It's about time but still good news (or would be if I ever flew Delta):

Haven't had too many new things lately but from what I can remember:
Le Trou Du Diable La Saison Du Tracteur - a saison from Canada that was poured at the Shelton Brothers festival. I bought a bottle instead of having it there and just got around to drinking it last weekend. I'd be happy to drink this all night long but I've had some better ones recently.
Belching Beaver Peanut Butter Milk Stout - I've had this before and loved it. Still really good but it was better on tap than in the bottle.
Almanac Dogpatch Sour Wild Ale brewed with Cherries then aged in Wine Barrels. Probably one of the best sours I've had from them.
I also went to a sour symposium that Eagle Rock Brewing held with the woman who runs the barrel-aged sour blending program at New Belgium. Was pretty cool event tasting through some of their limited release sours and talking about how they approach making them.
Some interesting takeaways:
* All of their sours are built from two base beers: a dark lager and a light lager. She claimed that the more complex the base beer, the harder it was to get a sour right and the longer it would take to make. She said you want to give the "bugs" a simple diet.
* The key to making good sours is blending. She said a single barrel of sour is rarely great.
* They participate in looped barrel program with Leopold Brothers distillery in which Leopold gives New Belgium the barrels it uses to age Fruited Whiskeys (they make a Mt Cherry Whiskey, a Peach Whiskey and a Blackberry Whiskey) after they bottle each batch. New Belgium adds Brett and the various bacteria to the barrel and then their beers and returns the barrel when they are done aging the beer back to Leopold and the cycle starts anew. Must try some of these fruit whiskeys. The bugs can't survive in a barrel with cask strength whiskey but i'm still curious to taste whatever impact the beer and bugs have on the whiskey. We tried their Cherry Felix beer aged in a barrel used to make the Cherry Whiskey and it did taste like cherries. She told us that all the
cherry came from the whiskey barrel. There was no fruit added to the beer.
* They've been making sours for a long friggin' time. I think she said 17 years? She said that it was extremely hard to find the right types of bacteria commercially and that some of the starter bacteria came from a fat tire keg that a customer returned because of off flavors. The bar hated the keg but they loved the off flavors and dumped some of the kegs in a foudre to create a starter culture.
Pretty cool stuff and all of the sours were much better than I was expecting them to be. I've never been a huge fan but some of them were pretty great.