OC Beer Society Chili Cook-off and Bottle Share Event Recap

This was my first year attending the OC Beer Society Chili Cook-off and Bottle Share and I must say, well done! It was held on a Sunday at Peace Brewing in Anaheim. Peace Brewing is actually the famous home brewer Bradley Daniels’ home brewery and bar fashioned out of his attached garage. It’s extremely impressive and hard to describe to someone who hasn’t been there. It’s everything a home brewer could ever dream of having? Does that successfully cover the ridiculousness amazing grandiosity of it? Probably not.

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A slightly hot, lovely sunny Sunday afternoon at Bradley’s house was oh so much fun. The different chili’s were great and so unique in their own right. Some were more loose and some were thick, some were really hot and some were savory and sweet. I personally like a little heat in my chili and I consequentially picked Greg’s from OC Beer Blog  to win and he won!

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The bottle share was impressive. Little sips and tastes of so many wonderful beers carefully plucked from impressive beer geek cellars floated around the crowd of people discussing and laughing. I mentioned to Sean, my fiance, how well behaved and non-drunk everyone seemed to be considering how much high ABV beers were getting passed around. It was really mellow and inspired, which leads me to believe that everyone there had a good handle on their limits and how to handle their alcohol. It helps that Bradley had constant water getting filled at every table. I know, the water was mainly to clean the glasses between beer sips but everyone was appreciative. It’s crazy how the little things make such a big difference at events. It’s all in the details!

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Cheers to Bradley and his fantastic wife, and OC Beer Society for putting on the event. I hope everyone enjoyed my beer macarons and I hope to see you all at the next event!

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Top 54 Beer Blogs… I’m listed at #4 !

I completely missed this post about the top 54 beer blogs. The only reason I found this was I received some traffic from this site and once I clicked on the link, to my amazement, I was listed at #4 of the top beer blogs! I feel so honored! Check out the article here. This is super awesome and I feel so loved! Thanks BarWhiz!

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Beer Biscuit Sandwich Cookies with Nutella

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It’s time to step out into the unknown and start trying new recipes. I am going to try and start doing a weekly recipe post on Monday of a new challenge that I haven’t tried yet. Committing to one post a week shouldn’t be that hard, right? Famous last words, I’m sure. Since Mondays are my least favorite day, I think the addition of a lovely blog post should lighten the mood.

Drum roll…..

Monday Madness Recipe: Biscuit Sandwich Cookies with Nutella…made with beer!

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Ingredients:

1 cup AP Flour

1/4 cup sugar

1/2 teaspoon course salt

4 tablespoons cold unsalted butter cut into small pieces

1/4 cup , plus 1 tablespoon heavy cream

1/4 teaspoon vanilla

1/4 teaspoon of Hangar 24 Chocolate Porter

1 egg yolk

Nutella!

Directions:

1. Process the flour, salt and sugar in a food processor. If you don’t have a food processor then a bowl with a whisk is ok. Just make sure to mash the butter good with a wooden spoon. Add the butter and pulse until standy. Pour in the 1/4 cup heavy cream, beer and vanilla and run until it just comes together.

2. Put in plastic wrap and put in the fridge for 15 mins or so. Preheat the oven to 325. Take this time to clean!

3. Put down two sheets of plastic wrap on a flat surface to roll-out your dough. Put the dough on the center of the plastic wrap and put a sheet of plastic wrap on top. Roll out the dough to a 1/4 inch thick. This is the best way I have found to roll out dough. I hate how the dough sticks to the rolling pin and gets too much added flour to prevent sticking. Plastic wrap is my best friend, and makes cleaning so much easier!

4. Cut out your shapes (I did hearts cuz it’s almost Valentine’s Day!) and put them on a cookie sheet with a silpat or parchment paper. Put in the freezer for 10-15 mins to make sure the cookies maintain the shape. Otherwise, they will spread too much and that’s not cute looking. Before putting them in the oven, combine the remaining heavy cream and egg yolk and brush the top of the cookie. That’s what will give it the shinny colorful exterior.

5. Bake at 325 for 15-20 minutes. I can always tell when a cookie is done by how it smells, the color on the outside edges and if they slide around on the silpat.

6. Let the cookies cool, then pipe Nutella into the center of the cookie with a piping bag and tip or a ziplock bag. I tried to just use an offset spatula and that was entirely frustrating and messy. The cookies look way better if you take the time to pipe them. Put in the fridge for 15 mins or longer to get them to set before serving.

These cookies tuned out so good! The biscuit part was so flavorful but not overly sweet which made the nutella filling so satisfying. The cookie wasn’t overly rich and had the perfect amount of salt. It reminds me of the perfect coffee companion.  It was crunchy, slightly salty, sweet, and had that wonderful smell of pie dough. This was so great, I will definitely make these again. Let me know if you make these how they turned out for you!

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Updated About Page and New Shop Page

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Who wants a Beer and Baking t-shirt or hoodies!? I have joined Society 6 which is an awesome website that promotes artists and an economical way to create your own items more available to the general public. The best part is I won’t have to worry about the shipping or processing of each purchase, which is a big deal because I also have a full time job. I would hate to delay shipping something because I simply don’t have time or lost track of things.

I have also uploaded a few photos available for purchase as prints, just for fun. It will be interesting if anything actually sells….

Let me know your thoughts or if you have something you would like to see me add! Do you have a society 6 page that I can follow? Let me know!

PS. I have updated the About / Sponsor page…so there’s that. If you are interested in sponsoring me because I’m awesome, please email me at beerandbaking@gmail.com.

Beer Macarons!

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I love macarons but I love them even more when they have beer in them. The undertaking of making a macaron is something to behold, if you are planning on doing it properly. Even when you do everything you should, it can still get messed-up by not measuring things exactly or having too much egg whites…etc. Basically, be ready to spend 3-4 hours on making one of my most favorite and beloved by all cookies.

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Ingredients:

1 1/2 Cups of whole almonds with the skin (raw, not roasted or salted please!)

2 1/4 cups powdered sugar

3 large egg whites

1 1/2 teaspoon cream of tarter

Frosting:

Buttercream with beer syrup instead of vanilla! Buttercream was made with 3 sticks of butter and then I added a 1/4 cup of powdered sugar and kept tasting it until it seemed right. Probably like 1 – 2 cups of powdered sugar. It really depends on your tastes! I added about a 1/4 cup of beer syrup which was  New Belgium Lips of Faith Imperial Coffee Chocolate Stout cooked down with a 1/4 cup of granulated sugar then cooled. Pour the coffee syrup slowly into the taste-approved buttercream. Watch your consistency!  Buttercream is known to break easily so don’t add it too fast and wait to add more until it’s incorporated.

Directions:

1. Line 2-3 baking sheets with parchment paper. Draw with a pencil or pen small circles like 1 1/2 inch in diameter about 1 inch apart. I used a flask-filling funnel 🙂 Once you are done, flip the parchment paper over so you can see the circles but don’t get ink on your cookies. Don’t skip this step, I did once and it resulted in some wonkey-shaped cookies that didn’t make for good sandwiches.

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2. Take your almonds and split them into two bowls. Then take the powdered sugar and split that in half into the two bowls with the almonds in them. Put one bowl (with the half almonds and half powdered sugar) and pulse them together in a food processor. I held down the lever for 5 seconds 5 times then checked the mix to make sure it was sandy but not chunky. You don’t want to mix it too far. Do the same thing for the second bowl and set it aside.

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3. Get a new bowl ready with your 3 egg whites and cream of tarter. Mix with a hand-held electric mixer until stiff peaks. You can do this with a stand mixer, but I prefer the hand-held one for egg whites.

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4. Once you have stiff egg whites, start to incorporate the almond mixture. This is what took me a while, because you don’t want to incorporate too quick and you don’t want to crush those lovely air bubbles you just created in the egg whites. I would say add each bowl of almond and powdered sugar mixture in 1/3rds and remember to fold, not mix.

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5. Once your mixture is completely combined, it will more than likely be a little runny. That’s ok! Grab a pastry bag (a Ziploc freezer bag works too) and a larger round tip to pipe the cookie mixture onto the baking sheets using the guides you drew on them. The cookies should have a little height, like 1/2 inch high.

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6. Put the cookies in a safe, temperature-controlled place for 2 hours. This is important for the cookies to develop that signature macaron “feet” that is so famous. I put them in my oven and threatened bodily harm to anyone who touched it for the next two hours.

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7. Take the cookies out of the oven, then preheat the oven to 325. Bake the cookies for 10-12 minutes or until they look like they are set. Let them dry completely and carefully separate them from the parchment paper so you can make the cookie sandwiches.

8. Fill a pasty bag with your buttercream and fill one side of the cookie and press (lightly!) the cookies together. I recommend filling the bottom in a circular motion so less pressing is required. These cookies are highly brittle. A couple will probably break, a few casualties are ok. They can be stored for about 2 weeks in an airtight container.

I made a regular coffee chocolate buttercream (the white buttercream) and I also took some of that buttercream and added some cocoa powder and made one chocolate. Consensus is the chocolate one was better! Feel free to add whatever you want: speculoos, nutella, peanut butter, lemon curd, anything!

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GIVEAWAY: OC Brew Ho Ho Tickets!

Hello fellow beer enthusiasts, I have an early holiday gift for you! On MY Birthday no less! Joy all around! I have two tickets for OC Brew Ho Ho to give away! Join me on Saturday, Dec. 8th from noon to 4pm at the Phoenix Club in Orange to celebrate the holiday season whilst drinking some awesome seasonal beers! Simply reply to this post with your name and what beer you are excited to try or your favorite holiday beer and you have a chance to win a pair of free tickets!

The following comes with the ticket to OC Brew Ho Ho:

-Seasonal Glass

-UNLIMITED 3oz. tasters

-Brewery Merch for your shopping delight

-Over 50 different breweries with seasonal beers

Some of the beers scheduled to be there are:

Black Market – Liberation Imperial IPA 9.5%ABV

Black Market – Barrel Aged Imperial Brown w/Cocoa Nibs 9.8%ABV

Black Market – Barrel Aged Imperial Brown w/Vanilla Beans 9.8%ABV

Noble Ale Works – You’ll shoot your eye out kid

Hangar 24 – Pugachev Cobra 16.5%ABV

Hangar 24 – Hallabaloo

Hangar 24 – Warmer

Pizza Port/ Newport Brew Co./ Bootleggers Collab – Brew Ho Ho Holiday Strong Ale

Taps – Toasted Santa

Cismontane – Dead Santa 2

Tustin Brewing Co. – Bourbon O.E. (Olde English) (limited edition English Barleywine aged in Heaven Hill Bourbon Barrels for 14 months)

Those are just a taste of the ridiculousness that will surely be a fantastic Saturday afternoon.

Reply to this post and let me know what beer you are excited to taste or what your favorite seasonal craft beer is! You might win! Free tickets! Comment!

Phoenix Club:

1340 S. Sanderson Ave.
Anaheim, CA 92806

OC Brew Ho Ho Facebook page: http://www.facebook.com/OCBrewHaHa

** Deadline to comment is 9pm pst Thursday Dec. 6th **

** Winner will be picked at random and notified via this post and email/facebook/text if contact info is provided **

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UPDATE: 12/7/12:

 

And the winner is:  David Gillanders!  (or @bikesbeers)

 

 

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HopScotch Sneak Peak!

Orange County doesn’t have a decent craft beer and whisky-centric bar to call home, until now. Some of you may have heard some of the media buzz surrounding HopScotch, with good reason. The highly anticipated opening of this new bar located in the heart of downtown Fullerton, off Commonwealth next to SlideBar, is about to happen.

HopScotch could very well be my new favorite place to go. I put serious investment into places that pay attention to the details I want when it comes to a bar:

  • Good Craft Beer. Michael (Liquid Culture Project) and I spoke to co-owner Bryan Gonzales in great length about the tap list and what was to be expected. We talked about getting a nice mixture of local, seasonal, and hard-to-find gems on draft. Expect: Russian River, Ballast Point, Bootleggers, and The Bruery to name a few. A little inside tidbit I learned is that Beers In Paradise is assisting with the tap list and bottle list so I am certain it will be good no matter what. I personally would love to see the following on tap: Avery, Upright, Hair of the Dog, Cismontane, Craftsman, AleSmith, Societe, and Lost Abbey. Although, I am not sure if all of those breweries even distribute kegs and if so, to this area (wishful thinking).
  • Good Selection of Spirits. A telltale sign that the bar you are visiting has a commitment to the integrity of a good cocktail is the fact that they branded Four Roses Whiskey logo on their bar top. They have custom shelving behind the bar accented with a lighted plaid background to showcase their lovely liquor selections. Also, they don’t have any Red Bull and Vodka in sight. This makes me happy. 
  • A Laid-Back Atmosphere. This is something that Fullerton sorely is in need of. Amidst the sea of drunkard college students and locals, the bars in the area tend to not be terribly enjoyable. They seem to be: over-crowded, over-priced, sweaty, annoying, poor drink/beer selections, nowhere to sit, fighting to get to the bar, bartenders who ignore you or are over-worked and therefore it takes 20 minutes to get a drink. This however is not just the typical annoyances with downtown Fullerton, as it applies to Huntington Beach, Orange, Laguna Beach, Newport Beach, Long Beach, Costa Mesa, etc. Most towns have these issues, but there are usually some safe haven places that are enjoyable. Examples being: La Cave and Kitsch in Costa Mesa are laid-back and make great drinks, Long Beach has Beachwood BBQ and Congregation, Orange has Haven and The Bruery Provisions, etc. Fullerton doesn’t really have a downtown bar that is laid-back, unpretentious, and focused on how a customer would really want to spend their evening. From their vintage cracked-leather chairs to their Edison light-bulb fixtures, HopScotch really nailed it.

 

Fortunately we were there for the OC Scotch Club meeting/tasting at the same time of getting a sneak preview of the location and joined in on the festivities. I was driving so Michael was doing the scotch tasting with the OC Scotch Club and he tried the Auchentoshan Single Malt Scoth, Caol Ila 13 Year, Glenmorangie Signet, and Longmorn 30 Year to name a few. The speaker from Malt Maniac, Dave Wankel, was extremely informative and the experience was enjoyable even if I didn’t taste the scotch. I did smell some of them and boy were some of them peaty!

Food and drink tickets were also provided as a part of the OC Scotch Club meeting so we also got to sample some of their cocktails and food offerings. The slow-cooked barbeque was so amazing it melts in your mouth. The stand-out food item was the Mac & Cheese! It was so delicious and rich with an unexpected spicy kick. The crusty cheese top was a nice touch…if only I have more of it. Right now. The cocktail sample I had was the Blood & Sand served with a big ball of ice. I loved that they had the ice ball because that means my cocktail won’t get watered-down like a standard cocktail served over regular ice cubes. It’s the little things!

I could really just go on and on about HopScotch but I suggest you go and see it for yourselves! The taxidermy on the walls, two large patios, and the oak-barrel repurposed bar top, all of it. They are set to open officially on Nov. 19th so I hope to see you there!

HopScotch on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/hopscotchfullerton

HopScotch on Yelp: http://www.yelp.com/biz/hopscotch-fullerton

Gourdgeous Cinnamon Rolls

When I think of fall I think about apples, caramel, cinnamon, fall leaves and long daylight drenched evenings turning into the darker nights I remember way back when. I read about a contest to submit your favorite fall recipe to Style Me Pretty (SMP) and pondered what I would make. I decided that I have never made cinnamon rolls from scratch and it’s been on my list of “stuff I want to try baking at least once” so I decided that a fall twist on a standard cinnamon roll recipe would be appropriate.

Because I couldn’t decide, I made a regular version and a chocolate version. I just like to make things difficult on myself.

Ingredients for the Dough– Regular Version:

1 Large Bowl – oiled with Vegetable oil, Pam, or any oil.

1 tablespoon of dry yeast (or 1 packet)

5 cups of warm water (between 110-120 degrees)

10-14 cups of all-purpose flour

½ cup of dark brown sugar

1 tablespoon of sea salt (I used vanilla bean sea salt)

1 tablespoon of cinnamon

1 teaspoon of fresh ground nutmeg

¼ teaspoon of cayenne

Ingredients for the Dough– Chocolate Version:

Everything the same except add ½ cup of coco powder

Inside Mixture Ingredients:

Pumpkin Butter

Cinnamon

Vanilla Sugar

Frosting:

¼ cup Hangar 24 Gourdgeous Beer (or any pumpkin ale)

1 box or 4 cups Powdered Sugar

2 tbsp of Light Corn Syrup

Directions:

Heat up the water to the desired temperature and mix in the yeast. Let yeast mixture sit for a few minutes. Put 5 cups of flour in a stand mixer (or a bowl) with the bread attachment. Add the warm water. Mix on low until mostly incorporated. Add salt, sugar, and spices (and chocolate powder if making the chocolate version) into flour mixture. Add in the remaining 5-8 cups of flour. Add slowly and once the dough is smooth and incorporated and not very sticky but not dry either it’s ready to rest.

Put the dough in a large oiled bowl and put plastic wrap over it and let sit for 1 to 1 & ½ hours or until double in size. Once the dough is ready, have a work surface dusted with flour to roll out the dough. You want to roll it out in a big square. About ¼ – ½ inch thick. Once rolled out, spread pumpkin butter all over the dough. Don’t go all the way to the edge so you can seal the cinnamon roll. After the butter is spread, sprinkle cinnamon and vanilla sugar over the butter and roll dough into a big log.

 

 

Once the dough is rolled, cut into 1-1&1/2 inch rounds (a dough cutter works wonders for this step) and place on a buttered sheet trey. After all the rounds are cut, cover with plastic wrap and allow the rolls to rise again for another 30 minutes to an hour. Bake at 400 degrees for 35-40 minutes on the middle rack. You know when it’s done by the bottom of the roll having a little gold coloring and the top of the roll golden and slightly crunchy. Take out of the oven and place on a cooling rack. Mix the corn syrup and powdered sugar and beer together in a bowl with a whisk. If the frosting looks too runny add more powered sugar. If it’s too dry then add more beer. You want the frosting to be thick so it won’t totally soak the roll. Frost your cinnamon rolls and enjoy! They are best if eaten immediately. They will last for a few days, but if you eat a day or two old cinnamon roll, heat it up in the microwave first otherwise they tend to get hard.

These cinnamon rolls were fantastic. The frosting had the slight beer flavor that was sweet and malty and mimicked the pumpkin fall spice lineup that was lying in wait within the dough. I don’t know why more people don’t add spice to the dough of cinnamon rolls. The roll was sweet, savory and every bite had little wispy hints of cinnamon, vanilla bean, nutmeg, and pumpkin. The chocolate version with the chocolate powder in the dough was like eating a Mexican hot chocolate souffle. Either roll version is best served with a coffee or hot toddy on a crisp autumn morning curled up with a good book. Let me know if anyone makes this and what you think!

OC Brew Ha Ha 2012 Recap

OC Brew Ha Ha doesn’t disappoint. The beer festival is well organized, thoughtfully spread-out, and well stocked for your beer-tasting experience. The location changed from last year to a location close to Irvine Lake, which is closer to my house so…yay! Also, it was way more spacious, which allowed for more visibility of each tent so guessing wasn’t required.

 

I was happy to find a wide variety of breweries represented. There was LA Breweries, OC Breweries, Inland Empire Breweries, San Diego Breweries and even a few surprises like Epic Brewing Company from Utah. I got to try some breweries I haven’t yet been able to like Ironfire, which I really enjoyed their stout. Another stand-out was Packinghouse’s IPA. It was strong and hoppy but had a wonderful aftertaste. It was really the perfect summer beer and really hit the spot considering it was really hot and a cold IPA is just magical.

 

Orange County Beer Society was hosting beer geek island again this year, only it wasn’t on an island like it was last year. It was a fenced-off area where people could sit in the shade and enjoy a bottle share with their friends and fellow beer lover. It was really mellow and relaxing. A serious thank you to OC Beer Society for arranging the bottle share, it was fantastic as always.

 

Besides getting to visit with beer buddies, and try new beers I loved the spirit of togetherness the event had. The crowd had a general happiness to contribute for a good cause, while doing something that you have a passion for. There really is nothing better than that. Also, congrats to Bootleggers on winning the Fan Choice award! 2nd year in a row!

 

 

 

 

My Homebrew is Famous!

In case you haven’t heard from me posting on Facebook or Twitter, me and Sean were on NBT Brewing’s podcast. Here is the link: http://www.nbtbrewing.com/ We talked about our Tea Pale ale brewed with Earl Grey and Irish Breakfast Tea and pineapple sage, basil, lime basil, white grapefruit, and orange peel. We brewed it at John Holzer’s house on his amazing homebrew set-up.

In other news, we won 3rd Place in the OC Fair Homebrew Competition! Our scotch ale “Angry Willie” seems to be a big hit. We talk about that beer on the next NBT Brewing podcast to be coming soon!