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February 22nd, 2012Desert Island BeersThis week’s Desert Island Beers features Fal Allen the Brewmaster for Anderson Valley Brewing Company in Northern California. From 2000 to 2005, Fal worked as General Manager and Head of Production for Anderson Valley returning in 2010 as Brewmaster.
Between 2005 and 2010 Fal was the Brewmaster and brand ambassador for Archipelago Brewing Company in Singapore (a division of Asia Pacific Breweries). During that time he developed many new and unusual beers brewed with local South-East Asian spices and other ingredients.
Fal started brewing professionally in 1988 for Red Hook Brewery in Seattle and in 1990 moved downtown to Pike Place brewery where he was the head brewer for 8 years. In 1998 he was awarded the Brewer’s Association’s Russell Schehrer award for innovation and achievement in craft brewing.
He has spoken internationally on a range of brewing subjects from cask conditioned beers to QA/QC procedures, to brewery installation. He has been a beer judge at the Great American Beer Festival for the last 12 years and has judged several times at the World Beer Cup. He has also judged beer internationally in New Zealand, Singapore and Japan.
Fal’s writing credits include co-authoring the Brewer’s Association’s book on Barley Wine, a four part series on microbiology and lab procedures and more than 40 articles in periodicals including American Brewer, The New Brewer, Zymurgy, Master Brewer’s Technical Quarterly, The Malt Advocate, The Scandinavian Brewer’s Review and The Washington Law Review.
Fal holds degrees from both the University of Hawaii and the Siebel Institute of Brewing Technology
The Beers
So Fal which 5 beers would you want to have with you if you were stranded on a desert island, and why?
Tags: anderson valley, Brouwerij Duvel Moortgat, duvel
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February 13th, 2010Beer Reviews, Belgian/Trappist
Maredsous Brune (or Bruin)
It seems that my previous claims that I wasn’t really a fan of Belgian beers were completely unfounded (or simply founded on inexperience). A few years ago I assumed incorrectly that all Belgian beer = wheat fuelled turbo Hoegarden.
Maredsous is a great example how Belgian beer can be the antithesis of my previous perception: deep brown, fruity, with no pungent wheat head or overly fizzy body.
From the church wine nose, through stewed fruit – figs or prunes perhaps – this is rich, sweet affair, almost caramel on the tongue. There’s a wisp of chocolate that arrives from nowhere to spice things up as well. It finishes softly but that isn’t such a bad thing.
This is a rich, mouth-filling beer; but with it’s gentle finish it’s the sort of beer that could become one of my staple ‘have a couple in the cupboard beers’. Read the rest of this entry »
Tags: abbey, belgian, benedictine, Brouwerij Duvel Moortgat, caramel, Fruity, maredsous, monks -




















