Famous Dave’s Wild Hog House Brew, Pyramid Breweries

wild hog

House brews are an interesting creature: sometimes a major brew with a different name on it, or something a little craftier but similarly rebranded, or something brewed just for the establishment. Half the fun is trying to figure out what the beer is. Then when you ask, sometimes they’ll tell you, sometimes they won’t.

While visiting my brother down in Phoenix, we swung into Famous Dave’s for some brew and ‘cue. I’d had all the other beers on the menu, and when I asked about the Wild Hog, the server just said, “It’s kind of dark.”

(Info about this beer is pretty elusive on the interwebs. I found one site that called it “Hog Wild,” but I had checked the word order three times on our menu.)

The beer arrived a dark reddish brown, and seemed like it would be a good accompaniment to my Texas Manhandler, a sandwich chock full of brisket, smoked sausage, and pickles.

Wild Hog is fairly malty, but without any of the bitterness that comes with some types of malt. There wasn’t much, if any, hops flavor, or really any bitterness at all. It’s only lightly carbonated and smooth, and is fairly light in body for a beer that dark.

Then the guessing began. I surmised that it might be a slightly lighter version of Redhook’s ESB. My friend guessed maybe Moose Drool or Dundee Amber (which would have been a decent guess if they actually made one, but they do have a couple that are roughly similar.) My brother took the lowest-brow guess with Amber Bock. (A couple days later at the Fox and Hound, the house brew was Budweiser American Ale, an affordable and very underrated brew that isn’t as widely available as I would wish. So some places do rebrand some pretty mainstream stuff for the house.)

We asked the server if she knew what it actually was, and she went to check, and came back with an answer of Pyramid Amber. “Ah,” we said. But later I recalled that Pyramid doesn’t distribute an amber. So I’m assuming they brew this stuff just for Famous Dave’s; the chain is big enough for such a contract. In general I like Pyramid, and I like the Wild Hog. It’s a pretty good compliment to the range of barbecue sauces at the restaurant, and pairs well with red meat.

So next time you’re craving some Famous Dave’s barbecue, grab a Famous Dave’s brew, too.

The Basics:

  • Pyramid Breweries
  • Seattle, WA; Berkeley, CA; and Portland, OR
  • Style: Amber ale
  • ABV: ?
  • IBUs: ?

Turbodog, Abita Brewing Company

turbodog

Turbodog is one of those beers I’ve been aware of for ages, but have never tried. The one trip I’ve made to New Orleans was during one of the soberer stages of my life, and the few drinks I did have were of a more weather-themed variety (i.e. Hurricanes). The only Abita brew I’ve tried is Purple Haze, which is a fine brew, if you’re in favor of fruit in your beer and Hendrix references.

Abita brews in Abita Springs, about thirty miles north of N’Awlins, and runs a pretty respectable operation. Beers such as SOS (Save Our Shores) and Restoration Ale give money directly to some good causes: 75 cents of every bottle of SOS to an environmental restoration fund and $1 from every six-pack of Restoration Ale to the Louisiana Disaster Recovery Foundation.

Turbodog is pretty dark for a brown ale, and tastes the same. If someone had given me this as a blind sample, I probably would have guessed it was a porter.

The beer hits the tongue with an almost burnt cocoa flavor, but it isn’t harsh or astringent (we’re not in Starbucks coffee territory here). Adding to the bitter flavor is a very distinct hop flavor; they’re using Willamette hops here, and the brew tastes hoppier than the 28 IBUs would indicate.

The bitter elements are balanced out by a fairly light caramel flavor. The beer has a pretty thin body, and goes down very smoothly. Turbodog reminded me quite a bit of Firestone Walker’s Reserve Porter, which I reviewed two months ago, and also liked quite a bit.

If I have one big complaint against the beer, it’s that the label is pretty boring for something named Turbodog. I was envisioning something a little more like this:

C’mon, Abita, I love ya, but feel free to get wacky sometimes.

The Basics:

  • Abita Brewing Company
  • Abita Springs, LA
  • Style: Brown ale
  • ABV: 5.6%
  • IBUs: 28

Chelada, Anheuser-Busch, Inc.

SONY DSC

Prior to camping this past weekend, I decided I would need a breakfast beer. I didn’t feel like going the coffee porter or stout route, and opted instead for a Chelada.

Chelada comes in both Bud Light and heavy versions, and is spiked with Clamato (clam-fortified tomato juice), salt, and lime. Bud Light is the best-selling beer in the world, but I do not like it. It leaves a horrid aftertaste in my mouth. I’ve tried the Bud Light Chelada before, and was very unimpressed. This time, I reached for the more caloric can.

I drank one can while setting up a tent following a four-hour drive, and another the next morning for breakfast. I quite liked the stuff. It was refreshingly fizzy, with a solid kick of tomato and a detectable lime bite, and perhaps a little too salty. To my tongue, it tasted exactly like the sum of its parts. Personally, I would add a splash of Tabasco.

Before even attempting this beer, you need to ask yourself the following: Do you like tomato juice? Do you have an aversion to shellfish? Do these things sound appealing mixed with beer? Do you ever put lime in your beer? Does salty beer sound in any way appetizing?

A month or so ago, I was mixing these myself from scratch. Beer with V-8, Tabasco, black pepper, and lime. I was at a friend’s place and using his beer. The Budweiser version was perhaps on par with my self-mixed Rolling Rock version, a little worse than my Corona version.

The beer snobs on the internet have much hate for this stuff (a 52 at BeerAdvocate and a stunning zero at RateBeer). Obviously, if you hate Budweiser, you won’t like this stuff. If you hate tomato juice, clams, etc. you won’t like this stuff. Even if you love the Bud and all the ingredients separately, you might find this stuff strange. But sometimes, and for some people, it can be just right.

The Basics:

  • Anheuser-Busch, Inc.
  • St. Louis, MO
  • Style: Lager with Clamato
  • ABV: 5.0%
  • IBUs: ?

Witbier, Brouwerij Hoegaarden

hoegaarden

Beer has been brewed in the small town of Hoegaarden, Belgium, since about 1445. Originally the work of monks, the brewing of wheat beer eventually took off in the village, and by the end of the 19th century, Hoegaarden had 36 breweries. And only 2,000 villagers. But this little plot of Beervana wouldn’t last. Due to the post-World War II economy and the rise of competitors brewing clear lagers with industrial methods and new refrigeration techniques, the small wheat breweries fell one by one. In 1957, Tomsin, the last wheat beer brewery in Hoegaarden, closed its doors.

In 1965, a group of Hoegaarden villagers, led by the village milkman, Pierre Celis (who had worked at the Tomsin brewery before it closed), decided to revive the beer.

Celis was successful, and today Hoegaarden is enjoyed in numerous countries around the world.

The beer is a traditional Belgian white, brewed with the classic coriander and orange peel. It is pale yellow in color and hazy, due to being unfiltered. Hoegaarden says that the beer is best served in its traditional hexagonal glass, but I chose to drink it straight from the 11.2 ounce bottle. (I just can’t help but feel a little cheated by those missing 0.8 ounces, but then again, I’m an American, with my sense of entitlement and need for overconsumption.)

The beer was well carbonated upon opening the bottle, but went flat quickly. The beer starts off with a nice hit of citrus that gives way to an oatmeal-like flavor. It’s about medium on the sweetness scale, and tasted slightly watery. The brew had a funky wheat aftertaste; not really skunky, but sort of like bran flakes that have sat on the counter for a day or two.

Hoegaarden is a decent beer, and fairly refreshing, but personally, I think there are a couple other imports that do the style a little better.

But those other beers might not have such a good story. The milkman who saved a town’s beer: I’ll drink to that.

The Basics:

  • Hoegaarden Brewery
  • Hoegaarden, Belgium
  • Style: Belgian white
  • ABV: 4.9%
  • IBUs: 13

Boatswain HLV, Rhinelander Brewing Company (for Trader Joe’s)

Boatswain HLV

As I prepared to watch the Season 2 finale of Breaking Bad on Netflix, I decided such an occasion required a badass beer. I had an array of badass-sounding brews in the fridge, things with names like Terminal Gravity, Titan, and Turbodog. I passed over these and reached for the Heavy Lift Vessel.

I grabbed the bottle of Boatswain HLV because, though it might lack some alt-coolness in its name, it was the only beer I had in a big-ass bottle, and it was the strongest by alcohol. It was in the fridge because I had some prior luck with the brewery’s stout.

The internet tells me the beer is the same as the Minhas Mystical Jack Traditional Ale. At first, it comes across with the flavor of a pale ale, but it also tastes roasty, with hints of cocoa, almost like a porter. The beer also had a noticeable alcohol bite. Despite seeming fairly heavy, the brew had a weirdly thin body.

While I liked some aspects of the beer, it was marred by a weird grapefruit flavor. The previous weekend, I had a Widmer IPA that was actually brewed with grapefruit peels, and the HLV tasted disturbingly similar. So the beer manages to taste like both cocoa and grapefruit; does that sound like a winning combination to you?

At only $1.99 for a big bottle with 7% alcohol, it is a good drunk value. But it isn’t a good beer.

I’ll be avoiding this stuff like Walter and Jesse avoid the DEA.

The Basics:

  • Rhinelander Brewing Company
  • Monroe, WI
  • Style: Ale
  • ABV: 7.0%
  • IBUs: 80

Inkblot Porter, MacTarnahan’s Brewing Company

inkblot

MacTarnahan’s. I remember buying mixed cases of this stuff from Sam’s Club when I was in college. I kind of thought of it as something maybe a step up from High Life, but still something to be purchased in mass quantities at a warehouse store. Even the name seemed a little contrived, like it was trying a little too hard to sound Irish or Scottish or something. I never really took the brewery seriously.

And then I moved to Oregon. MacTarnahan’s is based out of Portland, and used to be the Portland Brewing Company. And the name isn’t some corporate creation, but the name of one of the brewery’s original investors.

And while it’s not even close to one of my favorite breweries, they do put out some pretty decent beer.

MacTarnahan’s Inkblot is Baltic porter. The style is more robust than a standard porter, and got its name because it was a popular style to ship across the North Sea. Inkblot is fairly strong, at 7.5% ABV, but doesn’t taste overly boozy.

The beer is thick and a little syrupy, and weighed a little heavy in my stomach. As a decent porter should, this one was roasty, with fairly restrained flavors of coffee and chocolate. The beer is sweet, but didn’t seem excessive for something so strong.

Really, the thing this beer made me think of is Cocoa Puffs. Particularly, if you had laid out some Cocoa Puffs on a baking sheet and toasted them under the broiler, so they were not quite burnt. If that sounds delicious to you, you will like this beer. If not, it’s still probably worth a try.

The label tries to mimic the beer’s name, and looks like crappy graffiti, which doesn’t really make much sense; I don’t think folks in the hood are sipping this stuff. Still, I like to think that maybe this is the stuff that Rorschach, of the Watchmen, likes to drink when he’s not beating up bad guys. Or hipsters, since the beer hails from Portland.

The Basics:

  • MacTarnahan’s Brewing Company
  • Portland, OR
  • Style: Baltic porter
  • ABV: 7.5%
  • IBUs: 35

Trippel, New Belgium Brewing Company

trippel

I like the idea of Belgium. They’ve given us big poofy waffles and French fries, and they weren’t on the wrong side in WWII. And they are known for brewing good beer.

And what better entity to brew Belgian beer here in America than a brewery named New Belgium?

The brewery offers a couple Belgian-style brews, including Abbey, a dubbel (meaning “double,” so named because it’s stronger than a standard offering). Trippel (the style is often spelled “tripel”) goes a little bigger.

Trippel is brewed with a little bit of coriander, and the herb is pretty light in the smell. However, I thought it was a little much in the taste. The beer is quite heavy, at 7.8% ABV, and it does have a fairly boozy taste. The beer finishes with a bit of citrus and pepper-like spice.

The Belgian yeast is quite prevalent in the flavor, but in this beer, it tastes like soap to me. The beer also has a thick and slippery texture, again, like soap. (Yup, I’ve had soap in my mouth before. Thanks, Mom!) I hated the aftertaste of this beer; everything I disliked about the beer just seemed to hang around in my mouth. Despite the soap taste, it didn’t finish clean.

I should point out that I might be one of the few people who doesn’t like this beer. My usual sources of beer intel rate it pretty high. But it’s not for me.

While we Americans have mastered some of the Belgian foodstuffs, I think we’ve fallen a little short here. Have some fries or waffles on hand to get the taste of this stuff out of your mouth.

The Basics:

  • New Belgium Brewing Company
  • Fort Collins, CO
  • Style: Belgian-style ale
  • ABV: 7.8%
  • IBUs: 25

Summer Styles Sampler, Samuel Adams

Sam Adams summer styles

I love summer beer. And I think Sam Adams brews some pretty decent beer. Yeah, maybe they’re getting a little too big to comfortably fit into the “craft beer” category, but they do try to keep things interesting. So I was excited when I saw a Sam Adams Summer Styles Sampler pack for just over $12, featuring two bottles each of six flavors. Here’s the breakdown:

Cherry Wheat

Cherry Wheat is brewed with Michigan cherries and honey. Being Wisconsin born, I kind of wish they had sourced their cherries from the other side of the lake, but at least they’re keeping it in the region.

The beer has a nice fruity flavor, with a very distinct cherry taste, and isn’t quite as sweet as I was fearing, despite the honey. I was expecting something way too sweet, but it finds a nice balance of fruit, wheat, and malt. I do kind of wish the beer had a little more tartness from the cherries. The beer weighs in at 5.3% ABV, along with 23 IBUs.

This is a pretty drinkable beer, but I think I’d reach for it alongside dessert, or maybe a bowl of fruit. Or drink it in place of dessert and fruit, which, truthfully, is more my style.

Belgian Session

The Belgian Session is the lightweight of the sampler, at 4.3% ABV and 16 IBUs. The beer has the distinct flavor of the Belgian yeast strain, sort of floral and lactic and viscous. It’s a hard flavor to describe, but if you’ve ever had a strong Belgian, you know what I’m talking about. But the flavor isn’t overwhelming here.

The brew has a mild citrus and spice, with a bit of fruitiness, and goes down pretty easily. Out of all the beers in the box, though, this is the one beer that you want to drink while it’s really cold. The flavor gets pretty cloying when it warms up.

East-West Kolsch

Sam Adams’ Kolsch-style offering is pretty light with some decent carbonation. The beer is a little bitter, with a leafy, tobacco-like flavor. It provides a little bit of spice in the back of the throat, with a hint of pepper. The beer offers a 5% ABV with a low 15 IBUs. The Kolsch has a nice aftertaste, but is a little sweeter with a bit less citrus flavor than some other beers in the style.

Noble Pils

Noble Pils decides to follow the advice that more of a good thing makes something better. Instead of just one type of Noble hops, it goes for five. Despite the array of hops, they don’t overdo it, and the beer weighs in at only 34 IBUs. The result is a very well-balanced hop profile, with a hint of piney flavor. The hops are pretty restrained, though the beer is on the edge of pushing into pale lager territory.

At 4.9% ABV, this is a fairly sessionable brew. The finish starts out pretty clean, but the grassy hops aftertaste builds pretty quickly.

The sampler pack is rounded out by their Summer Ale (which we’ve already reviewed) and the flagship Boston Lager.

Overall, this is a pretty interesting mix, and I’ll be grabbing some more to get me through the summer. I suggest you do the same.

Prima Pils, Victory Brewing Company

Prima Pils

I had never tried Victory’s Prima Pils before last weekend, which is surprising since the beer is one of the country’s best regarded Pilsners. The phrase “world class” gets tossed around a lot when people talk about this beer, including over at Beer Advocate and by Draft Magazine.

After whacking some golf balls around in some near-90 heat, The Beer Page design overlord and I retreated to the shade of his back yard to refresh with some brews. And Prima Pils definitely hit the spot.

Victory describes the beer as both a Pilsner and a pale lager. While the beer uses a Pilsner malt, it also gets heavily dosed with a heaping pile of German and Czech whole flower hops. While the clean Pilsner flavor is definitely there, the beer has less carbonation and way more floral notes and bitterness than the standard Pilsner.

The beer starts with the flavors of cereal and yeast, which gives way to just a hint of citrus. The finish is mildly sweet and floral, but with a clean, pleasant, quickly dissipating aftertaste.

Unfortunately, we only had two in the fridge, meaning we only got one bottle each. Fortunately, we only had two in the fridge, otherwise I probably would have chugged down a pile of these Pils in pretty short order. The beer is great on a hot day, but it seems like it would be pretty versatile. It also seems like it would pair well with a lot of foods, such as barbecue, or even S’mores later in the evening. Or some hearty German fare.

With Prima Pils, Victory has definitely brewed a winner.

The Basics:

  • Victory Brewing Company
  • Downingtown, PA
  • Style: Pilsner, pale lager
  • ABV: 5.3%
  • IBUs: 64

Spring Reign Ale, Ninkasi Brewing Company

Ninkasi Spring Reign

With summer firmly upon us and temperatures in my neck of the woods cracking 90, I figured it was time to finally pop open the bottle of spring seasonal that’s been sitting in my fridge for a while. With beer in hand, I would think wistfully back to a time when life was a little bit cooler, in the thermometer sense. (How a spring beer managed to survive spring in my fridge without getting consumed, I really don’t know. Maybe with the green label, it blended in with the grapes or lettuce? Or maybe, since the brewery is named for the goddess of fermentation, the beer prolonged its own life with some Mesopotamian goddess wizardry?)

Ninkasi is a pretty highly regarded brewer here in Oregon. But to be honest, I’ve never been the biggest fan. I do like the Oatis Stout, and most of their beers are solid, but nothing I’ve tried from them has really blown me away. And so it is with their Spring Reign seasonal ale.

Spring Reign comes on with a pretty heavy hit of malt that then gives way to a bitter hop finish. And…that’s about it. The beer has a pretty clean finish and medium body, and there isn’t a whole lot else going on.

The bottle’s label says this: “Notes of toasted malt up front, with a bright and crisp Northwest hop finish, it’s a session beer that everyone can enjoy!”

And I have to agree. No distracting, weird flavors. No bells and whistles. Just a solid beer.

I’d never turn one down, but it’s not a beer I’ll be thinking about much after that day’s drinking is done.

The Basics:

  • Ninkasi Brewing Company
  • Eugene, OR
  • Style: Ale
  • ABV: 6.0%
  • IBUs: 38