Saturday, March 13, 2010

Pre-Hardcore Hardcore

I could really get into this kind of stuff.

Someone hook it up.


Wednesday, February 24, 2010

Kiss the Bottle...

As much as I love beer, I'm also fairly interested in the design aspect of the packaging. Whether it be the label design or bottle shape, product design is very important in the craft beer industry. Having to compete with multi-billion dollar breweries who spill more on their bottling line everyday than most brewers produce in a year, and have advertising costs upwards of $800,000,000, craft brewers usually focus their efforts on letting their product sell itself. However, I believe a well designed label or bottle can just as easily sway a drinker from one beer to another as a witty commercial aired during the Superbowl can. Not to mention, with how ignorant most of America is towards craft beer, breweries have to compete with each other to catch the eye of someone looking for something other than corn water. Here are a couple of my favorite bottles that I think have just as much taste as the beer they contain.

Deschutes from Bend, OR
Aside from making world class beers, Deschutes labels are always top notch. From their yearly offerings to their limited releases, I think each label depicts the beer extremely well. What is not great, however, is the fact that I can not purchase these beers in Philadelphia.

The Abyss
Luckily enough, I've had a chance to try The Abyss thanks to a couple drunk nights on ebay. The deep black crack spanning the length of the bottle and the black wax-dipped cap are indicative of the beer inside.
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Red Chair IPA
Honestly, no label has ever made me want to try a beer more than Red Chair IPA. Like a great painting, I'm sucked into the scene depicted on the label and if the beer tastes anything like the feeling I get looking at the label, I think I'd be spending the night on that chair until someone wakes me up the next morning.
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Mirror Pond Pale Ale
Like the label for Red Chair IPA above, the scene on the label is just great. I've always been attracted to the Pacific Northwest for some reason or another, and I imagine drinking Mirror Pond on one of those nights that's not quite Summer but not quite Fall would be a treat. Also, as one of Deschutes' flagship beers, the label is not too intimidating as to scare off some typically BMC beer drinkers.
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The Dissident
This is my favorite label in the world. I'm a pretty big Alfred Hitchcock fan and, for obvious reasons, this reminds me of him. Defined as something that dissents from established conventions, this beer is a far cry from the typical American light lager. The burgundy colored wax-dipped cap just seals (LOL!!!) it for me.
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Surly Brewing's Darkness (Brooklyn Center, MN)
Each year Surly does a different label for their extremely popular, extremely limited Russian Imperial Stout. 2009's was my favorite they've done so far.
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Orval (Belgium)
Orval is my favorite beer in the world. Living in Philadelphia, I'm lucky enough to have Orval anywhere at anytime. The label is perfect. Elegant and modest, with a lot behind it (love the story/legend of the fish with the ring in its mouth), just like the beer.
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Oskar Blues Ten Fidy (Lyons, CO)
Who says beer tastes better from a bottle? With the recent 75th Birthday of the beer can, it's great to see many craft breweries giving the can some love (sexual innuendo not intended). Ten Fidy definitely has my favorite label art for a can. It's also great seeing thick, black motor oil coming from a beer can after being conditioned for so many years seeing "fizzy yellow" water.
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Russian River Brewing Company's Growlers (Santa Rosa, CA)
Growlers are regaining a lot of popularity recently. The NYTimes recently published an article on the craze. Most are fairly simple, some add a flip top and metal handle, but Russian River has a growler unlike any other I've seen. I love the bulbous shape of the bottom and the finger-hole glass handle. Wish I could get my hand on one of these (filled with Pliny the Younger, of course).
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Lastly, and I'm not joking with this...
Miller High Life (All over the country, USA)
As shitty as the beer may be, High Life has its place and time. Unless you are a serious baller, anyone can, or should, enjoy a night out with a bunch of friends at the dive bar in your neighborhood drinking $1 High Lifes. As unclassy as the beer may be, I think the label is classy as shit. It works really well with the clear bottle. Too bad Miller probably spent more money designing the label than they did brewing the beer!
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There are so many more that I think are worthy of some sort of praise, but these are just a few off the top of my head that I really enjoy. This link that I found on my twitter feed (thanks @beersage) has a list of 50 really well designed bottles/labels. Most I've never even heard of, but it's a nice list regardless. I really like the Cable Car Brewing (not related to Lost Abbey), Hallertau, Bierbank, and Nelson Brewing packaging a lot. The student designed, reimagining of Westmalle's bottle/4-pack carrier is gorgeous. It's a shame that it just wouldn't work.


P.S. Thank you to all the websites from who I stole these images. I'll buy you a round at the bar.



Currently Into:
USA Men's Hockey
LOST
The Tempest
Getting back into some sort of respectable shape

Monday, January 25, 2010

Pretty much one of my favorite songs of all time.
Really feeling it tonight, especially.

Tuesday, January 19, 2010

The Omega Point


Big ups to Mr. Mikey Bornmann for providing me with the link to this pretty awesome blog dedicated to theories on what is really going on in LOST.
I'd really like to give a summary on this theory that he has for the overall plot of the show, but I'll spare you and just give you the direct link.



(p.s. Note, in the picture, the skulls underneath Sayid and Hurley!!!)


Thursday, January 14, 2010

I'll see you next year...

Two Thousand and Nine.

My favorites of '09
(in no order whatsoever)

- The top of Mont Royal with Brian and Mishik
- Blacklisted - No One Deserves To Be Here More than Me
- Barrel Aged Stouts (Old Rasputin XII, Black OPS, Abyss, B.O.R.I.S., Podge)
- Ellsworth St./ Devil's Den/ El Jarocho/ Chickie's
- Dylan
- Get Real and Underdog in Asbury Park
- Peche Mortel on draft at the Dieu de Ciel brewpub in Montreal
- Woody Allen films
- All of my new friends, All my old friends
- My Mom, Dad, and Sister






Monday, February 2, 2009

LIFE IN SHAMBLES


First thing on my mind is the show Todd and I went to this past (yes, Superbowl) Sunday at the Barbary. Cold World, Internal Affairs, Braindead, Cruel Hand, Alpha&Omega, Mother of Mercy all played this matinee and every band ignited an energy in me that I haven't felt in a long time.

First off, Todd and I are pricks for getting to the show a little late because we missed over half of MoM's set. Featuring members of the notoriously straight edge LetDown, Mother of Mercy has put out two 7"s (No Eden and Passing Through the Fire) and have an energy in their live show that I haven't seen since the first few Blacklisted shows that I saw. MOTHER OF MERCY.

Alpha&Omega played next. From LA, CA they were probably the band I was most curious to see. I had only heard their record maybe 2 weeks ago and DUG it so I was a fresh fan all giddy to see this new band for the first time. They were really tight, the singer looked pissed the whole time and dove into the crowd once and broke some lighting shit, but who gives a fuck. I think they would have sounded heavier and harder with a second guitarist but that ain't gonna stop me from seeing them again. Their record rules. ALPHA&OMEGA.

Next up was Cruel Hand from Portland, ME. First, let me say that I've been wanting to visit Portland, Maine for a long time. Cruel Hand made that city seem a hell of a lot cooler. It was actually my first time hearing them, but I was hooked right after the first song which was 'Life in Shambles' off of their LP 'Prying Eyes'. I bought a hoodie from them, and I never buy band hoodies. Also, the singer's stage presence kinda reminded me of Greg Mental for some reason. CRUEL HAND.

Braindead was next.... I like them more with Steve singing but they were still good. BRAINDEAD.

Internal Affairs.... I was never a big fan of them, but they actually sounded a lot better than the other 2 or 3 times I've seen them and people went off which I really dug. The singer also said some funny and also honest things that I was into, plus I really liked the shirt he was wearing haha. They seem like, although a band I wasn't really into, one that a lot of people really felt a connection to whether musically or lyrically. So, I bid a fond farewell to these LA straight edge dudes. INTERNAL AFFAIRS.

FINALLY....Cold World. I can't help but remember the first time CW's drummer Nick Woj posted Cold World's mp3s on the internet back in, what?, '03? People on the Rev board were bashing the shit outta them for being Rap-Rock or sounding too much like Linkin Park (wtf??) Not to sound totally OG or sumshit but I was a big fan from day1. Regardless, Cold World put out a 7" on now defunct Walk All Night, then another record on Lockin Out, then a split 7" with War Hungry on Six Feet Under, a compiling CD on 1917, and finally their magnum opus (IMO) 'Dedicated to Babies Who Came Feet First' on Deathwish, Inc. I haven't seen CW since the new record officially was released (the last time i saw them, the record had leaked but hadn't been released yet) but out of the 10+ times I've seen this band, Sunday afternoon was definitely the best I've seen them. They were unbelievably tight, all in rhythm, and everyone (especially the crowd) seemed all in high spirits. Maybe they were all hyped up on the Steelers playing in the Super Bowl a couple hours from them, but every aspect of their show was all amped up to volume eleven. Also, highlights from the set include George from Blacklisted singing his part from the track 'Dedicated to Babies Who Came Feet First" and the amount of songs they played from their first two 7"s. COLD WORLD.

Between CW and Cruel Hand, this show sparked a newfound interest in both newer hardcore bands and the ones I thought I had seen all of.

I'll see you 2/15 in Doylestown FEATURING ColdWorld LetDown WarHungry BadSeed SwampThing
Also, maybe this Saturday in Hoboken for the Don Giovanni Showcase (LAST FOR SCIENCE SHOW)

Since I loved them so much, here's Cruel Hand's record "Prying Eyes"
Come with me to see them next time they come around, though.

Listening to:
Cruel Hand - Prying Eyes (OBVIOUSLY)

Thursday, January 15, 2009

Vetri Birthday Dinner



My birthday is tomorrow, so my Mom and sister took me out to dinner tonight at Vetri located on Spruce between 13th and Broad. I had been hearing a lot of buzz since I started trying to get into good food recently (thanks mostly to Evan) so I made sure to make a reservation about a month in advance. "In GQ this month (the one with Jennifer Aniston on the cover), food writer and Philly native Alan Richman not only calls Italian the New French, but says Vetri is the best Italian restaurant in America." (citation)

The one dish I had heard a ton about was the spinach gnocchi with shaved ricotta and brown butter (pictured above), so I ordered a half portion as my appetizer. I can see why so many people were talking about it because it was heavenly. Very rich and warm. For my entree, I ordered the chestnut fettuccine with wild boar ragu which was very good as well. I had never eaten boar before so I was a little unsure, but there was nothing too strange in either the texture or taste.

The service was great and I even saw Marc Vetri walking around talking to customers. Can't wait to go back again sometime but I'll need to time to save some money haha.


Listening to:
Deerhunter - Weird Era Cont.
Fever Ray - Fever Ray