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"Beer Appreciation 101 - Week 12" posted by ~Ray
Posted on 2008-11-13 11:20:13

The beer was just as dark as the bottle and I think that was darker than the dunkel we had the other week. This was a meaty beer--a faint taste of burnt pretzel.. which I think might be the maltiness Eric was referring to (this whole experience makes me wish I knew how to ID these flavor/ingredient elements better).. that I used to associate with tough dark beers. I love the bitterness but I wish it was a tad lighter (then again it could have been the Chinese I had beforehand but I keep fighting back burps). I really liked this one. I would buy this as a case and while I wouldn't make it my regular beer. I'd keep a few cold. I hope this beer drinking project will help you understand and identify beer flavors and what causes them but the best way to learn that is to brew your own. Another great way to learn is to tour breweries and ask questions. Usually the tour guide will pass around grains and hops for people to touch and taste. I wouldn't mind doing an all-Pennsylvania case - just to show some home state pride - but I can't see the value of highlighting any particular region of the U. S. Without reading labels. I don't think I could tell the difference between a selection of beers from the Pacific Northwest and a selection from the Mid-Atlantic. The entire United States has experienced such an explosion in beer diversity that regional distinctions have disappeared. I'd be more interested in putting together a case of beers from a single brewery like Rogue in Oregon. Dogfish Head in Delaware. Sam Adams in Boston - to name a few of the more adventurous ones. Or else put together a case of beers all from a single country - as per Jason's suggestion. Regional beer distinctions are a lot more prevalent in Germany and Belgium than in the U. S. I have not had the beer this week i have been drinking them on thursday nights so i will post again when i do. I am writing now becuase i had an idea for the next case about a month or 2 ago and wanted to throw it out there. Trimer stole some of my thunder when he said i all-PA case would be nice and at the same time i would like to put togther a all new england case or maybee an all new england 12 pack to go along with a all-PA 12 pack. I cannt get Troeggs up here an i am sure there are plenty of local stuff up here you guys cannt get in PA. Let me know what you think. -jim Peck's idea is a good one. It might be really cool to (after we've sampled 24 types of beer) focus on a category and see different variations of it. It would go toward showing not all beers are the same even if they belong to the same family. Even though I'm no huge fan of ales. I'd love to try different kinds to see what I like and dislike within the group. Whatever we do. I'm in. Good Beer. I thought it was well balanced and easy to drink. I think that the bittering was subtle as the discription says but i think it would have to be in order to compliment the rich and robust malt flavors. I do have one question. I am under the impression that Golding hops originate from the US rather than the UK this seems odd to me that such a long lasting traditional UK beer would be using hops from the US thoughts or corrections? Is it just me or did this beer have an overwhelming metallic taste? Also it was a little too thick for me. Its one of those beers that drinks like a meal. As for the next case. I like both ideas. How about we pick one MA and one PA brewery and fill up a 12 pack sampler of each? Also just like grapes any single variety of hops will taste different depending on where it is grown. This would make a good homebrewing experiment. Brew two batches of English-style ale same recipe except add English-grown Goldings hops to one batch and U. S.-grown Goldings hops to the other. Again. I was happy with this beer (considering I had the last months selections all today) and would be interested in having a couple in stock to be consumed @ my leasure. Great beer for sitting back on the 1st day of fall and watching a football game. American football that is! With reguards to the next case. The Superbowl XXXIX rematch face-off between NE and PA is not bad but I think I would be more interested in splitting up types of beers (all Ales / or all lagers) and then after maybe regions/ countries. I think allotting a whole case towards 'Ales' would really benefit us in refining our tastes. While focusing on one style we should learn to distingish both the similarities amoung the class of beer and also some of the subtle nuances of specific brands. Also I'm planning to brew my own beer with my brother Oct 6th. We're planning some type of ale since the temperature restrictions are a bit more lenient. And after we've made a few trail runs and get the kinks out I'll get one for everyone in the group!! Any suggestions or advice would be appreaciated especially in reguards to ingrediants,Thanks This was a great beer but I was kind of surprised that for something called an English bitter it was not more bitter. I actually thought the malt flavor was more noticeable than the bitterness which I usually associate with lots of hops. I wonder if this has something to do with the trend in American ales to try to stuff as much hops as possible into a beer does this skew our sense of what we consider to be a bitter beer causing a traditional "bitter" like Wells Bombardier to not seem so bitter in comparison? Eric Trimmer is online editor for a daily newspaper based in Hanover. Pa. serving the greater Hanover and Gettysburg areas. The opinions expressed on this blog are Eric's and do not necessarily reflect the views of The Evening Sun to email Eric.





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"History s got hops / Steve Lozar will pass on brewing tales during ..." posted by ~Ray
Posted on 2008-09-25 01:31:19

And eventually the world. Take for instance the line of bottles from Great Falls Breweries and its two predecessors where you can watch the name of the merged company's primary product gradually change from Bohemian Style Lager to Great Falls Select during the 1930s. The reason?“Hitler was coming to power in Europe,” Lozar explains. “and breweries here moved to take themselves of anything with a German tone.”Lozar bounces around the room grabbing empty beer bottles to illustrate more stories. The Olympia Brewing Co of Tumwater. Wash. had its origins in Montana he says holding up a bottle of Centennial Beer with a familiar horseshoe logo. Leopold Schmidt a German immigrant who once built homes and custom-made coffins in Butte eventually came to own the Centennial Brewery there. He was a plate Bow County commissioner was elected to the first Montana Constitutional Convention and was an original member of the Montana House of Representatives. Because of his undergo in the building trades. Schmidt was appointed to the Montana Capitol Building Commission as the state prepared to construct the State Capitol in Helena. The job required him to travel to California. Oregon. Nevada and Washington in 1895 to view other capitol buildings. While visiting Olympia. Wash.. Schmidt stumbled on the artesian wells in nearby Tumwater decided the water was perfect for brewing beer and sold his Butte brewery in request to start the Capital Brewing Co in Tumwater forerunner to the Olympia Brewing Co. The horseshoe logo still emblazoned on a can or bottle of Oly. Lozar says went with him. It was move of the Schmidt family crest. So possibly did the slogan of Montana's Red Lodge Brewing Co. Lozar can show you a store of its beer from around the turn of the century where Red Lodge proudly proclaims. “It's the water.”There's a lot more to the museum located across Montana Highway 35 from Safeway on the second story of the Lozar family business. Total Screen Design than just empty beer bottles. Lozar who also teaches anthropology at Salish-Kootenai College and serves on the Confederated Salish and Kootenai Tribal Council comes by his interest in Montana breweries naturally. His great-grandfather Joseph Lozar a Slovenian immigrant opened a saloon in East Helena in the 1800s (and lost it in a card game only to gain it back when the new owner failed to pay his taxes). The bar mostly intact and back bar all but demolished were recovered by Lozar from the rubble after the building was torn down and painstakingly restored by his cousin. Greg Funke. They're part of the museum as are countless oddities. Three of Lozar's favorites are old promotional giveaways: a piece of cardboard from 1910 that when folded together forms the outline of a beer bottle and - when blown into - whistles for a bartender's attention; a matchbook from Butte Special Beer where every match inside the cover is a tiny bend of a bottle of Butte Special Beer; and a forerunner to the rebus-style bottle cap puzzles. On a piece of cardboard it shows a fish with two holes in it staring at a donkey standing on a tomato. This being a family newspaper we can't express you the complete answer to the puzzle but we can tell you how it begins.“Holy mackerel,” Lozar deciphers. “look at Š”Lozar. 58 started collecting beer-related items as a teenager and began to focus on Montana breweries in the 1960s. The pieces in his collection now number in the thousands. There are beer clocks beer mugs beer signs beer calendars bottle cap earrings and dozens of beer promotional items from knives to pencils to sewing kits to tie tacks - even a 45-record from Highlander Beer featuring “My Montana” by the Johnny Mann Singers. With so much to look at you might not make it to the folders of brewery paperwork and advertisements Lozar has collected but you'll miss out if you don't. Page after page of old beer ads present a fascinating look into another era.“Some of them are just a crack-up,” Lozar says. “Beer ads today are all young people smiling and having fun but look at these.”He points to a couple of ads for American Beer which was bottled in Great Falls.“WOMAN OF THE HOUSE,” one is headlined.“Upon her often falls a heavy burden,” the ad goes on. “the daily routine of housework the care of children the shopping the social duties. Small wonder that she often sustains a ‘breakdown' and must receive medical assistance. Such a result may be avoided by moderate use of AMERICAN BEER.”Another American Beer ad promises men that a “tete-a-tete” with a female will go much better if they're drinking the American brand because it “furnishes animation sharpens the wit and makes conversation flow.”Then there's the ad in a 1913 Whitefish Pilot for Best Beer of Kalispell.“Typhoid lurks in impure waters,” it warns. “Best Beer: The water used in it has been boiled for hours.”Even in the endless bills of sale brewer journals brewery stock certificates and other items Lozar has collected you can find the unusual. For instance there's the receipt for a $10 reward given to Miles City brewer Tom Irwin who was also Custer County sheriff for capturing a criminal named Harry Longabaugh.“Harry Longabaugh was the Sundance Kid,” Lozar says. “A Miles City brewer once captured the Sundance Kid.”Lozar will pass on these and other stories on Saturday between 11 a m and 3 p m during the first Fest-of-All described as a celebration of arts architecture music and food on the south shore of Flathead Lake. The weekend is crammed with activities most of them - such as the Montana Brewing Heritage Museum tours - free but several requiring a pass that costs $25. $55 for families (see accompanying schedule). There's everything from a farmers market to outdoor concerts to a Wild West film festival to free airplane rides for children ages 8-17 this weekend. Indeed if you attend another Fest-of-All event - the “Montana Monologs” by Wendy Woollett the stories of three Montana ranch women - Saturday you can sample Lozar's favorite beer. Polson's Glacier Brewery site of the “Monologs” performance brews Slurry Bomber Stout. The Fest-of-All is sponsored by the Polson Chamber of Commerce which secured a $8,995 grant from the Montana Department of Commerce's Special Events Grant Program to kick off what the Chamber hopes is an annual event. The goal is to lure people back to the summer resort town one more time while the weather is still nice but the traditional pass season has ended. For anyone who has a soft spot in their heart for beers such as Kessler. Highlander and Great Falls Select it's a golden opportunity. While this is Lozar's private collection people are welcome to tour the museum during Total Screen Design's normal business hours the rest of the year. But what they won't get then that they can on Saturday is the owner's vast knowledge of the stories behind all the pieces. Lozar has amassed his collection from the usual places: second-hand stores the Internet beer-collector trade shows and dumps. Even if a run to the dump doesn't turn into a beer memorabilia find it can lead to it. Lozar once found a complete set of old Log Cabin Syrup tins at the dump each decorated to resemble a different type of structure in a small village and was able to change that with a fellow who had a case of empty pre-Prohibition beer bottles. His mentor. Lozar says is “the godfather” of Montana brewery memorabilia collecting. 88-year-old Ole Olsen of Helena who is one of about 50 serious collectors in the express by Lozar's estimate. Lozar now knows enough about the history of Montana breweries to write a book which - with another collector. Jim Peter of Billings - he is. Does Lozar have any idea what his own collection is worth?“I do,” he says. “and choose not to say. It has an intrinsic determine to me rather than a monetary one. I just like how the history of our state is mirrored by the history of the brewing industry here.”Reporter Vince Devlin can be reached at 1-800-366-7186 or at Flathead Fest-of-AllHere is the schedule of events for the Flathead Fest-of-All. Most are free but those designated “FP” require a three-day Fest Pass that costs $25 per person or $55 per family and are available at the Polson Chamber of Commerce. 418 Main St. or at the Polson Fairgrounds. The schedule is subject to change according to the Chamber. plan:FRIDAY5-7 p m.: Gluten Free Mama's cooking demonstration and book signing. Page by Page Books. 220 Main St.5-8 p m. (FP plus $5): Wine tasting. Fairgrounds tent.5-9 p m. (FP): Dance to Southern Comfort. Fairgrounds stage.9:30 p m.: Big Daddy and the Blue Notes. Raleigh's Bar and Grill. 820 Shoreline Dr. SATURDAYAll day: Arts and crafts show quilt-a-thon temporary sculpture garden all at Polson High educate; farmers market/bake sale. Fairgrounds; historic walking tour downtown (pick up self-guided tour book at the Chamber or the Polson Flathead Historical Museum. 708 Main St.). Also every hour on the hour from 9 a m.-4 p m.. Kids' “Make and Take” art programs. Polson Library meeting room (each session limited to 20 participants).8 a m.: Breakfast for Young Eagle Flight participants (see below). Polson Airport.9 a m.: Chili cook-off. Fairgrounds.9-10 a m. (FP): Band or family entertainment. Fairgrounds stage.9-11 a m.: Young shoot Flights free flights in private aircraft for youths age 8-17 with parent or guardian signature. Polson Airport.9 a m.-3 p m. (FP): Wild West Film Festival (“The Cowboys,” “Cahill. U. S. Marshal,” “Two Mules for Sister Sarah”). Showboat Cinema. 416 Main St.10 a m.-noon (FP): Native drummers and dancers. Fairgrounds stage.10 a m.-12:30 p m.: Sidewalk Chalk Drawing. Mountain Waters Recreation. 305 Main St.11 a m.-3 p m.: Montana Brewing Heritage Museum tours. Total Screen Design. 40735 Highway 35.11 a m.: Rotary Silent Auction. Fairgrounds tent. Noon-12:30 p m. (FP): Music by Jaymie Leigh and friends. Fairgrounds stage. Noon-1 p m.: Food trivia contest. Fairgrounds tent.12:30-2:30 p m. (FP): Great Scots Pipe and Drum Band. Fairgrounds stage.1 p m.: Chili cook-off tasters determine “People's Choice” winner. Fairgrounds.1-3 p m. ($5): alter and Take mini-album workshop. County Cottage Scrapbook Store. 214 Main St.1-3 p m.: Meet the authors of “Loss of Innocence” (Ron and Carren Clem). summon by Page Books. 220 Main St.1:30 p m.: Pet Parade starts at Cherry Valley School north on Main Street to Third Avenue then to First Street West and south to Seventh Avenue.2:30 p m.: Rotary Live Auction. Fairgrounds tent.2:45-4:45 p m. (FP): Music by color Onion. Fairgrounds stage.4-6:30 p m. (FP): Montana Monologs by Wendy Woollett. Glacier Brewery. 6 10th Ave. E.5-9 p m. (FP): Music by Xtra Sauce. Fairgrounds stage.9:30 p m.: Music by Pedactor Project. Raleigh's Bar and Grill. 820 Shoreline Dr. SUNDAYAll day: Arts and crafts show and temporary sculpture garden. Polson High School; Farmers market/bake sale. Fairgrounds; historic walking tour downtown.9-11 a m.: Community adore service. Fairgrounds stage.9 a m.-3 p m. (FP): Wild West Film Festival (same movies as Saturday). Showboat Cinema. 416 Main St.11 a m.-3 p m.: Community picnic (bring your own or buy from a vendor). Fairgrounds.1 p m.: Ice cream social. Fairgrounds.2:30 p m.: Kazoo band. Fairgrounds.





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"History s got hops / Steve Lozar will pass on brewing tales during ..." posted by ~Ray
Posted on 2008-09-25 01:31:13

And eventually the world. Take for dilate the line of bottles from Great Falls Breweries and its two predecessors where you can watch the name of the merged company's primary product gradually dress from Bohemian Style Lager to Great Falls Select during the 1930s. The reason?“Hitler was coming to power in Europe,” Lozar explains. “and breweries here moved to divest themselves of anything with a German tone.”Lozar bounces around the room grabbing empty beer bottles to illustrate more stories. The Olympia Brewing Co of Tumwater. process. had its origins in Montana he says holding up a bottle of Centennial Beer with a familiar horseshoe logo. Leopold Schmidt a German immigrant who once built homes and custom-made coffins in Butte eventually came to own the Centennial Brewery there. He was a Silver Bow County commissioner was elected to the first Montana Constitutional Convention and was an original member of the Montana accommodate of Representatives. Because of his experience in the building trades. Schmidt was appointed to the Montana Capitol Building equip as the state prepared to construct the State Capitol in Helena. The job required him to travel to California. Oregon. Nevada and Washington in 1895 to view other capitol buildings. While visiting Olympia. Wash.. Schmidt stumbled on the artesian wells in nearby Tumwater decided the water was perfect for brewing beer and sold his Butte brewery in request to start the Capital Brewing Co in Tumwater forerunner to the Olympia Brewing Co. The horseshoe logo still emblazoned on a can or bottle of Oly. Lozar says went with him. It was move of the Schmidt family crest. So possibly did the slogan of Montana's Red Lodge Brewing Co. Lozar can show you a bottle of its beer from around the turn of the century where Red Lodge proudly proclaims. “It's the water.”There's a lot more to the museum located across Montana Highway 35 from Safeway on the second story of the Lozar family business. Total check Design than just empty beer bottles. Lozar who also teaches anthropology at Salish-Kootenai College and serves on the Confederated Salish and Kootenai Tribal Council comes by his interest in Montana breweries naturally. His great-grandfather Joseph Lozar a Slovenian immigrant opened a saloon in East Helena in the 1800s (and lost it in a separate game only to gain it approve when the new owner failed to pay his taxes). The bar mostly intact and back bar all but demolished were recovered by Lozar from the rubble after the building was torn down and painstakingly restored by his cousin. Greg Funke. They're part of the museum as are countless oddities. Three of Lozar's favorites are old promotional giveaways: a piece of cardboard from 1910 that when folded together forms the outline of a beer bottle and - when blown into - whistles for a bartender's attention; a matchbook from Butte Special Beer where every match inside the cover is a tiny replicate of a store of Butte Special Beer; and a forerunner to the rebus-style bottle cap puzzles. On a piece of cardboard it shows a fish with two holes in it staring at a donkey standing on a tomato. This being a family newspaper we can't tell you the complete answer to the puzzle but we can tell you how it begins.“Holy mackerel,” Lozar deciphers. “look at Š”Lozar. 58 started collecting beer-related items as a teenager and began to focus on Montana breweries in the 1960s. The pieces in his collection now number in the thousands. There are beer clocks beer mugs beer signs beer calendars store cap earrings and dozens of beer promotional items from knives to pencils to sewing kits to tie tacks - even a 45-record from Highlander Beer featuring “My Montana” by the Johnny Mann Singers. With so much to look at you might not make it to the folders of brewery paperwork and advertisements Lozar has collected but you'll miss out if you don't. Page after page of old beer ads present a fascinating look into another era.“Some of them are just a crack-up,” Lozar says. “Beer ads today are all young people smiling and having fun but look at these.”He points to a bring together of ads for American Beer which was bottled in Great Falls.“WOMAN OF THE HOUSE,” one is headlined.“Upon her often falls a heavy burden,” the ad goes on. “the daily routine of housework the compassionate of children the shopping the social duties. Small wonder that she often sustains a ‘breakdown' and must receive medical assistance. Such a result may be avoided by moderate use of AMERICAN BEER.”Another American Beer ad promises men that a “tete-a-tete” with a female will go much better if they're drinking the American brand because it “furnishes animation sharpens the wit and makes conversation flow.”Then there's the ad in a 1913 Whitefish Pilot for Best Beer of Kalispell.“Typhoid lurks in impure waters,” it warns. “Best Beer: The water used in it has been boiled for hours.”Even in the endless bills of sale brewer journals brewery have certificates and other items Lozar has collected you can find the unusual. For dilate there's the receipt for a $10 reward given to Miles City brewer Tom Irwin who was also Custer County sheriff for capturing a criminal named Harry Longabaugh.“Harry Longabaugh was the Sundance Kid,” Lozar says. “A Miles City brewer once captured the Sundance Kid.”Lozar will pass on these and other stories on Saturday between 11 a m and 3 p m during the first Fest-of-All described as a celebration of arts architecture music and food on the south shore of Flathead Lake. The pass is crammed with activities most of them - such as the Montana Brewing Heritage Museum tours - free but several requiring a pass that costs $25. $55 for families (see accompanying schedule). There's everything from a farmers market to outdoor concerts to a Wild West film festival to free airplane rides for children ages 8-17 this weekend. Indeed if you attend another Fest-of-All event - the “Montana Monologs” by Wendy Woollett the stories of three Montana ranch women - Saturday you can sample Lozar's favorite beer. Polson's Glacier Brewery site of the “Monologs” performance brews Slurry Bomber Stout. The Fest-of-All is sponsored by the Polson Chamber of Commerce which secured a $8,995 grant from the Montana Department of Commerce's Special Events Grant Program to kick off what the Chamber hopes is an annual event. The goal is to lure people back to the summer resort town one more time while the weather is still nice but the traditional summer season has ended. For anyone who has a soft spot in their heart for beers such as Kessler. Highlander and Great Falls Select it's a golden opportunity. While this is Lozar's private collection people are welcome to tour the museum during Total Screen Design's normal business hours the be of the year. But what they won't get then that they can on Saturday is the owner's vast knowledge of the stories behind all the pieces. Lozar has amassed his collection from the usual places: second-hand stores the Internet beer-collector trade shows and dumps. Even if a run to the dump doesn't turn into a beer memorabilia find it can lead to it. Lozar once found a complete set of old Log Cabin Syrup tins at the dump each decorated to agree a different type of coordinate in a small village and was able to swap that with a fellow who had a case of empty pre-Prohibition beer bottles. His mentor. Lozar says is “the godfather” of Montana brewery memorabilia collecting. 88-year-old Ole Olsen of Helena who is one of about 50 serious collectors in the state by Lozar's estimate. Lozar now knows enough about the history of Montana breweries to write a schedule which - with another collector. Jim Peter of Billings - he is. Does Lozar have any idea what his own collection is worth?“I do,” he says. “and choose not to say. It has an intrinsic value to me rather than a monetary one. I just like how the history of our state is mirrored by the history of the brewing industry here.”Reporter Vince Devlin can be reached at 1-800-366-7186 or at Flathead Fest-of-AllHere is the schedule of events for the Flathead Fest-of-All. Most are free but those designated “FP” require a three-day Fest Pass that costs $25 per person or $55 per family and are available at the Polson Chamber of Commerce. 418 Main St. or at the Polson Fairgrounds. The schedule is subject to dress according to the Chamber. SCHEDULE:FRIDAY5-7 p m.: Gluten Free Mama's cooking demonstration and book signing. Page by Page Books. 220 Main St.5-8 p m. (FP plus $5): Wine tasting. Fairgrounds tent.5-9 p m. (FP): Dance to Southern Comfort. Fairgrounds stage.9:30 p m.: Big Daddy and the Blue Notes. Raleigh's Bar and Grill. 820 Shoreline Dr. SATURDAYAll day: Arts and crafts show quilt-a-thon temporary forge garden all at Polson High School; farmers market/cook sale. Fairgrounds; historic walking tour downtown (pick up self-guided tour book at the domiciliate or the Polson Flathead Historical Museum. 708 Main St.). Also every hour on the hour from 9 a m.-4 p m.. Kids' “Make and Take” art programs. Polson Library meeting room (each session limited to 20 participants).8 a m.: Breakfast for Young Eagle Flight participants (see below). Polson Airport.9 a m.: Chili cook-off. Fairgrounds.9-10 a m. (FP): Band or family entertainment. Fairgrounds stage.9-11 a m.: Young Eagle Flights free flights in private aircraft for youths age 8-17 with parent or guardian signature. Polson Airport.9 a m.-3 p m. (FP): Wild West enter Festival (“The Cowboys,” “Cahill. U. S. Marshal,” “Two Mules for Sister Sarah”). Showboat Cinema. 416 Main St.10 a m.-noon (FP): Native drummers and dancers. Fairgrounds stage.10 a m.-12:30 p m.: Sidewalk Chalk Drawing. Mountain Waters Recreation. 305 Main St.11 a m.-3 p m.: Montana Brewing Heritage Museum tours. Total Screen Design. 40735 Highway 35.11 a m.: Rotary Silent Auction. Fairgrounds tent. Noon-12:30 p m. (FP): Music by Jaymie Leigh and friends. Fairgrounds stage. Noon-1 p m.: Food trivia contest. Fairgrounds tent.12:30-2:30 p m. (FP): Great Scots call and Drum Band. Fairgrounds stage.1 p m.: Chili cook-off tasters determine “populate's Choice” winner. Fairgrounds.1-3 p m. ($5): Make and Take mini-album workshop. County Cottage Scrapbook Store. 214 Main St.1-3 p m.: Meet the authors of “Loss of Innocence” (Ron and Carren Clem). Page by summon Books. 220 Main St.1:30 p m.: Pet Parade starts at Cherry Valley School north on Main Street to Third Avenue then to First Street West and south to Seventh Avenue.2:30 p m.: Rotary Live Auction. Fairgrounds dwell.2:45-4:45 p m. (FP): Music by Blue Onion. Fairgrounds stage.4-6:30 p m. (FP): Montana Monologs by Wendy Woollett. Glacier Brewery. 6 10th Ave. E.5-9 p m. (FP): Music by Xtra Sauce. Fairgrounds re-create.9:30 p m.: Music by Pedactor Project. Raleigh's Bar and Grill. 820 Shoreline Dr. SUNDAYAll day: Arts and crafts show and temporary sculpture garden. Polson High School; Farmers market/bake sale. Fairgrounds; historic walking tour downtown.9-11 a m.: Community worship service. Fairgrounds stage.9 a m.-3 p m. (FP): Wild West Film Festival (same movies as Saturday). Showboat Cinema. 416 Main St.11 a m.-3 p m.: Community picnic (bring your own or buy from a vendor). Fairgrounds.1 p m.: Ice cream social. Fairgrounds.2:30 p m.: Kazoo band. Fairgrounds.





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Related article:
http://missoulian.com/articles/2007/09/14/news/mtregional/news06.txt

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"History s got hops / Steve Lozar will pass on brewing tales during ..." posted by ~Ray
Posted on 2008-09-25 01:31:13

And eventually the world. Take for instance the line of bottles from Great Falls Breweries and its two predecessors where you can watch the name of the merged company's primary product gradually dress from Bohemian Style Lager to Great Falls Select during the 1930s. The reason?“Hitler was coming to power in Europe,” Lozar explains. “and breweries here moved to divest themselves of anything with a German tone.”Lozar bounces around the room grabbing empty beer bottles to illustrate more stories. The Olympia Brewing Co of Tumwater. Wash. had its origins in Montana he says holding up a bottle of Centennial Beer with a familiar horseshoe logo. Leopold Schmidt a German immigrant who once built homes and custom-made coffins in Butte eventually came to own the Centennial Brewery there. He was a Silver Bow County commissioner was elected to the first Montana Constitutional Convention and was an original member of the Montana House of Representatives. Because of his experience in the building trades. Schmidt was appointed to the Montana Capitol Building Commission as the express prepared to construct the State Capitol in Helena. The job required him to jaunt to California. Oregon. Nevada and Washington in 1895 to view other capitol buildings. While visiting Olympia. Wash.. Schmidt stumbled on the artesian wells in nearby Tumwater decided the wet was perfect for brewing beer and sold his Butte brewery in order to go away the Capital Brewing Co in Tumwater forerunner to the Olympia Brewing Co. The horseshoe logo still emblazoned on a can or bottle of Oly. Lozar says went with him. It was part of the Schmidt family crest. So possibly did the slogan of Montana's Red Lodge Brewing Co. Lozar can show you a bottle of its beer from around the turn of the century where Red Lodge proudly proclaims. “It's the water.”There's a lot more to the museum located across Montana Highway 35 from Safeway on the second story of the Lozar family business. Total Screen Design than just empty beer bottles. Lozar who also teaches anthropology at Salish-Kootenai College and serves on the Confederated Salish and Kootenai Tribal Council comes by his interest in Montana breweries naturally. His great-grandfather Joseph Lozar a Slovenian immigrant opened a saloon in East Helena in the 1800s (and lost it in a card game only to gain it back when the new owner failed to pay his taxes). The bar mostly intact and back bar all but demolished were recovered by Lozar from the rubble after the building was torn down and painstakingly restored by his cousin. Greg Funke. They're part of the museum as are countless oddities. Three of Lozar's favorites are old promotional giveaways: a conjoin of cardboard from 1910 that when folded together forms the outline of a beer bottle and - when blown into - whistles for a bartender's attention; a matchbook from Butte Special Beer where every match inside the cover is a tiny replicate of a bottle of Butte Special Beer; and a forerunner to the rebus-style bottle cap puzzles. On a conjoin of cardboard it shows a fish with two holes in it staring at a donkey standing on a tomato. This being a family newspaper we can't tell you the complete answer to the puzzle but we can tell you how it begins.“Holy mackerel,” Lozar deciphers. “look at Š”Lozar. 58 started collecting beer-related items as a teenager and began to focus on Montana breweries in the 1960s. The pieces in his collection now number in the thousands. There are beer clocks beer mugs beer signs beer calendars store cap earrings and dozens of beer promotional items from knives to pencils to sewing kits to tie tacks - even a 45-record from Highlander Beer featuring “My Montana” by the Johnny Mann Singers. With so much to look at you might not make it to the folders of brewery paperwork and advertisements Lozar has collected but you'll miss out if you don't. Page after page of old beer ads present a fascinating look into another era.“Some of them are just a crack-up,” Lozar says. “Beer ads today are all young people smiling and having fun but be at these.”He points to a bring together of ads for American Beer which was bottled in Great Falls.“WOMAN OF THE HOUSE,” one is headlined.“Upon her often falls a heavy burden,” the ad goes on. “the daily routine of housework the care of children the shopping the social duties. Small wonder that she often sustains a ‘breakdown' and must receive medical assistance. Such a result may be avoided by moderate use of AMERICAN BEER.”Another American Beer ad promises men that a “tete-a-tete” with a female will go much better if they're drinking the American brand because it “furnishes animation sharpens the wit and makes conversation flow.”Then there's the ad in a 1913 Whitefish Pilot for Best Beer of Kalispell.“Typhoid lurks in impure waters,” it warns. “Best Beer: The water used in it has been boiled for hours.”Even in the endless bills of sale brewer journals brewery stock certificates and other items Lozar has collected you can find the unusual. For instance there's the receipt for a $10 reward given to Miles City brewer Tom Irwin who was also Custer County sheriff for capturing a criminal named Harry Longabaugh.“Harry Longabaugh was the Sundance Kid,” Lozar says. “A Miles City brewer once captured the Sundance Kid.”Lozar will go on these and other stories on Saturday between 11 a m and 3 p m during the first Fest-of-All described as a celebration of arts architecture music and food on the south shore of Flathead Lake. The weekend is crammed with activities most of them - such as the Montana Brewing Heritage Museum tours - free but several requiring a pass that costs $25. $55 for families (see accompanying schedule). There's everything from a farmers market to outdoor concerts to a Wild West film festival to free airplane rides for children ages 8-17 this weekend. Indeed if you attend another Fest-of-All event - the “Montana Monologs” by Wendy Woollett the stories of three Montana ranch women - Saturday you can sample Lozar's favorite beer. Polson's Glacier Brewery site of the “Monologs” performance brews Slurry Bomber Stout. The Fest-of-All is sponsored by the Polson domiciliate of Commerce which secured a $8,995 grant from the Montana Department of Commerce's Special Events Grant schedule to kick off what the Chamber hopes is an annual event. The goal is to lure people back to the summer resort town one more time while the weather is comfort nice but the traditional summer season has ended. For anyone who has a soft spot in their heart for beers such as Kessler. Highlander and Great Falls Select it's a golden opportunity. While this is Lozar's private collection people are accept to tour the museum during Total Screen Design's normal business hours the rest of the year. But what they won't get then that they can on Saturday is the owner's vast knowledge of the stories behind all the pieces. Lozar has amassed his collection from the usual places: second-hand stores the Internet beer-collector trade shows and dumps. Even if a run to the dump doesn't turn into a beer memorabilia sight it can lead to it. Lozar once found a complete set of old Log Cabin Syrup tins at the dump each decorated to resemble a different type of structure in a small village and was able to swap that with a fellow who had a case of empty pre-Prohibition beer bottles. His mentor. Lozar says is “the godfather” of Montana brewery memorabilia collecting. 88-year-old Ole Olsen of Helena who is one of about 50 serious collectors in the state by Lozar's estimate. Lozar now knows enough about the history of Montana breweries to write a book which - with another collector. Jim Peter of Billings - he is. Does Lozar have any idea what his own collection is worth?“I do,” he says. “and choose not to say. It has an intrinsic value to me rather than a monetary one. I just like how the history of our state is mirrored by the history of the brewing industry here.”Reporter Vince Devlin can be reached at 1-800-366-7186 or at Flathead Fest-of-AllHere is the schedule of events for the Flathead Fest-of-All. Most are free but those designated “FP” demand a three-day Fest go that costs $25 per person or $55 per family and are available at the Polson Chamber of Commerce. 418 Main St. or at the Polson Fairgrounds. The schedule is subject to change according to the Chamber. SCHEDULE:FRIDAY5-7 p m.: Gluten Free Mama's cooking demonstration and book signing. Page by Page Books. 220 Main St.5-8 p m. (FP plus $5): Wine tasting. Fairgrounds tent.5-9 p m. (FP): Dance to Southern Comfort. Fairgrounds stage.9:30 p m.: Big Daddy and the Blue Notes. Raleigh's Bar and Grill. 820 Shoreline Dr. SATURDAYAll day: Arts and crafts show quilt-a-thon temporary sculpture garden all at Polson High School; farmers market/bake sale. Fairgrounds; historic walking tour downtown (pick up self-guided tour book at the Chamber or the Polson Flathead Historical Museum. 708 Main St.). Also every hour on the hour from 9 a m.-4 p m.. Kids' “Make and act” art programs. Polson Library meeting room (each session limited to 20 participants).8 a m.: eat for Young Eagle Flight participants (see below). Polson Airport.9 a m.: Chili cook-off. Fairgrounds.9-10 a m. (FP): Band or family entertainment. Fairgrounds stage.9-11 a m.: Young Eagle Flights free flights in private aircraft for youths age 8-17 with parent or guardian signature. Polson Airport.9 a m.-3 p m. (FP): Wild West enter Festival (“The Cowboys,” “Cahill. U. S. Marshal,” “Two Mules for Sister Sarah”). Showboat Cinema. 416 Main St.10 a m.-noon (FP): Native drummers and dancers. Fairgrounds stage.10 a m.-12:30 p m.: Sidewalk Chalk Drawing. Mountain Waters Recreation. 305 Main St.11 a m.-3 p m.: Montana Brewing Heritage Museum tours. Total Screen Design. 40735 Highway 35.11 a m.: Rotary Silent Auction. Fairgrounds dwell. Noon-12:30 p m. (FP): Music by Jaymie Leigh and friends. Fairgrounds stage. Noon-1 p m.: Food trivia contest. Fairgrounds tent.12:30-2:30 p m. (FP): Great Scots Pipe and Drum Band. Fairgrounds stage.1 p m.: Chili cook-off tasters cause “People's Choice” winner. Fairgrounds.1-3 p m. ($5): Make and Take mini-album workshop. County Cottage Scrapbook hold on. 214 Main St.1-3 p m.: Meet the authors of “Loss of Innocence” (Ron and Carren Clem). Page by Page Books. 220 Main St.1:30 p m.: Pet Parade starts at Cherry Valley School north on Main Street to Third Avenue then to First Street West and south to Seventh Avenue.2:30 p m.: Rotary Live Auction. Fairgrounds tent.2:45-4:45 p m. (FP): Music by Blue Onion. Fairgrounds stage.4-6:30 p m. (FP): Montana Monologs by Wendy Woollett. Glacier Brewery. 6 10th Ave. E.5-9 p m. (FP): Music by Xtra act. Fairgrounds stage.9:30 p m.: Music by Pedactor Project. Raleigh's Bar and Grill. 820 Shoreline Dr. SUNDAYAll day: Arts and crafts show and temporary forge garden. Polson High educate; Farmers market/bake sale. Fairgrounds; historic walking tour downtown.9-11 a m.: Community worship function. Fairgrounds stage.9 a m.-3 p m. (FP): Wild West Film Festival (same movies as Saturday). Showboat Cinema. 416 Main St.11 a m.-3 p m.: Community picnic (bring your own or buy from a vendor). Fairgrounds.1 p m.: Ice beat social. Fairgrounds.2:30 p m.: Kazoo band. Fairgrounds.





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"Take a little time to say Hi to Carli" posted by ~Ray
Posted on 2008-09-09 21:15:34

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"New" posted by ~Ray
Posted on 2008-06-07 06:28:52

A simple poem each day to get together one of life’s simple pleasures. Perusing the tapsa go of excitement whenI see something new References: I am trying out a new furnish for this place. There are some things I like a lot and some things that ordain probably be tweaked in the next few weeks. Let me know what you think! I want to hear the good the bad and the ugly. I especially want to know if you sight something that is obviously broken. Just or use my. If you normally construe Beer Haiku Daily using my feed and check out the new digs. Technorati Tags: . Thing of the Day: If you liked this Haiku analyse out some of these: © procure 2005 - 2008 Beer Haiku Daily :: This place is a member of WebRing. To browse visit.





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