Category: Beer Scores


SF Beer Week: Day 8: Toronado Barley Wine Festival 2011. The rain could not stop my husband Dave from standing outside in line for hours waiting patiently, as every Toronado patron must, for their doors to finally open. This will just be a list of ones that were tried:

Lost Abbey Angels Share Grand Cru-10% abv: Bourbon, vanilla, rich molasses, chocolate, and more bourbon.

Anderson Valley- Horn-Aged in Brandy barrels: Caramel, sticky sugar, apple brandy.

Glacier Brewhouse- Big Woody: Bourbon, oak, vanilla and caramel.

Fifty Fifty Brewing- BART-9% abv: Hazelnuts, molasses, honey, and coffee.

Hebrew- Vertical Jewbelation-11.5%abv: Grapes, huge oak, slight cola, molasses.

Green Flash- Barleywine 2009-10.8% abv. Aged in brandy barrels: Juicy hops, grapefruit, pine, oak, touch of brandy.

Ballast Point- Three Sheets-9% abv. Brandy barrel Aged: Huge fruit,  acidic, smells like Chinese White Alcohol, tart, more acidicy…Interesting.

Ninkasi- Critical Hit- 10% abv: Hops, bitter, pine, touch of caramel, and an extra bitter pine.

Mill Valley Beerworks- Barleywine. Aged in Pinot Noir barrels: Huge grape nose, wine, oak, touch of sweet caramel, touch of hops, odd rosemary spiciness.

Kona- Old Blowhole-12.5% abv: Sweet caramel, honey, oak, touch of piney hops, bitter ending.

Mad River- John Barleycorn 2009-11% abv. Aged in bourbon barrels: bourbon, vanilla, alcohol, oak, tart oak. Too much oak for me.

Jackie O- Wood Ya Honey: Sweet stewed cherries, caramel, alcohol, honey, pecan pie.

Lagunitas- Gnarleywine 2008: Bourbon, vanilla, oak, slight caramel and  a kiss of hops.

Seabright- Old Okole: Hoppy, grapefruit skin, honey, sweet caramel, slight currant.

TripleRock-John Barelycorn 2009 11% abv. Brandy barrel aged: Raisin, prunes, vanilla, brandy, slight green apple and a lot of slcohol.

Triple rock- Bunny’s Toes: Hops, grapefruit skin, mango, tropical fruit, piney, slight caramel, touch of coffee.

Firestone Walker- Abacus: bourbon, vanilla, toffee, more bourbon, caramel, touch of hops and then more bourbon on the finish.

Midnight Sun- Artic Devil: Sweet bourbon, sweet catamel, the sweetest of all beers, touch of spice, cinammon, almost like a holiday barelywine. Is there some mint in there?

Epic- Batelywine: 10.1% abv: Hops, grapefruit, mango, pine, hops, slight caramel and more hops. The hoppiest of the day.

Ale Industries- Fysus: Bourbon, huge vanilla, touch of hops, caramel  and more bourbon.

Iron Springs- The Menace- 11% abv: sweet, spur, tart cherries, caramel, vanilla, oak.

Favorite Barley wines of the day were:

Firestone Walker :Abacus

Jackie O: Wood ya Honey

Lost Abbey:Angels Share Grand Cru

Fifty Fifty:BART

Marin: Old Dipsea 2008

Speakeasy: Old Godfather

Glacier Brewhouse: Big Woody

Hebrew: Vertical Jewbelation

SF Beer Week Day 9, Last Day: Rosemunde’s. It was not a bad way to end such a great week than with 2 very hoppy beers at Rosemunde’s in the Mission.

Starting off with: Bear Republic- Racer 15- 8.5% abv: Grapefruit, resin, hoppy, piney and more grapefruit pilth. Racer 15 is much better than Racer 10. I might even like it better than Pliny the Younger, those be fighting words, I know…

Then finishing off with: Sierra Nevada Hoptimum: Huge pine forward flavor, incredibly bitter, grapefruit juice and more pine. Not too resin-y or sticky, just pure hops.

Sf Beer Week: Day 5: Russian River tion night at Toronado…’nough said.

20th anniversary: Sour wine fruit currants vanilla. More malt forward. This beer sold out within 30 minutes.

Compuction: Sour tart citrus, citrus fruit very orange-y. Tart. Nice. They wrote that this beer is made with kumquats but I think it is actually made with pluots.

Beatification: Super sour, lemon citrus, incredibly sour. The most sour of the night.

Damnation 23 2008- Sour plums! Roasted plums, roasted apricots, not so tart. More Belgiany.

Damnation 23 (46) 2009-Less fruit, more belgiany. I like the 23 2008 better.  This one has a touch of ginger.

AND it didn’t take truly that long to get a beer, considering it was 6 people deep at the bar when I first arrived…the bartenders will take care of you if they know you.

Sf Beer Week: Day 6: Lost Abbey and Lagunatas Night at Toronado.

Lost Abbey 2010 Cable Car sold out in 20 minutes.

Lagunitas SF Fusion Hop High: Sweet resin! Super sticky, fruity  sweet. Not bitter at all until a light bitter aftertaste.

Drake’s Hop Salad on cask: Incredibly bitter warm. Super piney,  bitter grapefruit skin pilth bitterness.

Lagunitas Bourbon Barrel Aged Imperial Stout: Sweet candied sugar, roasted malt, vanilla, bourbon. Not as bourbony as expected, it is a bit more subtle but lovely.

I didn’t actually try any Lost Abbey beers: I was told by a male bartender (who I shall not name) there that all Lost Abbey beers were sold out. Although, I saw others at the bar order and receive  2 Lost Abbey  beers after myself and my friend asked him point blank. I was even following twitter feeds after I got home that they were drinking and currently ordering Lost Abbey beers- 2 hours after I was told they were all tapped out. Hmmmm….were the beers actually gone?

SF Beer Week: Day 3: Sour Beer. We ended up going to the Sour Beer Festival at Triple Rock and the Sour Beer Tasting at the Jug Shop…not a bad way to spend a Sunday.

Dave and I headed over to Triple Rock and got there at around noon. There was still a line about a block long to get in. We waited about 20 minutes before we were in and handed a glass and 5 tasting tickets for $20 (additional tastes were $5 each!).

We immediately ran upstairs to get the last pour of Vertitas 08. Ah, the sweet taste of sour victory!

Then I managed to find Hanssens’ Experimental Raspberry. This was listed on the tasting notes as ‘on tap’ but it was actually out of the bottle. There were actually a lot of mistakes on the tasting notes including a category of RARE that basically meant if it wasn’t SOUR or BARREL AGED, then they just put it in the RARE category (since when is Saison Dupont a rare beer???) Hanssens’ Experimental Raspberry pours a beautiful orange florescent pink. Absolutely beautiful. Tastes like incredibly sour raspberries. I immediately went to savor every drop.

Hanssens Kriek: This beer is not that rare but I have actually never had it before. It pours a dark cherry red. It tastes a bit like sour pit stewed cherries. It is not as cherry forward as Cantillon or 3 Fonteinen but definately a contender.

Hanssens Strawberry: Super sour, incredibly fruity nose. It is incredibly sour, the most tart of all three. The only real hint of fruit is in the beautiful nose. I have had this beer many times and will hopefully continue to do so.

Thirsty Bear Sour Starve: This beer is a lot better than I would have expected from Thirsty Bear. It is fruity with a touch of barnyard funk and nice and tart.

After we were there for 4 hours and they kept telling us every 1/2 hour that they were going to put the keg of Cantillon on (and not doing so), we finally had to leave to get to the Jug Shop’s Sour Beer Tasting. $30 for 17 pours of awesome sour beer. That price seems a lot better than what you got at Triple Rock. Eric Cripe always gets his tastings right!

We tried: Lipseger’s Gose to start (which was special and very  rare). Then we tried a few that we have had before: Rodebach’s Grand Cru: a good go-to sour beer. We had Oud Beersel’s Geuze (which is another super tart geuze and reasonably priced at $13.99/750ml), Lindeman’s Cuvee Renee, Russian River’s Sanctification (which if you don’t have any bottles of yet, you should get some before they run out), Temptation, Supplication, Oud Beersel’s Kriek, Cascade Kriek Ale, and one of my absolute favorites: Hanssens’ Oudbeitje Lambic (ale brewed with strawberries that I also just had at Triple Rock).

And the beers I have not tasted before:

Liefman’s Goudenband- 8% abv: Slightly wheat-y, acidic, lots of oak, not too sour.

Bidre Trois Dames’ Grand Dame Oud Bruin- 7.2% abv: Raisins, dates, cereal, caramel, leather, barnyard funk.

Fantome’s Pissenlet by Dany (the offbeat brewer at fantome) – 8% abv: Pissenlit is the French word for dandelion and literally means “pee in bed”. Floral, herbal, grass, wheat, lemons, touch of hops  not too sour, but oh so rare! Made with dandelions that grow in the fields around the farmhouse brewery.

Fantome de Noel- 10% abv: Raisins, touch of spice, touch of roasted malt, dry, touch of honey and not too sour. Not a bad holiday beer at all.

L’Abbaye de Saint Bon-Chien- 11% abv: Oak, spicy red wine, sour oak and tart. This beer is named and brewed in honor of the former brewery cat that disappeared.

Haandbryggeriet’s Haandbakk- 8.5% abv. This is a sour beer that uses Norwegian wild yeast and lactic bacteria for the first time in over a hundred years. This beer is also aged in Burgundy barrels. It tastes like sour oak, vanilla, tart and a large burgundy red wine character.

Oud Beersel Geuze Ale- 6% abv: Incredibly tart, funky, touch of fruit and super sour. Tart tart tart. This beer is a great go-to sour for the price of only $14. They claim it is the white sparkling wine of the ale world. This beer we have had before, but it is so good, I wanted to let you know about it.

Drie Fonteinen Oude Geuze- 6.5% abv: sour lemon complexity mixed with oak and more sour. Drie Fonteinen is the only remaining traditional geuze blender in Belgium, using only 100% spontaneously fermented lambic beer, aged in oak casks, with no artificial sweeteners or other additives.

The only bad thing about the tastings at the Jug Shop, is that they have to end.

Sf beer week Day 2: Beer Revolution
Another beautiful SF day, another trip to Oakland to Beer Revolution for their Bruery event. They have 11 taps on from The Bruery. While everyone was busy drinking double IPA’s at the DIPA festival, we headed there to drink up all of the Oude Tart.We got there just in time to have a glass before it was tapped out.

The Bruery: Oude Tart with cherries. Pours a muddy mahogony. Smells like victory: we got there before it tapped out. It smells like lightly stewed cherries. It tastes like sour malt, sour cherries, and
tart. Mmmm good. My favorite Bruery beer.


The Bruery’s Berlinerweisse- 3.5% abv. Wake up your tastesbuds with a nice light, sour lightly funky wheaty beer. Lemon tart delish.

The Bruery’s Barleywine- 9% abv. Hoppy, citrusy, piney, touch of malt. Great California barelywine.

Stone Lucky Bastard IPA- 8.5% abv. Caramel, hoppy, piney, resiny, sticky grapefruit skin goodness.

The Bruery’s Dark Agave Quad- 10.5% abv. This pours a pitch black. It tastes like malty, hops, caramel, bitterness and a touch  honey-like.

Ale industries Uncle Jesse- hoppy, piney, lightly bitter, grapefruit skin.

Our friend Chris bought a bottle of the Noel de Calbaza by Jolly Pumpkin. Ale aged in oak barrels. It is a nice sour malty, pumpkin-y with a hint of spice to it.
Dave then bought a bottle of 3 Fonteiben’s  Schaerbeekse Kriek. This pours a bright cherry. It smells like sour stewed cherries. It tastes like super sour Wisconsin cherries and overall sour cherry pit tart yumminess.  Mmmm.

Sf Beer Week: Day 1: Opening Gala at Yuerba Buena. The organizers were kind enough to give me a VIP ticket. This meant going and drinking amazing beer at 3:30 in the afternoon on Friday. It is amazing that this would be my first SF Beer week Opening Gala: we shall see if it’s worth the $85.

What did I start with? How about Russian River’s Pliny the Younger. Not a bad way to start SF Beer Week! Mmm 2011 Younger.

What to try next? How about the much anticipated: Almanac Beer Co Farm to Barrel’s Summer 2010 Blackberry brew? A Belgian style golden ale brewed with Sebastopol blackberries aged in wine barrels (Zin and Merlot). Not only did it taste great with flavors of wood, oak, wine and berries, but drinking this beer also supports Northern California sustainable farms. Cheers to Jesse and Damian, the masterminds behind this brewery.
Highlight of the night!

Next up: Drakes Hopocalypse - 9.3% abv. Smells amazing; lots of grapefruit, mango, pine and resin.

Brewers Guild’s Imperial Common- 8.5% . Apparently this beer is the official beer of SF Beer Week 2011 (although I think Younger is always the unofficial beer of any SF Beer week!). A little sour in the nose, a touch malty with hints of cereal.

Anderson Valley’s  Sour Stout. A bit buttery but a decent sour stout. Cherry, lots of cherry.. Sour malt with a bit of dryness on the end. Tart. Nice.

We made sure to time our watches not to miss the 6pm pouring of Russian River’s Supplication 6L. Vinnie faced a mad rush of people after he opened this bottle.  Sour oak sour mmm.

Drake’s Hopsalad. 9% abv. Interesting name. Fruity but more piney and resiny than the
others. Grapefruit resin bitter goodness and the most bitter so far..

Marin Brewing’s 21 yr Old Ale- A port barrel aged old ale with brett.  Asour malty beast that is semi sweet with a touch of oak.Mmm more sour beer. Nice.

After all of this beer, we had to set outside to try some of the food stands. I was under the impression that there would be oysters somewhere, but we never found them. Apparently last year, they didn’t even offer a vegetarian option. I made my way to Tacolicious and had a  spicy peppery vegetarian sandwich. Spicy yet amazing. Then onto more tasting:

High Water Brewing Co’s Single IPA- It is chock full of pine, apricots, grapefruit skin and pine resin. It had a huge flavor and a huge nose for a single IPA. It tastes like a double IPA.

Overall, it was a great first opening gala.The space was smaller than I had anticipated with fewer breweries than I thought, but I never had to wait very long to try a beer. The only off-putting thing was what the guys at Voodoo Brewery did to advertise: girls in tight skimpy dresses handing out flyers for their beer a la Las Vegas Car Show style….It was completely degrading, sexist and all they did was alienate 1/2 of their market. Not only did I not try their beer, but now I won’t. News Flash Voodoo people: Women like beer.

73 degrees and sunny in San Francisco on a Saturday? What to do? What else would we do but go over to Oakland and drink beer on a nice and sunny patio? Especially since it was Beer revolution’s 1 Year Anniversary party and they just expanded to have 43 taps- just in time! Congratulations to Rebecca and Fraggle for making through the year! And congratulations to us lucky patrons who got to go to their amazing lineup last Saturday.

Marin brewing- Conrad Kriek. You definitely missed out if you didn’t get to try this beer. This pours a beautiful deep raspberry. It smells like cranberry, sour lemons and a touch of spice. It tastes like sweet raspberries, cranberries, slightly tart, slightly sweet and a touch  of spice. Raspberry lemonade- but in a good day.

Lavender APA- This pours a golden light amber. It smells like lavender flowers and hops. It tastes more like hops, bitter pine and floral lavender. It is not a lavender overkill which one would expect, it is actually really nice.

We also tried:

Noble Double IPA

Drake’s Who’s Daddy

Moylan’s Baryleywine aged in port barrels with dates

Moylan’s Heaven Hill Imperial Stout 2009 (but they also

had 2010 and 2011)

Moylan’s Raspberry Imperial Stout

Kilt Lifter aged in Apple brandy

..and  a free glass of Parabola.

We even got to try some of Fraggle and Rebecca’s: St. Fuiellen Triple 9l….

all in all not a bad way to spend on a sunny Saturday afternoon!

Cantillon!!!!!

5 Euros gets you a self guided tour and 2 tastes. But if you befriend the older owner, aka Lou Pepe himself, who does all the tastes (and bring a few Pliny’s) then you might get a few more like we did!. Oh and he was also wearing a Russian River T-Shirt!  Apparently Vinny from Russian Tiver has invited these guys for the Craft Brewers conference in late March. So we might see them out this year in 2011. They also buy all of their barrels from Bordeux and use them for 12-15 years.

First taste: Gueze. This pours a bright yellow amber hay. It smells like sour funk, barnyard, slight fruity esters and more brett. It tastes like sour tart lemon, slight oak and a touch of well balanced sweeter lemon. Nice.

2nd taste: Kriek- This pours a bright cherry-ruby. It smells like tart cherries, sour funk and more fresh stewed cherries. It tastes like fresh tart cherries, sour lemon tart and finished with a touch of oak and more tart cherries. Very fresh and extremely good.

3rd taste: Framboise- This pours an even brighter crimson red. It smells like fresh raspberries and sour funk. It tastes like sour, sour raspberries! Fabulous! Tart on the back of your tongue raspberries. Mmm…

We also got a bottle of the Mamouche, in which the owner (grandfather Lou Pepe) bought for us! It pours a semi-cloudy resin. It smells like a field of flowers, jasmine, grass and oak. It tastes like jasmine, sour oak, herbal grasses and leave a sour oak jasmine flavor on the tongue. It is very fresh tasting- like Spring. The floralness cuts the funkiness a bit. This would be a great aperitif.

Next up we got a bottle if the Pinot d’Unis- This pours a beautiful, almost neon, strawberry red. It smells like spicy red wine, oak, slightly mulled fruit and sour funk. Really nice aroma. It tastes like sour red wine, spice, leather saddle, oak and funk.

And last but not least, we got a bottle of the Lou Pepe 2008 with cherries from Scharbeek (which are harder to find). This pours a beautiful deep garnet red. It smells like strong tart cherries. Delish. It tastes like very tart charties, oak and sour funk. Mmm good!

We did happen to leave with cheeses made with their gueze, jellies  made with thier lambic and framboise and 12 bottles of Cantillon. Not a bad day…

The first full day we had in Brussels, we got up extra early..to venture outside of the city to the gastroclub that had many rare beers from Cantillon and Drie Fonteinen made especially for them: De Heeren van Lidekerke. We took a metro to the Midi station and then a train out of town to Lidekerke. We walked through town, in the snow, just past the main large parking lot and we were very happy to find De Heeren, a fantastic craft beer and high end restaurant open. They even had an English menu!

First things first: 1 bottle of Cantillon Crianza Helena 2008 made especially for this restaurant and only 17.50 Euros for a 750ml bottle. It pours a crisp yellow amber. It smells like sour funk with a touch of oak and slightly sweet. It tastes like pucker sour, then barnyard funk, and a crisp tart punch in your face at the back of your tongue and throat finish. I even met the 3 year old girl in which this beer was named after.

We ordered shrimp croquettes and a salad with a gueze sauce (10 Euro) to start and I got a homemade Jeruselum artichoke soup with gueze and scallops ( I skipped the ham croutons). Dave had the monthly special: wild boar, venison, apples with marzipan and foie gras toast for 21 Euros.

They even gave us each a free appetizer of fish with rice and fennel!

Next we ordered: 3 Fonteinen Hommage 2007 6% abv 750ml for 16 Euros. This pours a cloudy red sienna. It smells like funky sour, slightly sweet berries and oak. It tastes way more sour than sweet. It is not really sweet at all. It tastes like sour crushed raspberries, tart oak and stingy wood. Nice. Not fake raspberry tasting…

After our meal, we ventured back to Brussels to see where our next adventure might take us….

So, on Boxing Day, the day after Christmas, in which most people in Europe celebrate, Dave and I take a train from Utrecht to Brussels arriving around 7pm.  After we find our place that we rented through airbnb, we found that we were starving and very thirsty. Of course Dave immediately wants to try to find Moeder Lambic, which was a bit of a treck for us across the city. Me hoping my husband was right, that it would indeed be open. Much to my dismay, after we walked through the snow and ice, seeing closed restaurant after closed restaurant (it was a freaking holiday afterall), we turned the corner and there it was: shiny brightly open in the night sky.                                                                We knew we had made the right decision.

We walked into a tiny bar with 8 tables and a few chairs at the bar. We sat at a table by the window and the bartender came over immediately (and asked in French) and we ordered (Dave answered in poor Spanish for some reason):

Cantillon-Faro 5% abv. 2.90Euros. This pours a golden dark amber. It smells like funk, slight bread, light oak, and a touch of fruit. It tastes like funky grapes, oak, slightly sweet, then a slight sour punch hits the back of your throat and leaves a semi-sweet flavor on your tongue.

Cantillon- Kriek (cuvee moerder) 5% abv. 3.90 Euro. This pours a beautiful cherry red. It smells like real tart cherry pie and sour funk. It tastes like sour barnyard, funk, oak and  leaves a lingering fresh tart cherry flavor on your tongue. Delicious!

Then we both ordered the Cantillon- Lambic Bio 5% abv for 3.30 Euros. This pours a semi cloudy brown amber with a thick foamy head. It smells like barnyard funk, oak and sour! It tastes like sour oak, then more wood, more funk sour, a bit fruity and ends a bit acidic. Pretty tasty wood.

We ordered some fromage as well:
Cru Des Fagnes and the Palet du vieux moulin-each about 100grams for  7.20 Euros but it comes with bread and malt grains (interesting). The cru was a bit more flavorful and stinky; I highly recommend it.

Then to top off the evening, we ordered a 2004 Fonteinen Oude Gueze vintage for 10 Euros. You could smells the sour funky Brett as soon as the bottle popped. Mmmm sour 6 year aged Gueze! It poured a golden honey amber. It smells like a ton of sour oak. I could just sit here and smell it all day. Beautiful. It tastes like sour, oak barrels, lemon puker, more oak, more sour and with a nice woody oak finish. Did I mention that it tasted like sour oak barrels???

Not a bad way to start our trip in Brussels….

Being a vegetarian, it is always hard to go to beer pairing dinners. I can not justify spending $80 and up for a great beer dinner, but not being able to eat half of it or having my ‘vegetarian’ option be some sort of pasta. That just doesn’t cut it for me. It is hard to understand living in San Francisco where vegetarian beer connoisseurs get the short end of the stick the majority of the time.

The last time I spoke with Eric and Neil from Mission Gastroclub, we talked about my frustrations and joining forces to offer a vegetarian craft beer dinner for the Women who like Beer meetup group. Even though on their website  it states: We are omnivores: the menu will rarely be vegetarian/vegan friendly. Emphasis is placed on in-season and sustainably produced foods whenever possible. I appreciate their willingness to venture out into vegetarian territory…even though they did have a pig breakdown on Saturday (in which my husband was a happy participant).

The menu was a 4 course meal paired with 2 of Eric’s homebrews and 2 were commercial craft beers.

1st Course: Maldon faltbread, red beets and olivade pairied with Eric’s Belgian Single. This beer is 4.7% abv, 32 IBU’s and is done as a second runnings beer (partigyle) from when Eric brewed a triple IPA. The sweetness from the beets, accompanied by the creaminess of the olivade and the crunchiness/saltiness of the flatbread worked well with the light, hoppiness of the Belgian Single.

2nd Course: Vaquero heirloom beans, cold smoked cauliflower, crispy garbanzos paired with Drake’s Rey Eye Ale (6.5% abv). The starchiness of the beans, crispiness of the lightly fried chickpeas and the chilled smokiness of the cauliflower helped to compliment the hoppy and caramel balance from the Red Eye Ale.

3rd Course: Braised leeks, king oyster mushrooms, barley, beer blanc served with Anchor’s Bock (5.5% abv). The beer blanc really helped to pull this dish together. The butteriness and the nuttiness of the barley, the umaminess of the flash fried mushrooms and the semi-sweet and savory beer blanc helped to compliment the flavors of the Bock: sweetness, caramel, cereal, stewed fruit and  touch of hops.

4th Course: Beer poached Asian pears, macaroons paired with Eric’s Tripel (8.9% abv, 25 IBU’s). The caramel, slight funk, cereal and carmelized banana flavors out of Eric’s Tripel really emphasized the slightly sweet caramel of the poached pears and the nuttiness of the coconut.

I always ask the ladies to write their top 3 favorite beers and favorite pairings at each event…and the results are in:

Favorite Beer: 1-Eric’s Triple 2- Drake’s Red Eye 3-Eric’s Belgian Single

The top 3 favorite pairings were:
1- Beer poached Asian pears, Macaroons with Eric’s Tripel
2- Braised leeks, oyster mushrooms, barley, beer blanc with Anchor’s Bock
3-Vaquero beans, smoked cauliflower, crispy garbanzos and Drake’s Red Eye

Kass said: This was a very enjoyable event. A special treat to sample the interesting and tasty small dishes and beers presented by the guys at Gastroclub. Kudos for lining up a vegetarian pairing. Tiila, you do a good job organizing events like this. Thanks to all!

Rebecca said: Loved everything about this meetup – great food, great beers (including a really awesome home brewed triple from our hosts)! Thanks Tiila for another great event.

Thanks again Eric and Neil! You guys rock…

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