
Monday, August 31, 2009
Amsterdam's remarkable beer bikes

The Locals softball team? Express your interest here.

This summer, we're looking at starting up a mixed slow-pitch softball team - The Locals - for customers and staff . I've played in this comp before and it's a lot of fun and a great excuse to get together for a beer afterwards..
Thursday, August 27, 2009
Paul Mercurio's Beer & Chilli Feast postponed
We're committed to running these beer dinner events so to help us better promote them, please give us your feedback as to why this one didn't tickle your fancy!
If anyone has booked, we'll contact you ASAP to arrange a refund..
Tuesday, August 25, 2009
St Kilda Ale Stars - what is the best beer of the last year?
Saturday, August 22, 2009
Willie's new beer book a cracker

When in Hobart the other night, I bought a copy of Willie Simpson's new coffee table book, The Australian Beer Companion.
Separated into state sections, the book covers more than 100 of Willie's favourite Australian breweries and traces each brewery’s history and their range of beers, and showcases their beer label through a feature called ‘Behind the Label’.
St Kilda Ale Stars Celebrate first Birthday


Last Tuesday saw the St Kilda Ale Stars celebrate their first birthday.. When we launched the Ale Stars we had about 8 people around a table yet last week we had 52 regulars turn up to help us celebrate.
Friday, August 21, 2009
A Brew(m) with a View - Our Visit to Moo Brew Brewery, Hobart
A Trip to Hobart for the HOPSters beer night
Thursday, August 20, 2009
Darlo Ale Stars - style and line up announced!

Wednesday, August 19, 2009
Beer Diva - Beer & Food Tasting - Darlinghurst - Wed 26th Aug

We will be tasting 8 beers, matched to 5 delicious courses of food, all for only $60.00 per head!! A great night, with great beers, great people and a lot of laughs!
There are a few places left, so book now on the right habd side of this blog (bookings are essential so that we can cater appropriately).
Our beer line up for next Wednesday is:
- Moo Brew Hefeweizen
- Bridge Road Chevalier Saison
- Stone & Wood Draught Ale
- Kostritzer Schwarzbier
- Two Brothers Growler Brown Ale
- Moo Brew US Pale Ale
- Five Islands Shark Oil IPA
- Brewboys Ace of Spades Stout
Tuesday, August 18, 2009
Ale Star Membership packages launched
Sunday, August 16, 2009
Bright Brewery Bright Lager Lands At The Local
Bright Lager is delicately hopped and light on the palate. The flavour is reminiscent of new season apples and a subtle honey aroma is also present alongside the grainy characters you expect from a lager. While the lengthy fermentation and maturation time may frustrate the brewer, it rewards us with a beer that is so drinkable it should probably come with a caution. To preserve the fresh taste it is unfiltered and no clarifying agents are used. And the brewers wore only natural fibres and played acoustic music through the brewery sound system while brewing it."

Tuesday, August 11, 2009
Darlo beer fans - Do you support our roof terrace proposal?
community and believe we have addressed all known concerns in our application.
If you are supportive of the development, we’d greatly appreciate it if you could send a personalised email to the Council Planner expressing your support before August 19th. If you have any concerns, please email us so we can discuss them.
The planner's name is Meagan Kanaley and her email address is mkanaley@cityofsydney.nsw.gov.au. You must refer to our case file number 2008/1415A and any response to email should refer to the issues in the application - namely noise, heritage, amenity, opening hours etc. Here's a link about the process if you're interested!
- Planning Appeal Letter (City Plan)
- Acoustic Report (Marshall & Day Acoustic Engineers)
- Heritage Response (Rod Howard & Associates,
- Site Plan (Archmedia)
- Plan of Management
Paul Mercurio's Beer & Chili Feast tix on sale!
Paul be presenting 6 different chili dishes cooked with (and matched with) 6 craft beers.
Tix are just $80 and you need to prepay with your credit card (see top right corner of this blog). Spaces are limited and this will be great fun so be quick!
http://thelocaltaphouse.blogspot.com/2009/07/paul-mercurios-beer-chilli-feast.html
Monday, August 10, 2009
Beer & Cheese Experience for the beer lover - a few spots left!

Where: The Local Taphouse, 122 Flinders Street, Darlinghurst
Cost: $90 Inclusive of GST
Tuesday, August 4, 2009
August Brewery Showcase - Moo Brew of Moorilla

Brewed in the most picturesque of locations at Moorilla on the Derwent river, Moo Brew's finely crafted brews are brewed in accordance with the Reinheitsgebot.
Four of their excellent brews will be on tap at both venues, including:
Moo Brew Pale Ale, a fruity American Pale Ale.
Moo Brew Hefeweizen, a traditonal Bavarian wheat beer.
Moo Brew Dark Ale, a homage to the great American Brown ales.
Moo Brew Imperial Stout '09, this years batch fresh from the brewery.
So come on down and enjoy one (or three..) of these great brews while they're still on the mainland.
St Kilda Ale Stars - 1st Anniversary Extravaganza lineup
Here's what is confirmed:
Weihnstephaner Hefeweissbier
Timothy Taylor Landlord Strong Pale Ale
Samuel Smiths Famous Taddy Porter
Schlenkerla - smoked marzen
Saison Dupont
Red Hill Imperial Stout
and probably Pilsner Urquell - But maybe Budvar!
There'll be a great quiz, awesome prizes, delicious pizzas and the usual hullabaloo. Oh, and Ale Star Tsar (and new dad), Shandy, will be back in the hot seat!
This month's special session is $35 which includes everything. Book at the top right hand section of this blog ASAP!
Monday, August 3, 2009
Congrats to Ale Star Tsar Shandy
Coopers Local Laughs - Great first night
Review: Cooper’s Local Laughs Aug 2nd ‘09
This was the opening night for a new comedy room in Sydney – Cooper’s Local Laughs at The Local Taphouse on the corner of South Dowling and Flinders Streets, Darlinghurst. Always keen to look at a new room, I went along.
First: the pub. It used to have another name, but now it’s The Local Taphouse and it offers an extensive range of boutique beers (including a tasting paddle for the dedicated) and a funky menu of snacks and full meals. (There is another The Local Taphouse pub in St Kilda which hosts Melbourne’s longest-running independent comedy room under the name Cooper’s Local Laughs, and this Local Laughs comedy room is a spin-off from that.) The ticket price for the show includes two half-price Coopers beers – happy days.
The performance takes place in the front bar which has some couches and sofa-chairs near the front, along with some high tables and stools along the sides and some more normal seating in rows in the middle. The room is a wedge-shape leading to the stage right in the street-corner of the building. This means great sightlines, although the sound tends to splash around a bit towards the back of the room near the bar, which makes some words a little unclear there even when the front rows can hear them perfectly. So, get there early and get a seat up front if you want to get every punchline.
The planned opening night line-up was a corker, and despite a hitch with the booked MC being a no-show due to flight delay problems it was still a great night. It’s just as well that room organiser Jacques Barrett has plenty of MC experience, as he had to step in at the last minute. The audience made him work hard at the start, but he had them starting to warm by the end of his set. Englishwoman abroad Julia Clark was the next to take them on with her rapidfire wryness on her new country and the foibles we share. She and Raw Comedy finalist Rodney Todd’s more relaxed free-form style had the audience smiling and chuckling happily but not really letting the guffaws run free. Melburnian veteran Brad Oakes closed the first half with a set that finally broke through the audience’s reserve with his sheer gag per minute rate and his challenge to them to step up and think even though it was a Sunday night – they couldn’t hold out any more and willingly followed him for the ride.
After the break a younger Melburnian comic, Geraldine Hickey took the stage with her dark cynicism contrasted with delightful recountings of romantic bogan dalliances – so nice to see a comedian having fun with sexual stories instead of being insecure about it. The audience were really enjoying themselves by now. Then birthday boy David Smiedt alternated his slyly charming anecdotes with riffing off audience answers to his questions, followed by Nick Sun’s anarchic and always surprising comic musings, to finish the night off with the relentlessly taking-logic-to-absurdist-extremes one-liners of Bruce Griffiths. It may take the audience a few beats to fully follow Griffiths’ train of thought, but the response is all the bigger for it.
The audience left the pub happy, appreciative and vowing to return another week. Which is very much what this room needs – some regulars who help get everybody else in the room ready to have a fine old time with the comedians. Once the word gets around about the highly appealing beer-food-comedy combination, I don’t think regulars will be any problem, especially since the early start at 7-ish means that it’s all over before 10pm so that everybody can manage to start back to work on the next day. Good planning, that. Highly recommended.
Sunday, August 2, 2009
Obama's 'beer summit' solves problems over a beer

US President Barack Obama has sat down for beers and snacks with a white police officer and an eminent black scholar at the White House in a bid to quell a national furore over racial profiling.
Mr Obama welcomed Harvard University professor Henry Louis Gates and police sergeant James Crowley for 6pm beers around a white patio table in the White House Rose Garden, hoping to turn the page on a race row that erupted during a July 16 incident at the scholar's home.
Shortly after one of the most highly anticipated White House happy hours in recent memory, the President described it as a "friendly, thoughtful conversation" and said in a statement he hoped "that all of us are able to draw [a] positive lesson from this episode".
Earlier Mr Obama downplayed the significance of the meeting, dubbed a "beer summit" by the press, saying he was "fascinated with the fascination about this evening".
"I noticed this has been called the 'beer summit'. It's a clever term, but this is not a summit, guys. This is three folks having a drink at the end of the day and hopefully giving people an opportunity to listen to each other. And that's really all it is," he told reporters in the Oval Office.
The comments did little, however, to quench the thirst about the trio's beer bash, which grew to a foursome with the surprise addition of Vice-President Joe Biden.
But the White House media pool was kept at bay, shuttled to the far side of the Rose Garden for a 30-second photo opportunity that yielded no chance to ask questions or listen to the conversation.
Sergeant Crowley addressed reporters after the meeting at an office building. When asked if anyone apologised over the incident in which he ended up arresting Professor Gates at the scholar's home, he said "no", but noted: "We had a cordial and productive discussion today.
"This was a positive step in moving forward as opposed to reliving the events of the past couple of weeks, and an effort to move not just the city of Cambridge or two individuals past this event, but the whole country, to move beyond this and use this as a basis of maybe some meaningful discussions in the future," he added.
The contretemps two weeks ago occurred when Professor Gates - arguably the foremost US scholar on African-American affairs - was arrested after police received a call that two men might be attempting a break-in at a house in Cambridge, Massachusetts, home to Harvard.
As it turned out, Professor Gates was merely attempting to enter his own home after the door had jammed.
Professor Gates and Sergeant Crowley exchanged heated words, and the professor was ultimately arrested for disorderly conduct.
Mr Obama, the nation's first African-American president, added to the controversy when he said police had "acted stupidly" by arresting his friend after establishing that Professor Gates had been in his own home.
The incident sparked an intense national discussion as to whether police rushed to stereotype a black man as a potential criminal - even a bookish and middle-aged one such as Professor Gates - based solely on his race.
But public outrage also swelled over Mr Obama's choice of words, and his hasty characterisation of what had happened.
It provided an opening for right-wing commentators to criticise the President as well, including one who accused Mr Obama of being racist against whites.
Some critics say the President maligned Sergeant Crowley, a well-regarded officer in Cambridge who trained others in his department on the perils of racial profiling.
Last week, Mr Obama called Sergeant Crowley to express regret over his statement, and to invite the police officer and Professor Gates to the White House for a reconciliatory beer.
Mr Obama later said that blame in the stand-off was most likely shared, suggesting that Professor Gates "probably overreacted" - as did police, by booking the professor for being hot-headed.
The controversy ends the first six months of Mr Obama's presidency in which he managed not to be defined by his race, but Mr Obama said he hoped the chat would offer a chance for reconciliation.
In the Rose Garden, Sergeant Crowley and Professor Gates, dressed in dark suit jackets, sat next to each other, while Mr Obama, in white shirtsleeves, sat next to the sergeant and Mr Biden alongside the professor.
According to the White House, Mr Obama drank Bud Light, Sergeant Gates was served Boston local brew Sam Adams Light, and Professor Crowley drank Blue Moon. Mr Biden drank a low-alcohol Buckler.
Sergeant Crowley said he and Professor Gates agreed to meet again in the near future. He declined to provide a location, but hinted strongly that alcohol would not be involved.
"I think meeting at a bar for a beer on a second occasion will send out the wrong message," he said. "Maybe a Kool-Aid or ice tea or something like that," he said.





