Fifty Must-Try Craft Beers of Ohio. Rick Armon

Fifty Must-Try Craft Beers of Ohio - Rick Armon


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5.4 percent

      IBUs: 20

      Available: Year-round in 16-ounce cans

       IF YOU LIKE THIS BEER, here are five other lighter Ohio craft beers to try:

      • Sibling Revelry Lavender Wit

      • Millersburg Lot 21 Blonde

      • Rhinegeist Cougar

      • FigLeaf Basmati Cream Ale

      • Royal Docks 67 Alaska

      ERMAL “ERNIE” FRAZE is one of the most important figures in the history of beer. Don’t know him? Well, he invented the pull-top can in 1959: an invention that meant beer drinkers, and soda drinkers for that matter, didn’t have to carry around a can opener to enjoy a brew.

      Fraze, who founded the Dayton Reliable Tool Company, was at a picnic one day and, alas, had forgotten his can opener. He ended up using a car bumper to open his beer and decided that day that he was going to create a better can. The Ohio Historical Society estimates that more than 75 percent of American breweries were using his invention by 1965.

      Warped Wing Ermal’s Belgian Style Cream Ale pays tribute to Fraze, not only with the name, but, in a sense, also with the beer itself, which is a style invented by brewmaster John Haggerty.

      Cofounders Joe Waizmann, Nick Bowman, and Haggerty knew they wanted to offer an approachable beer in their initial lineup for Warped Wing, which opened in a former industrial building in downtown Dayton in early 2014. Waizmann and Bowman suggested a cream ale, a style with a deep history in southwest Ohio, thanks to Little Kings Cream Ale and a slew of former Dayton breweries that made it.

      But, at first, the bearded Haggerty put the kibosh on that idea. He had nothing against cream ales, but the style just didn’t speak to him. So he set about to create his own variant. Ermal’s Belgian Style Cream Ale is a mash-up of a wit and a cream ale made with corn sugar, coriander, grains of paradise, orange and lemon peel, white pepper, camomile, and flaked oatmeal.

      “It all kind of works together flavorwise,” Haggerty said.

      Ermal’s has gone on to become the brewery’s best-selling brand. Today, the name Ermal is making a comeback in the Dayton community, and Fraze’s story—featured on Ermal’s 16-ounce can—is reaching a whole new generation.

      “What’s impressive and cool for us is that the word ‘Ermal’ wasn’t in our daily lexicon,” Waizmann said. “A word like Ermal didn’t exist, and now people are relating to the word and associating it with the brewery.”

       The Evangelist

      Staas Brewing Co. | www.staasbrewing.com

       Staas Brewing Co.

      31 W. Winter St.

      Delaware, Ohio 43015

      (740) 417–4690

      First brewed: 2013

      Style: Belgian dark strong ale

      Alcohol content: 10 percent

      IBUs: 20

      Available: Year-round on draft

       IF YOU LIKE THIS BEER, here are five other Ohio craft beers to try:

      • Maize Valley Monk in Public

      • Toxic XXXX

      • Fat Head’s Sorcerer

      • Willoughby Brute’s Quad

      • Fifty West 4X4 Quadruple

      MANY BREWERIES love to say that their beers are brewed in small batches. Staas Brewing’s The Evangelist, a beautiful Belgian-style quadrupel ale, really is.

      Staas, a nanobrewery in Delaware, operates with a half-barrel brewing system. The Evangelist is so big with its grain bill that Staas can produce only 10 gallons at a time on its system. And it’s not an easy process, with a two-hour boil required. Despite the challenge, the beer is on draft year-round to the delight of Belgian beer fans.

      “It’s a labor of love,” says Liz Staas, who runs the operation and brews along with her husband, Donald.

      The Evangelist was designed by Liz’s dad, Tony Evangelista, a homebrewer who started back in the 1970s. He was always a huge fan of Belgian and English beers, and his daughter caught on to Belgians as well, so it should come as no surprise that the brewery specializes in—what else?—Belgian and English styles.

      The Evangelist, thanks to its high (10 percent) alcohol by volume, is served in a 10-ounce snifter. It’s boozy and dark with plenty of sweetness that gives way to fig, raisin, and plum notes. It was important for Liz Staas to have the fig showcased.

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