Sunday, April 13, 2014

reflecting on the opening of Honolulu Beerworks



Friday, April 11th, 2014: a big day in the history of Honolulu. On this day, Honolulu finally got its first craft brewpub. Sure, we had Aloha Beer before, and Vice Inferno, and even Brew Moon way back when. But each of those places played it safe. They tried to create brewpubs that would appeal to a cliched concept of "local" tastes. And what do locals like, according to those cliches? Tacky nightclubs and green-bottle beers. So that's what these brewpubs tried to give us: colored lights and black-painted ceilings and beer that tasted closer to mass-market brews than to real craft ale.

None of those brewpubs succeeded. Two of them didn't even survive a single year.

Honolulu Beerworks, on the other hand, is trying for something different. It's not a watered-down-for-"local"-tastes type of place. It's a craft brewpub, a real one. From the oak-barrels flanking the entrance, to the center-stage setting for the bar, to the gleaming stainless-steel brewery in the back, Beerworks is following a vision previously unseen in Honolulu. Because of that, it's got more in common with the brewpubs thriving on the mainland than it does with those other, short-lived local breweries.



That difference in vision applies to the beer, too. I drank a sample of every beer currently on tap, and went back for a couple pints of my favorites, and I can tell you with full confidence that Honolulu Beerworks is real beer. Not every beer won me over, but there were a few that satisfied my beer-cravings like no other local beer has managed to do.

The standout for me, by far, was the South Shore Stout. When I tipped back my glass and took my first gulp, it nearly brought tears of joy to my eyes. Big-bodied, malty, rich with caramel, and packing a notable alcohol punch. The ethyl-caramel combo made me recall bourbon-barrel aged beers I've had before, though of course this brewery hasn't had the time to age beer in barrels, yet. It also brought to mind the Russian Imperial Stout style, but Russian Imperial Stouts, in my experience, tend to have such a high alcohol level that the ethyl just burns your palate (unless they've been aged for a long time, and it's hard to find one that's been given enough time to mellow). This beer is a smoother, lower-alcohol drink than those. It didn't feature much of the smoky, roasted flavor that I favor in certain stouts, but I loved it anyway. Awesome beer!



I also really liked the Pia Mahi' Ai Saison. Slightly hazy, pale gold in color, with a good foamy head. The funk was in effect, but it was paired with an interesting sweetness that I'm not used to seeing side by side with that farmhouse flavor. A good, refreshing beer. I'd gladly go back for more.

There were a few disappointments, too, and since I value balanced journalism I feel obligated to mention them. The Kakaako Kolsch felt a bit thin and bitter. The Rye Not Pale Ale was so slight with its rye component that I could barely even notice it, and it poured completely flat with absolutely no head or carbonation (maybe they forgot to attach that keg to the CO2 system in advance, so it never got a chance to condition?). And it looked like they used plenty of PVC piping in their brewing system, which seems like a really bad idea to me.



But all in all, I'm excited about this place. Very excited. Take a look at their current line-up in the picture above, and you'll see that they've got two farmhouse beers and a rye. Beers featuring those flavors are relatively new to the American scene, definitely not as proven-to-sell as typical pale ales, IPAs, and lagers. You certainly wouldn't have found anything like them on tap at any of the other Honolulu breweries.

Which brings me back to my opening thoughts. This is the first brewery in Honolulu that isn't focusing their approach on appeasing that cliched concept of the "local" masses. Honolulu Beerworks seems to be trying to appeal to local beer geeks instead. (And there were plenty of them in attendance on the opening night--lots of Stone Brewing shirts, and even some other-than-west-coast gear like Three Floyds and Half Acre.) It's a gamble that no one else has tried here before. Personally, I'd love to be able to go back for more of that South Shore Stout, so I'm hoping it's a gamble that pays off.

Update (4/20/14): I sent an email to Geoff, owner of Beerworks, when I put this post up. He read the post and responded. The key things I took from his email, which I think should be posted, are these:

1) He confirmed that Honolulu Beerworks is "definitely not trying to appeal to the mass market green beers". They plan on rotating styles and should have barrel-aged beers available soon.
2) He's planning on upping the rye quotient in the Rye Not, and he says he's worked out the carbonation issues present in the first few batches.
3) (most important point) The PVC pipes I saw are actually just external cores for double-insulated glycol piping. The beer never comes in contact with PVC.

Thursday, April 10, 2014

Honolulu Beerworks opens tomorrow (April 11th)!

Guess where I'm gonna be tomorrow night!



(Picture taken from Tim Golden's article at Honolulu Magazine.)

It's been a long time coming, but Honolulu Beerworks is scheduled to open tomorrow night. The pictures I've seen online look awesome, and the lineup looks very promising. All the local beer-lovers have been working up a serious thirst, so I'm sure tomorrow is gonna be an epic opening. My hope is to try every beer on tap!

Also, very interesting tidbit from the Honolulu Magazine article linked above: Dave Campbell has been brought onboard as daily brewer. I wonder what that means about Hoku Brewing? Is he gonna be brewing at both places?

Tuesday, April 8, 2014

Making Mead



Wedding season is coming up. My wife and I have four weddings we'll be attending this summer, three of which are happening here on O'ahu, and going to weddings usually involves giving a wedding gift. I'm not especially excited about picking an item off a Williams Sonoma registry--seems sort of impersonal to me, you know?--so I've decided to give the newlyweds a gift of homebrewed mead instead.

You see, mead is a drink traditionally associated with weddings. The term honeymoon even relates to it. In olden days, after the wedding ceremony the couple would go into isolation for the period of a lunar cycle (which *cough cough* just happens to roughly coincide with a woman's menstrual cycle). During that time they'd drink mead and work on producing a male heir. The isolation was to help insure that the heir was the true sire of the husband. The mead was to inspire them in their work, and to increase the chance of the fruit of that work being male (mead can affect the PH of the body, and the PH of the woman's body during conception apparently affects the gender of the child conceived).

Anyway, heir or no, honeymoon or no, mead can be a pretty wonderful drink. I've been thinking about it more seriously recently because, as opposed to beer, the ingredients for mead can be entirely produced in Hawaii.

See, beer consists of barley, hops, water and yeast. The barley and hops don't grow well in Hawaii--they've developed in regions of greater latitude, which offer more sunlight hours in the summertime (in Hawaii we get like 13 hours of sunlight in the summer; in Washington state they get 16). But mead is mainly honey, water, and yeast. And honey is locally produced pretty much anywhere that plants grow, including Hawaii.

Another benefit to brewing mead in Hawaii is that the yeasts normally used in mead fermentation are often more tolerant of higher temperatures, whereas beer yeasts usually like it to be cooler. Dealing with Hawaii's warm temperatures has been a constant struggle for my brewing here. I've resorted to swamp-coolers and a cooler bag, and I've experimented with different yeast strains, all to minimize off-flavors produced by hot fermentations. The best luck I've had resulted from using more heat-tolerant yeasts.

So, for all of these reasons, I've decided to give mead-making another try (I did a batch back in San Fran that turned out pretty good, but I never got back to it till now.) Last month I got my hands on nine pounds of Organic, locally-sourced (Big Island) honey from Wililaiki Blossom nectar, and turned it into a mead. My plan is to bottle it next month, and then to give a bottle to each of the newly married couples with a recommendation to wait to open the bottle until at least their first year anniversary (which doesn't go along with the traditional honeymoon idea, but hey--my experience with mead leads me to believe that the longer the aging process, the better). Of course, I'll have plenty of bottles saved for myself, and I'll be sure to post how they turn out.