Tag Archives: beer

Mexico 2020 – The Beer Post

(if you’re reading this in real-time, I posted the day’s writing before this one, with a couple photos)

The last couple trips we mostly ate in, cooked for ourselves or were cooked for. This trip we ate out every day, most often twice a day, so I got a lot more opportunities to try different beers, and every restaurant had a good selection of different brands.

The unfortunate part, is that the craft beer scene in and around Playa Del Carmen doesn’t appear to be thriving. There were a handful of local beers, but for the most part it’s a steady stream of labels you would recognize from your local liquor store.

The further unfortunate part, is that it appears that although there are lots and lots of different beers and beer companies, there are actually only 2 companies that own them all. It feels somewhat stagnant, but the fact that I had a couple craft brews in tourist areas brings hope.

The good part is that there are lots of different beers, even if they are all from large-scale breweries and even if they are similar in style, they compare well to each other. It may feel like a Sol and a Corona and a Dos Equis are identical, but there are subtle differences that are easier to find when you drink new ones each day.

To the beers!

TL;DR

You should really read it, I think it’s fascinating.

But if you’re looking for a quick ordered list of what beer to order in Mexico, here’s my opinion:

  1. Cucupa Amber Ale – I love craft beer, this ones an easy top of the list. I wish I’d been able to try more of theirs!
  2. Dos Equis Ambar – It’s been two weeks since I drank this, but I thought it was pretty damn good. Sweet and delicious.
  3. Bohemia Vienna – A darker sweeter beer
  4. Bohemia Pilsner – A pilsner that doesn’t taste like Heineken. I’m sick of Heineken and I think it’s been 15 years since I had one.
  5. Tecate – Sweet and tasty.
  6. Indio – Basically the same beer as Tecate, but less available.
  7. Tecate Light – A totally different beer from the Tecate, it’s light and crisp. If you’re looking for low-alcohol, go with this one.
  8. Dos Equis Lager – After this trip, Dos Equis moved up my list quite a bit.
  9. Modelo Especial – Crisp and easy to like.
  10. **** I did not really like anything below this line ****
  11. Sol – Kind of like a Corona, but less skunky.
  12. Barrilito – A super light beer that had no flavour. I enjoyed it’s experience, drinking on a shuttle bus, rather than it.
  13. Negro Modelo – A dark beer that just didn’t grip me. Tasted like someone had added “dark flavour” to a beer.
  14. Pescadore Blonde Ale – Loving craft beer, I wish I’d tried other Pescadore brews to give them a chance, but I couldn’t find any other than this and the IPA.
  15. Montejo – I didn’t write any notes, or find any reason to drink it again to take any notes. Thoroughly uninspiring.
  16. Victoria – Kind of like a Heineken. Do not like.
  17. Corona – Corona is the absolute worst beer I drank this trip.

Your most common options are going to be Sol, Corona, Dos Equis. If this is true, have the Dos Equis. After that, both Bohemia’s and Tecate Light are somewhat common, I’d probably pick one of the Bohemia’s in that list, both are good and are actual options between dark and light beer that you might not have in other places.

Barrilito

Untappd. 3.4% lager. I drank this in the shuttle bus from the airport to our condo, as offered by our shuttle bus driver. It had been a long day, and I was grateful for a drink and this was that.

However, aside from the time and place, this beer doesn’t have much to recommend it. If you truly stop and savour the flavour, you find… it has none. It was utterly without any taste, and was merely a vehicle for cold non-water liquid entering you. Might not drink again, unless for a purpose. Someone on Untappd said it made a good morning beer, for example.

On the drive from the airport to Playa Del Carmen.
On the counter, a photo in the light.

Tecate

Untappd. I had this one twice, because at the start of the Mexico beer adventure, I forgot to write about it. It’s 4.5% and in the restaurant it came with a lime, which I drank it with.

I picked up a can from 7-11, wanting to give it another try after forgetting my notes. Not really the same beer as Corona/Sol, it’s maltier and sweeter. I wasn’t really feeling like drinking when I had the can, so I don’t think I gave it a really fair shake to start. I let the can sit (which some people think is a travesty, I’m ok with it) and came back to it a little later and it grew on me more.

It’s virtually the same beer as Indio, but easier to find. However, most places that serve Tecate, serve the Tecate Light which is a totally different beer!

At Mexico Loco, a restaurant really near Fundadores Park.
Can from 7-11 2 blocks away. I was buying Pepsi and chips and milk and got a beer off my list.

Tecate Light

Untappd. 3.9%, and Untappd says 7 IBUs which I totally believe. Crisp and cold, not a lot of flavour, but nothing bad either. No weird aftertaste, or weird taste like a Corona or Sol. Would drink again, but likely not compared to other options. This one is comparable to the Barrilito, but the Tecate Light is available at restaurants and feels slightly tastier. I avoided it for a while because I’d had the Tecate, but they are totally different beers that they are worth discussing separately. The Tecate is sweeter and maltier, where the Light is crisp and doesn’t have a lot of flavour to it.

At 100% Natural, a great restaurant nearish our place that we went to several times.

Tecate Light Michelada

I was at a restaurant where I’d tried every beer they were serving, and didn’t want to repeat so I did a michelada of Tecate Light.

A michelada is where they take worcestershire sauce, some spices and maybe some tomato juice, toss some salt on the glass rim, and call it a beer cocktail. It’s not my favourite preparation, but it is an interesting drink and worth drinking.

In this case, it added a lot more umph to a very light tasting beer. Basically you’re enjoying the spices, and the beer is a liquid vehicle for them.

At Aay Chabela, a good restaurant about 2 blocks away (it’s pretty much across the street from the 7-11). I just noticed that in a lot of my beer photos, Miranda has a Coke.

Cucupa

Untappd. Brewery on Untappd. Brewery. The first craft beer I had in Mexico was found at Zitla, an exceedingly highly rated restaurant about 6 blocks from our condo.

It’s a 4.5%, 17 IBU, very round, and sweet amber ale. Untappd says it’s a red ale, and I don’t usually like reds because they tend towards highly hopped beers that are “red” because they remind people of “copper”, which isn’t my thing.

This is a great beer, and I would definitely drink again. Unfortunately, I was unable to find other Cucapa’s nearby, because it looks like they have a great selection!

At Zitla, the #1 rated Mexican place in PDC.

Dos Equis Ambar

Untappd. 4.7%, a crisp lager, but more flavorful, as you would hope an amber would be. Sweet, but not as sweet as the Cucapa. This is a really good blend, and I would drink it again. After drinking this, I decided to prioritize having a Dos Equis. I’m not even sure if we have the Ambar in Vancouver, but if we do, I should drink it there! This is a great beer!

I think this was at Blue Lobster, a seafood restaurant that was a little too expensive for me to be happy going back multiple times. And then we went back a second time and had a pretty terrible experience.

Montejo

Untappd. 4.5%. I didn’t write any notes on this one! I didn’t end up seeking it out to try again, and while I’m sad my list isn’t complete, I’m pretty sure this was a wildly uninspiring beer.

At El Oasis, a seafood restaurant we weren’t impressed with.

Dos Equis Lager

Untappd. 4.2% lager. Crisp, refreshing, not to much and not to little.

I did the Whistler Tough Mudder many years ago, and at the end of transporting myself 18km and doing a bunch of obstacles and getting electrocuted, they give you a beer. I’d never had a Dos Equis before that, and it was the most delicious beer I’d ever had. I assumed it was because after that level of exercise, anything would have been refreshing, but it turns out that I think I really like Dos Equis. Enough alcohol and overall flavour to have a flavour (unlike the Barrilito), but it try to be more than it is.

After this trip, I’ve decided that I think Dos Equis (and the Ambar, which I’ve never seen before Mexico) is a really good beer.

At La Familigia, an Italian/pizza place we went to a couple times. A fair distance from our place, unfortunately.
On the Cozumel ferry back to Playa Del Carmen.

Pescadore Blonde Ale

Untapped. Untappd Brewery. Brewery. 4.5%, a blonde ale that I drank after I finished a Dos Equis at La Famiglia. Slightly hoppier than I prefer, but good enough bite with the fatty pizza.

This is a local microbrewery at Puerto Morales about 35 minutes drive from Playa Del Carmen. One of a small number of craft brews I had in PDC, so while I didn’t love this beer, I like that they exist! The brewery has a Habanero Ale that sounds fascinating!

At La Famiglia. I had 2 beers that night, because the Dos Equis was so light and cheap and we were still eating when I finished it. That never happens!

Corona

Untappd. You know Corona, you’ve had a lot of them. But you’ve likely never taken the time to compare it to other brands of a similar nature. Corona, in my mind, is the reference lager against which all other “Mexican” or “cervesa” lagers are compared to.

I’ve decided that I don’t like it. >.>

It has a “skunky” taste that at first I attributed to bad batch, because my first Mexican drinking of it was at a buffet where I got served it in a short glass.

I later got a bottle of it at a restaurant, and noted the same skunk flavours.

Reading about it now, some of these flavours are said to exist because (for whatever silly reason) Corona is sold in clear glassware, which is very very bad for beer. Beer is sold in brown or green bottles because that kind of glass absorbs light frequencies that catalyze these kind of off-flavours.

I’m going to avoid Corona in future, in favour of…well…almost anything else. Not that I wasn’t avoiding it anyway. But now I have a scienticious reason for it.

Glass at the Mexican buffet at Xcaret. My first mole chicken, which was damn good despite being from a buffet.

Victoria

Untapped. 4% and comparable to the Corona, but more like a Heineken, with a slightly more “green” taste. Didn’t really like it, and if you’re going for a low-alcohol beer you have much better choices in the area (Tecate Light, for example).

Sol

Untappd. Where I live, Sol is a brand you might pick up if you want a Corona but don’t want a Corona. 4.2% and closer in flavour to Corona, but less skunky. I didn’t like it enough to have it again, once I was on duplicates.

Modelo Especial

Untappd. 4.5%. crisp, light, very tasty and easy to like. I’m sad I didn’t take any photos of this one, because I like the somewhat minimalist and cute bottles.

Negra Modelo

Untappd. This was not a good beer. My first thought is that it was a lager with “dark flavour” added. Holding it in my mouth left no flavour, until I swallowed and then it was there.

It reminded me of an experience with drinking beer in Costa Rica many years ago, when I had the “Imperial Dark” which tasted like the “Imperial Regular”, but had a darker colour.

Unfortunately, this beer was worse than that experience, because at least the Imperial was a decent lager.

Bohemia Vienna

Untapped. 4.9%, 14.4 IBUs. Dark lager. Tasty, dark and crisp. Bohemia does good beers, and you can’t go wrong with either of this one or their Pilsner “Clara”.

At Playa Mia, in their giant buffet tent.

Bohemia Pilsner

Untappd. A 4.7%, 21 IBU pilsner. After drinking Mexican lagers all week, I wasn’t prepared for a pilsner. Tasted sweeter than I think l pilsner usually is. Less of the bitter or sharp flavour I associate with them. My reference pilsner is Heineken, which I’m sick of, and this was reminiscent, but quite different. Quite nice, would drink again.

At La Famiglia again.
At Fairfield Inn & Suites near Cancun airport.

Indio

Untapped. 4.1%, Sweet and comparable to the Tecate. Virtually the same beer to my taste.

At the poorly fated Blue Lobster meal.

And that’s it!

Wow, that is a lot of beer. I think I drank 1-3 a day for 2 weeks. Time to go home and not drink daily for some period of time. 😛

Fredericton – Just the beer

We recently went on a 2 week vacation to Fredericton and the Maritimes. Why would you do this, you ask? Well, because we have great friends who live in Fredericton whom we’d been promising to visit for some time, and now was finally the time. We had an absolute blast, but unfortunately for you I’m not here to write about any of that. I’m here to write about the beer.

As is my new vacation hobby, I was trying to fit in as many local craft brews as I could. Fredericton alone has a good number of breweries, and when you add in the rest of the Maritimes, you can tell that beer is a passion of the area.

About Me

Re-reading my Hawai’i blog about beer, I think maybe one of the problems is me. I just don’t like a lot of beers, and in order for me to claim that I like it, it usually has to be either quite sweet or quite interesting. I love interesting. But at present, I don’t have enough knowledge or experience to discern whether this particular Red Ale is better than the next – I just know that I’m not a fan of Red Ale’s in general.

Worse, I think I pick and sometimes like beers based on their graphic design. Call it a personal failing, or call it a peculiarity, but I appreciate a good label and a good logo.

New Brunswick

Big Axe

Big Axe is a brewery in Nackawic, New Brunswick, which is apparently the home of the worlds largest axe. I guess when you’re a small town, you need something. Despite it’s silly origins, the name works and their logo and graphic design are eye catching, which is why I ended up buying 3 of their beers from the liquor store.

Lizzie Border Red American Amber Ale

This one was a little more of a red ale, and in hindsight it even said that on the label. I don’t like red ales because the coppery flavour tends to be just a little bit bitter for what I’m looking for. Unfortunately, I tend to believe that I like amber ales, so I bought 2 of them and regretted it.

Seaberry Sour

I’ve grown to really like sour beers, I think because the brewers have tended to take more risks with them and you can end up with some great fruit flavours without having a “fruit” beer. This was really quite sour, and had a strong punch to it. I really liked it!

Blonde Hatchet Ale

This one a little hoppy for what I prefer. However, it was not as hoppy as some of the local breweries that love their hops, so it was still within the realm of “yeah, I’ll finish that”.

Pumphouse – Blueberry Ale

Pumphouse is a brewery in Moncton, roughly 2 hours drive from Fredericton. I only tried one of their beers, even though my friend bought a sampler pack. I was trying to find one last new beer on the last night, and grabbed this one. I love blueberries and I think they make great beer. I feel like you can go really deep into the blueberry hole with beer and still come out with something that tastes like beer, but also strongly of blueberries. (unlike something like a strawberry where you tend to end up with a strawberry drink).

Graystone – Into the Woods Brown Ale

Graystone is a Fredericton local brewery, and the only beer I tried that was from where we were primarily staying! Brown ale sounds more like my style. Untappd says it has “chocolate and caramel flavo[u]rs” and I’m sure they think it does, but I only tasted a regular English brown ale. Nothing overly special, except that I have a deep love of the full-can landscape art.

 

Nova Scotia

Garrison – Nut Brown

Garrison is a Halifax brewery, and I had this beer in a little roadside eatery in a little town we were passing through when we needed to eat. This Nut Brown had a nice but not overpowering malted taste, very easy to drink with just enough flavour to be good. It had some bitterness that I didn’t love, but it wasn’t to much.

Propeller – ESB

Propeller beer seemed to be everywhere we went, so much so that I think I had an assumption somewhere in my mind that it might be like our local Granville Island Brewing — local, but huge, so maybe not like “craft” craft beer. I eventually tried their ESB, and it was quite good. It tasted like it had more head than I was used to, or like a foaminess to it that was a little odd. Even though I claim to not love bitterness above, I keep trying ESBs (which literally claim to be “bitter”) because I had a New Westminster local Steel & Oak ESB that was just phenomenal a few years back and I keep trying the style to get that taste back. This wasn’t it.

Shipwright – Fruitea Weissbier

Lastly, the Shipwright. We stayed in Lunenberg for a night which is a quaint little town that knows it’s quaint. It is seaside and has a lighthouse nearby and a famous sailing ship and all the buildings are a variety of different colours, and it was lovely. They had one brewery which I had to stop in and visit.

They seemed to prefer hoppier beers, as of the 2 others on tap there was an IPA and another hoppy beer I don’t recall much about. The third option was a wheat beer which is a style I don’t generally mind.

This is officially my second favourite beer in the world. 

It was different and cool and I felt like you could taste tannins from one of the teas in it and it was fruity, but not overly fruity and light and wheat-beery and man I bought 4 “crowlers” (32oz cans) on the spot after trying it. I shared one with the friend we were staying with, left one with him and bought 2 home.

(my first favourite beer is the Red Rice Ale I had in Hawai’i…)

 

Anyway, that’s my survey of beer in New Brunswick and Nova Scotia. We went through Prince Edward Island, but didn’t stop long enough to enjoy any beer they might have had.

 

#5 – The Beer of O’ahu

I’ve been promising this one for a few weeks, and I hope it doesn’t disappoint. I did my damnest to drink a different beer whenever I could, and ended up with 15 different brews. I prefer darker, maltier, sweeter beers, and I dislike strong hops, to give you a sense of where my preferences lie. However, I’ve drank enough high-hop beers to, I feel, give an opinion on the ones I did drink.

Overall, I think the craft beer of Hawai’i is not as varied, or as creative, as the craft beer of Vancouver and the American regions south of it. In some places there seemed to be promise, but it then fell flat.

Kona Brewing

This is the oldest brewery of Hawai’i, and the only one that I knew going in, because I’ve drank their beer on-island before. Their Longboard Lager is, I think, the most well known of their brews. We bought a mixer pack for the house, and I also went to their brew pub in Honolulu, so I got a good sampling of their stuff. They also ship to the mainland, so you may find them at your local store!

https://konabrewingco.com/

Longboard Lager – 20 IBU, 4.6%

As I said a moment this, this is their most well known beer. This lager is simple, but effective. It’s a far cry from the Buds and Kokanees of the world, offering a good body, but it’s not so outlandish as to scare away people who might be wary of strong-flavour. I like this beer, but I wouldn’t drink a lot of it because lagers aren’t my thing. Available in bottles, and in the mixer pack.

Big Wave Golden Ale – 21 IBU, 4.4%

Of the readily available Kona beers, this one was my favourite. It has a good golden body that brought me back time and time again. However, compared to where my true loves lie, it’s still fairly light. It has a good crispness to it, but with enough fullness to be called a “golden ale”. At the same time, I wanted a little more of a honey ale from it. Available in bottles, and in the mixer pack.

Fire Rock Pale Ale – 35 IBU, 5.8%

It starts with a nice copper taste, but then finishes with just hops, which turned me off. Put this in the pile of “I’d drink it, but only if it was the last in the mixer box”. Available in bottles, and in the mixer pack.

Castaway India Pale Ale – 50 IBU, 6.0%

I do not, at all, like IPAs. This one claims a bunch of stuff about citrusy hops and a touch of mango and passionfruit balanced by rich caramel malts, but all I tasted was hopppppppps. At the same time, I opened one after a super hot day and it was refreshing. But it was the last one in the mixer pack. Available in bottles, and in the mixer pack.

Koko Brown – 45 IBU, 5.5%

Now we’re talking. This beer was amazing! Nutty, with a very unique toasted coconut finish. And unlike a coconut beer I’ll review in a bit, this one actually tasted like toasted coconut! I had this one at the brew pub, and the menu said it was only available in Hawai’i, but their web site says it’s available elsewhere!

Maui Brewing

http://mauibrewingco.com/

This brewery looks like the next biggest, as I saw their product in a number of O’ahu restaurants, but it’s still a lot newer than Kona. We went to their brew pub in Honolulu and I got a flight, which added 4 beers to my list.

Coconut Hiwa Porter – 30 IBU, 6.0%

This was a good dark beer, but not at all coconuty by my taste. I found it a disappointment, but only because it tasted like a lot of other dark/malty porters in the world. I wanted coconut, because it says coconut! You can buy this one in a can.

Pineapple Mana Wheat – 18 IBU, 5.5%

This was a decent wheat beer, with a pineapple taste that was a lot more pineappley than the coconut was coconuty. I had it twice, by mistake, because I forgot to write it down the first time! Both times I had the same reaction — it needed a pineapple wedge. I don’t love wheat beers, but I’d drink this one again (and did). Available in cans.

Waimea Red – 50 IBU, 6.5%

I always want to love red ales, like the Parallel 49 Gypsy Tears, and I keep ordering them and keep being disappointed. I feel like the colour should impart a different flavour than a full-bodied hoppy ale, when I don’t like hops, but it does. This was a basic ale that wasn’t bad, but wasn’t exciting. I had it at the brew pub, but you can get it in cans apparently.

Lilikoi Saison – 15 IBU, 5.5%

This was the best of my flight at the brew pub. It was nice and fruity, not to fruity. Bitter, but not to bitter. It was labelled as a sour beer. I liked it.

Barefoot Brew Ale – 23 IBU, 5.5%

I had this in the brew pub. It was labelled as a honey amber ale, which is my brand, but this was a little to light for my tastes. I want more roundness, more honey, and this was innocuous in flavour, in my opinion.

Mac Nut Brown – 20 IBU, 5.1%

I love this style of beer, but this one was disappointing. As with the coconut porter, I wanted more mac nut from it. Without the mac nut advertising, this would have been a decent brown ale. With the mac nut advertising, it didn’t give me enough mac nut. I had this one in the brew pub.

Root Beer

These guys brew root beer, which is awesome. You can really tell it was handcrafted, as it has a taste of not-mass-produced. You can buy in in cans on the island. It has a strong taste of vanilla, and had a decent bite to it, while being sweet enough but not to sweet. Would highly recommend!

Other Breweries

I had 3 other beers, 2 of them local and 1 an import, but not enough from each brewery to justify their own heading. 🙂

Honolulu Beerworks Kewalos Cream Ale – 20 IBU, 5.25%

http://www.honolulubeerworks.com

These cans are available around the island. The only other cream ale I’ve had is the Sleeman one. I didn’t write any detailed notes on this one, but it was pretty good, was exactly what I wanted from it, and would have it again.

Big Island Brewhaus Golden Sabbath – 30 IBU, 8.5%

http://bigislandbrewhaus.com/

Take note of the 8.5%, because I didn’t when I bought it. There’s a craft beer store in Hale’iwa that I bought this in. This was an excellent beer. A Belgian-style strong golden ale, it had exactly the sweet and full flavour I wanted from it. I had the entire 22oz bottle in one sitting, by myself, and was fairly drunk at the end. Thankfully, I was sitting on the couch with Miranda and didn’t need any of my faculties. Highly recommended!

Hitachino Nest Red Rice Ale – 26 IBU, 7.0%

http://www.kodawari.cc/?en_home.html

This is my new favourite beer. All the Japanese beers locally are pretty much the same – light and crisp. They’re nice, and I drink them occasionally, but I like different.

The Red Rice Ale is different. First, it’s a malty beer with a full, round flavour. It’s very very sweet. And as it ends, it has a slight taste of sake. It reminds me a lot of Innis and Gunn. I&G was my favourite beer for a long time, I loved the rum finish to it, because it’s aged in oak rum barrels. This one is aged in sake barrels, and you can tell. I don’t super love sake, but I love the combination of sweet into sake.

 

The End

Those are my Hawai’i beers. I’m sad I ordered the Maui Pineapple twice, because the Honolulu Beerworks Makakilo Brown Ale was in tap at the Beachhouse and I missed it!

 

Random phone photos

I have a few things on my phone for you. 🙂

5th Ave at night.

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Our cafe Tulum, protecting us from the rain.

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Cycling Tulum.

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My special promotional Corona.

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M’lady insisted we eat at McDonald’s one night.

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Looking for gifts for our cat sitters. 😀 (these are every where)

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Water spout off shore on our drive around Cozumel.

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Adrian and Rooster Scooters.

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We forgot to get photos of us driving, so here’s Miranda afterward. 🙂

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Best place to eat. Make sure your Spanish isn’t bad. Home of the bitchy waitress who refused to slow down her speech for a couple tourists who were trying their best. But at 120 pesos for two tasty meals and 2 drinks (around $10), we’ll accept some amount of abuse.

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