We all know Rule #1 of Brew Ha Ha's Best Of 2017. As my son, David, is displaying it's Ontario Craft Beers ONLY! Here is where we honour OUR best!! (I also honour them all year long by drinking them.) |
Our good friends at the Ontario Beverage Network had to struggle up keep up all the breweries offering online ordering where you just stick your tasty beers from far-away breweries in the little cyber-carts and within a business week, they're at your front door. Well, "struggle" might be overselling it as OBN is always on top of the Ontario craft beer scene like nobody's business. They also talk about other beverages that I don't care about, such as ciders and wine, but that's because they are exceptionally well-rounded people. I am not. I am exceptionally narrow-minded when it comes to imbibing. My push-cart only aims in one direction and it always involves water, yeast, malted barley and especially hops.
But back to the point of online craft beer ordering, as my man, Drunk Polkaroo, pointed out late in the year, "Is there going to be any Ontario breweries NOT offering online ordering by the end of next year?"
Best Pale/Blonde Lager this year was a tasty one from our friends at Amsterdam Brewing, their Pale Rider Dry Hopped Lager. Clean and punchy. |
I don't want you guys thinking I'm one-dimensional and it's all "beer, beer, beer" in my corner of the world. I pay attention to other stuff, too. Like international events. For instance, tensions ran so high between the USA and North Korea this year that France has already surrendered. See, I know stuff. I read the Internet.
But we're here today for one reason - to check out The Best of the Best, the top dogs, the Big Enchilada's of the craft beer fiefdom. However, I'm known for, uh, my strict adherence to rules so here's mine. Just as it was last year, Ontario craft beers only in this Winner's Circle. We'll add an out-of-province beer or two tomorrow as Part Two, while mostly still concentrating on Ontario, does drift elsewhere a little. And Rule #2, no repeat winners. We have so many great craft beers in Ontario that we wanna spread the honours around. Ready to rock? Hit the damn gas, Aunt Bea!
Best Pale/Blonde Lager: Yeah, I know, ewww, gross, pale blonde lagers. That's the macro brews we used to drink, right? Well, I gotta tell you, I don't remember Labatt Blue being jacked up on El Dorado and Amarillo hops the way that Amsterdam Brewing's (Toronto) Pale Rider Dry Hopped Lager is! At just 4.2%, this packs some tasty and tangy citrus. A smooth, easy, flavourful ride with this one. (Previous Winners: Cameron's 12 Mile India Pale Lager, Hogback's Vintage Lager)
Best Dunkel/Dark Lager: This is a tougher category than you'd think as I like my lagers dirtier than Charlie Sheen's bathroom but so far this year, four separate excellent beers were vying for the top spot. But in the end, I went with Four Fathers Brewing (Cambridge) Shevchenko 9 Ukrainian Dunkel Euro Dark Lager. At 5%, this is dripping with nutty chocolate and thick, bready malts. Almost too deep to be a lager. If you love your porters and stouts, give this a whirl because it's not that far removed from the heavier styles. (Previous Winners: Lake Wilcox' Mad Quaker Amber Lager, King Brewing Dark Lager, Mill Street 100th Meridian Organic Amber Lager.)
Best Pilsner: These guys have their own separate IPA category all to themselves in this annual space out of necessity. I was worried they'd just keep winning the Best IPA category year after year. You'd think that'd be enough but nooooo... Anyway, turns out this little-known Etobicoke brewery named Great Lakes can make a damn fine Pilsner, as well, with their Hopped Improperly American Dry-Hopped Pilsner. The 5%, 25 IBU (international bitterness units) seems just kinda grassy and a wee touch of fruit on the nose like most pilsners but steps it up on the tongue with nice traces of orange and lemon. (Previous Winners: Steam Whistle Pilsner, Steamworks Pilsner, Black Oak Epiphany No. 2 Pilsner, Rainhard Unfiltered Pilsner.)
Best Saison: Although traditionally a very mild style of beer, a good crossover between macro and micro, there's always a couple of saisons that trick it up and jump to the front of the pack every year. This year, it was easily Little Beasts Brewing (Whitby) La Saison D'ete, which may have skirted the whole saison thing with this little 6% bomb-blast. Brewmaster Erin Broadfoot apparently decided, "Hey, you know what saisons really need? More goddamn hops!"
Best Belgian-Style Wit: I started this category last year after I realized German-style wheats were going to win Best Wheat every year.
Best German-Style Wheat: Now this, my friends, is a true German wheat - Big Rig Brewing's (Ottawa) Big Boot Hefeweizen. With just that wee trace of bubble-gum on the nose that disappears quickly, the 4.8% beer burst with bananas, cloves and very mild spices on the tongue. A good German wheat is meant to be light and refreshing - the ultimate Summer patio brew - and this certainly fills the bill. This brewery continues to crank out beauties! (Previous Winners: Creemore Hoppy Hefeweizen, Howe Sound King Heffy Imperial Wheat, All Or Nothing Hopfenweisse and Side Launch Wheat.)
Best Specialty Wheat: I added this one last year because a brewery in Toronto blended a red ale and a wheat and the result was simply outstanding. So now, well, I guess it's kind of a thing. But honestly, there has to be one that knocks me over or I have no problem ignoring this not-at-all-traditional category altogether. One did. After one of their many forays across the Province this year, Drunk Polkaroo and his lovely wife, Kat, popped into my work with a healthy handful of beers for me, all IPAs... plus this one that wasn't. Beyond The Pale Brewing's (Ottawa) Pink Fuzz Grapefruit Wheat. Grapefruit is a taste better associated with pale ale and IPAs so what's it doing in a wheat beer? Adding a lot of flavour, first off. Think of a Radler, a grapefruit-lager combo but way better! (Which is actually ridiculously easy because radlers pretty much suck ass.) This 6% wheat was kind of a Germany-meets-California pale ale, citrus-grapefruit and wheat combo that I have never enjoyed before. Probably because it didn't exist. Zesty, a little bit hoppy and damn tasty with big bunches of grapefruit! (Previous Winner: Junction Craft Brewing Olympia Looping Red Wheat)
How has this beer not won before? This has been one of the best session ales in Ontario for a while. Muskoka Detour has been a low-ABV go-to for me since its launch because it's got a pretty big taste! |
The Beau's Lug Tread Honourary Best Kolsch: This category is named as such because for years, I never picked a Best Kolsch. Last year, there were two winners because my co-worker Jay-Dawg and I couldn't agree on the best one. And neither of the choices were Lug Tread, the Province's most beloved lagered ale. So, ironically, Beau's (Vankleek Hills) has never won my Best Kolsch. Until now. Because you see, Beau's Haters Gonna Hate Imperial Kolsch is not only a great beer, it's also a mistake. When they were brewing their first batch of Lug Tread, they accidentally froze it a little. That resulted in the ABV shooting up above 7%, a little high for the marketplace. They got it right the second time but, well, that spoiled batch had its fans within the brewery. It took 10 years but they finally returned with their new take on that original mistake. At 7.1% and 40 IBUs, Haters Gonna Hate has a bit of a musky aroma but on the tongue, it's very tropical mango and fruity for a lagered ale. And as the IBUs indicate, it has a little more hop-pop than your average Kolsch. This just proves that sometimes, mistakes are the best thing that can happen in life. And that, dear readers, is exceptionally good news for me. (Previous Winners: Cowbell Absent Landlord Country Kolsch, Old Tomorrow Track 85 Lagered Ale)
Best Session/Light Beer: First brewed in 2015, Muskoka Brewing (Bracebridge) slugged a bases-loaded homer with Detour, their session IPA. Frankly, I should have awarded this beer much sooner but, well, other beers got in the way. At a very reasonable 4.3% and 30 IBUs, the brewery starts with fewer hops in the early boil but then, puts in a lot more at the end during the dry-hopping process. El Dorado, Citra and Sorachi Ace hops all contribute to the pine finish while giving it a beautiful citrus and grapefruit nose. Now available in 355-ml (12 ounce) cans in either six or 12-packs, this is one of those good things that come in small packages. One of those really good things. (Previous Winners: Great Lakes' Sunnyside Session IPA, Flying Monkeys' Genius of Suburbia ISA, Great Lakes' Citradiction Extra Pale Ale)
Best Blonde Ale: Blonde ales are, well, blonde ales. They're a nice, mild style that won't set the world on fire but still hold their place in the craft beer world because they are so damn accessible. Anyone can drink a blonde ale. Even your grandmother. You know, if she wasn't so blasted on gin already.
Best Amber-Dark Ale: This, quite frankly, might just be the best new beer of 2017. Cameron's Brewing (Oakville) is literally down the street from me and while they continue to resist the pale ale or IPA bandwagon, they have two of my favourite beers constantly in stock - their 12 Mile India Pale Lager (frankly, the best lager in the Province) and their brand new Dark & Sticky India Brown Ale. Given the category, it's the latter we're looking at today. This is quite literally a brown ale meets an IPA. So it has all the thicky smoky malts of a brown ale but is goosed with Idaho 7 and Falconers Flight hops to give it some serious juice.
Best Pale Ale: Well, this little contest was over as soon as I had my first Redline Brewhouse (Barrie) Clutch American Pale Ale in the Spring. You know those hazy New England-style IPAs you always read about? Yeah, this is the pale ale version of that. In fact, when I would pop into the now-defunct Rib Eye Jack's Ale House for an after-work pint or two, I always started with this. At first it confused the servers, who would, out of habit, start reciting the latest IPAs on tap to me but they caught on quickly. As one eventually noted when she saw me coming through the door, "Donny wants his Clutch first!" And indeed, I most certainly did.
Best British-Style IPA: This is an often tricky category as it usually means a nicely hopped IPA but with an unsually strong malt backbone. The trick is not many breweries make this style, preferring to go malt-light, full west coast hops. But there's always a couple that capture my attention and this year, it was Walkerville Brewing's (Windsor) Geronimo IPA.
Best Great Lakes Brewing IPA: Yes, this category was created last year because I looked at their stable of Tank Ten IPAs and thought, "No one else is gonna win Best IPA with these guys in the mix." So I gave them their own category. The good thing about this little craft beer party is that I can make up rules on the fly. And I often do.
I think this one caught all Ontario craft beer drinkers a little off-guard this year as Beau's finally released a west coast style IPA and goddammit, was it ever good! |
Best West Coast IPA: I gotta be honest. When I heard Beau's All Natural Brewing was releasing an IPA this year, I was skeptical it would be a true west coast one.
Beyond The Pale Brewing's Aromatherapy IPA is pretty much the best Vermont-style IPA brewed in Ontario this year. It's hazy and yucky-looking and totally delicious! |
Best New England Style IPA: This is a first time category because 2017 was the first year the hazy, funky east coast IPA style caught on with our brewers. And a healthy handful of them did it very well. But none moreso than Beyond The Pale Brewing with their Aromatherapy NEIPA. The Ottawa brewers use Citra and Mosaic hops in the initial boil before adding Amarillo and Centennial to the dry hopping. The result? A 6.5%, 55 IBU murky monster that bursts with a floral and citrus nose followed by a truckload of fruit and peach juiciness on the tongue. I can't wait for more brewers to hit the shelves with this style!
Best Imperial IPA: Well, it took me four years but I finally got my hands on some Indie Ale House Cockpuncher Imperial IPA. Why did it take so long? This beer is scarce and fleeting when it lands in their retail with extremely limited stock.
Well, that's it for Part One but Part Two is coming soon where we'll look at the best porters, stouts, sours, barrel-aged beers, fruit beers, specialty beers and of course, the Beer of the Year! I'm off to Las Vegas tonight to catch the Toronto Maple Leafs play the Golden Knights on New Years Eve and while I will be taking my lap-top, Part Two may wait for my return due to "I'm in Vegas" reasons. But mindful of the fact that Vegas is an expansion team in the middle of a desert, I want to help their American fans with some common Canadian hockey cheers. Terms such as "Go hockey game!" Or "Yes, play sports!" Perhaps "Shoot the hamburger at the webbed cage!" And of course, "Elude the heavily-padded fellow guarding the cage and wearing the murder mask!" I'm all about helping those with a lesser understanding of hockey explore their potential as a true "Rink Rat." But guys and dolls, that's it, that's all and I am outta here. Until Best of 2017: Part Two, I remain...