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Keeping cool at Penn

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Even walking just the few blocks from the bus stop to 800 Vinial St. on a sticky afternoon was enough a little sweaty … and more than a little thirsty.

And that’s OK. Inside that address — that’s the home of Penn Brewery — are more than a dozen ways to keep cool on a humid summer afternoon.

Since it was founded 29 years ago by the late Tom Pastorius, Penn has stood for one thing — German beers. The brewery has made its living brewing German styles, mostly the bright, clean — and don’t forget cold — lagers that country’s brewers are famous for.

Let’s make sure something is clear — our ubiquitous pale American lagers technically are related to what goes on at Penn, in that the giants brew alcoholic beverages that are of the same broad style, but that’s about where the similarities end. Those beers strive to be inoffensive. These beers? They strive to be crisp and a bit spicy (Penn’s Kaiser Pils), balanced with hints of dark bread (Penn Dark dunkel) or rich and roasted dancing with caramel sweetness and a little extra booze (Penn’s St. Nikolas Bock). Even the non-lager in the brewery’s year-round lineup — the sunshine-colored (and flavored) Penn Weizen — is a perfect representation of the southern German style.

Lagers are fermented at colder temperatures, because that’s the best way to keep lager yeast strains happy. And they have to sit in that cold for at least a month — as opposed to ales that can be ready to drink in a few days — while they settle. Maybe it’s that extra time in the cold, but summer has always seemed like the right time for me to track down Penn’s German beers. Go find a bottle of Penn’s Kaiser Pils and you’ll see what I mean.

Post-Gazette coverage of Penn Brewery:

PCBW: An overwhelming week

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Even if you put Christmas, Halloween and the Fourth of July together in one week, it’s not going to be as much fun as Pittsburgh Craft Beer Week.

The annual showcase of the region’s craft beer industry, now in its fourth year, gets started this weekend with collaboration beers, beer dinners, beer brunches and what has become the biggest bash of the week — the instantly sold-out Commonwealth Press Beer Barge.

And that’s only the first weekend.

The rest of the week keeps up a similar pace, with a dizzying list of events all the way through Sunday, April 26. This is the week when it becomes a little easier to track down some of those holy grail beers — you know, stuff like Founders’ Kentucky Breakfast Stout, Goose Island’s Bourbon County Stout, Deschutes Abyss — when they show up at this week’s special events.

Even better? We get the full sense of exactly how good we have it here in western Pennsylvania. We have beers brewed specifically for this week. We have eight different collaboration beers, all made by the talented brewmasters we have in the region, available all over town.

Want some highlights? On Tuesday, you’ll probably find me at Carson Street Deli, which will host a mini firkin festival featuring Grist House and Hop Farm. Breakfast at Piper’s Pub on Wednesday is an excellent idea, especially if you don’t need to be productive later in the day. Thursday? Yikes — get to the South Side and plan on staying there.

Finally, don’t miss the Brewers’ Olympics at Grist House in Millvale on the week’s final day. You’ll pay $15 for the privilege of laughing at with our favorite brewers, and money raised during the event will go to help out the folks at Blue Canoe Brewery in Titusville get back on their feet after last month’s fire.

Are you ready? The fun’s about to begin.

Post-Gazette coverage of Pittsburgh Craft Beer Week:

Family setting is Grist for good beer

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For Brian Eaton and Kyle Mientkiewicz, it’s not enough that they learned how to brew beer side by side years ago.

The founders of Millvale’s Grist House Brewing are also brothers in law; Mr. Eaton is married to the sister of Mr. Mientkiewicz. And those family ties have to contribute to the welcoming feel of Grist House’s cozy tap room on East Sherman Street.

The past of the space — it was a slaughterhouse into the 1970s — is still present, especially in the imposing steel beam and hook that curves overhead. There are newer touches to add to an industrial feel, like the wrought-iron tap handles built for the tap room. But the warm wood of the bar, the colorful walls — especially — the chalk board listing patrons who are owed a pint that was purchased by a friend are a comfortable contrast.

Of course, the beer helps as well. A larger capacity helps keep those iron tap handles moving, and customers are liable to find beers covering a wide range of styles — from an American Wheat and a Belgian tripel to a coffee porter and a Russian imperial stout when we visited — ready to try. And Mr. Eaton and Mr. Mientkiewicz are both professed hop heads, so there was an APA — Horizon Shine — a black rye IPA — Black rIPA — and a double IPA — Master of the Galaxy — all on at once. And that’s not all: the brewers promised the release of a new IPA by the time you read this.

Post-Gazette coverage of Grist House Brewing:

 

Category: Allegheny County | Tags: ,

That Voodoo that we do

 

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The reminders of the building’s past are still there. A row of heavy firefighters’ turnout coats hanging in one corner. A pile of coiled canvas hoses stacked under a metal stairway behind the bar.

But the conversion of the building that had been Homestead’s old fire station to Voodoo Brewing’s first Pittsburgh-area pub — the first one, actually, other than the original at the brewery’s home in Meadville — was thorough, from the long bar and the floor-to-ceiling menu blackboard to the beer hall-style tables fashioned from old shipping pallets. The space is quirky and inviting, like the beers that Voodoo has been turning out for years.

The pub’s presence should work out well for fans of the brewery who can’t make regular trips to Crawford County, because we’re going to get some draft-only beers we don’t usually get to sample here. Our visit included tastes of the latest in the brewery’s single-hop series, as well as Hail To Pitt, a hop-forward Homestead exclusive that tastes like it’s loaded with resinous simcoe.

Voodoo partner Jake Voelker said the pub has so far been embraced by the community, from people who volunteered to help with renovations to the space to shot-and-a-beer neighborhood guys who just wanted to get a look at the old municipal building. The century-old building that was the hub of Homestead could be that again.

Post-Gazette coverage of Voodoo Homestead:

 

Category: Allegheny County | Tags: ,