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Indiana Microbrewers Festival

Thanks to a couple of friends dragging me, and paying much of the way, I was able to visit the Indiana Microbrewers Festival in Indianapolis this past Saturday, July 18.

The Good

  • No limit on the number of tastings.
  • Great weather – slightly overcast with a high of 70.  Who wants to drink outside in the summer heat?
  • Well over 50 brewers (mostly from Indiana) – most present themselves, a few via distributors.  There were between 250-400 different brews to sample, making it impossible to sample every one on my list.
  • Almost every brew was on tap, no bottles!
  • Lots of swag to be had – mostly key chains and coasters.
  • Designated driver tickets – with free soft drinks and water.
  • Full layout of the festival including a listing of every beer was available in advance of the event.
  • The event was a benefit for The Leukemia & Lymphoma Society and Optimist International.
  • Firkin Tent!  A tent full of cask conditioned brews – o’ my!
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The Bad

  • Parking, or lack thereof.  Get there early.
  • Smoking was supposed to be away from the tents, but in practice it was everywhere.  Aroma is such a huge factor in taste, why anyone would want any distractions from this is beyond me.
  • Size of the crowd.  The event was four hours long and during most of the event you were in line.  Get a beer, run and get in the next line – then enjoy your taste.
  • Logistics.  The lines and crowds overlapped, making navigating extremely difficult.  You often could not figure out which line went to which brewer.  Most of the crowd did not seem to care, as they could rarely tell us which brewer they were in line for.  They really need to limit the crowd more, or do some serious work on the layout.
  • Food – although there was food available, the quality was dubious and it was an extra cost.
  • Non-alcoholic drinks were available for designated drivers, but cost $2 for drinkers.  Do you really want to encourage drinkers not to hydrate?  Water should have been freely available.  You also had to hunt down the single location in the back of the event to get the drinks.
  • No early entry – they opened the gate at 3:00pm, not a minute early.  Not much of a problem for us, as we were fairly close to the beginning of the line, but I felt sorry for those in the back as they must have missed the first half hour, or more, of the event.
  • Port-o-lets with very long lines.  Chalk this up to a necessary evil of an outdoor event.

The Brews

You can find a mostly complete listing of what I tasted below.  But I must, yes must, point out three that demand notice.  First, most of you have probably had a Dogfish Head 120 (the best IPA ever) – but very few of you have had it on tap.  I encourage everyone out there to hunt down an establishment and try this extraordinary pour.  Second, drive to the Upland Brewery in Indiana and have one of the best stouts ever made – Chocolate Stout aged in a 23 year old Pappy Van Winkle Bourbon Barrel.  And third, if you ever have heard of Three Floyd’s Dark Lord you certainly know the hype this beer generates.  It can only be purchased from the brewery on a single day each year – and you have to buy a ticket to get the right to buy the beer.  Now that I have tasted it I can assure you the hype is real – this is indeed the best beer you will ever have.  Get on the lottery list now for next years Dark Lord Day.

Alphabetically listed (brewer – brew – rating from 1 to 10):

  • Alcatraz Brewing – 1 3/4 Belgian – 8
  • Barley Island Brewing – Single White Friar – 8
  • Broad Ripple Brewpub – Hefwiesen – 5
  • Brugge Brasserie – Bruno – 5
  • Brugge Brasserie – Tripple De Ripple – 5
  • Brugge Brasserie – Voyageur IPA – 5
  • Dogfish Head – 120 IPA – 10
  • Granite City – Brothers Benedict Bock – 4
  • Hoppin’ Frog – Boris Stout – 7
  • Lafayette Brewing – 1998 Big Boris Barleywine – 9
  • Lafayette Brewing – 2008 Big Boris Barleywine – 6
  • Mishawaka Brewing – Four Horsemen Irish Ale – 2
  • New Albanian Brewing – Scotch Cask Condition Community Dark Mild – 2
  • Schmaltz – He’Brew ReJEWvenator – 8
  • Shoreline Brewery – Beltaine Scottish Ale – 4
  • Southampton – Saison – 5
  • Three Floyds – Dark Lord – 10
  • Three Floyds – Gorch Fock Helles – 4
  • Two Brothers – Oh! Brother Belgian Triple
  • Upland – Bourbon Barrel Chocolate Stout – 10
  • Upland – Rad Red – 4
  • 21st Amendment – Hell or High Watermelon – 6
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Today in Amusement History

Many moons ago, there was The Amusement Park Almanac, compiled by Dave Althoff and published periodically on Usenet.  Anyone out there remember, or even know what Usenet is, let alone use it? For the last few years it has laid fallow with no updates and for a time, no home.  That is till I came along and revived the Almanac.  After getting the OK and support from Mr. Althoff it is alive again, living on DerekClayton.com/tiah.  Both of us are now maintianing the list, updating it for current events and slowly filling in the events that were missed over the last few years.

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But it is no longer just a list – oh no indeed!  First off, it is now in a true database.  Secondly, it can now be viewed in many ways – via website, Yahoo Widgets, Google Desktop and iGoogle. And if you have your own website, you can easily add it to your site (see the website for details).

Amusement history is an important part of American history, and Americana in general.  Hopefully this will help keep it alive.

PS, if you need a Yahoo Widget, Google Gadget, etc… developed please let me know, I have your solution.

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DAFE Website Upgrades

As many of you know, I am the webmaster of the DAFE.org (Darkride and Funhouse Enthusiasts) website.  Until recently the database of attractions was kept in a Excel sheet.  When I first took over the website I wrote a quick script that parsed that Excel sheet with an output to straight HTML – quick and effective – with the intention of doing a true database at a later date.  That date has finally arrived!

The entire database is now online, sortable and searchable.  Best of all the database is now in one central location that any DAFE board member can update at any time – with the update instantly available to all DAFE members.  Images are now handled automatically – re-sized and copyrighted stamped. Cool feature side note: the admin pages are dovetailed into the existing Wordpress user accounts.

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Additional information about each attraction is now being gathered to help our members.  In addition we are now in the process of expanding the database from currently running US attractions to a worldwide database – past and present.

With the attractions databased, we can now offer a featured (random) attraction on various pages within the website, and random rides are now added to the existing Darkride Twitter account (which also is linked into the DAFE blog).  Attraction ratings are also enabled (AJAX) – a feature that will see the light of day the minute the DAFE board is ready to enable the membership feature of the website.

Check it out, I hope you like this new upgrade and find it useful!

http://www.dafe.org/ddb/

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