Tuesday, December 9, 2008

Spaten Optimator (dobblebock) and Balarina aged goat gouda

Beer is a tad sweet with buttery carmel malts, black cherry, and molasses.
Cheese is hard and crumbly, has an oily parmesan aged character, is very salty, and slightly spicy.

Cheese has smoky hints that bring out roasted malts of Optimator. Goat cheese tangy nuances and salt are rinsed away by full-bodied dark Optimator. Cheese has a musky, mushroom earthiness that goes well with this malty beer. Slightly tart pungency would get along better with a hoppier Pale or Red, or perhaps a dry stout.

Saturday, December 6, 2008

Lost Coast Indica with Humbolt Fog

IPA and goat?? Creamy cheese goes well with fruity beer, spicy blueness saddles up with the piney/citrus hops. The hopiness actually restrains the cheese some what, giving it a vinegary character, accentuated nutty, carmel notes, but this could be the beer, which has definite burnt sugar flavor. Thick sticky cheese is cut by astringent and well carbonated Indica, its feels just fine after a head to head match with some stanky queso.

Fruits (apples, melon, apricot, grapefruit) and cream, burnt toast with cream cheese and jam. Excellent combo, more of a contrast whereas the B-wine would be complementary (the full sail is pretty hoppy tho).

Pilsner with Cypress Grove Humbolt Fog

Hint of hops and mucho bubbly try to tether this extremely dank cheese to the ground, but it floats away into the atmosphere. Pils is supposed to contrast bloomies, but I think this cheese is too strong. Metallic flavor of beer is brought out, and its not very good. Nothing good about this one, perhaps I've been spoiled by the expensive Belgians and b-wine, but I guess you need something that strong to match this cheese.

Friday, December 5, 2008

Mirror pond with Stilton asparagus.

Floral/citrus hops cuts through stilton like butter, but after a second the cheese comes back in. Play of Fruit (beer) and Earth (Stilton).

Asparagus green vegetable dankness brings fruits right out of Beer. Asparagus and Blue is a fairly rich combo, with Big veggie/earth flavors. Beer is light, sharp, and hoppy in contrast to heavy creamy cheese.

Would be a great pairing to start a BBQ with. Imagine Asparagus wrapped in proscuitto or bacon with a blue cheese/beer dip and sourdough. Or Aspargus as a side to a blue cheese bacon burger. Portobela burger with Blue cheese, bacon, and roasted bell pepper on it.........cream of asparagus or polenta, spinach, and tomato on the side...................Pale Ale................Oh Yeah!!

Broken Rake Amber with Vincent Gouda

Cheese is sweet and salty, grainy and grassy, with light nuts and a slight aromatic tang. Amber ale matches the light nuts and grains and is a little hoppy, just as cheese is only slightly aromatic. Burnt butter taste of cheese is brought out and matched by caramelized sugar and toffee flavors in beer.

They match but its nothing to write home about, they are almost too similar. I heard a chef talking about how he liked to create conflict in dishes, utilizing contrast to create something that interests you palate. Complementary tastes are boring. I'm getting that here, although maybe its just that the beer isn't that good. The cheese is very good Gouda, one I'm not all that into. I think it would go better with a pale or perhaps a Belgian wit.

Thursday, December 4, 2008

Full Sail Old Boardhead B-wine and Stilton

Stilton comes in big after swig of B-wine, knocking fruity/malt out the way. Chasing Stilton with B-wine throws a big hop blast at the earthy sour-tang cheese, calming it down a little. The creamy character of the cheese is brought out. There is tension from the contrast of sour earthy rot in the cheese with sugar/carmel malts and fruity brightness of the beer. The beer has a sweet sour contradiction going on that the cheese uses as its launch pad for a cosmic flavor collision of astronomical proportions. Highly alcohol with a elegant complexity, the B-wine pairs up quite nicely with the similar strong and complex flavor of the Stilton. Excellent, like it better than the pairing of Stilton and Duvel.

This is exactly what I needed tonight. Perfect winter evening at home, cold outside, warm inside, alone by yourself because thats the way she goes. I know that I have tried, in my way, to be free. I guess I just didn't give enough. It takes more energy than I alone have to resist the system. Cheese and beer is an incredible pleasure to explore, I get a certain elation from a good pairing that is most satisfying. Treat the old stomach right with good fermented treats, keep them intestinal flora ship shape right right.

I've never been surfing, but I miss the ocean like the childhood brother I never had.

Tuesday, December 2, 2008

Ommegang Hennepin and Cypress Grove Humbolt Fog aged goat

Cheese is runny bloomy goodness. Very earthy and peppery with floral root veggie character. Beer can barely stand up next to this rich cheese, but the complex Belgian yeasts do the job. Very rich creamy salty cheese is refreshed by fruity and spicy ale. Flavors meld perfectly.

Slight contrast between sour tang of cheese and sweeter beer meets to give a incredibly pungent blend. The hops seems to bring out the nuttiness of cheese, somehow the combo is more nutty than either alone. The anise character of beer carries over into the earthiness of the aged goat.

Salt and fat richness (not kidding around here, its like sucking on salt and butter) is cut by carb and citrus. Both have an over-ripe fruit character, that combines to taste something like prunes, dates, or wine poached apples and apricots. Taste nirvana reached through the path of floral sweet/sour spiciness. Put it on the menu. Imagine cheese burgers with bacon and mushrooms alongside a saison like this. bomber

Monday, December 1, 2008

Duvel and Stilton

Cheese is herbal spicy (basil, parsley, black pepper, nutmeg, some cumin/coriander) and salty, with a creamy, nutty background. Beer matches spices (coriander, B. pepper, anise), and strong yeasts brings cheese and beer into seamless contact.
Cheese has mild tartness echoed in beer. The cheese is slightly sweet as well, balancing sour of Duvel. Mild malts in beer play the role of a cracker. Beer sets the pungent yeasty tone that the big herbal cheese plays on.
The dry hoppy/anise character of Duvel is perfect with salty blue aspect of cheese. An excellent combo, nice break from the usual Blue/Barleywine. Both are intricate, strong tastes that marry well.