Archive for April, 2008

Understanding Cream and Making Butter

Tuesday, April 29th, 2008

Schlafly No. 15

Tuesday, April 29th, 2008

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When you pop the cap off the bottle, your nose is immediately greeted by a strong smell of cinnamon. Uh-oh. I started to worry. But fortunately, the cinnamon flavor - while present and very noticeable - is not overwhelming. In fact, it provides a very nice finish for the beer.

No. 15 pours a nice reddish color with a decent head. Really, everything about this beer is pleasant - from mouthfeel, to aroma, to the base flavors. It’s not a huge, bold beer, but it’s a wonderfully delightful session beer.

Trappistes Rochefort 6

Friday, April 25th, 2008

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Upon popping the bottle cap of this lovely beer, I was immediately struck by a nutty aroma. Wow!

Oh, yes. This is a Trappist beer. It definitely bears a family resemblance to Westmalle Dubbel, but there are differences as well. Whereas Westmalle has a very creamy head, Rochefort’s is more fizzy, like the carbonation in a soda pop. Rochefort tastes dryer. The ABV is not very different from Westmalle, so I’m assuming that Westmalle contains more unfermentable sugars than does Rochefort.

There is the previously-noted nutty aroma, plus a chocolate aroma, and a subtle fragrance of plums. The taste is rich, full of chocolate, and very pleasant.

Rochefort is to beers what champaigne is to wine. Yummy. A very satisfying beer. God bless those Trappist monks!

Benedict, the Shepherd Who Is Led

Wednesday, April 23rd, 2008

Over at Pajamas Media, The Anchoress has a beautifully-written post entitled, “Benedict, the Shepherd Who is Led.” I was drawn to this article because the scripture passage she refers to has a great deal of meaning for my father. And then I read the column, and was deeply moved by the message it conveyed.

[Jesus] said to him the third time, “Simon, son of John, do you love me?” Peter was distressed that he had said to him a third time, “Do you love me?” and he said to him, “Lord, you know everything; you know that I love you.” [Jesus] said to him, “Feed my sheep.

“Amen, amen, I say to you, when you were younger, you used to dress yourself and go where you wanted; but when you grow old, you will stretch out your hands, and someone else will dress you and lead you where you do not want to go.”
- John 21:17-18

Of the countless stirring moments we have seen or heard about over the six days of Pope Benedict XVI’s visit to the United States, one image has struck me as the most moving and deeply meaningful of the whole sojourn: the moment when the 81-year-old bishop of Rome exited his shiny, protective popemobile to walk down the last part of the ramp leading to the small gathering at Ground Zero.

Many times this past week Benedict revealed himself to have an exquisite sense of proportion, of knowing what is appropriate to the moment - and never more so than at the footprint of the North Tower. At his age, in the chill morning, the pope might have been excused for slowly motoring down to the assembly, but he instead shed a worldly trapping of convenience and made his solemn way.

Although his aides moved with him, he walked with a grave air of solitude, a small gray-haired man in a beautifully tailored light coat, his arms at his side. Benedict wore an expression of obedient resolution and moved as though he was being pulled inexorably in, and further in, to the place he would rather not go - into our national gaping wound of horror, confusion, evil, and despair - and he fell to his knees and prayed.

There was nothing dramatic in his expression. He did not mug for the camera or demonstrate his prayer beyond his posture and closed eyes; he allowed us our dignity while keeping his own. One sensed that had his secretary not interrupted, his prayer would have gone on and on.

America has been spiritually and politically reeling since 9/11, struggling to find balance in a world full of new challenges and ugly realities. It has been a bloody and divisive effort and Americans are weary. In a tumultuous election year, we are trying to regroup and find our way. And we still mourn; we mourn our dead and the loss of our youthful, trusting innocence. Benedict came into all of that. He prayed; he met; he listened; he entered into the pain.

Although his meeting with some of the victims of the shameful sex abuse scandals was private and unseen, I suspect Benedict wore that same expression, and carried himself in that same resolute manner, as he allowed himself to be led where he would rather not go, placed into the presence of the church’s deepest wound - a wound of horror, confusion, evil, and betrayal. The terrible sin of some of our priests, compounded by their bishops, has been a source of sickening and unrelenting shame for us. We have felt the disgust in our bellies and wished we could push the whole story away, because the pain is so abysmal and vast. But it can be pushed away no longer, and Benedict said that even before his plane hit the ground at Andrews AFB, and every day after.

But speaking difficult words is easier than looking into the eyes of innocent lambs wounded and left to fend for themselves by neglectful and self-interested shepherds within the family. Benedict trusted and was led to look into those agonized eyes, and to tend the wounds, because it needed to be done if the flock is to survive. He did it for an American church which - scattered, divided, and needing to regroup - simply could not bear to do it on her own. He met; he listened; he entered into the pain. A healing process is begun. Within the flock, there is hope renewed.

Who would have thought it? After the glamor and punched-up charisma of John Paul II, many in America had set low expectations for this man who was known mostly by his media caricature, that of “hard-line enforcer.” For six days we watched and listened; we came to know Benedict as a cerebral and soft-spoken man whose body language was endearingly awkward and whose pen seemingly never rested. He is warmer than we expected, and he is braver than we knew. Overwhelmingly, though, Benedict is gentle and exceedingly, edifyingly humble. He is a “Supreme Shepherd” but one who allows himself to be led, and ever led, by the Divine one.

Looking back, we should have realized it sooner. When he understood, during the papal conclave, that he was going to be John Paul’s successor, Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger prayed, “Lord, don’t do this to me.” At his inaugural mass in 2005, Benedict begged of us: “Pray for me, that I may learn to love the Lord more and more. Pray for me, that I may learn to love his flock more and more. Pray for me, that I may not flee for fear of the wolves.”

Three years later, upon being informed in St. Patrick’s Cathedral that it was the exact hour and anniversary of that election, he echoed that sentiment: “I will try to do all that is possible to be a worthy successor of the great Apostle, who also was a man with faults and sins, but remained in the end the rock for the Church. And so I too, with all my spiritual poverty, can be for this time, in virtue of the Lord’s grace, the Successor of Peter.”

Always when a pope travels, much is made of the external trappings - the vestments, the red shoes, the miter and crosier - and often there are criticisms that the pope is too richly dressed, too well-shod. But the Successor of Peter does not dress himself; he is dressed by his Office, and not for his own vanity but for the benefit of the sheep who seek him out amongst the merchants, politicians, pilgrims, and other shepherds. His sheep mill around and graze; they frolic and fight; they stray and get caught in snares and attacked; and they look to that recognizable shepherd for guidance and rescue - to be gathered safely back, and to be walked home. But even the shepherd - if he is a good and mindful one who truly loves his sheep - allows himself to be led. He is aware of the hour. And obedient to the sun.

Feast of St. George

Wednesday, April 23rd, 2008

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Goose Island Summertime

Tuesday, April 22nd, 2008

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I have really been digging this beer this week. A light, refreshing German-style Kölsch beer with a mildly fruity aroma. The carbonation slowly comes out of solution while you drink it, but there really isn’t any head to speak of.

It’s a great session beer, or a great beer with which to refresh yourself after working outdoors.

Yummy!

Britain Cancels St. George’s Parade Over Fear of Muslim Rioting

Monday, April 21st, 2008

Gateway Pundit blogs that Britain Cancels St. Georges Parade Over Fear of Muslim Rioting.

The term “Great Britain” is a complete and utter oxymoron.

Prairie Path Golden Ale

Saturday, April 19th, 2008

img_9000.jpgTwo Brothers Brewing Co.’s Prairie Path Golden Ale is a pleasant surprise. I didn’t much care for their Weisse beer, so I didn’t have high hopes for this one. I’m glad I was mistaken. This is a very clean, crisp, and refreshing beer. But, unlike an American pilsner, it has flavor. This is the kind of beer I’d like to drink after a hot day of mowing the lawn.

Prairie Path is mildly carbonated, with not much in the way of a head. It is brewed with Belgian malts and Saaz and Golding hops - the very best of ingredients (IMHO). The hop bitterness perfectly balances the malt sweetness. There’s a pleasant floral aroma, and the ale yeast did leave some fruity esters. In other words, this beer has some character.

It did have a rather substantial mouthfeel, and a slight aftertaste - somewhat reminiscent of a steam beer.

All in all, I was impressed.

Rep. Myrick Calls For Former President Jimmy Carters Passport To Be Revoked

Friday, April 18th, 2008

Myrick NC09 - Press Release - Rep. Myrick Calls For Former President Jimmy Carters Passport To Be Revoked

Aftershock?

Friday, April 18th, 2008

I was just outside on break, taking a walk. When I came back inside, the folks here were talking about feeling an aftershock or tremor. I hadn’t felt a thing. I’m currently looking for confirmation.

Update: Yep. Initial measurements indicate magnitude 4.5.

Quote

Friday, April 18th, 2008

Zoe Romanowsky had a great quote: “Joseph Ratzinger wanted a quiet retirement to read and write and play his piano. Instead, he got poped.”

Pope blesses, kisses baby - NFL family in awe

Friday, April 18th, 2008

You shook me all night long

Friday, April 18th, 2008

Yes, I was awakened by the earthquake last night. I was awakened from a deep sleep and at first I thought that there was an intruder in the house. And then I realized that the rhythmic noise I heard was my closet doors rattling, caused by the whole house shaking. It took me a minute to realize the shaking wasn’t caused by a passing train, a large truck, or severe weather. So then I realized it was an earthquake.

I wondered whether it was a nearby small earthquake or a distant large earthquake.

So, In the morning, I found out it was 5.2 on the Richter scale and over a 100 miles away.

Update: Here’s Channel 20’s story on it:

WEST SALEM, Ill. (AP) — The U.S. Geological Survey says this morning’s 5.2-magnitude earthquake was likely generated by the Wabash fault zone in southeastern Illinois and southwestern Indiana.

USGS geophysicist Carrieann Bedwell says the quake about six miles from West Salem, Illinois occurred in a northward extension of the New Madrid fault area.

The fault is the country’s most active seismic zone east of the Rockies and produces numerous small quakes a year, but most are too weak to be noticed by the public.

In 1811 and 1812, the fault it produced a series of earthquakes estimated at magnitude 7.0 or greater.

The Wabash fault zone generated a magnitude 5.0 quake in 2002 and a 5.1 in 1987.

This morning’s sizable temblor was felt from Georgia to Michigan, but no major damage has been reported in Illinois.

Bl. Kateri Tekakwitha’s cause for sainthood going to Vatican

Thursday, April 17th, 2008

Bl. Kateri Tekakwitha’s cause for sainthood going to Vatican. Pray for the success of her cause.

Top 10 List

Thursday, April 17th, 2008

A friend of mine challenged me to make a list of the top 10 beers. I told him that I hadn’t had every beer in the world, so that was impossible. He then amended his challenge to me for me to list the top 10 beers that I have had.

A very difficult proposition, since my tastes and preferences do change over time. And really, how do you compare a porter to a hefeweizen? But I thought I’d give it a shot.

I started out by making a list of what I thought were truly “world-class” beers. I ended up with a list of 20 such beers. Then I tried to put them in the order of how much I enjoyed them. I’m sure I made mistakes doing this. And deciding that this beer belonged in the top 10 and that beer belonged in the second 10 was difficult and painful. But, in the end, this is what I came up with:

10. Belhaven St. Andrew’s Ale
9. Goose Island Christmas Ale
8. Millstream Colony Oatmeal Stout Lager
7. Hacker-Pschorr Weisse
6. Samuel Smith’s Organic Ale
5. Samuel Smith’s Taddy Porter
4. Fuller’s 1845
3. Weihenstephaner Hefe Weissbier
2. Ayinger Brau-weisse
1. Westmalle Trappist Ale Dubbel

Honorable mention: Arcadia Ales’ London Porter Ale, Rogue Shakespear Stout, Samuel Smith’s Organically Produced Lager Beer, Samuel Smith’s Pure Brewed Lager, Hofbrau Munchen Original Lager Beer, Erdinger Oktoberfest Weizen, Fuller’s London Pride, Fuller’s London Porter, and Spanish Peaks Brewing’s Black Dog Ale.