Magnolia. As the name suggests, The Wine Studio is not a traditional restaurant but a venue for experimentation, specialty themed events and cooking classes. It is a modern and open, loft-like, 850 square-foot room that will be the home of various events revolving around a new approach to food and wine. It is a place for food and wine enthusiasts to share in the experience of gourmet arts in good company.
It may also be worth noting that 610 Magnolia's Owner/Chef Edward Lee is a local legend, and while Lee wasn't at the helm of The Wine Studio's kitchen on Thursday (he dropped by and checked in), it's safe to say that his vision was pervasive, and the professionalism of staff impeccable -- confident, relaxed and articulate.
Beers from NABC, Three Floyds and Against the Grain were featured, and I represented my brethren, speaking for each. Marquee positioning was afforded AtG, and AtG delivered: The Duck in Four Forms (pictured) with Fruitis the Farmer Beescake (a new Saison with melons, seeded judiciously with brettanomyces) and dessert pairing with Bo & Luke (with smoky notes peeking above the intensity) both were scrumptious treats. Portions and pours were moderate. I was filled, not full; watered and not wasted. The attendees were wonderful.
It was a memorable evening, not because of hype and high (read: forced) energy, but owing to their absence. It was quiet, not loud. Beer works with food in any setting, whether a boisterous Bavarian beer hall or a thoughtful Wine Studio. Very well done indeed.
Welcome to The Wine Studio @ 610 Magnolia. As the name suggests, The Wine Studio is not a traditional restaurant but a venue for experimentation, specialty themed events and cooking classes. It is a modern and open, loft-like, 850 square-foot room that will be the home of various events revolving around a new approach to food and wine. It is a place for food and wine enthusiasts to share in the experience of gourmet arts in good company.
It may also be worth noting that 610 Magnolia's Owner/Chef Edward Lee is a local legend, and while Lee wasn't at the helm of The Wine Studio's kitchen on Thursday (he dropped by and checked in), it's safe to say that his vision was pervasive, and the professionalism of staff impeccable -- confident, relaxed and articulate.
Beers from NABC, Three Floyds and Against the Grain were featured, and I represented my brethren, speaking for each. Marquee positioning was afforded AtG, and AtG delivered: The Duck in Four Forms (pictured) with Fruitis the Farmer Beescake (a new Saison with melons, seeded judiciously with brettanomyces) and dessert pairing with Bo & Luke (with smoky notes peeking above the intensity) both were scrumptious treats. Portions and pours were moderate. I was filled, not full; watered and not wasted. The attendees were wonderful.
It was a memorable evening, not because of hype and high (read: forced) energy, but owing to their absence. It was quiet, not loud. Beer works with food in any setting, whether a boisterous Bavarian beer hall or a thoughtful Wine Studio. Very well done indeed.
Local Beer Dinner
20 March 2014
Passed Canapés
New Albanian Brewing Company
Black & Blue Grass
Tafel
__________
Beef Cheek Pastrami, Pickled Vegetables, Rye Crostini Soil
Tomato-Extra Virgin Olive Oil Mayonnaise, Mache
New Albanian Brewing Company
Tunnel Vision
__________
Braised Elk Neck Stew, Farro, Bone Marrow and Parsley Toast
Herbed Crème Fraiche
3 Floyds
Robert the Bruce
__________
Duck in Four Forms:
Seared Breast, Smoked Duck Sausage, Confit of Leg, Foie Gras Bread Pudding
Braised Cabbage, Green Apple Fluid Gel and Poached Fuji Apples
Against the Grain
Fruitis the Farmer Beescake
__________
Bitter Chocolate Pot de Crème, Macerated Dried Cherries, Whipped Caramel
Pink Peppercorn Tuile Cookie
Against the Grain
Bo & Luke
Monday, July 29, 2013
Here's the menu for tomorrow's Indiana Craft Beer Dinner at MilkWood.
Here's the menu for tomorrow's Indiana Craft Beer Dinner at MilkWood. I'll be chatting a bit about the Indiana craft brewing scene between nibbles of what looks like a mouth-watering menu. So much for the diet I never got around to starting.
Indiana Craft Beer Dinner
Welcomes
Chef Pat Niebling from Three Floyds Brewpub
&
Roger Baylor From New Albanian Brewing Company
30 July 2013
house made charcuterie
Campari Dragonfly Spritzer
c
tuna tataki, pickled fresno, papaya, yuzu sorbet, shiso
New Albanian Brewing Company Naughty Girl 6% ABV
c
seared sea scallops, piquillo pepper coulis, bourbon soaked blueberries
XO sauce, cilantro
Three Floyds Brewing Co. Gumballhead 5.6% ABV
c
adobo rubbed antelope leg, sweet corn purée, smoked fingerling potato
lemongrass chimichurri, anchovy butter
New Albanian Brewing Company Hoptimus 10.7% ABV
c
pork sausage, puffed cheddar grits, banger sauce, giardiniera, scallions
Three Floyds Brewing Co. Robert the Bruce Scottish Ale 7% ABV
Thursday, April 11, 2013
About that Harvest pork and beer dinner with NABC ...
"A cat will look down to a man. A dog will look up to a man. But a pig will look you straight in the eye and see his equal."
-- Winston Churchill
Tuesday night, Harvest Restaurant hosted a 4-course NABC beer dinner, with the delectable theme being Chef Coby Ming's “snout-to-tail” pork dishes, sourced from Red Wattle hogs raised at Barr Farms.
See Colette Henderson's review at Louisville.com
I'll remember this farm-to-table-with-beer dinner because of its sheer excellence, both in concept and execution. There is something elemental about meat and beer, and in the current age, it is useful to recall the bulk of human history, wherein there was no squeamishness in the notion of eating the entirety of an animal and appreciating what it means to be carnivorous without the attendant hypocrisy.
Coby's beer pairings were spot on, too. When pork roast met Bonfire, palates in Munich undoubtedly started quivering.
Unfortunately for Harvest, there was an epidemic of last-minute cancelled reservations, the bane of restaurants on normal evenings and even worse when so much effort goes into a special event.
Ostensibly, these fair-weather cancellations arose from the imperative of viewing the U of L women play in the final game of the NCAA basketball tournament, although it is more likely the no-shows were suffering from the previous evening's celebrations after the men's team won its tournament, and probably didn't even know the women even had a team until it was mentioned on the men's telecast.
Either way, they missed it, didn't they? It's why we have words like "wanker."
They missed hog jowl scones, pretzel crostini, smoked rib jam, and an open-faced pastrami tongue & cheek Reuben as appetizers.
They missed posole, beer-brined head, trotters and hocks, hominy, toasted garlic-coriander broth, cabbage and grilled rapini, porchetta, baby salad greens, Blue Dog Bread crostini, pickled ramp relish and crispy ears.
They missed pork roast, boulangerie potato cake, crispy pork rillons, carbonnade jus, crispy sweet potatoes and a dessert of Old 15-B chocolate ganache truffle, torched malted marshmallow, sugar-spiced pork rinds and coffee gastrique.
The author shrugs. It only meant there was more for me. Harvest is a treasure, and you need to eat there.
Tuesday, April 02, 2013
Harvest hosting 4-course NABC beer dinner April 9.
Details here: Harvest hosting 4-course NABC beer dinner April 9
Harvest and the New Albanian Beer Co. will present a night of great food and local craft beer backed by The 23 String Band's all-original music. According to a news release, the menu will center on “snout-to-tail” pork offerings made from Red Wattle hogs raised at Barr Farms.
Harvest and the New Albanian Beer Co. will present a night of great food and local craft beer backed by The 23 String Band's all-original music. According to a news release, the menu will center on “snout-to-tail” pork offerings made from Red Wattle hogs raised at Barr Farms.
Wednesday, March 20, 2013
Exchange Pub + Kitchen Beer Dinner with Flat12 Bierwerks on Tuesday, April 2.
Hot off the internetz, here's the lowdown on Exchange Pub + Kitchen's beer dinner with Flat12 Bierwerks on April 2.
---
For Immediate Release
Contact: Ian Hall
Tel: 812.948.6501
Email: theneexchange@gmail.com
The Exchange Pub + Kitchen to host four course Beer Dinner with Flat 12 Bierwerks
New Albany, IN (March 20,2013) If you're a beer enthusiast at any level, you won't want to miss out on this special event at The Exchange Pub + Kitchen in New Albany on Tuesday, April 2nd at 6:30 p.m., when we host a four course beer dinner with our friends from Flat 12 Bierwerks.
Executive Chef Rick Adams will present four courses inspired and paired with beers from Flat 12 Bierwerks. Dinner begins at 6:30 p.m. and a limited number of tickets are available at $60 per guest (not including tax & gratuity). The dinner will be held in the Shrader & Son's room on the second floor of The Exchange pub + kitchen.
Tickets may be purchased at The Exchange Pub + Kitchen, while supplies last. Seating is limited so purchase yours today.
In conjunction with the beer dinner we will be offering features on Flat 12 beers through out the evening in our main dining room and bar.
FLAT 12 BIERWERKS BEER DINNER
First Course
Half Cycle Braised Pork Belly
smoked tomato and chili coulis, grateful greens sweet corn shoots
Paired with Half Cycle IPA
Second Course
Seared Halibut
meyer lemon beurre blanc, black currant caviar, chive couscous
Paired with Upside Down Blonde
Third Course
Seared 3D Valley Flat Iron Steak
24 hour amber marinade, kenny's white cheddar weisenberger grits, asparagus and mushroom ragout, amber compound butter
Paired with Hello My Name is Amber Ale
Fourth Course
van pogue tres leches, bourbon barrel vanilla creama anglaise, van pogue whipped cream
Paired with Van Pogue Porter
What: 4 Course Beer Dinner with Flat 12 Bierwerks $60 per guest(not including tax or gratuity)
When: Tuesday April 2, 2013. One seating @ 6:30PM
Where: Shrader and Sons Room @ The Exchange Pub + Kitchen. 118 W. Main St. New Albany, IN 47150.
For more info please call us at 812.948.6501
---
For Immediate Release
Contact: Ian Hall
Tel: 812.948.6501
Email: theneexchange@gmail.com
The Exchange Pub + Kitchen to host four course Beer Dinner with Flat 12 Bierwerks
New Albany, IN (March 20,2013) If you're a beer enthusiast at any level, you won't want to miss out on this special event at The Exchange Pub + Kitchen in New Albany on Tuesday, April 2nd at 6:30 p.m., when we host a four course beer dinner with our friends from Flat 12 Bierwerks.
Executive Chef Rick Adams will present four courses inspired and paired with beers from Flat 12 Bierwerks. Dinner begins at 6:30 p.m. and a limited number of tickets are available at $60 per guest (not including tax & gratuity). The dinner will be held in the Shrader & Son's room on the second floor of The Exchange pub + kitchen.
Tickets may be purchased at The Exchange Pub + Kitchen, while supplies last. Seating is limited so purchase yours today.
In conjunction with the beer dinner we will be offering features on Flat 12 beers through out the evening in our main dining room and bar.
FLAT 12 BIERWERKS BEER DINNER
First Course
Half Cycle Braised Pork Belly
smoked tomato and chili coulis, grateful greens sweet corn shoots
Paired with Half Cycle IPA
Second Course
Seared Halibut
meyer lemon beurre blanc, black currant caviar, chive couscous
Paired with Upside Down Blonde
Third Course
Seared 3D Valley Flat Iron Steak
24 hour amber marinade, kenny's white cheddar weisenberger grits, asparagus and mushroom ragout, amber compound butter
Paired with Hello My Name is Amber Ale
Fourth Course
van pogue tres leches, bourbon barrel vanilla creama anglaise, van pogue whipped cream
Paired with Van Pogue Porter
What: 4 Course Beer Dinner with Flat 12 Bierwerks $60 per guest(not including tax or gratuity)
When: Tuesday April 2, 2013. One seating @ 6:30PM
Where: Shrader and Sons Room @ The Exchange Pub + Kitchen. 118 W. Main St. New Albany, IN 47150.
For more info please call us at 812.948.6501
Wednesday, February 27, 2013
On Thurs., Feb. 28, Fireside Bar and Grill’s Flight Night, a beer and food pairing with NABC.
Fireside has been one of our longest and most loyal customers. It is located at 7611 Hwy. 311 in Sellersburg, IN. Where'd that ThunderFoot come from, anyway?
The Fireside Bar and Grill’s Flight Night ... A Craft Beer & Food Pairing, featuring NABC
Thursday, February 28th 5-10 p.m.
Order flights of 5 beers, or choose your favorite brew with suggested food pairing. Food & Beer flights available.
For More Information: 812-246-5456
www.facebook.com/dinnerbyfireside
The Brews
Hoosier Daddy
Black & Bluegrass
Tunnel Vision
Elector
ThunderFoot
Bonfire of the Valkyries
The Food
Appetizers
Blue Cheese Gougeres & Sausage Empanadas
(Recommended beer: Elector)
Salad
Fresh Arugula, Pan Seared Goat Cheese, Balsamic Beets tossed in lemon vinaigrette
(Recommended beer: Black & Bluegrass)
Entrees
Smoked Leg of Lamb (Recommended beer: Bonfire of the Valkyries)
Chili Rubbed Ribeye (Recommended beer: Hoosier Daddy)
Red Chili & Orange Broiled California White Bass
(Recommended beer: Black & Bluegrass)
Dessert
ThunderFoot Cherry Granita
(Recommended beer: ThunderFoot)
The Fireside Bar and Grill’s Flight Night ... A Craft Beer & Food Pairing, featuring NABC
Thursday, February 28th 5-10 p.m.
Order flights of 5 beers, or choose your favorite brew with suggested food pairing. Food & Beer flights available.
For More Information: 812-246-5456
www.facebook.com/dinnerbyfireside
The Brews
Hoosier Daddy
Black & Bluegrass
Tunnel Vision
Elector
ThunderFoot
Bonfire of the Valkyries
The Food
Appetizers
Blue Cheese Gougeres & Sausage Empanadas
(Recommended beer: Elector)
Salad
Fresh Arugula, Pan Seared Goat Cheese, Balsamic Beets tossed in lemon vinaigrette
(Recommended beer: Black & Bluegrass)
Entrees
Smoked Leg of Lamb (Recommended beer: Bonfire of the Valkyries)
Chili Rubbed Ribeye (Recommended beer: Hoosier Daddy)
Red Chili & Orange Broiled California White Bass
(Recommended beer: Black & Bluegrass)
Dessert
ThunderFoot Cherry Granita
(Recommended beer: ThunderFoot)
Sunday, February 17, 2013
NABC's beer dinner with Varanese, reviewed.
Colette Henderson reviews NABC's recent beer dinner(s) with Varanese.
Varanese First-Ever Beer Dinner Shouldn't Be the Last (Louisville.com)
This is why I enjoy participating in these kinds of dinners here in Louisville. While my body is privileged to gain sustenance from the feast in front of us, my soul benefits from breaking bread with new faces in my community. I count this as an important aspect of enjoying food. Even the most divine culinary projects experience a loss without the camaraderie of other eaters.
Saturday, February 09, 2013
A Courier-Journal preview of Thursday's cask ale pairing dinner with Garage Bar.
The Garage Bar's Megan Breier previews Thursday's NABC cask ale dinner in the Courier-Journal. I can't recall a time when we've taken two firkins to a local restaurant for a food and beer pairing, so here's to another "first." It also may be the only time you find ConeSmoker and Hoosier Daddy on the same beer menu, at least outside of our own two locations.
Here's the menu for the Garage Bar's Anti-Valentine's Day Cask Beer Dinner with NABC, on Thursday, February 14.
Here's the menu for the Garage Bar's Anti-Valentine's Day Cask Beer Dinner with NABC, on Thursday, February 14.
Louisville Restaurant News ... Garage Bar features beer pairings on Valentine's Day, by Dana McMahan (Courier-Journal)
Garage Bar, 700 E. Market St., is serving up two New Albanian Brewing Company Cask Beers paired with pizza and pork belly on Thursday. “Basically it is like an a la carte idea where guests can come in and enjoy the cask beer and have some specials specifically paired with the beers,” says manager Megan Breier.
Cone Smoker, a smoky American Pale Ale, is one of the beers. “We all sat around with the chef (Richard Sible, chef de cuisine) and had the beer and all just thought pork belly would be amazing with this beer,” says Breier. The staff suggests the pork belly special — with citrus sorghum jus and cannellini beans — to pair with the Cone Smoker.
Notes from a beer dinner at Varanese.
Knowing that night two of last week's NABC beer dinners at Varanese was going to be huge, and that with less time to speak, I'd have to say more in the space allotted, I packed a cheat sheet -- or as I call it, a set list. It also was an unprecedented opportunity to eat the same meal two nights in a row, meaning that on night number two, I could drop prescient pairing hints and summarize previous courses more succinctly. Here are the points we covered. It went well, indeed.
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February 7 Beer Dinner, NABC at Varanese
Props to Varanese, thanks to all
Opening quote:
“Art can never take the place of social action, but its task remains forever the same: to change consciousness.”
-- Amos Vogel, in “Film as a Subversive Art”
The craft beer mandate definitely is local: Economic localism; community building and placemaking; sheer creativity up from the grassroots, not from big corporations down
It’s important to keep craft as craft, something genuine. Craft beer is a rebellion against brewing multinationals. It doesn’t belong to them. It belongs to us.
Hoosier Daddy
NABC history
Black & Blue Grass
Brewing process, ale as opposed to lager
Good spicy counterpoint to the quail and onion ring batter
Elector
The 2002 election
Salty bacon pairs with malt, lemon vinegarette and bitter greens modify hops
Hoptimus
Imperials always are bigger
Big beer for cutting through the big meat flavors, toasted barley a rare, nice touch
Solidarity
Baltic Porter, English idea. German brewing technique = different style
Look for the way the mandarin orange goes with Solidarity
Tunnel Vision
Royal Wallonian back story
Quote to close
"The Parting Glass" … Irish/Scottish/Newfoundland song, predates "Auld Lang Syne"; great version by Luke Kelly and/or Dubliners
Of all the money that e'er I spent
I've spent it in good company
And all the harm that ever I did
Alas it was to none but me
And all I've done for want of wit
To memory now I can't recall
So fill to me the parting glass
Good night and joy be with you all
---
February 7 Beer Dinner, NABC at Varanese
Props to Varanese, thanks to all
Opening quote:
“Art can never take the place of social action, but its task remains forever the same: to change consciousness.”
-- Amos Vogel, in “Film as a Subversive Art”
The craft beer mandate definitely is local: Economic localism; community building and placemaking; sheer creativity up from the grassroots, not from big corporations down
It’s important to keep craft as craft, something genuine. Craft beer is a rebellion against brewing multinationals. It doesn’t belong to them. It belongs to us.
Hoosier Daddy
NABC history
Black & Blue Grass
Brewing process, ale as opposed to lager
Good spicy counterpoint to the quail and onion ring batter
Elector
The 2002 election
Salty bacon pairs with malt, lemon vinegarette and bitter greens modify hops
Hoptimus
Imperials always are bigger
Big beer for cutting through the big meat flavors, toasted barley a rare, nice touch
Solidarity
Baltic Porter, English idea. German brewing technique = different style
Look for the way the mandarin orange goes with Solidarity
Tunnel Vision
Royal Wallonian back story
Quote to close
"The Parting Glass" … Irish/Scottish/Newfoundland song, predates "Auld Lang Syne"; great version by Luke Kelly and/or Dubliners
Of all the money that e'er I spent
I've spent it in good company
And all the harm that ever I did
Alas it was to none but me
And all I've done for want of wit
To memory now I can't recall
So fill to me the parting glass
Good night and joy be with you all
Tuesday, February 05, 2013
St. Valentine's Day At Bank Street Brewhouse: Food and wine and beer.
Chef Matt Weirich and the crew have created a Valentine's Day menu at Bank Street Brewhouse with plenty of options. You can build a three- or four-course menu; pair with Oliver wines or NABC beers; or pluck your own choices a la carte. Call 812-725-9585 for information, details and reservations.
For those manning the social calendars: Mr. and Mrs. Curmudgeon will begin the evening at the Garage Bar for our brewery gig there, and then stop by Bank Street Brewhouse for a nightcap and dessert.
For those manning the social calendars: Mr. and Mrs. Curmudgeon will begin the evening at the Garage Bar for our brewery gig there, and then stop by Bank Street Brewhouse for a nightcap and dessert.
St. Valentine's Day At Bank Street
February 14, 2013
February 14, 2013
Starters
Lobster Bisque 8
Crab Cakes, served with Rouille and Remoulade 9
Grateful Greens Romaine, Garlic Croutons, Anchovies, Parmesan
Reggiano 8
Brie en Croute – Brie wrapped in pastry with roasted apples and
baked,
Served with Apple, Honey and Crostini 9
Served with Apple, Honey and Crostini 9
Suggested
Pairing: Oliver Sauvignon Blanc or NABC Gold Blonde Ale
Entrees
Brown Butter Gnocchi with Roasted Vegetables and Parmesan
Reggiano 14
Cocoa Rubbed Diver Scallops, Fingerling Potatoes, Haricot Vert,
Oyster Mushrooms, Vanilla Beurre Blanc 28
Oyster Mushrooms, Vanilla Beurre Blanc 28
Suggested Pairing: Oliver Pinot Grigio or NABC
Tunnel Vision Wallonian Ale
Wagyu Tri-Tip with Pommes Pavè, Roasted Asparagus,
Domestic Mushrooms with a Bourbon Au Poivre 24
Domestic Mushrooms with a Bourbon Au Poivre 24
Feilder Farms Pork Tenderloin with Potato Puree, Fig Chutney,
Asparagus, Fig Gastrique 22
Asparagus, Fig Gastrique 22
Suggested Pairing: Oliver Cabernet Sauvignon or NABC
Elector Imperial Red Ale
Cheese
Capriole Farms Tomme, Mont St. Francis and O’Banon 9
Suggested Pairing: Oliver Shiraz or NABC Black &
Bluegrass Spiced Belgian Ale
Dessert
Beignet
Maple Crème Brulée
Bonfire of the Valkyries Chocolate Mousse
Chocolate Truffles and Macaroons
6
Maple Crème Brulée
Bonfire of the Valkyries Chocolate Mousse
Chocolate Truffles and Macaroons
6
Suggested Pairing: Oliver Vidal Blanc Sparkling or
NABC Solidarity Baltic Porter
Three Course Tasting paired with wine or Beer $38 Four Course 45$
Monday, February 04, 2013
The beer dinner with Varanese and NABC is so popular that a second night has been added.
My diet's gone straight to hell because NABC's beer dinner with Varanese is off the charts. Thursday (7th) is sold out, and with the waiting list stretching around the corner, a second night has been added: Wednesday, February 6 -- same time, place, menu, beer and price ($49 + tax and gratuity).
Call Varanese at 899-9904 to reserve.
Friday, January 18, 2013
Calendar check (updated): The Varanese/NABC beer dinner is Thursday, February 7.
01/22 update, now with the complete menu
01/23 update, added Tony Beard's poster
John Varanese, chef and owner of the Frankfort Avenue eatery that bears his name, is devising a four-course menu to accompany the six NABC beers pictured: Hoosier Daddy, Elector, Black & Blue Grass, Solidarity, Hoptimus and Tunnel Vision (in the growler).
It is Varanese's first-ever beer dinner, and it takes place on Thursday, February 7, with greetings and drinks at 6:30 p.m., and the courses unfolding beginning at 7:00 p.m.
Varanese web site
Varanese at Facebook
I'll be there to describe NABC's beers, and we're looking forward to a memorable evening. Here are the menu and pairings, and remember, this is only $49 per person, plus tax and gratuity.
NABC Beer Dinner
Varanese/The New Albanian Brewing Company
Reception
Hoosier Daddy – Imperial Red Ale
First Course
Black & Blue Grass – Spiced Belgian Ale
Crispy Fried Chipotle BBQ Quail Legs
Served with Beer Battered Onion Rings
With a Horseradish Cream Sauce
Second Course
Elector – American Strong Ale
Arugula and Frisee Salad topped with Bacon Lardons, Toasted Sunflower Seeds and Croutons with a Lemon-Cracked Pepper Vinaigrette Topped with Poached Egg
Third Course
Hoptimus – Imperial India Pale Ale
Beer Braised Short Ribs and House-Made Sausage
Served with Toasted Barley and Carrot Risotto, Buttered Cabbage and Caraway
Finished with a Porter Beer Sauce
Fourth Course
Solidarity – Baltic Porter
Chocolate-Orange Cheese Cake with Pretzel Crust
Topped with Caramel and Marshmallow Sauce
Closing
Tunnel Vision – Royal Wallonian Ale
01/23 update, added Tony Beard's poster
John Varanese, chef and owner of the Frankfort Avenue eatery that bears his name, is devising a four-course menu to accompany the six NABC beers pictured: Hoosier Daddy, Elector, Black & Blue Grass, Solidarity, Hoptimus and Tunnel Vision (in the growler).
It is Varanese's first-ever beer dinner, and it takes place on Thursday, February 7, with greetings and drinks at 6:30 p.m., and the courses unfolding beginning at 7:00 p.m.
Varanese web site
Varanese at Facebook
I'll be there to describe NABC's beers, and we're looking forward to a memorable evening. Here are the menu and pairings, and remember, this is only $49 per person, plus tax and gratuity.
NABC Beer Dinner
Varanese/The New Albanian Brewing Company
Reception
Hoosier Daddy – Imperial Red Ale
First Course
Black & Blue Grass – Spiced Belgian Ale
Crispy Fried Chipotle BBQ Quail Legs
Served with Beer Battered Onion Rings
With a Horseradish Cream Sauce
Second Course
Elector – American Strong Ale
Arugula and Frisee Salad topped with Bacon Lardons, Toasted Sunflower Seeds and Croutons with a Lemon-Cracked Pepper Vinaigrette Topped with Poached Egg
Third Course
Hoptimus – Imperial India Pale Ale
Beer Braised Short Ribs and House-Made Sausage
Served with Toasted Barley and Carrot Risotto, Buttered Cabbage and Caraway
Finished with a Porter Beer Sauce
Fourth Course
Solidarity – Baltic Porter
Chocolate-Orange Cheese Cake with Pretzel Crust
Topped with Caramel and Marshmallow Sauce
Closing
Tunnel Vision – Royal Wallonian Ale
Saturday, January 05, 2013
Against The Grain Brewery & To ØL Brewers present a Swanky Prix Fixe on January 29, 2013.
With customary and insouciant irreverence, Against the Grain provides information on a swankily collaborative beer dinner this month.
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A Swanky 5 course Prix Fixe dinner!
AtG's Brewmaster Jerry Gnagy and To ØL Brewmasters (Tobias and Tore) will pair beers, with commentary from the brewmasters, for each course.
Guests will be seated for dinner on January 29th at 6:45 pm sharp. The dinner will include, an aperitif cocktail (to be served casually from 6 pm to 6:30 pm), 5 courses with 5 beer pairings from both AtG and To ØL brewmasters, as well as commentary from each brewmaster regarding the paired choice. The menu is as follows, with no substitutions or compromise.
*Prix Fixe inspired by Chef Reed Johnson
Guests are encouraged to come casually dressed and prepared to have an evening of amazing beer, food, fun, and company from the makers. Seats are limited to 24 guests. Cost is $75 per guest and reservations must be paid in advance, as there are limited seats available. To book your reservation or for more information, contact Sam Cruz ... sam@atgbrewery.com, or purchase tickets at Against The Grain Brewery.
Against The Grain Brewery & Smokehouse
401 East Main St. @Slugger Field
Louisville, KY 40202
(502) 515-0174
---
A Swanky 5 course Prix Fixe dinner!
AtG's Brewmaster Jerry Gnagy and To ØL Brewmasters (Tobias and Tore) will pair beers, with commentary from the brewmasters, for each course.
Guests will be seated for dinner on January 29th at 6:45 pm sharp. The dinner will include, an aperitif cocktail (to be served casually from 6 pm to 6:30 pm), 5 courses with 5 beer pairings from both AtG and To ØL brewmasters, as well as commentary from each brewmaster regarding the paired choice. The menu is as follows, with no substitutions or compromise.
- Basil corn chowder with house cured bacon, chili oil, and pork cracklin’ crumble
- Beer poached duck sausage with roasted beets, farro, goat cheese and toasted pecan
- Steak tartare with quail egg, sprouts, fried caper, and pecorino romano
- Cherry smoked rack of lamb with parsnip purée, pickled garlic, and fried leek
- Chipotle pot de crème with bourbon cream and smoked cherries
*Prix Fixe inspired by Chef Reed Johnson
Guests are encouraged to come casually dressed and prepared to have an evening of amazing beer, food, fun, and company from the makers. Seats are limited to 24 guests. Cost is $75 per guest and reservations must be paid in advance, as there are limited seats available. To book your reservation or for more information, contact Sam Cruz ... sam@atgbrewery.com, or purchase tickets at Against The Grain Brewery.
Against The Grain Brewery & Smokehouse
401 East Main St. @Slugger Field
Louisville, KY 40202
(502) 515-0174
Tuesday, September 25, 2012
NABC Beer Dinner at The Garage Bar on Wednesday night, September 26.
To help celebrate Louisville Craft Beer Week, the Garage Bar (700 E. Market Street in Louisville) is hosting a New Albanian Brewing Company Beer Dinner on Wednesday night, September 26, beginning at 6:00 p.m. I recommend calling them for further information. Richard Atnip and I will be in attendance. I can always tell when I'm needed to guide the discussion by the desperate tone of Richard's voice.
Enjoy a selection of New Albanian Brewing Company beers alongside your Garage Bar favorites. Pairing suggestions for every course will guide your taste buds through a fun filled beer inspired dinner.
For those wanting the full experience, a three course prix-fixe menu will be available:
Local mixed green lettuces with black walnuts, blue cheese and Granny Smith apples
served with NABC Black & Bluegrass Saison
~
Sausage Pie with milled tomato, calbrian chiles, rapini and fior di latte
served with NABC Willett Rye Barrel-Aged Yakima
~
Beer Float with NABC Bourbon Daddy and chocolate malted house custard created using Bourbon Daddy malts
Wednesday, September 19, 2012
A busy fest day in downtown New Albany on Saturday, September 22. Here's the overview with links.
On Saturday, September 22, there will be quite a lot happening on, or near, the 400 block of Bank Street in downtown New Albany. It's part Louisville Craft Beer Week event, and part civic. With bourbon, too.
Let's tackle these events in approximate chronological order.
Indie craft consciousness in downtown New Albany on Saturday, September 22.
Let's tackle these events in approximate chronological order.
Updated plan for the Southern Indiana Craft Beer Showcase on Saturday, September 22.
New Albany First's 1st Annual Indie Fest is Saturday, September 22.
Menu and details for the Willett Bourbon Dinner at Bank Street Brewhouse on Saturday, September 22.
Indie craft consciousness in downtown New Albany on Saturday, September 22.
(Previously published at NA Confidential)
NABC’s contribution to the festivities of Louisville Craft Beer Week surely will strike some observers as atypical.
That’s because “typical” in craft beer is in desperate need of redefinition, and tilting at windmills like these is what gets me out of bed in the morning.
On Saturday, September 22, we’ll be breaking in Bank Street Brewhouse’s recently approved, (yet far from completed) former patio, called the WCTU Reading Room, and our new “biergarten,” known as Lloyd’s Landing. We’ll be pouring local and regional beers, ciders, meads and even some wines. We’ll be acting as the de facto adult beverage annex to the first-ever New Albany Indie Fest, and just for the fun of it, hosting a Kentucky bourbon tasting and dinner.
I’m calling it the Southern Indiana Craft Beer Showcase, but I might have simplified matters by omitting the word “beer.” It’s the main component, but not the only one. My ideological motivation is two-fold.
To make a point about what I view as overlapping circles of interest, from local to metro, from regional to national, and all the way to international.
To allow the people closest to me to experience tastes of what can be done by local producers and purveyors, not just of beer, but also of other libations that fuel my personal world.
I’ve always counseled event organizers to begin by tailoring their planned gatherings to those potential attendees closest in proximity, and only then widening the scope to entice those from a distance.
A good example is the renowned institution of the Beer Dinner. It has been my experience that the marvels of the “visiting” beer team alone generally will not sell the required number of seats. Rather, the regulars who already enjoy a chef’s menu and regimen invariably compose the biggest bloc of diners, and if they have a particular interest in the brewery or beers being paired, it serves to enhance a spark previously lit.
In like fashion, I want our Showcase event to be about this extended community, and to help explain the aspects of “buying local” that I personally believe are the most important: Shifting one’s personal discretionary spending from multinational to local, and while doing so, visualizing the way these circles touch.
Aeppeltroew ciders are made in Wisconsin, not Indiana. However, Starlight Distributors (owned by old friends) is located just up the Knobs from here. Indiana cideries and meaderies, like New Day, use local apples and honey whenever practicable. Regional winemakers buy grapes and juice from other places, but increasingly source their grapes from local and regional vineyards. Admittedly, barley isn’t grown hereabouts, although it could be. Someday, it might, especially after we conquer the next five percent.
And I want you to know that when you’re in Aurora, Bedford, Bloomington, Columbus or Nashville, there are breweries waiting to serve you (if you’re 21, of course) … that cider can be dry, and craft meads can be as variously costumed as craft beers … and that today’s Indiana wineries don’t restrict themselves to the sadly apocryphal sweet Manischewitz clones.
On Saturday, in addition to what I’m describing here, there’ll be booths, food, children’s activities and music out on Bank Street, courtesy of New Albany First and its Indie Fest.
There’ll also be all of downtown New Albany for roaming, and I wish you would roam it, because even though downtown always will be a work on progress and much remains to be done, more work’s already been done during the past five years than the quarter-century before – and this work has been undertaken almost exclusively by independent, small, local businesses.
These businesses are the real showcase on September 22. I’m choosing beer, cider, mead and wine to make my point about me, my business, and all the other indies. You can choose another platform, but the most important thing is the simplest: Make a choice.
---
Now, back to Louisville Craft Beer Week. The third edition begins this Friday, September 21, and runs through the 29th. At last count, more than 61 events had been registered, and there’ll be a special pull-out section detailing them to be found in Wednesday’s edition of LEO Weekly.
Online, my friends at LouisvilleBeer.com is your conduit for LCBW events. Here’s the description of LCBW, 2012.
NABC’s contribution to the festivities of Louisville Craft Beer Week surely will strike some observers as atypical.
That’s because “typical” in craft beer is in desperate need of redefinition, and tilting at windmills like these is what gets me out of bed in the morning.
On Saturday, September 22, we’ll be breaking in Bank Street Brewhouse’s recently approved, (yet far from completed) former patio, called the WCTU Reading Room, and our new “biergarten,” known as Lloyd’s Landing. We’ll be pouring local and regional beers, ciders, meads and even some wines. We’ll be acting as the de facto adult beverage annex to the first-ever New Albany Indie Fest, and just for the fun of it, hosting a Kentucky bourbon tasting and dinner.
I’m calling it the Southern Indiana Craft Beer Showcase, but I might have simplified matters by omitting the word “beer.” It’s the main component, but not the only one. My ideological motivation is two-fold.
To make a point about what I view as overlapping circles of interest, from local to metro, from regional to national, and all the way to international.
To allow the people closest to me to experience tastes of what can be done by local producers and purveyors, not just of beer, but also of other libations that fuel my personal world.
I’ve always counseled event organizers to begin by tailoring their planned gatherings to those potential attendees closest in proximity, and only then widening the scope to entice those from a distance.
A good example is the renowned institution of the Beer Dinner. It has been my experience that the marvels of the “visiting” beer team alone generally will not sell the required number of seats. Rather, the regulars who already enjoy a chef’s menu and regimen invariably compose the biggest bloc of diners, and if they have a particular interest in the brewery or beers being paired, it serves to enhance a spark previously lit.
In like fashion, I want our Showcase event to be about this extended community, and to help explain the aspects of “buying local” that I personally believe are the most important: Shifting one’s personal discretionary spending from multinational to local, and while doing so, visualizing the way these circles touch.
Aeppeltroew ciders are made in Wisconsin, not Indiana. However, Starlight Distributors (owned by old friends) is located just up the Knobs from here. Indiana cideries and meaderies, like New Day, use local apples and honey whenever practicable. Regional winemakers buy grapes and juice from other places, but increasingly source their grapes from local and regional vineyards. Admittedly, barley isn’t grown hereabouts, although it could be. Someday, it might, especially after we conquer the next five percent.
And I want you to know that when you’re in Aurora, Bedford, Bloomington, Columbus or Nashville, there are breweries waiting to serve you (if you’re 21, of course) … that cider can be dry, and craft meads can be as variously costumed as craft beers … and that today’s Indiana wineries don’t restrict themselves to the sadly apocryphal sweet Manischewitz clones.
On Saturday, in addition to what I’m describing here, there’ll be booths, food, children’s activities and music out on Bank Street, courtesy of New Albany First and its Indie Fest.
There’ll also be all of downtown New Albany for roaming, and I wish you would roam it, because even though downtown always will be a work on progress and much remains to be done, more work’s already been done during the past five years than the quarter-century before – and this work has been undertaken almost exclusively by independent, small, local businesses.
These businesses are the real showcase on September 22. I’m choosing beer, cider, mead and wine to make my point about me, my business, and all the other indies. You can choose another platform, but the most important thing is the simplest: Make a choice.
---
Now, back to Louisville Craft Beer Week. The third edition begins this Friday, September 21, and runs through the 29th. At last count, more than 61 events had been registered, and there’ll be a special pull-out section detailing them to be found in Wednesday’s edition of LEO Weekly.
Online, my friends at LouisvilleBeer.com is your conduit for LCBW events. Here’s the description of LCBW, 2012.
Louisville Craft Beer Week is a distinctively local celebration that seeks to educate and to raise awareness of the American Craft Beer Revolution at the local level, to showcase the incredible variety, dynamism, and expanding market presence of Craft Beer in Louisville, and to promote independent local establishments.
Louisville Craft Beer Week is a collaborative local mission. American Craft Brewing has re-established old traditions and created entirely new ones, and is closely tied to emerging ‘buy local’ principles. Local Craft Brewers are partners in the economic sense, perpetuating success by making the pie larger, and keeping money in our community.
Louisville Craft Beer Week is economic development. Craft Beer’s demographic is increasingly dynamic, but traditional patterns remain unchanged: youthful, college educated, well-traveled and affluent. The Internet is filled with urban revitalization success stories with a brewery as part of the scene, beginning with Governor John Hickenlooper’s Wynkoop Brewery in Lo-Do (Denver) in the 1980’s.
Louisville Craft Beer Week is all of us – brewers, wholesalers, package retailers, pubs, bars, and restaurants – but most importantly, Louisville Craft Beer Week is you – craft beer lovers living, working and playing right here in our city. Your patronage and enthusiasm makes it happen for all of us, and we thank you.
When you’re out and about during Louisville Craft Beer Week, always drink responsibly and whatever you do, don’t drive drunk.
Wednesday, April 18, 2012
Last evening's Harvest/NABC beer dinner was a pure treat.
Harvest Restaurant and NABC: A collaborative beer dinner on Tuesday, April 17.
Last evening's beer dinner was very, very good. I'm not just saying this because it was NABC. We got the beer pairings right, the food was magnificent, there were 40+ in attendance, and the kitchen and serving staffs rocked the house. It truly is wonderful when a plan comes together. Thanks again to everyone at Harvest for a transcendent evening.
Also, note this: Owing to the beer dinner's circumstance, Harvest is presently the only place in the world (including our own two establishments) to have NABC Black & Blue Grass on tap. Bottles and draft will be out soon, elsewhere, but for now, only Harvest has it. Black & Blue Grass is a food-friendly Saison with black pepper and lemongrass spicing, and blue agave sugar. For a preview, head over to Harvest.
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