Rick Derris Wrote:
Ok, first
Portland. There are too many breweries there. Too many. Previously I wouldn’t have been able to guess how many is too many, but after 6 days there of biking past countless breweries on city corners (not craft beer bars, mind you, but full-on brewing facilities with tap rooms and gluten free pastries and charcuterie boards and gourmet pickled vegetables), I came to the conclusion that Portland is what “too much” looks like. The standard of brewing is good there, these weren’t crappy products. But with just a week to sample so many, you could swap the labels on ten of those breweries and most people wouldn’t notice. Everybody makes an IPA, and a DIPA, and a pale, and a hefe. One might be called Stevie’s IPA and the other one YETI BALLS or whatever, but 80% of everybody is pretty much in the same groove. It’s a good groove, but… too many breweries in one city.
The standout breweries in town: Cascade and Hair Of The Dog.
Cascade specializes in sours and barrels, so they’re already staking out the upper end of the craft market from the word go. Several breweries had a “we don’t do normal IPAs and shit” theme going, because everyone else does it. With these guys it meant sours etc, with Occidental it meant all germans. I understand why… in a city FULL of IPAs and such, you have to try to stand out somehow. So these guys appear to have figured out a good set of sours, they got a good drinking space, and they were popular. Good on ‘em… if they stay smart they should make it. Apprently the Vlad The Imp Aler was the one to get, but at 10+%, I couldn’t start the day that way. Right after this we biked a heavy dutchy and a full-on bakfiets cargo bike up a goddam mountain, so I was NOT going to start with a liver bomb. I went Strawberry Cream, because I asked the bartender “what are you most proud of” and Vlad and this were the answers. –shrug- And sure enough, it was balanced and GOOD.

(Daughter is napping inside a cargo bike just out of view on the right…)
Hair Of The DogAnother great space, right downtown a few blocks from the river. They make a lot of big beers, and they barrel age some. These stood out in my foggy, beer-soaked memory banks.
Inside HOTD:


What I had, so I’d remember…

And some of the rest…
Now Old Lompoc, Amnesia, Captured By Porches, Good Life, Hub… all respectable and probably deserve a lot more attention than I could give them. But nothing stood out in my tiny one week sample size.

On to greener pastures.
Another humble but welcome brewery was Occidental. The beer wasn't amazing, but they do faithful german styles and nothing else, which was a relief after so much West Coast beer. It's a small space and not fancy, and was a mid-length bike ride out of the city (maybe an hour?), but the guy was nice, and the beer hit the spot. Note also the Hop In The Saddle guide book we used, awesome book with bike routes and breweries mapped out.

May I present…
Belmont Station. Half beer store, half bar. All beer store bottles can be opened by the bartenders for you to drink there. 1300+ choices. Insanely wonderful joint. Huge back room with massive open windows for the whole back wall, and more tables outside in back and in front. If you’ve ever wanted to find and try a beer, it’s probably here.

And then two breweries that I had in several places. First,
Ninkasi, the surprise hit of the trip. So many good choices from them, all just unique enough to stand out, all well executed. I kept returning to them when I needed Train Beers, or a woods sixpack. They’d be a favorite steady date if I lived out there.

And then of course,
Logsdon. Billy had me prepared to be wowed, and even so I was surprised with how good these two saisons were. Simply outstanding, and the best saisons I’ve ever had. Oddly cheaper in Vancouver, and they have massive booze taxes. Drinking there is as bad as Boston, price-wise. So I was VERY happy to see Logsdon (period) and see it cheaper. Thus, I got to try two styles. If you get to the west coast, it is a MUST.

I’ll do some more later.