This is the early 1990s and I was quite ignorant of brewing
methods. It could have been judicious use of red dye 40 for all I knew. I shake
my head.
"They put very finely ground tobacco in it," he
tells me.
"That's bullshit," I retorted. "You know how
I know it's bullshit? Because you're full of shit," I explain. It was
true. He was a smooth-talking bullshitter. Granted, it helped him get more ass
than a toilet seat in college but I'd known him long enough by that point to
realize when he was trying to slip something by me.
The beer world is full of such fabulation.
Just when you think you know the history of, say, a beer
style, someone pulls some brewing logs or tax records out that they found at
the bottom of a locked filing cabinet stuck in a disused lavatory with a sign
on the door saying "Beware of the Leopard" which demonstrate your
knowledge to be nothing but a craft beer canard. Q.E.D. I've had beer historian
types expose so many stories that I once took as gospel to be nothing but myths
that I now doubt everything that appears on a beer label or brewer's website
with a level of skepticism that would make even René Descartes sit back in awe.
Much to the credit of Madison's Working Draft Beer Company, neither
the label for their Czech-style pils, To Those Who Wait, nor their website makes
any claims on the history of the style.
Pilsner beer dates back to the early 1840s and the Czech
city of Plzeň (a.k.a. – Pilsen). The story goes that the (top-fermented) beer
brewed there was so bad that the town fathers eventually got fed up and
commissioned a new brewery to be built so they could have some decent beer for
a change. It would be state of the art with its own malt house that would use
indirect heat so as to produce pale malt, still something of a novelty at that
time in much of the world. And the beer would be bottom-fermented, the hip
new(ish) trend in brewing. To pull this off required a secret stratagem involving a monk being
recruited to smuggle the precious flocculators out of Bavaria.
By 1842 the shiny new brewery (Pilsner Urquell) was humming
along nicely and in November of that year the first batch of clear, fizzy,
golden piwo was being served at the finest establishments in Plzeň.
That is more or less the pilsner piety I was given when I was
initially learning about the style. But as time went by and I read more from
Evan Rail, an American expat researching Czech beer history from his home in
Prague, the more I realized there was more to the story and that robe and
dagger bit with the monk was nothing but a tall tale. The price of local beer
and a desire to indulge in trendy lagers were also factors in the invention of
pilsner.
For more on the history of pilsner, check out Rail's blog,
Beer Culture.
Working Draft Beer Company opened in 2018 smack dab in the
middle of Madison's Marquette neighborhood just northeast of downtown. The
brewmaster (and co-owner, I see as well) is Clint Lohman who has previously
worked at Wisconsin Brewing Company and Vintage Brewing before that. I had a splendid
conversation with him at a Madison Craft Beer Week event several years ago when
he was still laboring under the tutelage of Scott Manning at Vintage. I'm happy
to see that he has his own brewhouse
now.
To Those Who Wait was a lovey light gold color and crystal
clear. My pouring skills produced a nice white head that was light and pillowy
and stuck around for a while. In addition to lookin' mighty fine, it smelled
nice too. A little cracker plus the traditional Saaz aromas that, to my nose,
are like grass and black pepper/cubeb. A little herbal too.
The beer's medium body tasted of cracker along with that
green/grassy and peppery tastes from the hops. My notes say that the
carbonation was perfect. Enough for a nice fizziness on my tongue but not too
much so as to overwhelm the milder flavors. Plus I think the moderate fizz
helped give the beer a creamy taste.
For the finish there was a moderate grassy/herbal hop
bitterness along with a little dryness from the carbonation.
The name To Those Who Wait is apparently a nod to the 8 week
lagering period that the beer gets. While I am unsure how long Pilsner Urquell,
Staropramen, etc. are aged, here 2 months yields an extremely tasty brew with a
light, crackery flavor complemented by those delicious Saaz hops. Not a big,
bold brew, just one with lovely delicate flavors all in their proper places.
Junk food pairing: At 4.2% A.B.V. To Those Who Wait will
pair with a nice thin potato chip. I recommend getting a big bag of Old Dutch
Onion & Garlic Potato Chips. The pils will go down extra easily after a few
handfuls.
1 comment:
I compliment you on finding all the text characters with the diacritical marks [>Windows>Accessories>Character Map ?].
I would not have responded on this entry if not for the images showing something that even I, who is resistant to 'lookalike' copycat claims, must scribe - that label for "To Those Who Wait" Czech Pils bears familiarity to that of a certain brewery in the Czech Republic. At one point on the Chicago Beer Society e-mail listserv, somebody thereupon tried to abbreviate the brewery's name as "PU". I swiftly responded that, even if I thought another Czech beer was a better example of the style, I cannot let you (or anyone) use the phrase "PU" to refer to this beer. In North America, 'PU' has a different connoitation. |=)
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