31 December 2018

2018 Polkies - The Ten

 
To You. Love Polk


What makes a beer memorable?
  Is it the contents contained within?
  The texture, taste and overall balance or sticking to it's style?
  Is it the experience of where, when and with whom you drink it?
  Is it indeed a combination of all of that and a little more, the genuine love and appreciation for the ever changing world of craft beer around us and what it has brought to our lives.
  For the last 3 plus years I have written about what I am drinking and feeling every day on Instagram and with the addition of this blog, Pints with Polk on YouTube and my very active Twitter feed, there isn't much you don't know about me and who I am. I bring my life to you with the scars and experience of a man who went down the rabbit hole of mindlessly drinking macro beers in pursuit of something better. I did that for most of my adult life and when I finally discovered Craft Beer, everything changed. I regained my voice, my life and my love of the art simply writing about things. As we gather today on the final day of 2018, I want to look back at the 10 Most Memorable Beers of the year with an eye to finding the joy and love those great beers brought to me. They may not be the top rated beers or the whales we all seek out in our journeys, but they are the ones that stand out in my mind, that make smile and bring me back to that first sip and what they gave me since then. It is an exploration of more than just beer, it is a look at how each one of them changed the narrative or enhanced it in the last 12 months. I love them all for different reasons and I will try to convey that to you. It isn't just about how they taste, it has become much more than that.
10. Clifford Brewing Artificial Paradise IPA





  When Brad Clifford told me in 2017 that he would be finally opening a brick and mortar brewery in Hamilton's East End, I was overjoyed. When he finally opened the doors later that year and it was only 10 minutes from my house, I was in love. Making some of the best beer in the province already with the contract brewed Porter and Pinball Wizard APA, having a place to call his own and control every aspect of the process brought even more fine things to my Clifford Tulip as the year went on.
  But it isn't just that his first IPA, the 7.1% Artificial Paradise, was a beautifully crafted beer; it was the people at the brewery who made it and each stop we made in 2018 so much fun. It is very much a home away from home for so many of us and it is due to the friendly and joyful nature of the entire team at Clifford Brewing.
  So while I definitely hope you can come to Hamilton and get some of this and the other fine Ontario Craft beer being made here, I want you to be also able to experience the authentic and lovely place Clifford has become. This beer represents that commitment to creating new and amazing things for us to try and that is worthy of a spot in any Top Ten List.
YouTube Video Review
9. Grain and Grit Beer Co. In the Palms IPA

  It has become a common theme for me to associate not just the beer to the brewer's personal style but to also attribute the personality of the brewery to the experience of drinking it. Having a good time when you stop in at a brewery enhances not only your perception of their beer but gives you an insight into their philosophy and often their views on the wider world around us. Being a guy who talks about beer a lot, it is always a pleasure when I find something from a place filled with people I love that I can share with the highest of regard. Grain and Grit have been making decent beer with some forays into good from the beginning but the release of their In the Palms IPA, they finally found their footing and took off from there. A beautiful beer that I returned to buy anytime they released a new batch, it rounded out a portfolio of easy drinking and lower ABV beers that had been their hallmark from the beginning. As a guy who loves a hoppy beer, this combined with their outstanding Light Ray Session IPA had me giddy. All that put together with their work at making the Hamilton community as a whole a better place through various initiatives and an honest to goodness happy and joy filled brewery where the folks who work their give a damn, makes this beer an easy addition to my list.
  Grain and Grit continues to grow and impress every time I stop by but it is more than just beer, it is the people who make every sip a little better than the last.
YouTube Video review
8. Collective Arts Brewing IPA No. 5

  Sticking close to home early in the countdown and we turn now to the OG Hamilton Craft Brewer who had a year filled with a lot of ups, some downs and a whole lot of excitement. The early 2018 January release of Collective Arts Brewing IPA No. 5 set a high bar for the coming 12 months with it's big and juicy NEIPA body and tropical Citra and Simcoe Hops. A massive hit that inspired the #Keep5Alive hashtag on Twitter when it went away, it has returned in a different form with the late in the year release of Surround Sound DIPA. This was but a preview of a year that saw them throw a great beer festival (Liquid Arts), release a juicy milkshake IPA that pushed the boundaries of juice and beer and the unfortunate follow up to No. 5, the much maligned IPA No. 6. Redemption came with the aforementioned Surround sound and the next two IPA numbered releases and as the year closed, we could look back on an abundance of collaboration beers with brewers from around the globe, a plethora of world class releases and some of the finest folks a Polk can know.
  They may not always hit the mark but IPA No. 5 was the kind of beer that inspired a fanatical following and gave us a glimpse into what Collective was up to right off the bat. I have no doubt that 2019 will bring us some very interesting times as they begin to solidify and continue to be leaders when it comes to pushing the boundaries of what we love when it comes to this now legendary Hamilton institution.
 YouTube Video Review

7. Great Lakes Brewery Octopus Wants to Fight

  Long a favourite of Hop Heads everywhere, the news that GLB was making this 6,2% hoppy beauty available year round was a shot of lightening in the dark. As the best IPA, in my opinion, in 2018, it isn't just the tropical, dank and citrusy pithiness of this always fine IPA that meant the most to me. Although it sure as hell didn't hurt. It is a combination of the genius of Mike Lackey and the almost fanatical way they guard their Fresh GLB promise. Always on the lookout to make sure no beer is left too long, they are making it very difficult to not have this one in the fridge constantly. 
  As a long time friend of Polk, I adore the team at GLB for their commitment to not just beer, but the bigger community around them. Constantly doing good work for charity and craft beer at large with collabs helping to bring together folks who love great beer and company, they remain not only a leader in the Ontario Craft beer world but make a huge difference in the lives of those around them. Always and forever a part of what makes this fun for me and you, a salute and thank you to GLB.
YouTube Video Review

6. Barncat Artisan Ales Double the Juice DIPA

  It took me far too long to get out and visit the hottest nano brewery in Ontario but to be honest, their hours of operation are always a little bit problematic for a guy who works most weekends. Barncat is located in the growing hot craft beer spot out in Cambridge and are open just 9 hours a week. 3 p.m. to 8 p.m. Fridays and Noon to 4 p.m. on Saturdays. Hard to get to but I'll be damned if they aren't making some of the most sought after IPAs, stouts and barrel aged stuff in the country, let alone Ontario.
  Small batch is what they are and with the exception of one canning run of Triple Simcoe, they only sell their hoppy gems like Double the Juice by the growler, hoping to get you to drink fresh and enjoy the hazy, tropical and dank juicy contents as they intended it. I enjoyed 2 litres of this 8.3% beauty in mid November but I can still taste it now. Subsequent but sporadic visits have yielded even more top notch beer and while I do so wish they would ramp up production and grow to be able to be open a little more, I also know that part of what makes them so special is exactly what makes it hard to get them. Always a pleasure to hang out for a little bit and talk about the state of beer around Ontario with the guys, I am always going to sing the praises of good beer made by good folks and this is just that. I wish for even more trips in 2019 to Barncat and know that I am making that a priority from the start. They have captured something special and I need more of that kind of joy in my life.
YouTube Video review



5. Merit Brewing One for Us Brut IPA

  If you are a fan of exploring beer and having fun while doing it, then you need to come to Hamilton and make Merit Brewing on James street a stop. From funky and unique barrel beers to dank IPAs and everything in between, Spinney has been creating a larger and larger portfolio of amazing creations and with Tej and the rest of the team crafting a taproom experience on par with anything we've had, you are in for a treat.
  Often on the forefront of trying new things, like back in May when Merit was the first to bring the dry and effervescent Brut IPA to Canada with the release of the 5.9% One for Us. A soft body with lots of tropical citrus, the dry and lingering dank finish, this first foray was followed by others as they experimented with just how to use this unique beer style and create something new and better each time. While we enjoy going to Merit for a bite to eat from their excellent kitchen and perhaps a pint or two, it is their willingness to try new things, work with local producers of wine and other things and the various community events that they plan to help out their neighbourhood that makes me smile anytime I hear people are coming to town to visit them.
  Where will this style of beer evolve to? It has seen many other breweries already take a shot and with mixed results to be sure. But the fact that Merit was first and continued to tweak and pursue something no one else doing speaks volumes for their love of beer. Bravo to all of this!
YouTube Video Review

4. Dominion City Brewing Buck a Beer Blonde Ale

  When the Ontario PC party won the provincial election and made their promise of reducing the floor price on beer to $1 (from $1.25) and then proceeded to gut many of the social and educational programs to help those less fortunate or different than them under the guise of saving money, I was not quiet. I wrote about why Buck a Beer wasn't about beer (read it here) and I did what I could to call out the 2(!) Ontario breweries that decided to participate in this bread and circuses stunt. Dominion City Brewing from Ottawa went even further and that is why their Buck-a-Beer Blonde Ale makes The Ten this year.
  Home to so many beautifully crafted IPAs and others, Sunsplit NEIPA is quite amazing, Dominion has reached out to the province by offering home delivery and believe me they have fans everywhere, including here at The Manor. This beer in particular is a solid performing Blonde but it is the fact that they thumbed their nose at the often racist comments made by premier ford and his minions about refugees that makes this outstanding. A dollar from every pint sold went to a charity in the Capital region that helped resettle Syrian refugees and to the credit of Ontario craft beer drinkers, it was gone almost as fast as it hit the fridge and taps at Dominion. To take such a negative thing and spin it into a helpful and most Canadian way of welcoming the world to join us made me happy to support the cause. They recognized the need for someone to step up and say "No" to racism, bullying and xenophobia of all sorts and while I haven't been back to Ottawa in a long time, we have made a return trip a priority for the new year.
  For being right and standing up for those who need help, Dominion City not only belongs in The Ten, they earned it with their hearts.
YouTube Video Review

3. Oast House Brewers Grandma's Strawberry Rhubarb Ale

  A beer I had 2 years ago and missed last year came roaring back into my life and my only problem was that I didn't buy more when I had the chance. Oast House Brewers in Niagara on the Lake releases this 4.8% seasonal ale once a year and only in Growler fills. When I saw it had come out, I feared I would once again miss it as I was working all weekend and wouldn't be able to get there until the following Tuesday. Watching one of my friends pick up almost a dozen growler fills had that fear go up even more but he reassured me that it should last through the week. A hurried message later that weekend told me to make it my first stop on my day off as it was going faster than anticipated and when I awoke on that July day, I was off and running, ice and cooler ready to go. Why I only bought 1 growler still haunts me to this day as this fruit beer takes the cake for hitting the mark on unique and delightful flavours. It was literally like drinking a piece of pie as the rhubarb and strawberry melded into a biscuity graham cracker note on the finish. We emptied the contents as we floated around the pool and it was an extraordinary day because of it.
  For being such a short lived beer and perhaps that is part of its appeal, I could not imagine remembering the very best and most memorable moments of 2018 without this beer. Next year I will be bringing far. far more home with me and maybe I can share it with more people to help spread the love.
YouTube Video Review

2. Fairweather Brewing Fortune and Glory DIPA

  When Fairweather brewing opened their doors in 2017, I was impressed from the get go with the high quality and sheer genius of what was coming out of this west end Hamilton brewery. That continued into 2018 as I was able to get my hands on 29 different releases from them and not one was rated below a 4/5 with 8 hitting the high water mark of 4.5/5. This was one of those and without a doubt the highest praise is deserved for this dank, juicy and tropical gem of an Imperial IPA. At 8.5%, it is no crusher and every time I bought a bottle it got better and better...which is hard to do considering it was so damn amazing to start with. It was softly bitter with such citrus you'd think you were on an island somewhere with nothing to do but enjoy your life. It took me away from my troubles every single time and for that and all of the other amazing beers, I salute Fairweather with this spot in The Ten.
  As an aside, a stop into the brewery is a must for anyone who comes to Hamilton. They are my number one recommendation and believe me when I say you'll want to stick around and enjoy the fine folks who work there, their passion and joy make it even better. I am a fan of everything from the surprise Pilsner of the year (Donna) to the bright and shiny Beki, a sour lemonade ale that was simply divine. Next year is almost here and with it I am sure we will see even more out of Fairweather.
YouTube Video Review
1. Sawdust City Brewing Juicin'

  While I may put Sawdust City Brewing's Juicin' NEIPA at the top of my list this year, it could honestly be a dozen different beers from this Gravenhurst, Ontario brewery. They have long been a favourite of mine with the big old slow sipping Stouts (LDV, Blood of Chtuhlu and Titania), bitter and Piney IPAs (Lone and Twin Pine) and straight up classic Ontario craft beers (Golden Beach and Little Norway). Toss in a barrel aged and funky bunch (ODB or Limberlost, anyone) and a Sour Beer fest on Canada Day that is a must stop and you have a complete and authentic legend. While this softly bitter, multiple award winning NEIPA is full of tropical citrus and peach, dank pine and a finish that leaves you wanting just one more sip, it is from their visit to The Grotto on August 20th that I must make Sawdust City my Most Memorable Beer and Moment of 2018.
A real group of beauties right here!


  Unknown to me, Sam and his team had been in contact with Lady Polk for a while about coming down for a visit and as the day got closer, all I knew is that we had to clean up the house because we were having company. I had no clue that it would be two carloads of some of the best people in Ontario Craft beer, all the food for a BBQ and two coolers full of Sawdust City Beer. When they pulled into the driveway and I saw all these people spill out into the driveway I was stunned to say the least. When the Man himself hauled a cooler of beer out of the Sawdust van, I was done. It was an emotionally uplifting experience to spend a few hours trading beer stories, hanging out in The Grotto and even going live on Instagram drinking the 2016 ODB in The Crease. Floating in a pool with one of my favourite brewmasters drinking beer and talking about life is by far and away the best moment of 2018 and I will treasure the memory always.
I still can't believe this happened


  So for that day and so many other great things that Sawdust does for the larger community of craft beer drinkers and their various charitable brews and events, I am proud and happy to place them atop The Ten for 2018. The beer is on par with the excellent people who make it and if you can't find it close to you, order online or even better, head out on the road and drop in at the Brewery, you will be glad you did.
Sawdust for days


  That is a wrap my friends except for one more thing...
Thank You.
  Thank you for all of your support in the last 3 years, especially for everyone who voted for me when I won the 2018 Best Beer Writer in Ontario at the Golden Tap Awards in September. I love to hear your stories and share in your highs and lows as we navigate this life. I write like no one will read it, but I am grateful and humbled when you do. I couldn't imagine not doing this and I truly wouldn't have grown and changed without you. My eternal thanks to the breweries and the people that work at them for their kindness and passion and of course, to Kathryn (Lady Polk), who is by my side for all of this and slow sipping the best life we could live.
My pal Sam!
Happy New Year and let's bring on 2019!!
Cheers!
Polk




Stay sexy, My Friends!








 

The UnPolkies - My Least Favourite Beers of 2018

 
Judge Polk


  In the course of trying more than 700 different beers, there are bound to be a few clunkers. To be honest, when I finally was able to sort all of them and looked at my ratings, less than 40 (37 actually) were below my 3.5/5 rating, which generally is where I place an average but decent beer. These were not that...
  Finding a beer that isn't hitting the mark is not fun, I try to give it the benefit of the doubt and will even buy another one to try and see if I missed something. I don't enjoy not liking a beer but as I learn and grow, I am finding I have less time for poorly conceived or just plain "meh" beers. The first four on this list would be best described as off the charts poor with little to redeem them save the ABV and no one needs to get drunk so badly they should subject themselves to these liquid mistakes. The final two fall under the new category of "I'm not mad, I'm just disappointed", a look at two good ideas that just fell flat and left me feeling out of sorts because the breweries they come from have really good track records overall.
  So here we go, I drank them so you don't have to and now I get to relive it all over again. I'll share my review from Instagram and leave a link to the YouTube video review if there was one before having a few final words (in Italics) after looking back . Thank goodness I get to talk about my 10 Most Memorable Beers later today because these 6 are enough to drive a man to drink...better.

1. Green Bastard IPA


Then (May 25th) -  Not sure what I was expecting but back to the well a third time we go with NAC Importers and another Trailer Park Boys branded beer. This time it's Bubbles and his 6.5% Green Bastard IPA, brewed with Citra, Amarillo and cascade hops, so there's some hope. Pours a clean and deep golden colour with a thick white head that lingers on the surface with some lacing. The first sign of trouble is when you take a sniff and get some caramel and a muted orange note but it's just not right.  On the sip, toasted malt backbone with a caramel sweetness, bitter pine with hints of orange and grapefruit, a bit soapy with a spicy finish that has a sharp bitterness but somehow is sticky. It lingers with a warm spice, rye in the malt bill for some reason, orange and pine with a grainy malted aftertaste that won't let go. Meh is too much, just give it a pass unless you're a fan of the show and want to get the can for the art. Not decent, a shitstorm of competing flavours that work about as well as the boys plans to retire early after one more Big Dirty...that's probably the next release, some kind of turbid sour...just stop. 
Now - It cost me $3.25 and that seems like far too much for this kind of effort. Not cool man. The Boys need a better beer so their fans can stop wasting their money on this kind of swill. Fandom only goes so far before even diehards will start to see through blatant cash grabs like this.
2. Post Game Brew Co. Locker Room Lager

Then (January 24th) - I'm not much for light lagers much anymore and sometimes that reason is made clear to me. A clever marketing scheme and a low ABV cannot overcome a beer I'd rather not see in The Crease again. Found at the LCBO, Locker Room Lager by Post Game Brew Co. is a 4.2 % Game day crusher that pours clean and straw gold with a white head that fades. Smells of toasty malt with light lemon notes. On the sip, light is indeed the watchword here with a thin body that has little in the way of composition or favour. Slight lemon, biscuit and grass with some corn and a dry finish that resembles a similar beer that any macro brewer could put out. Aimed at the post game crowd or a sports bar, it leaves little to the memory and is best served ice cold, calling it suds on the can reminds me that we have a long way to go sometimes in our journey. Not a crossover beer in any sense, it's Coors light writ craft and for me, that's not a compliment or an endorsement. Save the $2.35 and grab a great Ontario Craft Lager instead. Maybe I'm getting cynical but this doesn't sit right in my wheelhouse or ethos.
Now - This one should be relegated to the broken stick pail and left out of any conversation about craft. So many low ABV options that have great flavour and body out there. Double minor for being low brow and pandering. A game misconduct for the entire concept. Hockey deserves better.
3. Magnotta Brewing Inukshuk IPA

Then  (February 5th) - I'm sensing a trend in 2018 and I'm not feeling it. From the 2006 Brewery of the year at the Canadian Brewing awards...because that is something they can still market, albeit without the 2006 on the can...comes Magnotta Brewery's 6.5%, 38 IBU True North Inukshuk IPA. Should be better labelled as an English style IPA but capturing aspiring hop heads off guard has it's moments I suppose as well. Pours a clear golden copper colour with a white ahead that fades to nothing and leave a no trace. Smells like a caramel with nuts. On the sip, bready malt body with a lot of sweetness and some nuttiness. A loaded malt bomb with a slight herbal and earthy hop bitterness on the backend. It finished sticky with more of the same, not really in my wheelhouse and I am a huge fan of a well done English style IPA. Guess I'll be the guy who keeps drinking 'em so you don't have to, LCBO available but that really shouldn't be something you should concern yourself with. Move along, nothing to see here.
Now - The marketing of this still bothers me, an award won 12 years ago and a beer that is not what it says it is. Hard pass. 
4. Hop City Brewing Cheat Day Porter

Then (February 1st) - Okay...yup.  From Hop City Brewing comes their 5.7% cake in a glass Cheat Day Black Forest Porter. It pours dark with light bleeding through and a tan head that fades to the side and smells of dark chocolate and light cherry. On the sip, this is where it all goes off the rails for me. Up front sweet chocolate and tart cherry is almost blunted by the metallic copper penny flavour that seems to permeate the entire way through. Letting it warm up a bit, there isn't a lot of roastiness and the cherry fights with the copper but the finish is cloying and metallic once again. Not really my style but that's what the world is all about, to each their own. Meh.
Now - Cherry is a beautiful flavour for a porter...if it tastes real...this did not. Cake in a glass is out there but needs a delicate hand and not just a fancy can.

I'm Not Mad. I'm just disappointed.

1. Omnipollo Prodromus Stout

Then - (January 6th) - It's not that I am cheap but I still can't pour a beer down the drain... although right now I'm damn close.  Brewed in Toronto from the Swedish minds of wandering brewers Omnipollo comes the 10.5% Prodromus Graham Cracker Chocolate Chunk Caramel Bar Stout. It pours a thick, slick oil spill consistency with a tan head that lingers a bit before heading to the sides of the glass. Scents of Graham cracker, chocolate, caramel waft up as soon as that top is popped, almost overwhelming. On the sip, cloying and artificial with a boozy end. Lots of sweet caramel, chocolate, vanilla, Graham cracker and a warming canned heat kicker.  It's sharp and dry with an alcohol and chocolate, caramel and vanilla finish that has more of that fake Graham cracker lingering. I think it tried to do too much and in over reaching just became a bit of a dark roasted mess. A beer that will no doubt be for some folks, but after all the really amazing Imperial stouts and even the plain old regular ones I've had from Ontario this week, it is a real letdown. I can't recommend it, don't want to finish it but will not give up any time soon. No beer shall defeat me, even this dark grog. Disappointing after that most excellent IPA we had not so long ago from this very same brewery.
Now - Just poorly conceived and executed, best left in Sweden and at $6.00 a can, one of the worst deals in Ontario.To this day we still cringe at the thought of this diabetic coma in a can.   
2/5 No Video...darn it.
2. Collective Arts IPA No.6

Then (August 27th) - The much anticipated Collective Arts Brewing IPA No. 6 lands in The Grotto about as fresh as can be. Canned August 24th, this 6.7% Collective Project was brewed with Peaches as well as Amarillo and Wai-Iti hops and pours a hazy orange with a fluffy white head that lingers a while. Smelling peaches with some melon. On the sip, it has a whole lot of over ripe peach notes with melon  and some citrus on the backend. Slightly bitter with an almost funky peach on the finish. It doesn't work for me at all, the peach feels off somehow and doesn't blend well with the other notes. Such is life, I can't love everything and that is okay. Always honest, always true.
Now - I did go back and revisit this in another batch and still found it to be a little off putting. It wasn't the worst beer, it just missed the mark of great that so many Collective Arts beers did. Tough to maintain that level beer after beer but sometimes you might want to just let one go and move on. This is that one.  

  No doubt someone loved each and every one of these beers. Palates are very personal and I encourage you to explore beer with an open mind, be honest and help us keep the Craft Beer community moving forward. Sharing our thoughts helps encourage conversation and that makes everyone a better, more informed consumer. Hold accountable those responsible for poorly thought out marketing or misleading labels, off flavours or just plain lazy beer. Give praise and help drive the sales of those who contribute to the greater good and make beer that is on point and made to be enjoyed with friends and family. You don't have to be an asshole about it but it is better to get mad than just blindly like everything you try to curry favour or try and get free stuff. Love is all about never losing sight of truth, honour and beauty.
Time to switch gears and later today I hope you'll come back as I talk of the Ten Most Memorable Ontario Craft Beers of 2018!
 
Cheers!
Polk

(If you want to know more about my personal system, which I try to use based on how close a beer comes to being on point, stylistically at least, you can check out Rating and Reviewing from my post about it last year here.)

30 December 2018

2018 Polkies - 'Thar be Hops! (Pale Ales and IPAs)

 While we love to dabble in other styles and many of us are fans of this dark or that sour, the overwhelming majority of craft beer drinkers I know are unabashed and loudly self proclaimed Hop Heads. Hazy, juicy, tropical, piney, dry, resinous and citrusy describe in one degree or another what we love and with that in mind I head into today's post still torn about the amazing and world class beers that didn't make the cut of my Top 5 in the following 8 categories. It is almost like when we talk about the Canadian Olympic Hockey team being able to field two world class teams, the top 15 in almost all of these categories are really damn great beers and no doubt would top anyone's list. I'll spare you the rehash of "notes of grapefruit, orange and pine, etc." in describing them as best I can and instead try to evoke just what made them so memorable and why they stood out.
  Hold onto your Spiegelaus, it's about to get Hoppy in here!


Pale Ales
1. Merit Brewing Step to the Right

  While the line between Pale ale and IPA is a bit of finessing no matter who you are, this dank and tropical one from Merit blew me away late one night in August. It was a big and juicy with an attention grabbing texture. I may be biased but damn if Hamilton isn't home to some of the finest breweries in the province. Merit brings so much to the table when it comes to the community as well and that makes them one of the best as far as I'm concerned. If this comes back, I'm buying a 12 pack because I missed it moments after I had my last sip and I don't feel that often.
2. Bellwoods Brewery Jutsu

 Last years top pale Ale slips a spot but that has little to do with the revamped Jutsu and a little more with Merit's ascendance. Still a big and bitter citrusy treat, it has become a little more dank and juicy and I am all kinds of okay with that. I imagine this will be a big seller online as the more people in Ontario can now experience the genius of Bellwoods through their home delivery option.
3. Great Lakes Brewery Canuck
4. Amsterdam Brewing Cruiser
5. Blood Brothers Brewing Blood Light


Session IPAs


1. Fairweather Brewing foreva eva

  Little can be said that hasn't already been about the year Hamilton's own Fairweather Brewing had. This September release was bang on what a session IPA should be. Loads of pithy citrus, dank pine and body made this easily feel like a 9% Double IPA and it came in at half that ABV. Outstanding is not enough praise but damn it really was.
2. Grain and Grit Beer Co. Light Ray

  From way back in February comes a beer that caught my eye and my heart. A 4.5 %, 80 IBU session beer that drank like the big boys with a loaded citrus and stone fruit body. It was the best beer I had found from G and G, starting a trend that saw them hit high water marks throughout the year. Hope to see it again and this time I will be loading up!
3. Great Lakes Brewery Sunnyside
4. Nickel Brook Brewing Lost in Orbit
5. Collective Arts Brewing State of Mind


IPAs
1. Great Lakes Brewery Octopus Wants to Fight

  Like a message from the heavens came the announcement that GLB would be making the 6.2%, 88 IBU Octo available year round and the ground shook as Ontario Hop Heads applauded and cheered! Given GLB's penchant for fanatical freshness and of course, the hop forward mind of Mike Lackey, we knew this would be a fantastic new everyday option for our homes. The big and juicy tropical notes meet a touch of the dank and to the skies we go with joy. I only wish I was an octopus so I could have 8 pints on the go at once!
2. Fairweather Brewing High Grade

 A slight tweak to the recipe made this Fairweather core IPA a damn near perfect beer as 2018 rode along. Touching up the dank, juicy beauty with a deft hand meant multiple trips required back for more as this beer kept needing to be in my glass. Taking a detour from the grapefruit and pine to add mango and melon made this one a must have for anyone who loves 'em bold and bitter.
3. Left Field Brewery Prospect Simcoe
4. Merit Brewing Young Rival
5. Clifford Brewing Artificial Paradise


Imperial IPAs
1. Fairweather Brewing Fortune and Glory

 Prestige. Pride. Power. This 8.5% juicy, tropical and dank hop juggernaut was a revelation when it hit my glass in the latter half of the year. So much citrus, pithy and dank with light pepper notes, it went down quickly and I bought more everytime I returned to Fairweather. They have found the key to true happiness and it resides in this bottle, one glorious sip at a damn time.
In the category I love the most, it was a close race and this beer made the case for all the honour it receives.
2. Barncat Artisan Ales Double the Juice

  I don't know if you're supposed to drink the whole 2 litre growler of Barncat Double the Juice when you get home from work but I did it. I couldn't resist its juicy, tropical citrus and dankness...it is second but by the slimmest of margins. If I lived closer I would be there every weekend and as it is, 2019 will find me making more trips to this amazing nano brewery that has everyone who tries their creations stunned and awed.
3. Bellwoods Brewery Mylarshark
4. Rainhard Brewing Revolution No. 8
5. Rouge River Brewing The Dankster King


Black IPAs
1. Great Lakes Brewery Apocalypse Later

  Like a king returning from battle, this big and boozy 10.5%, 100+IBU strides into Polk Manor with a swagger that is very well deserved. Roasty, bitter citrus pith and pine make this a damn slow sipper of the highest order and the one beer I cannot see dropping from top spot year after year. Perhaps it was my expanding palate but in 2018, Apocalypse was even better, bigger and bolder than before! I patiently wait it's return.
2. Muddy York Brewing Frogman

The early months of the year are always filled with dark and roasty treats and with the release of the 8.0%, 60 IBU Frogman, legendary brewer Jeff Manol of Muddy York crafted something wonderful. Bright and tropical with a solid dark chocolate backbone, it warmed me to the core on a chilly March day and resonates to this day. Look for it to return and if it does, you'll be able to order it online and join the hop madness!
3. Shillow Brewing Bitter Waitress
4. Great Lakes Brewery Black Hole of Eden
5. Manantler Brewing Death's Tar


New England Style IPAs
1. Sawdust City Brewing Juicin'

  Putting aside the fact that the Team from Sawdust showed up here at The Grotto for an amazing evening in August, I have been in love with Juicin' since the moment I first tried it a year and a half ago. It topped my list last year as favourite IPA and now takes the crown in the first ever NEIPA category. So many great beers, but this peach, citrus and smooth bodied, softly bitter beauty remains at the top of my list and will be once again returning to my glass when it hits the shop in Gravenhurst in 2019. Hard to knock of the beast when it's this damn good. A must order online when you see it!
2. Dominion City Sunsplit

  I have the feeling that I need to go visit the capital region of Canada soon as Dominion continues to impress with both their amazing beers like this legendary and on point Sunsplit and their community works. More on the latter tomorrow but for now suffice it to say this tangerine, peach and mango slow sipper was enjoyed many times thanks to friends and my own mail order and if you see it out again in 2019, make that bet and get your own, sent direct and fresh!
3. Left Field Brewery Greenwood
4. Collective Arts Brewing IPA No. 5
5. Nickel Brook Brewing Wicked Awesome


Belgian IPAs
1. Fairweather Brewing Ipso Facto

  Sensing a pattern? Fairweather released hit after hit in 2018 and it came as a shock when this 7.5% Belgian style beauty dropped in September. All the fruity spice of that Belgian yeast with the citrus shining bright. It was a peppery, fruity gem that takes the top spot in one of the toughest categories for me to decide.
2. Elora Brewing Wandering Monk

  A literal unexpected find in early January when I stopped in at a different LCBO, this 8.0% slow sipper of a Belgian from Elora Brewing was just what I wanted and didn't know existed. Pithy, spicy and full of zest, it made the choice for top spot hard and it did it from almost a year ago. I need to try this again.
3. Great Lakes Brewery Audrey Hopburn
4. New Limburg Brewing Belgian IPA
5. Brimstone Brewing A Mountie and a Buffalo walk into a Bar


Milkshake IPAs
1. Left Field Brewery WHIP Pina Colada

  I don't know if it is properly classified but I'm calling 'em as I see 'em. Lactose, pineapple, coconut and a smooth bodied 6.0% gave me joy in late July and I was sold all the way. I've never seen coconut done quite so right in a beer and damn if Left Field doesn't keep making me smile anytime I get something new from them. It was most amazing!
2. Great Lakes Brewery Grimace's Tears

 When I first had this late last year, it didn't grab my attention. The release later in the summer of 2018 was a damn sight to behold as they really nailed the recipe and the balance between the strawberry, vanilla and lactose sweetness was near perfect. Both of my cans disappeared in a single sitting and I look forward to it returning in 2019...I hope.
3. Merit Brewing Breakfast?
4. Collective Arts Brewing Liquid Arts Fest
5. Merit Brewing Till Then


  There you have it my friends, all my hoppy dreams came true and more in 2018 and I wasn't joking when I said I could produce 2 separate lists and be happy with the second picks just as much as these. There is no shortage to the creativity and sheer genius in many of these beers and I am stoked to see where we go in 2019!
  Come back tomorrow morning for My Least Favourite beers of the year and then later in the day for My Top 10 Most Memorable Beers of the year!


  As always, I thank you  for your support and look forward to seeing which Pale Ales and IPAs you felt were Top of the Hops for you in 2018!


Cheers!
Polk




29 December 2018

2018 Polkie Awards - Into the Darkness Again (Porters and Stouts)

 The first two days of my annual look back on the past year is a sprint through over 30 different styles of beer and while I don't give short shift to anything I drink, as the 4th Annual Polkie Awards go Into the Darkness Again, we are approaching some of my very favourite things. Dark and roasty, I have long been a fan of porters and stouts, heavy and beautiful. The balance of coffee, dark chocolate and a host of other, smaller notes bring me joy and I have finally started to really appreciate a lot of the subtle nuances that can and do occur between batches and years. This year brings a new category because I finally was able to try enough really good Barrel Aged porters to justify splitting that category in half. Work has me frazzled, but talking about the best of 2018 in Ontario Craft beer brings me nothing but pure happiness!

Here. We. Go!


Porters


1. Great Lakes Brewing Harry Porter

  My love for GLB is well known and while their hoppy gems are always around my glass, it is this 6.5% American style Porter that captured my heart early in 2017 and never left. Harry Porter is all the rich and dark roasted chocolate and coffee with a nice hop presence that gives it a little something extra. It's popped up from time to time and the variants (cherry, bourbon soaked vanilla bean, etc.) are a beautiful way to explore this amazing porter. Excelsior!
2. Clifford Brewing Porter

  I'm not sure if it's that Brad Clifford has his own brewery now as opposed to contract brewing this award winning Porter but it was a staple in our house all year round! More on the dark chocolate side with some espresso and bitter coffee, it lives here fresh on a weekly basis. Bravo!
3. Muddy York Porter
4. Collective Arts Brewing Swedish Baltic Porter
5. Collective Arts Brewing Stranger than Fiction

Imperial/Barrel Aged Porters
1. Shacklands Brewing 2017 Bourbon Barrel Porter

  A cellar shining star as this 2nd place finisher from last year aged beautifully and grew into an even more impressive finisher. Smooth and balanced with a warming but not overly boozy finish, loaded dark roasted notes of chocolate and coffee were met with a fine vanilla and oak touch. Sad to see it go but happy to have been able to share it with Lady Polk, who loved it just as much as I. Wow!
2. Muddy York Tawny Port Barrel Aged Plank Road Baltic Porter

  The aging of a few months brought a more balanced dark malt and sweet port to an already fantastic beer. Loads of cherry, wine tannins, a touch of coffee and some warming booziness made this a beer I would love to see again. I'm always a fan of what MY does but these special releases are not to be missed and with their online ordering, you never have to again. Salud!
3.Clifford Brewing Bourbon Barrel Porter 
4. Collective Arts Brewing Imperial Barrel Aged Porter
5. Fairweather Brewing Wishing Well

Stouts
1. Blood Brothers Black Hand

  A late in the year find in the back of Polk Manor's cellar, this Toronto brewery is known more for their funk and hops but this straight up stout was not to be missed. Rich an dreamy with bittersweet dark chocolate and a smokiness that was balanced within the entire slow sipping evening. My only regret was that I bought just one bottle. A dream, perchance to love! Prost!
2. Left Field Brewery Mocha Marshmallow
  The 2017 champ drops a spot but still remains one of the finest stouts I had all year. The thick lactose addition and vanilla note balanced into the rich and dark roasted coffee and chocolate make it a memorable sip every time. A beer I would love to see again and again as the years go by. Gorgeous!
3. Anderson Brewing Stout
4. Henderson Brewing Studio Two
5. Sawdust City Brewing Skinny Dippin' Stout

Imperial Stouts
1. Sawdust City Long Dark Voyage to Uranus
  A 3 time winner in this category, this year was perhaps the closest decision I've ever had to make. The game is changing and more and more Ontario Craft brewers are bringing great things to this slow sipping, long time thinking category. One of the earliest loves of my craft beer life, this rich and dark roasted gem has a balance that has me laying down the cash to keep it in stock here all winter long. The variants from Sawdust (available online for ordering) such as Titania and the Vanilla Coffee one blew me away as well. Champion!
2. Amsterdam Brewing Tempest

  Returning to the world as part of the Flight pack from Amsterdam Brewing, this legendary Imperial stout was neck and neck for the top spot with LDV. My only complaint, and believe me it's a small one, is that you couldn't purchase it on it's own. From what this Old Polk hears, that will not be the case next year and with a better availability, this rich and smooth dark roasted chocolate and coffee Imperial could scale to the top of the charts! Ascension!
3.Sawdust City Brewing Blood of Cthuhlu
4. Wellington Brewery Imperial Russian Stout
5. Collective Arts Brewing/Kex Imperial Stout


Barrel Aged Imperial Stouts
1. Nickel Brook Brewing 2016 Kentucky Bastard
  I know, I know. How does an almost 3 year old beer keep popping up on my best of lists? It's simple really....it's that damn good. One of the few BA stouts I've managed to save for this long, the smoothing out of the heat and growth of balance between the boozy bourbon and rich dark malts is perhaps the finest I've seen in my 4 years of drinking and writing about beer. While we consumed our final bottle during the August heatwave, it changed nothing. This Bastard gives you everything a champion should and drinks almost like perfection from start to finish. There are a few bottles left at the Brewery and at $26.50 for a 750ml bottle, it's something you need to add to that Beer Bucket list. Love!!
2. Bellwoods Brewery 2017 Bring out Your Dead

 The first time I tried this beer, it caught my attention. When I was finally able to sit down and enjoy every last drop, it had my heart. Aged in cognac barrels, it is smooth and boozy but not in a hot way. Warming the sub cockles of this old fella's heart, the coffee, chocolate and vanilla with that cognac note was simply beautiful. Sublime!!
3. Sawdust City Brewing 2017 Titania
4. Merit Brewing Nowhere
5. Nickel Brook Brewing 2016 Café del Bastardo

   That wraps up today's look back and I'm feeling all roasty and warm just thinking about all the amazing porters and stouts to pass through my glass in 2018. I am sure the next 12 months will bring some surprises and perhaps something I have never seen before...
  Check back tomorrow for All the Hops, my favourite Pale Ales, IPAs and more. Followed on New Year's Eve by My Least Favourite Beers of 2018 and then by The Ten, my most memorable ones.

Cheers!
Polk