Week 12: My Comfort Beers
Here we are, in heart of winter. This is the time of year when we face the wet, the cold, and the short days. Where I live, it is mostly the wet. The holidays have passed. Everyone is taking down the decorations. This is the down time for many businesses, too, especially pubs and restaurants.
Throughout January and February I always enjoy staying in with my wife, cooking comforting dinners together, and relaxing. I have a certain number of meals that have always been my comfort foods, like shepherd’s pie, ham and pea soup, braised pork, stew with dumplings, mac and cheese, and ribs. These foods help warm me up, and make the winter seem far away.
I have my comfort beers, too. When I want to tip a few back in the heart of winter, I seem to come back to brown ales. They are lighter than stouts and porters, and often have flavours of nuts, brown sugar, and toasted grains. The texture is usually on the creamy side. They carry all of these comforting tastes, but stay easy drinking.
Part of the comfort people from get food and drink comes from familiarity. Brown ales are a natural place for people to start drinking craft beer, as they are not giant flavour bombs. The good ones tend to be subtle and smooth. Bad brown ales can be sweet and sugary, though.
The term ‘brown ale’ was supposedly coined in 17th century London as a term for certain mild ales. Since then, as is typical with labels of this sort, it has evolved to mean different things in different places. As usual, Martyn Cornell knows much more than me on this subject, and if you click here you can find an informative article.
To me, brown ales represent slightly lighter dark ales, when compared to porters and stouts, that carry many characteristic lighter malt flavours. Sometimes they have a stronger hop presence, but my favorites are usually smooth, toasty, and rich.
The five beers that I will review this week are all from B.C., with a couple of breweries that are appearing on The Flagon for the first time.
I will review brown ales from Barkerville, Spinnakers, Howe Sound, 4 Mile, and Tree. The last two are new to the site.
So, grab a brown ale, curl up on the couch, block out the outside, and warm up with one of my comfort beers.
Week 12: My Comfort Beers was originally published on The Flagon