Gee-zam! How fast I forgot how much extract brews cost. All told, WH honey ale is a $65 brew, bought local.
Gee-zam! How fast I forgot how much extract brews cost. All told, WH honey ale is a $65 brew, bought local.
When Gov. John Hickenlooper's around, it's only natural that sometimes the talk turns to his second career. Not politics -- that's his third career -- but beer.
Hickenlooper, who was a geologist before founding Denver's first brewpub, the Wynkoop Brewing Co., was sought out by The Atlantic magazine for his opinion on the home brews President Obama has been drinking at the White House.
The governor hasn't tasted the beers himself, but he looked at the recipes released by the White House and pronounced the presidential beers to be a little too heavy on the honey.
"It's none of my business and I don't want to criticize the White House chef, but I think maybe they could use a little less honey," Hickenlooper told the magazine. "One recipe I'm pretty sure would be better without the honey and the other one I think would be. A little bit less honey would be nice.
its a $40 kit mailorder, but around $60 is what I'm seeing local also.
Colorado's first brewpub, Wynkoop Brewing Company was founded in 1988 by a group of young entrepreneurs and urban pioneers led by former Denver mayor and current Governor of Colorado, John Hickenlooper.
Our brewpub’s hallmarks -- highly acclaimed small-batch beers, high quality food & service, the city’s best pool hall and our glorious 1888 building -- helped make us a major catalyst for the revival of Lower Downtown Denver.
Today Wynkoop Brewing Company is a beer-blessed Denver institution, a must-visit Colorado landmark and one of the nation’s most revered craft breweries.
We’re also one of the city’s best places for private and corporate events. We’ve hosted everything from Democratic National Convention parties to beer festivals, weddings and company conferences. (All with great beer and food.)
Today we're expanding our brewing efforts to better carry on our pioneering place in Denver and Colorado's microbrewing history. In 2010 we began hand-canning our craft beers (on a wiz-bang, table-top machine) so that we could deliver more of our ambitious, artisan-style craft beer to Denver area beer lovers. Look for our Rail Yard Ale, B3K Black Lager and Silverback Pale Ale in local stores and the areas top bars and restaurants.
In late 2011 we expanded our brewery for the first time in nearly 15 years, by adding two 20-barrel fermenters to our brewhouse and creating a special new room for our famed open fermenters. In July of 2012 we'll add two more of these fermenters. With this new capacity we are creating a flood of rule-breaking new beers -- from barrel-aged treats to sour beers and new styles - that help us honor the work of our original brewer, the late and very great Russell Schehrer. (The Brewers Association's annual Innovation Award is named after our beloved Russell.)
Our pioneering brewpub is housed in the glorious J. S. Brown Mercantile Building, built in 1899. The Mercantile Company was a cornerstone of the young Denver economy and one of the city’s most impressive early buildings. Its hardwood floors, thick timber pillars and pressed-tin ceilings are still in place today. Miners, ranchers and city folks walked this building looking for goods to furnish their Western adventures and frontier homes.
In 1899 our main floor served as the Mercantile’s original showroom. Today it’s home to our main bar, restaurant, brewery and kitchen. On the south side of our main floor is our Mercantile Room, now a renovated banquet room replete with high ceilings and expansive arched windows. The giant metal door you see by the main bar? It was once the door to the building’s main vault. Today it holds a different sort of valuables: our brewers and their office. The second floor is the home of Wynkoop Billiards, arguably the city's most elegant pool hall. We have 22 pool tables, two private pool rooms, dart lanes and a bar serving most of the same acclaimed beers you find downstairs.
This floor also houses some of our most popular banquet rooms, and the entire floor and pool hall are available for private functions. The backbar on this floor was rescued from the original tasting room of the old Tivoli Brewery, a famed Denver brewery located at what is now the Auraria college campus. In our basement you’ll find the serving tanks for all of our beers, and we now hand can our beers down there, too. The Impulse Theater is also on our basement level and welcomes grinning crowds to its hugely popular improv-comedy shows.
Did anyone convert these to a full boil extract recipe? I've never done that, I'm not sure how the hop additions change.
Walked into my LHBS this evening to buy the ingredients for this and the owner was busy pre-packaging PM grain bills for the Honey Wheat recipe. Says he's been inundated with requests for both recipes since they were released.
Say what? And I'm just asking here.
I can see them going to only one type of flower in a trip. Maybe in their little bee brains they figure if a red rose worked this time, a red rose will work next time too.
But when you say, "...bees will keep the honey for different flowers separate. ", what does that mean? Are honey, nectar and pollen interchangeable words? I figured once it got to the hive to be honey, it was all one mish mash of bee vomit.
kappclark said:Has anyone finished this recipe ?? What does it taste like ??
I see NB's recipe uses 1.5 Fuggles at 15 for the honey Ale. Do we know if that is indeed where the missing oz is supposed to be?
I know they say you shouldn't judge fermentation by air lock activety, but I think this time...
And I think I have a crack around my bung hole, but don't we all?![]()
When I watched it I said, "hey that's what it looks like when I brew." Haha needless to say I'm a noobert.![]()