Skip to main content

Fun With Beer!

The other big (and super fun) thing we did with our friends when they visited this past weekend was go on factory tours at both Odell Brewing Co and New Belgium Brewing.

Odell


Tour stats:

  • Approximately 30 minutes long
  • About 25 people in our group
  • Knowledgeable and laid back tour guide
  • Small operation (62 employees, one building) and unfortunately not running since it was a Saturday

I love Odell beer. Love, love, love it. And not to be too melodramatic, but it has changed my relationship with beer. Before moving here and falling in love with them, I did not like IPA's or stouts. But their IPA's and stouts? Ah-mah-zing. Obviously, their recipes have something to do with it but I learned on the tour that they don't pasteurize their beer. I actually have no idea whether or not this actually affects the taste (they say it does) but it's sounds cool, yes?

Every time we've been to their tasting room, they have different beers available to try out. Turns out that they have a crazy number of experimental beers going at one time. They have an adorable little mini set-up where they can brew small batches of new recipes and several bourbon barrels (Makers Mark!) where they make one of a kind batches that can never be reproduced (because each barrel is different).

This is where they keep the small batch beers they are working on (each box had writing all over it describing the recipe and details about the beer).

Bourbon Yum!

Summary: Straight up tour of a small factory. The tour guide was great and the beer, although not free, was delicious. Recommended.

New Belgium

Tour stats:
  • About an hour and a half long
  • Only eight people in our group (although she said it is normally around 25)
  • Knowledgeable and cool tour guide
  • Pretty extensive facility (300+ employees, three or four buildings?) with lots of machines that were running
  • Free beer!
This tour was a truly a treat, not only because it was quite extensive and they gave us a crap load of free beer, but because we didn't think we were going to be able to go on the tour at all. They accept reservations for their tours and when I went to sign up, every single available tour that day was filled. So we were surprised and delighted when we walked into the brewery and were told that a large party had just canceled and that we could go on a tour starting right then!

I have been on a many factory tours all over this country but I have to say that this tour was the best I've ever been on. The highlight was when we all got to take a beer directly from the conveyor belt. Don't believe me?


Video

7 minute old beer!

We got to go down the slide in the employee area...



Video

...and try out a type of beer that is totally new to me: Sour Beer. It's aged in wine casks from France...


...and may be the most unique beer I've ever had. I definitely want to spend some more time "evaluating" this new beverage.

We ended the tour taking some silly photos and drinking our last, free beer in the tasting room.




Summary: New Belgium definitely puts a lot of effort into interacting with their customers and reinforcing their brand. They gave us plenty of free and quite unique beer and the tour guide was wonderful. Watch your head on the slide. Recommended.

Comments

  1. I know, this is totally your kind of place! Get your asses over here!!

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

I spy...

I was looking for directions on Google Maps today when I realized that Google had just added "birds-eye" views for Fort Collins. So, of course, I went to see what our home looks like. Much to my surprise, I found that Google just happened to catch us on the morning of March 29, 2012. Our moving day! So, you better think twice before deciding to run around naked in your back yard. You never know when the aerial photography plane is going to fly by!

DIY Wort Chiller

We here at Curious Souls H.Q. are always looking for ways to save a buck or two. So, when shopping around online for a wort chiller for home brewing, we found the following prices: $65 @ Midwest (plus shipping) $70 @ Northern (plus shipping) $39 @ Amazon (plus shipping) So, off to the hardware store... 3/8" (internal diameter) Vinyl Tubing (10 feet) = $4.15 Sink to hose adapter (varies based on your type of sink) = $4.79 3/8" X 20' Copper Tubing = $24.13 Vinyl Hose Coupler = $2.49 Hose clamps (x2)  = $1.70 Band-aids (x2 or x3 or x4) = $1.00 For a total of $38.26 (pre-tax, no shipping), we decided to roll our own. Here's how it went down... ( vid link ) And, of course, there is the joy of having made something all by yourself! Priceless & fun!

Chickens Are Scarier Than Crows, Didn't You Know?

The garden is in!  If our Scarechicken does its job, we will soon have a nice crop of heirloom tomatoes, onions, hot peppers, green beans, basil, parsley and thyme! Huge thanks to my parents for their help getting the area ready. It was a jungle!