The paddle at Halifax's Garrison Brewery became the challenge point from young Megan for me to take a closer look at the East Coast craft brewing scene... |
But this challenge was a little different. It came from the east coast and was issued by young Megan. I remember meeting Megs as a teenage girl when she was but a high schooler down the street. The daughter of my coworker, Marie, she used to pop into my Beer Store all the time and I remember the talented teen strumming her guitar and singing with a gaggle of her friends out front of the store during our fund-raising May 24th bottle donation drive some years ago. I'm fairly certain that was our best year for collections ever and its success, I would say, landed squarely on pretty Megan's young shoulders.
Now 21, Megan is out on the east coast - Halifax, to be precisely - living with her Dad. I heartily approve of someone her age seeing as much of this country as possible. Indeed, when I was exactly the same age, I drove off to beautiful Banff, Alberta. From there, some new-found buddies and myself hopped into my rusty old Pinto and headed south-west to Pacific Coast Highway #1 where we continued south until we hit Venice, California. We had the time of our lives.
While busking on the Halifax Pier, Megan found an attentive audience with someone's chihuahua. Beauty will always soothe the savage beast. And probably chihuahuas too |
But back to Megan and her challenge. Posting the above picture on Facebook in early-July with me tagged, Megan said, "Hey, Don, if you ever catch yourself this way, try a sampler from Garrison Brewing. An IIPA so hoppy, there's no stronger way to classify it, the creamy nut brown ale, a raspberry ale fit for an East Coast summer, a cider so sweet you could pour it on your pancakes and my favourite, the blonde ale. The best one, however, was a taste of the (Garrison) Tall Ship (Amber Ale) mixed with the raspberry ale. On top of that, with Garrison and Propellor (Brewing, also out of Halifax) taking over the industry out here, I suggest perhaps an East Coast edition of Brew Ha Ha to shed light on some of the smaller, more beloved brands."
Well, I am not one to shy away from a challenge (particularly one less likely to need police intervention) so I suggested to Megan that since her brothers were out east visiting her and their Dad that, well, maybe she could use one of them as a beer mule and get some of that fancy East Coast beer headed back my way. As always, Megs was game and before long, I found myself in possession of a Garrison Imperial IPA, a Propeller Extra Special Bitter, a Boxing Rock Brewing (Shelburne, NS) The Vicar's Cross Double IPA and... well, this was a surprise, a ShipBuilders (Halifax) Cider.
But as Megan is sitting happily in the middle of a craft-boom in the east, I asked YellowBelly Brewing's (St. John's, Newfoundland) brewmaster Liam Mckenna how the craft beer scene was progressing out there from his perspective."(Craft beer) growth is great," he told me. "Consumer uptake and participation could not be more enthusiastic. There are consistent, quality producers such as Garrison, Granite (Brewery in Halifax), Propeller, Gahan House (Brewery in Charlottetown, PEI). There are also notable up-and-comers like Big Spruce (Brewing in Nyanza, NS) and we also have the genius of Greg Nash who is about to shock us all again out of our stupor with Unfiltered Brewing (opened this past summer in Halifax with partner Andrew Murphy.)"
So it's time to dip our toes into the Atlantic and look at some of these breweries. And let's start with Garrison Brewing since they and Propeller kicked things off decades ago.
John Allen, the founder of Propeller Brewing, stands beside one of the many brewing kettles in his Halifax brewery. They sell over 140 growlers of beer daily. |
Like Titus, John Allen, the founder of Propeller Brewing, also has his pre-brewing ties to things aquatic, having been an inspector for the Department of Fisheries and Oceans in the 1980s. From there, he became a prop master for the television and film industry before deciding in 1996 that he needed to try something new. According to an interview he gave the Halifax Chronicle-Herald in 2014. the workload in those early years (when he still had one foot in the prop industry, just in case) was "a shocker". But the time he was interviewed last year, Propeller had gone from struggling upstart to producing a million litres of beer annually - a huge jump from the humble beginnings in a former strip club on Gottingen Street where they began. In fact, they have opened a second facility in Dartmouth to keep up with the demand. But Allen told the paper that he was more interested in things running efficiently and keeping costs down than continued growth.
Greg Nash, the founder of Unfiltered Brewing, which opened this past Summer, is looking to smother east-coast drinkers with hops very soon. Even his t-shirt features a distinctive hop bomb. |
But what of these brash newcomers that my man Liam Mckenna mentioned? Well, Greg Nash's Unfiltered Brewing lives up to it name - nothing is filtered. "To me, it's an unnatural process that's not required," he told The Coast newspaper in an interview prior to their opening. "I want my beer raw; I want people to have it in the raw." (Challenge... accepted!! Wait, he does mean drinking naked, right?) Called "Nova Scotia's undisputed king of hops," it seems a safe bet that won't change with him owning his own place. When he was asked what to expect, he snorted, "A lot of fuckin' hops... I'm most well-known for hops obviously so most of the stuff I make is probably gonna be hoppy." At just 1,200-square-feet, it's one of the province's tinier breweries but Nash said he made maximum use of the limited space at their 6041 North Street location through the use of a lot of specialized brewing equipment.
My only contribution to this East Coast Extravaganza was the Propellor IPA because frankly, it was the only East Coast beer I could find at the liquor store! |
Well, Megan, look at what you started. While I feel I'm giving short shrift to the East Coast scene with these Reader's Digest looks at a few breweries, hopefully we're all getting the sense that while the east was lagging behind the rest of the country, they have now picked up the bat, the ball... and are starting to crank out the dingers.
The Boxing Rock Brewing's The Vicar's Cross Double IPA was a step down from that. I'll be honest - it doesn't taste like a double. That said, it would be a decent single IPA, even at 8.5% and 80+ IBUs.
The huge vat with the cannon painted on outside Garrison Brewing leaves little doubt as to what's being made inside... |
Okay, while I bought some Propeller IPA for this blog, it totally got hijacked by the Propeller ESB that Megan shipped. Using three malts including a noticeable (on the nose) chocolate one, the 5% brew is lightly hopped to just 30 IBU and is an excellent example of an English style bitter. I would plunk this down in front of any British pub patron and happily say, "Have at it." An outstanding ESB. Their IPA didn't knock me over and is, in fact, somewhat plain. Granted, having it after the Garrison IIPA likely hurt it. At 6.5% and 68 IBU, it too is a bit too malty and sweet on the nose with no real staying power on the tongue. However, I hear they dumped a truckload of Pacific Northwest hops into their Imperial IPA so that's definitely on my wish-list.
And that takes us to the ShipBuilders Cider.
So that's my East Coast Challenge all wrapped up in a pretty little bow though now that I've been introduced to their wares, I suspect an east coast visit is in the cards. Why not? All my nieces and nephews are out there, as is Megan and brewmaster Liam, so it would be a helluva party!
"Hey, Blog Boy! Don't you think it's about time you wrote about some east coast beers??" Uhhh, okay, Megan, I will... |
"Dear 2018 Megan: If you haven't already gone out and made a difference in the world, start today. You have no more time to lose. You can do great things if you set your mind to it and if anyone tells you that you can't, prove them wrong. There is no such thing as a dream too big and other people in the world prove that to us each and every day. Sincerely, 2015 Megan."
And cool things like that are precisely why I am so fond of this young lady. And also inspired to the point that I'm going to do this too!
"Dear 2018 Don: I can't believe you're still alive. Seriously, how is that possible? I hope whatever gutter you've crashed in has Wifi so you can read this! Do you still like beer? Hah, trick question! Buy all the Grade-A plutonium you can find. I'll explain later. By the way, you've been walking around all day with your fly down and your wangle-dangle hanging out. Nice Batman underwear. Smooth move, loser. Sincerely, 2015 Don."
There will be more East Coast in my future so I better start planning a trip. But guys and dolls, that's it, that's all and I am outta here! Until next time, I remain...