Ottawa Citizen

Oregon beer mecca good for what ales you

Something for everyone — even a beer skeptic — at Oregon’s craft-brewery scene

- DINA MISHEV

“Do you want to go to the Shell or Chevron?” asks Andrea as we heft our mountain bikes onto car racks after a ride at Shevlin Park, a 650-acre (263-hectare) spread five kilometres northwest of downtown Bend, Ore. I tell Andrea I don’t care where she gets gas.

“I’m not getting gas,” she says. “I don’t have any beer to go with dinner. I’ve got my growler to fill.”

Oregon law doesn’t allow you pump your own gas. But the beer scene in Bend, an outdoors playground anchored by mountain biking in the summer and the Mt. Bachelor ski area in the winter, is such that a local company, the Growler Guys (11400 NW College Way, thegrowler­guys.com), successful­ly pushed to make it legal for them to have taps in gas-station convenienc­e stores.

“While they’re filling up your car, I run inside and get a growler filled,” Andrea says. “It’s so much more convenient than buying a sixpack at the grocery store or going to a brewery itself.”

Inside the Chevron there are 36 taps; 30 dispense beer or hard cider, and six dispense kombucha. We’re offered samples as a guy fills Andrea’s growler with Boneyard Beer’s flagship brew, RPM IPA, a pale ale brewed with six different varieties of locally grown hops. I go for What Does the Fox Say?, a Cascadian dark ale from local Riverbend Brewing. It’s described as having a slightly chocolate flavour. The mouthwash-size sample comes in a mouthwash-size plastic cup.

Sipping it, I see a handwritte­n sign above taps: “Pints now available. Limit 2.” In Wyoming, where I live, there are drive-thru liquor stores. This is another level, though.

Here’s the problem: I hate the taste of beer. Never in my entire life — college fraternity parties included — have I been able to drink an entire pint without throwing up in my mouth. As an adult, friends have sometimes sneaked beer into an opaque glass before handing it to me just to watch my facial expression­s. The adjectives I use to describe beer’s taste and smell — and it doesn’t matter if it’s a Pilsner, IPA, hefeweizen or stout — include “toe cheese,” “cat urine” and, when I’m low on imaginatio­n, “bitter.” I’ve never had a beer I didn’t find bitter. I do not like bitter.

My taste buds pick up no chocolate in What Does the Fox Say?. They do pick up bitter. And as much as Andrea, and the rest of Bend, love Boneyard’s RPM, it makes me pucker.

I wish I liked beer. My mom loves it and collects bottles from around the world; the souvenir can’t be in the collection unless she drank its contents. Twenty-five years ago her collection started on one shelf high on a kitchen wall. Over the past two decades, my father built shelves extensive enough to ring the entire kitchen. Some walls have double-decker shelves, and many shelves have bottles two deep. No two are the same. One of my wildest dreams is to enjoy a beer with her — without getting sick.

Visiting Bend this past summer, I quickly saw it as a city especially qualified to help me realize this dream.

The Bend Ale Trail, promoted as “the largest beer trail in the West,” includes 16 breweries; you can bike or walk between most of them.

Last year, the lifestyle website Livability named Bend the No. 1 Beer City in the United States, writing that it has one of the highest concentrat­ions of craft breweries per capita in the country. Within the city limits there are about 81,000 people and 21 breweries (with seven additional breweries nearby).

They include one of the biggest craft breweries in the country, Deschutes Brewery, as well as tiny The Ale Apothecary, which barrel-ages its wild-fermented beer in the garage of former Deschutes brewer Paul Arney. (Wild fermentati­on uses yeast from the air or a reused barrel instead of a cultivated one, like brewer’s yeast.)

It sells for about $30 a bottle, if you can get your hands on one. Last year, The Ale Apothecary (61517 River Rd., thealeapot­hecary.com) produced only 150 barrels of beer, at about 300 bottles of beer per barrel.

In Bend, people drink beer like wine — sniffing, sipping and savouring before talking about things like undertones of grapefruit, vanilla or caramel. This is the most basic level of Bend beer conversati­on and connoisseu­rship.

“This is definitely a place that goes for quality over quantity,” says Arney, who was voted the city’s best brewer in August by readers of Bend’s City Source. “There might be a saturation point for how many brewery/restaurant­s Bend can support, but I don’t think there is one for well-crafted beer. People here will always appreciate that and seek out new tastes.”

On the outskirts of the orderly downtown Crux Fermentati­on Project (50 SW Division St., cruxfermen­tation.com) is so packed there’s an official parking attendant. The main lot is full, and I’m directed to a satellite lot. Seats at a communal table are even harder to find than a parking spot, but we snag some in time to hear our new neighbour ask the server whether his beer has Brettanomy­ces or Lactobacil­lus in it.

Is this beer or a biology class? “Brettanomy­ces,” she replies. The man turns to his friend. “I told you so.” That’s the next level of Bend beerdom.

When Anna Roberts returns with my four samples, I can’t help but ask, “Isn’t Lactobacil­lus what’s in yogurt?” It turns out I’ve asked the right person. Roberts is near the highest level of beer expertise; she’s a Cicerone. A Cicerone is to beer what a sommelier is to wine, and over the course of my Bend beer research, I find that everyone here is either (a) studying to become a Cicerone or (b) bikes with someone who is. (The two words that best sum up Bend are “beer” and “biking.” Bend’s 14-person Cycle Pub (cyclepub.com) is exactly what it sounds like and is an example of the sum being greater than its individual parts.)

Lactobacil­lus is the bacteria in yogurt, and Brettanomy­ces is another wild strain of bacteria that brewers are now allowing, or introducin­g, into their fermentati­on process. It creates what is called a “sour beer.”

“A lot of the time, Bend is ahead of the curve,” Roberts says. “I think sours are going to be the next big thing.”

I save Crux’s sour, Banished Freakcake, for last, hoping I’ll like the “next big thing.”

Because the idea of “liking” something is fairly subjective, early on I decide that for me to be able to say I like a beer, I must be able to drink an entire pint of it under two conditions: without making any funny faces and with enjoyment.

I start with Flanders Red, Crux’s interpreta­tion of a traditiona­l Belgian-style red ale. It tastes like foot mould to me. The Farmhouse Ale, a saison, is slightly better — minty and light — but it’d be a struggle for me to get an entire pint down.

Freakcake time. Freakcake is not only a sour, it’s also barrel-aged. There is a 2013 and a 2014 on the menu. I try both. I’m a fiend for espresso, and these immediatel­y appeal to me — they’ve got crema, the foam layer atop a properly pulled espresso; are almost the colour of coal; and I can smell coffee notes as soon as I pull them near me.

I’m unable to distinguis­h the nuances between the 2013 and the 2014 Freakcakes, but I return to each sample for second and third sips. If they weren’t 10.5 per cent alcohol, I think I could like both. They are the first beers I have had in my life with a positive flavour profile: I taste the fig and dried cranberry the menu descriptio­n promises.

Next up is Deschutes (901 SW Simpson Ave., deschutesb­rewery.com). I do a morning tour of their 91,000-square-foot production facility. Deschutes began brewing beer in 1988 in a smaller facility in downtown Bend, and today makes 337,000 barrels (one barrel is 31 gallons) annually in this bigger one, which opened in 1993, expanded in 2004 and does daily free tours. Every 23 minutes, the tour guide tells us, they bottle a lifetime supply of beer for someone who lives to the average age, which they say is 79, and drinks the average annual number of beers, which they say is 219.

There’s a tasting room at the brewery, but I save myself for Deschutes’ downtown Bend Public House (1044 NW Bond St., deschutesb­rewery.com), their original production facility and where they today serve not only standards such as Black Butte Porter, Obsidian Stout, Mirror Pond Pale Ale and Chainbreak­er White IPA, but also limited-edition special projects.

“We use people at the brew pub as guinea pigs,” says Gina Schauland, Deschutes’ social media co-ordinator and founder of Central Oregon Beer Angels, a group of women beer drinkers with nearly 400 members.

If a limited-edition beer does well at the brew pub, Deschutes makes it again and it becomes a “pub exclusive.” Three of our six samples, Pine Mountain Pilsner, Central Oregon Saison and Summer Piquant, are pub exclusives. The others are Twilight Summer Ale, Nitro Obsidian Stout and the Black Butte.

An enthusiast­ic 20-something delivers the four-ounce samples and applauds our selection. “I’m really inspired by your order,” he says. I think he’s joking. But no. “I really like what you guys have done here.” Because Bend is a hop-crazy town, he probably thinks our selections are shrewd and meaningful. The only meaning is that they are the six least-hoppy beers of the 17 currently on tap.

Five of the six fail with me. The sixth, Nitro Obsidian Stout, I kind of like, probably because it’s like drinking dessert — part espresso, part chocolate.

Since I’m getting closer to liking something, I don’t stop. Worthy Brewing has a beer that comes with a side of raspberry syrup to sweeten it up, but it’s still too bitter. McMenamins’ Terminator Stout and Ruby, an ale with added raspberrie­s, fall into the same category as the Nitro Obsidian Stout: getting closer, but not quite to “like” yet.

I bypass liking and fall in love at 10 Barrel (1135 NW Galveston Ave., 10barrel.com). Some Bend locals began boycotting this brewery after Anheuser-Busch InBev bought it last year — for a reported $50 million and changing nothing really, besides investing $10 million — but since I have no history with it, I don’t care. And that’s a good thing because I love its Swill.It’s only 4.5 per cent alcohol, and I drink an entire pint of Swill without making a single funny face. Swill is based on a Berliner Weisse and is lemony, effervesce­nt and thirst-quenching. I don’t sip it slowly, but swig it like water after a long run. And then I call my mom with the good news. “I’ve found a beer I really like!” “What kind?” “It’s an American radler. I drank the whole pint!” (Silence) “Did you hear? I drank a whole pint of beer!”

“Radler isn’t beer. But I guess it’s a start.”

Despite her high standards — after checking with several other sources, the consensus is that radler is beer, but, “It’s what Germans drink when they don’t want to drink” — I leave Bend saying I like beer.

This is definitely a place that goes for quality over quantity. … People here will always appreciate that and seek out new tastes.

 ?? TYLER ROWE/CRUX FERMENTATI­ON PROJECT ?? Employees at Crux Fermentati­on Project stir hops at Crux’s factory in Bend, Ore.
TYLER ROWE/CRUX FERMENTATI­ON PROJECT Employees at Crux Fermentati­on Project stir hops at Crux’s factory in Bend, Ore.
 ?? PATRICK WEISHAMPEL/THE ALE APOTHECARY ?? The beer is poured from the barrels into the bottles unfiltered at The Ale Apothecary.
PATRICK WEISHAMPEL/THE ALE APOTHECARY The beer is poured from the barrels into the bottles unfiltered at The Ale Apothecary.
 ?? SEAN VON TAGEN/THE ALE APOTHECARY ?? At The Ale Apothecary, the beer spends most of its time in oak barrels.
SEAN VON TAGEN/THE ALE APOTHECARY At The Ale Apothecary, the beer spends most of its time in oak barrels.
 ?? TYLER ROWE/CRUX FERMENTATI­ON PROJECT ?? Crux Fermentati­on Project in Bend, Ore. On the outskirts of town, it’s a popular beer-tasting spot.
TYLER ROWE/CRUX FERMENTATI­ON PROJECT Crux Fermentati­on Project in Bend, Ore. On the outskirts of town, it’s a popular beer-tasting spot.

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