Friday, August 29, 2008

One final rant before a concerted effort at dormancy

A month out from our Oregon trip, Mila and I are still quite haunted by the experience. Perhaps even more so than when we first returned to Texas about three weeks ago.
We have visited many lovely places together-- the Czech Republic, Colorado, North Carolina, and New England to name a few, but we have never once been gripped by the desire to uproot and actually MOVE.

Until now.



Bil's and Carla's neighborhood (Buckman) is like Austin's Hyde Park--- lots of very cool old houses occupied by creative, community-conscious, left-leaning Gen X-ers--- but Buckman is bigger than Hyde Park and, quite unbelievably, slightly less expensive. The Lamar Blvd. equivalent is Hawthorne Street, but Hawthorne has Lamar beat 10:1 if you are scoring for cool bohemian shops in cool old bohemian buildings. There's just more of them. Plus you can walk to the grocery store AND to 20 pubs, according to Bil's neighbor Dave, though only two of them brew their own beer.
Categories for consideration:
Climate-- NW Oregon posts 222 overcast days per year. The general populace deals with this by consuming prodigious amounts of coffee and super hoppy beer. Carla maintains that the wet, cool climate jibes with her Celtic genes. We didn't fully realize the truth of what she said until we returned to the stifling humidity and blast-furnace temperatures of Central Texas, but Mila and I both felt that our Euro bodies were somehow more attuned to that place than to this one. I offer no explanation.

People-- I was raised to value friendliness, openness, and good manners and to identify these as Southern norms, and unfortunately I also have harbored the misconception that the opposite of these values were "Yankee" norms. Travel has done much to unravel most of this prejudice, especially in the cases of Wisconsin and Massachusetts (but not New York or Michigan, sorry to say). Having eschewed one prejudice I shall, perhaps, rush toward forming another, for we found the people in Portland to be, in the balance, much friendlier, open and helpful than what you might expect to find in Texas. I was (pleasantly) surprised, but it is true.
Portland seemed to be a city filled with educated people with a middle class (though NOT bourgeois) sensibility. From the bus drivers to the rental car lackeys to the librarians to the convenience store clerks, they all came off as more helpful, informative, and industrious than their counterparts in any other American city I have visited.

Crime-- Here's the rub. Crime seems to be a major problem in Portland. We had no sense of this while we were there as we felt perfectly safe the whole time. Safer, indeed, than we feel in Austin. We saw nairy a gaggle of loitering thugs and only heard gangsta rap blaring from a passing car once in 12 days. It seemed, as I have intimated, like a city comprised of bright, educated people.

Some of whom have major drug problems, it would seem.

One demographics website I found gave Portland a crime index rating of almost 450, when the national average is only 100 and our beloved little Round Rock is a paltry 39. Property crime is the main thing, I guess. Murders are rare. Heroine and meth addiction are persistent problems, and the addicts engage in a lot of thievery.

Jobs-- Mila and I have good jobs here that we have excelled at and can almost do in our sleep. Who wants to start afresh and lose time with family as you scramble to learn the ins and outs of a new career? Plus, due to higher cost of living, we would have to pull in $60,000 more than we do now to maintain our current lifestyle.

Other considerations-- Friends, family, housing costs, the Dentones...

We are in a sort of limbo.

Monday, August 18, 2008

Oregon Brewers' Festival

Okay, so this post is about 26 days after the fact, but so it goes. The Oregon trip left a huge impression-- as did the size and scope of the Brewers' Festival.Mila took this picture of me picking the brain of master brewer Corey, who is in the employ of the McMenamins operation--- more specifically brewing for Cornelius Pass Roadhouse. He was explaining to me how it is that a bock does not necessarily have to be dark and malty. He and I are sitting in the circle of chairs we adults (all friends of Bil and Carla) set up like a buffalo ring to protect our young, some of whom you can see sitting on the blankets at the bottom of the picture.

I took notes in the 70-page program that I got that day, and these I shall presently share with you below. But first I must add reference to this oddity of fortune. The official program includes of list of reputable beer blogs not only in the Pacific Northwest but in the whole nation. See if you can spot yours truly in the picture on this blog's entry for the Brewers Guild Dinner.

And now for our notes from that lovely day:

Mila--

1. Trumer Pils by Trumer Brauerei
"Good" "has Czech qualities"

2. Bayern Pilsener by Bayern Brewing
"clean, nice bite" (but later) "might taste like Coors Lite"

3. no notes

4. taste of Alaskan Summer Ale by the Alaskan Brewing Company
"fresh and clean like glacier water!"


Po--

1. Stone Levitation Ale by Stone Brewing Co.
"Fine!"
score 800 (out of 1000)

2. Bridgeport Hop Czar by Bridgeport Brewing Co.
"Great! Fresh and hoppy!)
score 800
(Note: the lines for this one grew long! prohibitively so!)

3. Pliny the Elder by Russian River Brewing Co.
"Excellent! Hoppy indeed, but not too bright! Carla dumped her habanero beer
when she had a sip of this!" Actually, she was about to dump it when I wrote that,
but Bil rescued it and actually liked it enough to order it at the Green Dragon a couple of nights later.
score 900

4. taster of Solar Flare Ale by Lucky Labrador Brewing Co.
"Got bcs. line was short. Not bad, but pales in the company of this fest"
score 500

5. taster of MacTarnahan's Slingshot Extra Pale Ale
"Does not seem like an extra pale ale"
score 450

Wednesday, August 13, 2008

Happy 28th, Miss LaToya!!!

LaToya had her 28th birthday last month, and we celebrated here with an old style mahaloo--- BYOB and BYOM (the latter stands for "Bring Your Own Meap"). You should definitely click on this top one to see what Fast Eddy has on his ears!
There was also a kegschen of Bitburger. (One never wants to run out of beverage at a mahaloo.) Red Steve and Miss Willow's beau, newly moved down from New England, hit it off at the bar.
It was really nice seeing Fast Eddy again. He was back on his feet after many long months of dealing with a herniated disc that was crushing a nerve.


The conversation was lively and entertaining. One would not wish for party chat to be otherwise!
Here you can see LaToya enjoying a plate of meap while Lady Willow brandishes her silverware at the photographer, obviously agitated about something. Perhaps it is because all that remains of her plate of meap is a barely perceptable yellowish stain--- enough to upset any woman of good standing and a reasonable degree of self respect.

Everyone had a great time, and it was nice seeing Curt and his wife Joannie. It was their first visit to our home, and Joannie announced that she was expecting their second baby. She had a strong feeling that it will be a boy, and two weeks later this was confirmed by her doctor.

Wednesday, August 6, 2008

Notes from the 2008 Oregon Brewers' Guild Dinner

Menu:
Smoked Salmon or Pork Tenderloin
Roasted potato & veggie medley
Roll and butter
Shakespeare Stout brownie

My beer-tasting notes- as written:

"Saw Full Sail brewer John Harris! He looks like David Marks!" now that David has grown a full beard

Alameda Brewhouse- Lucky Devil Belgian Golden Strong Ale
"slight metal with abrupt finish"

Full Sail Brewing Co.- Lizama Summer Dunkel Weizen
"taste obscured by food" (had a sip while eating dinner)

Double Mountain Brewery- Pils
"A bright, hoppy IPA!"

Deschutes Brewery- The Dissident Belgian Sour Brown Ale
"Yuck! Joke beer!"

Ninkasi Brewing Co.- Tricerahops Double IPA
"fresh, greenish-gold flavor"

Pelican Pub and Brewery-- India Pelican Ale
"hoppier and less complex than Tricerahops"

Ram Restaurant and Brewery- Barefoot Wit
"Ooops! Forgot what 'wit' was! Got used to it, though. Good!"

Ram Restaurant and Brewery- Palm Island Toasted Coconut Porter
"coconut? poor choice"

Rogue Ales--Rogue Imperial YSB
"Had 2!!! Great balance. Met brother of namesake"

Lompoc Brewing Co. - Heaven's Helles Lager
"ended with this--- a perfect ending!"

Tuesday, August 5, 2008

Welcome to Beervana!


The family flew up to Portland on July 23rd to visit some dear friends and take in the local scenery...and ales. What a place! In the next few posts I'll extol some of the many virtues of Oregon, but for now suffice it to say that Mila and I both feel like our return to Texas is like crawling up on some strange and inhospitable shore.

That first evening, Bil and I biked down to Tom McCall Park (passing a monument to the Bill of Rights!) for the Brewers' Guild Dinner. Only 600 tickets were sold, and Bil had managed to get us a pair-- tickets number 4 and 5, actually! The man is no slacker.

Bil shot the picture at the top with his cell phone fairly early in the evening, just after we had finished our dinner which featured smoked Columbia River salmon. Yum!
Each of us got 6 eight-ounce pourings-- mainly from the Pacific Northwest but there were a few from other regions as well. We also did a lot of sampling of each other's choices. Somewhere in our yet-to-be-unpacked luggage (maybe if we don't unpack the trip won't be over?) I have my notes from the evening, which will appear in a forthcoming post.
The weather was chilly even before sunset. In fact, our kiddoes Onni and Davis had put on sweaters back at the airport. With the sun going down and the temperature dipping into the 50s, Bil and I mounted up and returned to the eastside via the Steel Bridge. Gliding along the river in that heavenly cool air and watching the sun set behind the city was an experience I'll not soon forget.

This parade was held the next day, and even though we missed it, the spirit of the 4-day event is quite evident. Plus you can see the nifty festival mugs we each were issued.