Monday, September 28, 2015

New York Breweries: Queens (Part II)

This entry is a continuation of a series on breweries in Brooklyn and Queens. You can download my hand-drawn brewery tour map here and follow along.

Inspired by a meeting of the New York Homebrewers Guild (every third Tuesday at Burp Castle, 41 E 7th St, New York, NY), this trip, an attempt to visit all the micro- and nanobreweries within New York City has stretched over the course of four weekends and counting.





SingleCut Beersmiths (website19-33 37th St., Astoria, Queens), is a short hike from the last stop on the N/Q at Astoria-Ditmars and the famous Bohemian Beer Hall (website2919 24th Ave, Astoria, Queens) and well worth the walk. By New York standards, it feels like the end of the earth, since the area is surrounded by grass and not far from a power plant and LaGuardia Airport, though the building itself feels new, open to the good weather, and overall an inviting place to have a few beers. Their bar area is stocked with free board and card games and they keep classic vinyl on the turntable.

The beer does not disappoint either. At the time of our visit in May the beer lineup included, most memorably, both the Hibiscus and Tart Cherry Sour Lagrrr! and the piney hopped Dean PNW Mahogany Ale. Their beers tended towards the light and drinkable, with a few hop-bombs thrown in for good measure, such as the latter beer mentioned above. Their brews can be found across the city as well, including at one of my favorites, Drop-Off Service (Yelp211 Avenue A, Manhattan), home of the $3 'til 8pm craft beer happy hour.

LIC Beer Project (website39-28 23rd St., Long Island City, Queens), is a small brewery space tucked in between the auto repair and warehouses of Long Island City. Their small selection was heavy on saisons at the time, which I usually prefer in a bottle and aged to smooth out the bite. Their WonderLIC Belgian pale ale, however, was a great treat, full of floral dry-hoppiness and not too heavy on the bitter or the alcohol. Worth a trip if you're in the neighborhood or if they're unveiling a big beer. All in all, the last in a series of quality offerings in between the skyscrapers going up in LIC.

Wednesday, April 15, 2015

New York Breweries: Brooklyn (Part II)

This entry is a continuation of the posts on breweries in Brooklyn and Queens and we will pick up on the third Saturday. You can download my hand-drawn brewery map here and follow along.

Inspired by a meeting of the New York Homebrewers Guild (every third Tuesday at Burp Castle, 41 E 7th St, New York, NY), this trip, an attempt to visit all the micro- and nanobreweries within New York City has stretched over the course of three weekends and counting.



Arriving via the Bedford Av (L) train, the third weekend of our New York City beer tour began with an 11am brunch at Five Leaves (website, Yelp, 18 Bedford Ave, Brooklyn, NY). I can say this place is home to possibly the best pancakes I've ever had: light, yet moist, and served with just the right amount of cinnamon butter and fresh fruit on top. The secret ingredient and key to the pancake batter was, incredibly, ricotta cheese, a food that I've strongly disliked since ricotta-heavy lasagna in childhood. Whatever the reason, it works really well in pancakes (!)

Dirck the Norseman (website, 7 N 15th St, Brooklyn, NY), the next and only stop on our beer tour this Saturday, was less than a ten-minute walk from the restaurant. Spacious and newly renovated, the space could stand on its own as a food or live music venue, of which it has both. Though we were here to sample the production of Greenpoint Beer and Ale Works (beer menu). The selection included mostly low-alcohol sessionable lagers and ales, with a focus on classic German styles like kolsch, rauchbier, Berliner weisse, and doppelbock, or at least it did at the time. See my notes on the afternoon below:


Paola spent the afternoon sketching and enjoying the weather and the garage door-style windows that open up to the outside. The sketch below was inspired by one of the other bar patrons and she gave it as a gift (it turned out it was the girl's birthday!):


I also took a stab at sketching, inspired by the moment:


On the walk back to the subway, you pass through some industrial and semi-abandoned areas, lots of prime real estate for some creative Banksy-esque graffiti:


We'll have to return, if not for the brewery tour (yes, I know they're all basically the same, but this one has beer tastings) then for the live music at night.



Friday, April 3, 2015

Dream Trip: Mongol Rally


A road rally (video) beginning in England, passing through Prague, and continuing through Europe and across Asia to Mongolia. There are only three rules:
  1. You can only take a farcically small vehicle
  2. You’re completely on your own
  3. You've got to raise a £1000 for charity
This idea of the Mongol Rally (official site) has been stuck in my head since I learned about it several months ago.

For someone that was one of the early adopters of CouchSurfing (in 2006), I'm surprised that I didn't learn about such a cool idea as the Mongol Rally until now, given that its inaugural run was in 2004. It is, in essence, an organized, yet disorganized road trip to end all road trips. Visit as many or as few countries as necessary to reach your final destination, go as quick or as slow as you decide. Here is one of the easier potential routes, below.


This is what they have to say about the vehicle specifications:
You must bring the shittiest rolling turd of a car you can find. Use a car you swapped for a bag of crisps. Seek out a steed that most people wouldn’t even use for the weekly shop. Better still, come along on a scooter.

After all, an adventure is only an adventure when things go wrong. Where in the name of Uranus would the fun be in cruising 10,000 miles in a 4x4? If you look at your vehicle and think; "This is the right car for crossing a desert," then you've got it badly wrong.

Wussy wagons are Out. Shitmobiles are In.
After watching at least a half-dozen unofficial videos from various Rally teams on YouTube and reading several long-format write-ups, it appears that:
  • Several major repairs will likely be needed along the 10,000-km journey;
  • You will change possibly dozens of tires;
  • Extreme boredom may entice you to ride outside (i.e. on top of) the vehicle;
  • Bribes may be necessary once local officials realize your fantastically embellished crapmobile means you're adventurers from Western Europe or some other prosperous region.
I'm incredibly intrigued and wish I could pull together a team, or at least Paola and myself, and find the 1-2 months necessary to complete the full trip. It can be done cheaply, or so I've read. This year's Rally begins on July 19, 2015.

Here are a few sources that I found entertaining:
From vochoverde.wordpress.com
If it were up to me, I'd start my own rally from Mexico through Central and South America using nothing but old vochos (VW Beetles) bought across the border from California. For that matter, if we could get one of these underpowered VWs to England, it could also be used to drive to Mongolia.

Anyone game to join someday soon?

Tuesday, March 31, 2015

New York Breweries: Queens

This entry is a continuation of last week's post on breweries in Brooklyn and we will pick up on the second Saturday. You can download my hand-drawn brewery map here and follow along.

Inspired by a meeting of the New York Homebrewers Guild (every third Tuesday at Burp Castle, 41 E 7th St, New York, NY), this trip, an attempt to visit all the micro- and nanobreweries within New York City has stretched over the course of two weekends and counting.

Promotional map from NYC Beer Week
After departing Brooklyn Brewery and a walk along picturesque Manhattan Ave. in Greenpoint, we went up and over the Pulaski Bridge into Long Island City. For those of you unfamiliar with LIC, it's an industrial area that contains much of the machinery that makes the densest areas of Manhattan habitable: taxi bases, recycling centers, distribution centers, repair and construction businesses, and light manufacturing. It is also undergoing an impressive highrise condo boom, with skyscrapers mixed in among low-slung brick buildings. 

A healthy lunch at Rockaway Brewing Co.
Transmitter Brewing (website, 195 Centre St, Brooklyn, NY) blends in with this mix of industrial uses. It's a small building with a small tasting area not much bigger than a bedroom in the East Village. The beers here are poured from the bottles in which they have been bottle-fermented. They offer a small range of summery farmhouse and sour styles, which I wasn't really feeling at the time, the weather being cold and rainy, however their innovative Community Supported Brewery program has me wanting to support to see what they brew next. Much like a CSA, members pay in advance for a selection of beers over six months. This is something I've never seen and hopefully allows them to capitalize their brewery and expand their offerings.

A short ten-minute walk took us to our next stop, Rockaway Brewing Company (website, 46-01 5th St., Long Island City, Queens, NY). From reading older reviews on Yelp, it seems that they've been doing a lot of work to make the place inviting, and it shows: the space is big and spacious and feels like you're either at the beach (based on the stuff lining the walls) or in a factory (polished concrete floors). Their beers tend towards the mild and drinkable, with a few nice malt-heavy options. Their stout was amazing, looking forward to when we can get it in bottles and not just in growlers from the bewery. Best of all, free Cape Cod potato chips! Can't wait until they figure out how to add a patio or deck somewhere for the summer months.
Big beer board at Big Alice

Another short ten-minute hop took us to Big Alice Brewing (website, 8-08 43rd Rd., Long Island City, Queens, NY). This place is small but looks shiny and brand-new. Wood bars and black chalkboards memorializing current and former beers line the walls. Overflow space is alongside the brewing equipment on the other side of the walls. Of all the breweries on our tour, Big Alice had the most innovative beers. Among the most memorable was the Salted Caramel beer, which was sweet and sour (in a beery way) and the Queens Honey Brown, made with real honey. We also had a smoked saison, aka "bacon beer" for its tasty smoked smell, and a White Coffee Stout, which I couldn't really pinpoint as a coffee-flavored beer or a stout given its light color and smooth finish.

We haven't quite exhausted what New York City has to offer, so there will be at least one more Saturday beer tour. Here are the breweries we have yet to see in Queens:
Coming soon, the remaining breweries in Manhattan, Queens, and the Bronx.

Saturday, March 28, 2015

New York Breweries: Brooklyn

Ready for a Saturday beer tour, just print and go.
Believe it or not, there's more to microbrewing in New York City than Brooklyn Brewery.

Inspired by a meeting of the New York Homebrewers Guild (every third Tuesday at Burp Castle, 41 E 7th St, New York, NY), this trip, an attempt to visit all the micro- and nanobreweries within New York City has stretched over the course of two weekends and counting. The majority of the breweries shown on the map below can be reached with minimal walking and a trip along the G train, with its 4-car trains, the redheaded stepchild of the MTA. Your starting station, Smith-9th Sts is one of the more picturesque stations in the system.

You can print and use the hand-drawn map below to plan your own trip. We started in Southern Brooklyn and worked our way north, though you could also start in Long Island City, Queens and head south.

First Saturday

Our first weekend began with brunch at Buttermilk Channel (website, Yelp). No chicken and waffles for breakfast, but say hello to chicken and pork schnitzel. Highly recommended.

Enjoying the first one of the day at Other Half Brewing
Once fueled up, we headed to Other Half Brewing (website, 195 Centre St, Brooklyn, NY). An unmarked door across the street from McDonalds was the entryway to this small tasting room and brewery. We figured it out by following the families with babies in tow into the unmarked industrial building. They offer samples, full pours and growlers of a selection of hop-heavy beers and regularly sell tallboy cans of their IPA. Growlers are returnable (!) to encourage repeat customers. We'll be going back for sure.

Next stop, after a 20- to 30-minute walk, was Threes Brewing in Gowanus (website, 333 Douglass St., Brooklyn, NY), a short walk from Atlantic Avenue station in Downtown Brooklyn. Threes had a deep selection of flavorful, drinkable session IPAs, saisons, and a Berliner weisse. The space is expansive, with plenty of seating, big long tables, and an outdoor patio area for the summer months. For the non-beer drinkers, they also have a food menu and a cafe on location. We've already been back here once since our initial visit.

Second Saturday
 
Beer brunch at Keg & Lantern hit the spot.
Our second weekend started on a rainy Saturday at 11am at Keg & Lantern (website, 97 Nassau Ave., Brooklyn, NY), reachable at the Nassau Av (G) stop. The brewmaster at this brewpub, P.J., was the guest speaker at the NYHBG meeting on the night I was inspired to plan this pilgrimage, so of course his home brewery had to make the list. After a hearty breakfast of bacon, eggs, and sausage and a half-pint of beer, we were able to check out the all-electric brewing setup in the basement of the building. Beers here are very drinkable and change often, so we'll be back.

The next stop was a 10-minute walk to the iconic Brooklyn Brewery (website, 79 N 11th St., Brooklyn, NY). Being iconic and well-known also makes you crowded. Wait in a long line, get inside, buy your tokens, 5 beers for $20, and wait in line again. The pluses of Brooklyn Brewery are its dirt-cheap pints ($4), Brewery-exclusive beers, and their Brooklyn logo gear, of which I've purchased one of their metal signs ($15). On their short brewery tour we learned that Milton Glaser (of I heart New York fame) designed the logo 28 years ago and was paid in beer for life.

Near Brooklyn Brewery and not yet visited are:
Our tour continued along Manhattan Ave. in Greenpoint, Brooklyn and over the Pulaski Bridge to Long Island City, Queens, detailed in the next entry.

Statement of Purpose

Hand-drawn map from Jack Kerouac's diary (Source)
Journey With Maps. In part, an homage one of my favorite writers, Graham Greene, whose first travels outside Europe led to the travelogue Journey Without Maps, as well as Jack Kerouac, John Steinbeck, and others.

As one of the worst winters in memory fades away comes the urge to get outside and explore the neighborhood, the city, and further afield. My goal is to inspire, to chronicle trips planned, trips taken, and to look forward to those all-encompassing journeys that take more time and planning than we may have at the moment.

Expect entries of the following types:
  • Day and weekend explorations around New York City and environs;
  • Feasible weekend getaways (i.e. short rides or cheap flights);
  • Long odyssey-type trips spanning multiple days and stretching across multiple states or countries;
  • Maps and other travel curiosities.
In general, I'm more interested in the possibilities of non-car based trips, since you tend to meet people, notice the details, and relax when you move at a slower pace. This will include walking, biking, bus, train, and some combination of the above.

From what I've found, the travel blog genre mostly consists of tips on how to travel on the cheap, hotel, event and restaurant reviews, and the dreaded "listicle" (e.g. 5 Public Restrooms You Never Knew Existed, 17 Types of Backpackers You Will Meet in Thailand). Since I'm not the the first person to sail those waters, I'll try to keep the content fresh and unique and not reproduce what can be found on Yelp or in your typical travel guidebook.

Each entry will likely be a trip idea with a special focus on the path used to get there. I will not purport to have the answers on how to get cheap airline tickets. Since I love maps, I will try to scan some of those that have inspired me that are unavailable elsewhere on the internet. In the course of developing a story, especially one about a potential trip, I may link respectfully to the work of others that have done a better job than I ever could.

Please comment freely, positive feedback is what keeps me going.

Kyle