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Tag Archives: beer

Bread with Spent Grains

IMG_2386

Spent Grain Bread

Thoughts:

I played around a bit and came up with this great, simple recipe for bread with spent grain. As with most recipes, it’s a starting point. Feel free to innovate and add other seeds, grains, flours, oats, sugars, etc. to make it your own. Just be sure to share your results! I certainly plan to keep trying new variations on it.

The resulting bread from this recipe is hearty in the extreme. The spent grains give each bite a little crunch, which is wonderful. It makes for a great toast, and even small sandwiches. I was partial to the very un-Westerosi PB&J, myself. :)

For the recipe, head on over to the brew blog, Game of Brews!

Brewing!

Brewing Projects from April

Having mostly settled into the new apartment, I’m ready to get back to brewing!

As with many such projects, it’s a lot more fun in a group. I’ve got a long list of various brews I’m planning to try sooner or later, and these are at the top of my list. Pick up to three of your favorites in the next week, and I’ll get to work!

And while the new brew is aging, I’ll be cracking open a few of my previous bottles. If they’re as delicious as I’m expecting, then you’ll have the recipes in no time. 

Update: As of Feb. 2013, all brewing recipes will be posted on IatC’s sister blog, Game of Brews.

And if that’s not enough for you, check out the other fictional brew options over at Food Through the Pages! Ent-draught, anyone? :)

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Wassail

Wassail

Our Thoughts:

Incredible.

I struggled to find a wassail recipe that really appealed to me, so naturally, I made one up. The resulting beverage is cider perfected. It tastes of autumn, crisp winds, and the Wolfswood. The alcohol combination manages to disappear completely into the cider (danger! danger!), although the ale gives just the slightest fizz. It starts out subtle, then builds almost instantly to a spiced cider explosion.

I’ve heard of adding tea to wassail, and look forward to experimenting with that, but in the meantime, this is a new winter staple at The Inn.

Continue reading →

Lagers and Tankards and Beers, oh my!

“Robert Baratheon took a long swallow of beer, tossed the empty horn onto his sleeping furs, wiped his mouth with the back of his hand, and said darkly, ‘Fat? Fat, is it? Is that how you speak to your king?’ He let go his laughter, sudden as a storm.  ‘Ah, damn you, Ned, why are you always right?'” (Game of Thrones)

We didn't take this picture!

Martin mentions a variety of different beers throughout the series, and we wanted to find some modern beers that could be rough equivalents.  The Beer in ASoIaF breaks down as follows: beer with lemon (sometimes for breakfast), pepper beer, dark beer, beer for every day, and autumn ale.  To be sure we did the beers justice, we called in a friend who knows more about the juice of the barley than we ever will; Here are his terrific suggestions:

For lemon in beer

Try a traditional with a German Hefeweizen.  They are customarily served with a lemon wheel in the rim, (though this is a much eschewed practice amongst beer geeks).  To serve, pour out 3/4 of the beer, swirl remaining beer in the bottle to agitate the yeast, then pour the rest.  Slap a lemon wheel on the rim or just squeeze a little bit in.  Any German Hefe is a pretty good bet for an older style example; a more modern American style wheat beer that’s pretty tasty is Troegs Dreamweaver Wheat.

As far as pepper beer

Take a Belgian style Witbier and add some finely ground pepper.  Use a touch; a little goes a long way.  This style in particular is best because it will usually has some white peppery qualities. (It actually pairs very well with pepper crusted Chevre).  An older style would be any Wit brewed in Belgium (Hoegaarden, St. Bernardus, Steen Brugge, Witkap, etc), and a modern example would be Allagash White Ale.  We shied away from the chili-pepper varieties of beer because they can be so hit or miss, but if you’ve got a recommendation, we’d love to hear it!

For a dark strong beer

Stout is the archetypal dark beer, but it’s a fairly new invention (about 200 years old). Imperial Stout, Belgian Strong Dark, or Doppelbock are all excellent options. For a modern strong dark beer, try Stone’s Russian Imperial Stout. For something more rustic, try a Belgian strong dark . Doppelbock is a classic old world strong, dark lager that may also be most appropriate to Westeros.  It’s a beer that has a long history (perhaps not as far back as we’d like, but pretty far) and is awesome to boot. Celebrator Doppelbock is another good option and is fairly widely distributed.

For everyday beer

Williams Brothers Brewing Co. has a line of beers called Historic Ales of Scotland.  If they aren’t at your local good beer store they should easily be able to get them if you ask.  This series includes Fraoch Heather Ale, brewed with heather, historically used before hops were widely available. The Alba Scots Pine Ale is brewed with spruce, something else that was used in lieu of hops.

We don’t know how widely available hops are in Westeros, but for something hops-based, try Belgian Saison; it’s rustic, traditional  and is sometimes called “farmhouse ale.”  A good old world version is Saison DuPont, an excellent modern version is Ommegang’s Hennepin, or any Saison by Stillwater Brewing.

An Autumn Ale

Is a tough one, since Autumn in relation to taste is fairly ambiguous, but interested beer aficiandos might try a Marzen, which is a German beer traditionally brewed in March for Oktoberfest (although it’s technically a lager not an ale).  Anything actually from Germany will be good, especially Paulaner.  Other options include English Brown Ale, or Scottish Ale.  Both are Autumnal in flavor. (Belhaven makes a nice light Scottish Ale.)  For an American beer, Dogfish Head’s, Post Road, or Smuttynose’s are all very good and have seasonal beers that might work well as “Autumn ale.”

And that’s what we’ve got!  I’m sure this will be a popular post, so give us your ideas and suggestions too!

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