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RACER X
11-30-2009, 12:33 PM
Sam Adams Pushes New Limits On Extreme Beer
Brewer Releases Updated Version Of Utopias
RUSSELL CONTRERAS, Associated Press Writer

POSTED: Monday, November 30, 2009
UPDATED: 9:56 am CST November 30, 2009

BOSTON -- It is banned in 13 states and sure doesn't come in a six-pack.

The maker of Samuel Adams beer has released an updated version of its biennial beer Utopias -- now the highest alcohol content beer on the market. At 27 percent alcohol by volume and $150 a bottle, the limited release of the brandy-colored Utopias comes as more brewers take advantage of improvements in science to boost potency and enhance taste.

"Just part of trying to push the envelope," said Jim Koch, founder and owner of the Boston Beer Co. the maker of Sam Adams. "I'm pushing it beyond what the laws of these 13 states ever contemplated when they passed those laws decades ago."

Since the 1990s, craft brewers like the Boston Beer Co. and the Delaware-based Dogfish Head have produced a number of "extreme beers" that challenge old notions of beer and the decades-old laws that have governed them.

By law, these specialty drinks still are classified as beer when they are based on fermented grain. And despite the hefty prices of the high-scale beer, brewers still have to pay the required nickel deposit on bottles.

Paul Gatza, director of the national Brewers Association based in Boulder, Colo., said new yeast research allowed brewers to experiment with the emerging science that pushed the traditional cap of 14 percent alcohol by volume for beer.

"As a result, these new beers, like Utopias, balance sweetness, higher alcohol content and more ingredients," Gatza said.

A few states also have moved to adapt their laws to allow for the emerging craft brew market. For example, Alabama and West Virginia recently passed laws to allow higher alcohol content in beer. Lawmakers in Iowa and Mississippi are considering similar legislation.

Gatza said consumers are also pushing for the changes.

That's what sparked a brew battle between the Boston Brewing Co. and Dogfish Head.

In 1993, Koch set a new bar by creating Triple Bock, a beverage with 17.5 percent alcohol by volume. In the early 2000s, Dogfish Head responded with beverages of their own that went to 22 percent.

But the latest Utopias alcohol volume gives Koch and Boston Beer Co. the clear title of having the strongest beer, said Sam Calagione, president and founder of Dogfish Head. "I must bow before him for Utopias," Calagione said. "I don't think we'll be brewing a beer that strong for a while."

Utopias has reached its unique strength through a 15-year aging process in barrels at the Boston Beer Co.'s brewery in Boston. It's aged and finished in wooden containers like Scotch whisky barrels and sherry casks. The drink's yeast strains are regularly used in making malts and champagne.

A quick sip unveils a cognac-like hit combined with vanilla, honey, and maple flavors.

The long production cycle is what limits its availability to once every two years. This holiday season, for example, Koch is only releasing 10,000 bottles with the suggested retail price of $150 apiece.

"It's like making 21-year-old Scotch," Koch said. "Yeah, you can make more. You just can't have it for 21 years."

The drink comes in a ceramic-and-copper bottle that resembles a tiny brew kettle. Thirteen states prohibit its sale because its alcohol content exceeds the legal limit for beer: Alabama, Arkansas, Georgia, Idaho, Mississippi, Montana, New Hampshire, North Carolina, Ohio, South Carolina, Tennessee, Vermont and Washington.

Chuck Hurley, CEO of Mothers Against Drunk Driving, said the group in general doesn't have a problem with extreme brands of beer like Utopias. However, he hopes the beverage's higher alcohol content is properly labeled and that it isn't marketed to minors.

"Right now, we're reserving judgment," Hurley said.

Koch said the Boston Beer Co. is presenting Utopias as an exclusive beer for sophisticated drinkers that should be consumed like champagne. He said it's not a beer for the weekend football game or for a regular dinner.

He would not speculate whether he would try to get more extreme with future brews, but noted that no one ever thought there would be an "insane brewer" who would be making such a strong Utopias.

"We'll see," he said.

Cutty72
11-30-2009, 12:43 PM
someone should really mail a poor suffering soldier in Kosovo some of this.

Rider
11-30-2009, 12:44 PM
No thanks, I'm not a fan of their triple bock, so I doubt I'd like this either. If I want a brandy.. I'll go buy a brandy. It's not really a beer.

Homeslice
11-30-2009, 12:50 PM
No thanks, I'm not a fan of their triple bock, so I doubt I'd like this either. If I want a brandy.. I'll go buy a brandy. It's not really a beer.

Agreed.........

Beer-flavored liquour......no thanks.

I didn't even think any beer existed over 8-9% or so. I remember back when Molson Ice came out and they made a big deal about it being 5.5% :lol:

tommymac
11-30-2009, 01:29 PM
Agreed.........

Beer-flavored liquour......no thanks.

I didn't even think any beer existed over 8-9% or so. I remember back when Molson Ice came out and they made a big deal about it being 5.5% :lol:

Most beer yeasts will die in anything over 10%, some of the stronger beers use champagne yeasts to bump things up. I forgot what sams does for this or their milenium ale they put ou tin 2000.

Tom

derf
11-30-2009, 05:28 PM
I just want europe's beer content of 10% (or whatever it is there, its stronger than here).

Anyway I thought that the penguines tactical nuke was the strongest beer with 30%

derf
11-30-2009, 05:45 PM
I found it, it is 32% alc

http://www.brewdog.com/blog-article.php?id=214

http://www.brewdog.com/uploaded_images/penguinblog2_440.jpg

TYEster
11-30-2009, 06:47 PM
-- now the highest alcohol content beer on the market. At 27 percent alcohol by volume and $150 a bottle...

This pretty much sold me out of the deal right there. Granted I've spent some money on lush extraneous things before, but beer? No, XO/Reserve/Limited/20+ year aged, MAYBE, but beer, no.

askmrjesus
11-30-2009, 07:24 PM
I found it, it is 32% alc

http://www.brewdog.com/blog-article.php?id=214

http://www.brewdog.com/uploaded_images/penguinblog2_440.jpg

That's fucking brilliant.

Who do I know with a really big freezer.....?

JC

Adeptus_Minor
11-30-2009, 07:39 PM
I'd sample it, but I wouldn't buy it.
$150?
That's good Scotch money.

Particle Man
11-30-2009, 07:54 PM
No thanks, I'm not a fan of their triple bock

Really? I liked it! It's almost freakin' impossible to find though :( :( :( :(

Adeptus_Minor
11-30-2009, 08:09 PM
Really? I liked it! It's almost freakin' impossible to find though :( :( :( :(

I've been aging some Double Bock.
It's quite good :dthumb:

We heard about the Triple years back but I never saw any.

Homeslice
11-30-2009, 08:32 PM
This is targeted to the urban professional metrosexuals who want to impress people they invited over to watch the latest Entourage

TYEster
11-30-2009, 10:15 PM
I'd sample it, but I wouldn't buy it.
$150?
That's good Scotch money.

That is a night of partying with cheap hookers and getting so trashed you'll never actually remember any of it.

derf
11-30-2009, 10:22 PM
That is a night of partying with cheap hookers and getting so trashed you'll never actually remember any of it.


Who are you talking about? For me $150 is some high class hookers wit them tings called teef and shit