"I am a firm believer in the people. If given the truth, they can be depended upon to meet any national crisis. The great point is to bring them to the real facts, and beer." - Abraham Lincoln

Saturday, February 11, 2012

Tommyknocker Black IPA


Name: n/a
Style: Black IPA
Brewer: Tommyknocker
Alcohol by Volume: 7 %
Price: $2.99 (12 oz bottle)
Rating: A


This one is really tasty.  It's got a great dark body set by the chocolate malts and roasted rye.  With 78 bitterness units, the hops do well with balancing the robust flavor of the malt.  The alcohol is present but not overwhelming and doesn't deter from the rich flavor.  This is probably one of my favorite Black IPA's I've had so far.


Chicken Stew


CHICKEN STEW!

So one of my favorite things to do on lazy days when the sky is gray is made a big pot of steaming stew.  I don't have any real recipes of my own.  Rather, I just take things from here and there around the kitchen and throw them into a pot.  I'm no mad scientist or anything.  I have a pretty sound judgement regarding what things may or may not pair well together.  There was only one time I made some stew I wasn't really feeling, and that's because I made the mistake of thinking flour could thicken it up.  It did thicken up but it left the stew vapid.  

This here is a chicken stew.  Like I said before, I just go with my gut (obviously the best thing to listen to when you're hungry).  I don't weigh anything out. I just eyeball it and taste along the way, but I'll give you my estimate as to the proportions.  Here is the recipe:

1.5 pound of white skin potatoes
1 pound of grilled chicken breast 
1 cup of rice
1 cup of black beans
1/2 of a large yellow onion
1 small green pepper

So, FIRST, I cut up the potatoes in half and then cut that half in half, threw them in the pot.  I put a pretty significant amount of McCormick seasoning (Spicy Montreal) and Mrs. Dash (Caribbean Citrus), a little salt (maybe a table spoon), chili powder and black pepper.

I let the potatoes boil until they were were soft enough to break up easily as I stir in the other ingredients and then I added the rice and beans.

I then took the chicken breasts and cut them into half inch strips and then cut those strips in half and threw it in the pot.  The chicken was grilled on my George Foreman and seasoned with the Caribbean Citrus.

I had waited until this point to put the green peppers and onions in because I like them to be crunchy.  They'll probably get soft eventually but for the first bowl, its just how I like it.

By this time, and after countless successions of stirring, the potatoes started to break up and gave the base of the stew more thickness.  I also happened upon a packet of powdered cheese, like you would use for Kraft Mac and Cheese.  I threw that in with some buffalo sauce and a little hot sauce and voila ! Bon appetite! 

I guess I was trying to go with a southwestern quesadilla type stew.  It wasn't spot on with that theme, but its still delicious.  


Thursday, February 2, 2012

Charlies Cafe


It has always been to my utmost delight to partake in the exploration of a genuinely good place to grab some grub.  Nothing pleases me more than the experience you receive when you are treated to the tastes and treats of any local dining establishment. There is really nothing quite like walking away from the table, full and satisfied, knowing you just experienced something well worth your time.  When your belly belts, “heed the call!”, there is something special in knowing you have done it justice.
For my first review, I chose a place that has newly become dear to my heart and stomach.  This establishment exemplifies why I find it worthwhile, important and downright smart to 1) eat at local businesses, and 2) eat here.  Many people are ignorant to the benefits of spending money at local businesses.  Before I begin describing the exuberance that is this gem of a diner, I want to address the benefits and correlation between spending your money at local establishments and the community.
Did you know that by spending your money at local independent businesses, 68 percent of that money is returned back to the community?  Did you know that by eating at nationalized fast food and restaurant chains only 43 percent stays within the community?  That’s something to think about.  What this means, at least for taxpaying citizens, is that the more money you spend locally results in more money being used to fund your local schools, roads, and people whose income depends on your tax dollars, like Norfolk’s Finest.  Local businesses reinvest in the local economy at a 60 percent higher rate than chains and Internet retailers. Your dollar can go a long way if you know where to put it.  I’m here to tell you to put it in your belly.
Charlie’s Café, located at the corner of 18th and Granby, is one of the oldest standing structures on the historic street.  It was built as a residence in 1905 and later incorporated a confectionary within the structure in 1920, beginning its history as a local favorite place to eat.  In 1983, the property became “Swanky Franky’s Hotdogs”, which was eventually sold to Charlie Ellison and his mother Gladys.  These days, former reality agent Ted Warren owns and operates Charlie’s Café, serving up some of the best dinner food in town.
You know you’ve hit the jack-pot when you walk into a diner and every seat is taken, the servers move like hurdle runners, and what appears to be five pounds of home fries is sitting on the flat top grill waiting to be plated.  I’ve never seen so much activity in such a limited amount of space in my life.  It was refreshing to see people of all types enjoying a local favorite.  Almost immediately, a sense of community presented itself in the smiles of the customers and employees.  The entire kitchen is essentially crammed behind the bar, which seats about nine people.  Greasy yellow tickets lined up above the grill kept the cook moving at a pace The Flash would most certainly commend.  The yellow walls of the dining area were littered with framed posters of Marilyn Monroe and James Dean.  Mimosas and Bloody Marys cluttered tables throughout the room, all served the Charlie’s way, in preservative jars.  All drinks, in fact, were served up in these jars, which I thought was a fun and practical use for them. The hustle and bustle was music to my ears.  I was right at home.
On an average weekend, Charlie’s goes through around 100 dozen eggs.  Judging by the size of the omelets one would think that’d be more, but surprisingly enough, only three eggs are used per omelet.  That means Charlie’s serves up around 400 Ultimate Omelets in two days!  Upon my first visit, a sensational hangover had me craving one of these magical masterpieces.  The toughest part was making a decision.  From Ted’s favorite, the Southwestern Omelet (Chorizo sausage, potatoes, jack cheese, topped with warm habanero salsa) to the Mom’s Omelet (American cheese, sausage, bacon, bell pepper, onion, mushrooms and tomato) Charlie’s offers up 11 varieties of omelets.  If you can’t make up your mind you can build your own either plain for $5.99 or with two toppings for $6.99.  You can choose between five meats and cheeses and ten vegetables. The best part is, all omelets are served with your choice of bread and home fries or grits.  In the end, I decided to play it safe and settled on the Charlie’s Special.  A moist, fluffy, and extremely appetizing omelet with ham, American cheese, bell peppers, onions, mushrooms, and tomatoes.  Charlie’s Café also serves up a swath of other breakfast options from platters, sandwiches, French toast and waffles, to pancakes with chocolate chips, strawberries, pineapples and/or pecans.  They even offer vegetarian options such as veggie patties and tofu scramble.
Not feeling breakfast?  Charlie’s Café serves up a variety of lunchtime favorites like the Swanky Franky’s Hotdogs, Mom’s Melt (Swiss cheese, mushrooms, and onions on rye) or the Veggie Melt (melted cheese, tomatoes, green peppers, onions, mushrooms, and artichokes on your choice of bread), salads, and quarter-pound burgers that will make you an instant Charlie’s addict. The chili is a perfect blend of heat and savory goodness with just the right amount of awesome.
Upon my second visit to Charlie’s, I felt like giving the burgers a try and, without hesitation, chose the Reuben burger.  My favorite sandwich on a slab of beef? Yes, please.  The quarter-pound meat patty was served up on rye with Swiss cheese, sauerkraut, and Thousand Island dressing making for a more than scrumptious settling to my afternoon craving.
Here is where things get interesting.  Charlie’s Cafe challenges you to the Mom’s K.O. (Killer Omelet) Challenge.  Want to eat for free?  If you can manage to eat a dozen egg Mom’s omelet smothered with the infamous habanero salsa and an eight stack of pancakes in one hour, without leaving the table, and keep it all down, it’s on Charlie.  Don’t eat meat? That’s no excuse to back down from this challenge.  Charlie’s will make it a vegetarian omelet just for you. Same rules apply.  47 have attempted this noble feat, but only two have walked away victorious.  Do you have what it takes? See for yourself.  However, if you fail, you gotta pick up the bill.  Don’t worry, it’s only $19.99, which is a more than a fair price for a feast of such magnitude.
If you haven’t been to Charlie’s Cafe, you are truly missing out on a grand experience.  Charlie’s will always make sure you are walking away satisfied without making a dent in your wallet.  This one-in-million diner is a great place to grab a bite with a group of friends, or break the ice with a date.  Like I stated earlier, eating at small local businesses goes a long way.  Even Charlie’s Cafe is sure to get their products from local markets, so by eating at Charlie’s, you’re supporting more than just one independent business.  If you want to experience true customer service, great food, and a great time, I implore you, heed the call.

Sunday, January 29, 2012

A little history on beer


Beer is the world’s oldest and most popular alcoholic beverage.  It’s been around, pretty much, since civilization began.   Its origins aren’t exact but recordings dating back to 6000BC from Ancient Iraq shows evidence of archaic recipes.  In fact, an early Sumerian prayer to the Ninkasi, the matron goddess of alcohol, contains the recipe for beer. 

Ancient beer recipes are pretty straightforward.  Essentially any substance with carbohydrates can ferment naturally.   This is typically in the form of starches and sugars.  The saccharification of starch and the fermentation of the resulting sugar are what make beer.  The starch and the enzymes from saccharification often come from malted cereal grains.  Malted barley or wheat are the most common.  Hops are another integral ingredient.  This is what gives beer its bitterness and was introduced to beer somewhere around the 9th century to act as a natural preservative.  The mastering of incorporating this ingredient was essential for exporting the beverage.  Herbs and fruit are often added in the mix to add flavor.  Beers can have a wide range of flavor "notes."  The style of the beer often reflects different flavors.  

Beer was often consumed instead of water when the purity and cleanliness of water was never guaranteed.  Being that water is boiled in the brewing process, it was considerably safer to drink.  It also provided a large amount of calories for the day when food was scarce.   As making beer with hops became perfected, German towns in the 13th century began to standardize barrel sizes and home brewing started to shift towards medium-sized operations of around eight to ten people.  

In the 14th and 15th centuries, be went from a home-based activity to an artisan one.  Pubs and monasteries began brewing their own beer for mass consumption.  An unhopped brew in the 15th century wold have been considered an ale, while the use of hops deemed it a beer.  In fact, no brewer was allowed to brew both.  The Brewers Company of London stated "no hops, herbs, or other like thing to be put into any ale of liquore wherof ale shall be made- but only liquor (water), malt, and yeast."

The Industrial Revolution catalyzed beer production with the steam engine and the invention of the thermometer and hydrometer.  These latter two were essential for monitoring the brewing process, ensuring efficiency and consistency.  The hydrometer measures beer's specific gravity.  Using this instrument, brewers could calculate the yield from different malts.  With this, they found the more expensive pale malts were able to produce more fermentable material over brown malt, used in porters and stouts, which produce a much darker, thicker and creamier beer.  In 1857, Louis Pasteur discovered the role of yeast in fermentation, allowing brewers more methods to prevent the souring of beer by undesirable microorganisms.  Many parts of Europe, and the UK in particular, have a large market for beers with live yeast in it.

Every country and culture has their own tradition of brewing beer with their own unique recipes of herbs and spices.  Prohibition changed the shape of beer for the American people when bootleg brewers watered down their beer to increase profits.  This is where you get Budweiser, Miller or Coors catering the modern American palate preferring weaker beers.

If prohibition, (not counting the War on Drugs) were instituted again today, you could almost guarantee a full out war would be waged.  Whoever came up with the idea of prohibition in the first place must have been well out of their mind to try to keep the good people of America in partaking in one of the worlds oldest traditions.  Beer is the blood of the people.  It our most common and ecumenical connection to our ancestors and our fellow man. What a terrible world this would be without it.











Bells pale ale


Name: n/a
Style: Pale Ale
Brewer: Bells
Alcohol by Volume: 5.2 %
Price: $2.29 (12 oz bottle)
Rating: A+


I would highly recommend this for someone who enjoys a nice Pale Ale but isn't always crazy about how intense hops can be.  Bell's Brewery, started in 1985 in Kalamazoo, Michigan, hits the sweet spot for me as I am like those I recommend this to.  This is not your conventional Pale Ale as it strays away from the usual hop dominated style one finds in traditional Pale Ales.  It's lightly spiced with floral accents and a clean bitter finish that gives you the essence of hops but doesn't choke you after you swallow.  It's very aromatic and not too thin.  I like that it's not completely transparent which lets me know there's some malt in the mix.  This is a perfect beer for the turning season's warming afternoons.



Paul Revere's got some taste

Name: Back in Black
Style: Black Indian Pale Ale
Brewer: 21st Amendment Brewery
Alcohol by Volume: 6.8%
Price: $1.99 (12oz can)
Rating: A-


This, my friends, is the revered Back in Black from 21st Amendment Brewery in San Francisco, California.  I picked it up largely because of the can.  A candlelit Paul Revere sports a classic chopper style motorcycle alerting the American people a revolution is brewing.  Another captivating decision factor was the name of the brewery.  As you may know, the 21st Amendment of our faithful nations Constitution was introduced to repeal the 18th Amendment, which sparked much controversy when it made the production, distribution, and consumption of alcohol illegal.  Luckily, the initiative wasn't long-lived.  After a miserable 13 years, Congress got their heads straight and did some good.  While it's unfortunate such good sensibility wasn't long lived for future generations, we still have beer to fall back on.  This thick, creamy, malty take on the classic British style Indian Pale Ale delivers a warm, rich flavor that lingers on the tongue just long enough to ensure you can still taste your dinner and not compromise either of their respective integrity.  A light bitterness compliments the dark malts without overwhelming it.  All in all, not too hoppy and not overly thick making for a well balanced and frankly conventional Black IPA.

Saturday, January 28, 2012

Post #1

This commences the first official post for this blog dedicated to my symbolic betrothal to food and drink.  The size of my waist line gives far sufficient credibility to speak on such matters concerning my fancy for such victuals and libations.  I find my most honest and fulfilling moments start in the kitchen and end in the bathroom. Nothing pleases me more than the contentment of ones stomach and the consequent clean plate that I had formerly filled.  Alongside my passion for cooking and sharing my creations with others is an undying thirst for the craft of beer.  I myself am no brew master, but my appreciation for such an ancient and skillful practice is unremitting.  I follow quick in the words of many great men whom praised the beneficent beverage for its uncanny ability to lift the spirit and bolster any evening of new or old company alike.