List of fantastic Arizona beers and breweries

FacebookStumbleUponRedditInstapaperShare
Beer Sampler by JMR_Photography

Beer Sampler by JMR_Photography

I love beer. Most people would probably consider me a beer snob in that I can’t stand Coors, Budweiser, or other popular brands. I like craft beer and exploring all the different tastes and styles from IPAs to stouts. Though if you really evaluated me to real “Beer Snob” standards I’m still very much of a newcomer, and I’m happy that way. I just like exploring tasty things, and don’t really care much about IBUs and brewing differences required for different grains.

I’m also a bit of an Arizona nerd, and am of the firm opinion there is far, far more to see, do, and experience in this state than most people realize. Complain to me there there is nothing going in Phoenix (or Arizona) and watch my eyes start to twitch. So when a commentor on a local board said there were “no good Arizona beers”, it hit two of my nerd buttons at once. The person is, quite simply, an idiot.

Great Arizona Beer

Being a Baby Beer Nerd, I did not want to craft a rebuttal on my own. I kicked it up the food-chain and asked the Arizona Craft Beer Lovers group on Facebook for their favorite Arizona beers. I specifically did not ask for “best Arizona beers” as this was not a competition, and beer preferences are very subjective. I just wanted to know what the Serious Beer Nerds in Arizona really like. They delivered!

Thirty-three different craft beers…
across thirteen Arizona breweries…
in nine different cities!

It’s a great list. Some of these I haven’t tried myself, so I got my own homework out of the deal to correct that issue.

Beers listed in Green were the most popular in the group, and everything in Yellow also received multiple votes. I put in each brewery’s home city, but most of these beers are available throughout the state. I also added a link to the brewery’s website so you can get more info.

Brewery Beer City
Arizona Wilderness The Refuge IPA Queen Creek
Four Peaks 8th Street Ale Tempe
Four Peaks Raj IPA Tempe
Four Peaks Sirius Black Tempe
Four Peaks Belgian Black Ale Tempe
Four Peaks Pumpkin Porter Tempe
Four Peaks Kiltlifter Tempe
Four Peaks Oatmeal Stout Tempe
Four Peaks Hop Knot Tempe
LumberYard Big Rapid Red Flagstaff
Mogollon Mesquite Smoked Porter Flagstaff
Mogollon Wapiti Amber Ale Flagstaff
Nimbus Old Monkeyshine Tucson
Oak Creek Nut Brown Ale Sedona
Old World Old World Red Ale Phoenix
Old World Nitro Blonde Ale Phoenix
Papago Orange Blossom Scottsdale
Papago Elsie’s Milk Stout Scottsdale
Papago Belle Epoque Scottsdale
Papago Oude Zuipers Scottsdale
Prescott Brewing Achocolypse Prescott
SanTan Hefeweizen Chandler
SanTan HopShock I.P.A. Chandler
SanTan Gordo Stout Chandler
SanTan Negro Nitron Chandler
Sleepy Dog Red Rover Tempe
Sonoran Sonoran 200 Scottsdale
Sonoran White Chocolate Ale Scottsdale
Sonoran Inebriator Scottsdale
SunUp Armadillo Red Phoenix
SunUp Horizon Hefeweizen Phoenix

 

No Excuses – Drink Arizonan!

If you just weren’t sure where to find great beer made in Arizona, or were intimidated by unfamiliar names and labels, you’re out of reasons to procrastinate. Arizona has tons of great beer and brewries, so get out there and try some.

I know there are many others out there, so if I missed your favorite, tell me about it!

FacebookStumbleUponRedditInstapaperShare

At the SOPAcabana… the internet is screwed!

FacebookStumbleUponRedditInstapaperShare

Sing along!

Barry Manilow sings it out!

Barry Manilow sings it out!

Her name was Lola, she was a blogger
With Google ads on her page, her snark was all the rage
She would tumblr and post to YouTube
And while she tried to be a star, she wasn’t going far
Because just one time, she posted a musical rhyme
They shut her down and sued her pants off
How does this seem fair?

At the SOPA, SOPAcabana
The unfairest law north of Havana
At the SOPA, SOPAcabana
Discussing your passions could earn you a lashin’
With the SOPA….the internet goes dark

Stop SOPA and PIPA

SOPA is everywhere today, but you really need to take the time to learn about it and take some action.

What can you do?

Sign this petition!

Call your congressman!

If this passes, the damage to the internet would be staggering… even worse than having “Copacabana” playing in your head all day:) )

FacebookStumbleUponRedditInstapaperShare

Running isn’t just bad for you, it’s bad for all of us

FacebookStumbleUponRedditInstapaperShare
sweat by Sukhchander

sweat by Sukhchander

I started running last year to train for the Warrior Dash. It was fun and provided an excuse to get in some cardio, so I didn’t really think about the bigger implications.

I ran in ignorance.

Today, on a particularly painful run that clearly 85% of my body did not want to be doing, I realized my folly. I listened to my body and it told me that running wasn’t just a bad idea for me, it is a bad idea for all of us.

History of Running

Let’s peer back in time at our ancient ancestors when all of them ran. You had to run to catch your food, run to move to new hunting grounds, run to escape the jerks in the next settlement over when they came to kill you and steal all your woolly mammoth tusks.

Here is the To Do list for pretty much all of our forebears:

1. Invent wheel
2. Learn to ride horses
3. Hook horses to wheels
4.  Own faster horse/wheel thing than neighbors

Notice the thread? Job One for our ancestors was to STOP running and find as many ways possible to not have to do it again. What happened once this list got out of committee and got some traction?

Civilization!

Running is bad for the human race

A growing number of people think running is fun. Marathons, half-marathons, triathalons, ultra-marathons, megathons, infinithons, and on and on. Every person who laces up a pair of shoes (or slides into some Vibrams) is turning back the clock to a time before we had perfectly good cars and airplanes to get us around. They’re not even running for a good reason. If hungry lions were released behind the runners at a race, at least there would be a sense of neolithic nostalgia about it.

Moving away from the products of our evolution as a species sends a message that we should abandon our modern progress and revert to a dirtier, sweatier, far more dangerous time. We evolved places like McDonald’s and Taco Bell so I don’t have to suit up and go hunt a buffalo every day. We created things like jeans and t-shirts so I can let my deer skinning and tanning skills get really rusty. I love indoor plumbing, the internet, laser beams, and my iPhone.

We can’t let runners take those away from us.

Their time is running out

Next time you see someone running, give them a flier for a nearby car dealership. If they’re listening to their iPod while they run, squirt it with water. Leap out from behind bushes and bite their legs to see how they really like the thrill of the chase.

Write to running event organizers and tell them to grow up and enter the Twenty-First century… or even the Nineteenth if that’s too much for them. Contact your Congressional Representatives and let them know how unAmerican running really is. Demand they take action.

Our ancestors would smack modern day runners right upside the head. If we work together, we can preserve everything they fought so hard to create: a comfy ride.

 

FacebookStumbleUponRedditInstapaperShare