Northwoods Brewing Birch Wood Ale + Week 2 Recap

Northwoods Birch Wood Ale: This post has nothing to do with bread, although the bread sure tasted better than the beer.

Holy priceless collection of Etruscan snoods, we’re halfway through! A recap of week 2:

  1. Lagunitas Sucks (Brown Shugga’ Substitute Ale) was a tasty, high-octane hop bomb.
  2. Woodman Popcorn Lager was unfit for human consumption
  3. Upland Oktoberfest Lager was just OK
  4. Flying Dog Wildeman Farmhouse IPA was a righteous mullet among beers.
  5. Central Waters and/or Map Room and/or Paddy Long’s Broken Window American Zwickl remains unresolved. Explanation forthcoming.
  6. Magic Hat Heart of Darkness Stout was far more delicious than the Joseph Conrad novella of the same name.
  7. New Belgium Dig Pale Ale was spring in bottle.

Best of the week: Magic Hat Heart of Darkness, with New Belgium Dig as a close runner-up.

Worst of the week: No surprise here; Woodman Popcorn Lager wins on theatrics alone.

Now for today’s beer. After my last run-in with the handiwork of a western-WI brewpub, I was more than a little apprehensive about this ambiguously labeled selection from Northwoods Brewing. Fortunately, Birch Wood Ale (style unspecified) didn’t result in any floods of foam or glasses of chunky, toxic swill. That said, the experience was not particularly pleasant.

Purporting to be west-central Wisconsin’s first microbrewery and Eau Claire’s first brewpub, Northwoods proudly declares that its “brewmaster has high quality standards, guaranteeing you a great-tasting brew…” After subjecting myself to Birch Wood Ale, I’m interested in taking the brewmaster up on his guarantee.

Birch Wood had an unpleasant sour aroma reminiscent of a homebrew gone a little awry. Predictably, it also tasted like an off-kilter homebrew. While not undrinkable, Birch Wood was relentlessly malty, except for a slightly repulsive sour aftertaste. It was also nearly devoid of carbonation and lacked any evidence of hops.

The most outstanding failing of this beer, however, didn’t become apparent until I visited Northwoods’ website. While the Birch Wood label describes the bottle contents simply as “ale,” with no other qualifications, a description included on the website characterizes the beer as a pale ale. What the what? This stuff could certainly pass as an inexpertly crafted amber, nut brown, or bock, but if it is, indeed, a pale ale, it is one of the most dreadful attempts that I’ve had the misfortune to consume. Either that or the bottle was mislabeled. For Northwoods’ sake, we’ll hope for the latter. The facts:

Northwoods Brewing Birch Wood Ale

Style: American Pale Ale (?!)
Availability: Year-round
ABV: Not Specified
Hops: Not Specified
Notes: Sour aroma; strong malt flavor with an unpleasant sour aftertaste. No evidence of hops and very little carbonation. Doesn’t resemble a pale ale in any way.
More Info: http://www.northwoodsbrewpub.com/beers.php
My Take: Either horrendous or mislabeled.

New Belgium Dig Pale Ale

New Belgium Dig

New Belgium Dig: Spring in a bottle.

As you may be aware, today was a pretty important day. This morning, at 7:28, our favorite prognosticating marmot, Punxatawney Phil (speaking through his interpreter, a gentleman dressed like Abraham Lincoln), foretold an early spring. Though the National Climatic Data Center asserts that Phil’s predicative accuracy is minimal, I’m about as inclined to trust a subterrestrial rodent as I am the average television meteorologist, so this is very exciting news.

To assess the imminent arrival of spring, I took my snowshoes out for a jaunt around Lake Mendota. After verifying that spring had not yet made an appearance, and that swimming conditions are not currently ideal, I returned home to pursue a more appropriate mode of celebration. New Belgium’s recently-released spring seasonal, Dig Pale Ale, seemed an appropriate choice for the occasion.

On location at New Belgium in 2010.

On location at New Belgium in 2010.

While pretentious types argue that Fort Collins-based New Belgium has gotten too big for its own good, and that no self-respecting connoisseur would consider its products seriously as craft beers, I happen to adore the place and thoroughly enjoy many of its fine offerings (I am, in fact, wearing a New Belgium t-shirt at the moment). You may judge if wish, but I’ll continue to imbibe their delicious elixers, anyway.

Moving on to the beer, Dig is possibly my new favorite among New Belgium’s pale offerings. Aromas and flavors reminiscent of lemon, peach, mango, and other tropical fruits imparted by the Sorachi Ace and Nelson Sauvin hops are quite amazing, and a little roasted maltiness balances out the hops nicely. Those lively fruit flavors, combined with a light body and an exceptionally clean finish, make Dig an exceptional accomplice to the rodent-foretold spring. Even if Punxatawney Phil’s prediction proves faulty, Dig might be just the thing to keep us from from taking drastic measures as the dismal torment of winter wears on. The facts:

New Belgium Dig Pale Ale

Style: American Pale Ale
Availability: Seasonal (spring)
ABV: 5.6%
Hops: Target, Nelson Sauvin, Cascade, Nugget, Sorachi Ace
Notes: Strong aromas and flavors of lemon, peach and mango. Lighty body; very clean finish.
More Info: http://www.newbelgium.com/beer/detail.aspx?id=6bf4da61-f80d-4947-b024-397616f1888f
My Take: Spring in a bottle.

Magic Hat Heart of Darkness

Magic Hat Heart of Darkness

Magic Hat Heart of Darkness: Better than the book.

In my heavily biased opinion, libraries are pretty amazing places. All that knowledge stockpiled in one place, chaperoned by helpful and attractive librarians, is pretty exciting. The one that I work in is more spectacular than most. After all, in how many other libraries does work sometimes consist of setting up and testing out a human foosball court in the stacks?

Though I love my job at the library, it does have a few downsides. The most egregious of these is that my reference desk duties sometimes conflict with Friday evening happy hour. Today being one such occasion, I chose to console myself after work with a very literary beverage selection: Magic Hat Heart of Darkness.

While I recall throughly despising Joseph Conrad’s novella of the same name when forced to dissect and interpret it ad nauseum in a high school English class, I found Magic Hat’s Heart of Darkness to be quite pleasant. The two Hearts of Darkness do share some similarities, however, as Magic Hat’s intensely dark stout is about as complex as Marlow’s trip down that blasted river. Rich roasted coffee and chocolate flavors augmented with a very slight hint of smoke give way to a lingering bitterness that ends with a faintly fruity flavor. An entirely delicious experience. The goods:

Magic Hat Heart of Darkness

Style: Stout
Availability: Seasonal (winter)
ABV: 5.7%
Hops: Apollo, Goldings
Notes: Intensely dark and complex. Roasty up front, with a tiny hint of smoke. Tapers off into lingering bitterness mixed with slightly fruity flavors.
More Info: http://www.magichat.net/elixirs/heart_darkness
My Take: Absurdly delicious; much better than the book.