Monthly Archives: October 2008

A New Feature: Pizza, Beer and Wine.

As I alluded to in a prior post, and Mike from Stlhops picked up in a forum thread, I have some pretty strong opinions on beverages that match well with pizza.  Generally, I find beer to be a terrible match.  I have a much higher hit ratio with red wine that has a good level of acidity to it.  Much beer seems to actively clash with pizza for me – the bitterness of the hops with the tomato, and the alcohol with the crust (why wine, with almost always higher alcohol doesn’t clash, I can’t explain).

Of course, there are almost as many forms of pizza as there are beer and wine.  So, in the interest of exploring this topic with some rigor, I begin a new series of posts – each will match a pizza with a wine and a beer – I’ll give details on all three as well as how I perceived the combinations worked.

Now, the usual tasting notes cavaets – they are a snapshot in time.  You will not be able to recreate the pizza exactly, the beer you buy will have been stored differently and may be of different age than mine, ditto your wine.  Your palate also isn’t mine, it’s yours.  Mine will be different tomorrow (yours will too, though you might not yet be able to admit that).

Tonight’s pizza:

Tonight's victim.

Tonight's Victim

Trader Joe’s crust (I usually make my own, but this does OK in a pinch).  Sauce is Muir Glen Organic Fire-roasted tomatoes, crushed, with homemade (thanks, Kim!) red wine vinegar, lots of dried Turkish Oregano (pizza sauce being one place where dried oregano kicks fresh’s butt), and a bit of kosher salt and onion powder.  Cheese is grocery store mutz, and Parmagiano-Reggiano (the real stuff).  I usually pick up whole milk mutz from Whole Foods (shockingly affordable), but wasn’t anywhere near there recently.  Only toppings are pepperoni from Trader Joe’s, as I’m out of Italian sausage from Viviano‘s at the moment, and a few onions, at Liz’s request (but they were actually very yummy).  I’ve learned to (of course) ignore the TJ’s instructions for cooking.  I make the crust as thin as I can, crank my oven (550F) for about 45 minutes to preheat, and then cook on my pizza stone for 8-10 minutes.

Tonight’s beer:

Sam Adams Black Lager.  This is a grocery store favorite for me, as Schnuck’s frequently runs Sam Adams at $4.99 or $5.49, which is a screaming deal.  It’s a nice take on Schwarzbier with a good malt base, a touch of yeasty fruitiness and some delicate hop notes.

Tonight’s Wine:

2002 J.P. Brun l’Ancien Beaujolais.  One of my favorite wines from one of my favorite producers.  Some bottles of the 2002 had some, um, interesting reductive notes and this bottle shows evidence of that, though time has largely taken it away.  The wine is made without cultured yeast, and no chapitalization (added sugar), coming in at a gulpable 11% alcohol.  This bottle is probably six months to a year past optimum drinking, but there’s still pleasure to be had.

How’d it work out:

Tonight's Contenders.

Tonight's Contenders.

The Brun did not clash at all with the pizza.  There isn’t much fruit left to this bottle – just a touch of sour cherry, amply supported by earthy spice.  The acidity really wipes the palate clean nicely.  However, it doens’t really add anything to pizza either.  Not so much a “match” as “accident avoidance.”

The Sam Adams has a minimal clash in the form of an initial hit of alcohol flavor on the first sip after each bite of pizza.  There is enough malt to calm the the heat quickly, and the roasty notes quickly take over the palate but don’t cause an off note.  Oddly, the roast is more intense than when drinking the beer on it’s own.

So, a slight edge to the wine tonight, but this was a pretty close contest.

Budweiser American Ale

I can’t remember a beer that’s generated the sort of hubbub that this one has.  I’ve had lots of casual beer folks, and non-craft beer people ask me what I thought about it, or if I’d tried it yet.  So, in the interest of having something useful to say to them, I dutifully plunked down my $5.99 and consumed my six pack in a variety of situations over the past few weeks.

If I had to sum up Budweiser American Ale in one word, it would be “clean.”  This sucker seems to have had most of the life stripped out of it.  There simply are no rough edges or bumps to be seen.  It has a glossiness to it that comes across as almost artificial.  The mid-palate seems a bit hollow, and the finish is quick without any lingering hop or malt notes.  It is crystal clear as well.  I don’t know what the filtering regime is for this beer, but my guess would be “thorough.”

The color is a bit over-the-top for me too.  This stuff pushes Amber to the limits of RED.  The nose is primarily a caramelly-sweet malt, with just a whisper of hops.  Thankfully, it’s much better balanced on the palate, though the malt is surprisingly less intense than the nose led me to expect, but man is that finish quick.

At the table, I found the beer to be pretty flexible – again though, never really shining in any particular situation, more not overtly interfering than anything else.  It works better with red-sauced pizza than most beers (I need to do a post on this topic some day), but it’s still not great.  It was also fine with some tacos I made from some local grass-fed ground beef, and it certainly didn’t get in the way of some kettle barbeque chips I picked up at Trader Joe’s.  But, in all of these instances, it didn’t add anything to the food either.

On its own, I became tired of it part way through each glass.  There was just nothing really interesting going on.  The flavor was pretty one dimensional, and I just happen to not be a fan of caramel/crystal malt flavors in beer.  All this being said, Budweiser American Ale is not all that different from a lot of craft-brewed Amber Ales out there, but I can’t think of too many Amber Ales that I like very much at all.  There are certainly no faults, in the technical sense, but it’s hardly an inspiring beverage.

I fully recognize that I am not the target market for this beer, and I can see the Budweiser name providing a reassuring gateway to the uninitiated, and for that reason, this beer could have a not insignificant value – both to A-B, and to the craft market.  That being said, I haven’t run into too many people that come to craft beer through baby steps.  I still have converted more people to possibilities of good beer with Three Floyds‘ Dreadnaught than any other beer.  I think the sheer shock of something so completely different and so delicious (I jokingly call Dreadnaught the best $10 bottle of wine I’ve ever had) makes a more compelling argument.

On a non-beer related note, I noticed, with serious environmental concern, how heavy the Budweiser American Ale bottles are.  When I weighed them on my digital scale I use for brewing I found each bottle to be 15% (Sam Adams) to 20% (O’Fallon) heavier than other brewers’ bottles that I had handy – that’s an extra 2.25 to 3 pounds per case to ship around for no apparent reason other than “style.”  Mulitply that by the tens or hundreds of thousands of cases they will sell, and it’s a problem for me.