Tag Archives: Homewood

East End Brewing Charity Open House

Just received this from our friend Scott at East End Brewing. An awesome event for a good cause. I am supposed to work on Nov. 4 but I may need to find an excuse to attend this.

East End Brewing Charity Open House: Nov 4th, 2-5pm – Just 20 bucks at the door gets you a pint glass for 3 hours of tastings, as many as 8 East End Beers, tasty eats from your favorite local tap spots… did I mention beer? We’ll be releasing The Ugly American for the very first time this day! And the best thing is, all proceeds go to PLEA – a very worthwhile local charity serving families of kids with developmental challenges.

Bring a friend, bring your thirst, and you can even bring a beer to share.

Congratulations on 100 batches of Beer

From our favorite Pittsburgh brewer’s newsletter – East End Brewing is on their 100th batch of beer…

ANOTHER MILESTONE REACHED: EAST END BREWING BREWS UP BATCH #100!!!
Ah yes, I remember it was just about a year and a half ago when I was
pouring the results of batch #2 from East End Brewing for so many of
you to taste that snowy night at Kelly’s. (Batch #1 was a
mind-numbingly bitter but otherwise tasty batch of Big Hop…not quite
ready for prime time though). Well, 99 batches later I’m still here,
still making beer, and it’s even gotten a bit easier with each batch
now that I know a bit more about what I’m doing. Hopefully the
beer’s gotten a bit better in the last year and a half too! So, what
to do for the big event – batch 100? Well, let’s just say that I
couldn’t let it go by without doing something unusual….

I was reading an article in one of the regional beer publications a
while back, about some American Brewers traveling to Belgium and their
participation in a beer that was a cross between a Belgian Tripel (or
“Triple” depending on your preference) and the much newer Imperial
IPA/Double IPA style. Immediately fascinated by the notion of a beer
that blends the light body and Belgian character of the tripel, with
the completely American over the top hoppiness of these huge IPAs, I
decided to seek one out and taste it for myself. As it turned out, the
idea was more interesting than the beer that I eventually got my hands
on, so I decided to give it a go here to see if I could MAKE the beer I
was imagining in my head – and what better time to do it than for #100!