Showing posts with label San Francisco. Show all posts
Showing posts with label San Francisco. Show all posts

Friday, August 21, 2009

106 Bottles (or drafts if you are lucky) of Beer on the Wall

If you are uninterested in beer then it might be best to save yourself 5 minutes and skip this post!
Having lived in Northern California for nearly 5 years, we have caught the beer bug and have been longing for cold drafts of west coast microbrew throughout the trip. Often we reminisce of the happy hours in San Francisco at Rogue Ale House, Vesuvio, Kennedy’s and of course, The Buccaneer.

Being beer enthusiasts we have made a point to sample the domestically produced beer in each country that we have visited in the hopes of learning not only what styles are preferred but also what role this wonderful drink plays abroad. Six months in we have visited 18 countries and sampled 106 domestically produced beers. The styles and tastes preferred have varied as well as the role that beer plays in each culture.

The world of beer styles is essentially split into two groups. ales and lagers. The essential difference is the yeast used in production, top fermenting vs bottom fermenting, and outside of that, both styles can offer a wide array of beers. Colleen and I are ale drinkers. Unless it is an early Saturday morning with Miller Lite during college football season (go Hawks!) or the conclusion of a long bike or run, we usually find ourselves sipping a cold pint or bottle of ale of some sort. Interestingly enough, the rest of the world heavily prefers the lager style of beer.
Availability of different labels has varied greatly from country to country. In Vietnam we have been treated to 18 different labels of beers while in Lesotho we were only able to track down one, the national lager called Mulati.

Over 70% of the beer we have sampled has been lager with the occasional surprise of an ale every now and then. If you like lagers such as Budweiser or Heineken, you would be in good company in most parts of the world. Most all the lagers we have sampled are fairly straight forward, light in color, lower in alcohol, and not much malt flavor or mouth feel outside of the presence of a slight alcohol taste. Most all contain adjuncts of some sort, usually rice or corn (or as they call it everywhere else, maize). Many add a fair amount of sugar prior to fermentation to boost alcohol levels (but impart no taste) and in Eastern Africa they even add unfermentable sugars to the mix resulting in a beer that can only be described as a Budweiser with a tablespoon of sugar added. There have been some great finds though, including the wonderful Laurentina Clara in Mozambique, the all natural Windhoek of Namibia, and the high alcohol Kingfisher Red of India. Rwanda, moving forward since the tragedies of the mid 1990s brought with it a tasteful Primus Lager served in traditional Belgian glassware, a reminder of it's colonial past.

Nearly all of the ales we have found have been in Ireland, the UK and South Africa. We were treated to unpasturized 'live ale' in London, a special treat that is hand drawn at traditional pubs. We also spent a fair amount of time with 750 ml bottles of Castle Milk Stout while camping in South Africa and we have also enjoyed half liters of dark ales recently in Vietnam.

I have found it very interesting the amount of mass produced large label beer available throughout the world. Carlsberg and Heineken are mainstays in most every country we have visited. We have actually had Carlsberg (Danish) that was produced domestically in Malawi as well as Amstel (Dutch) produced in Jordan and Lowenbrau (German) produced in Nepal.

We have been lucky enough to visit a total of 8 microbreweries so far getting a taste for small batch beer in each continent we have visited. Vietnam has been the surprise of the group boasting a microbrewery in a majority of all sizable towns we have visited. A stop for a beer at Legends microbrewery of Hanoi turned into and afternoon of discussion with the German Brewmaster. He introduced himself as I was seated at the bar staring at the brewing equipment and asked if I was Australian. I responded and clarified that I was American and asked him if he was Czec. It was a good way to break the ice and lead to an afternoon of beers he refused to let us pay for. Turns out his name was Werner and he was from Ramstein Germany and had been working in breweries since he was 13 (he was now in his mid 50s) eventually moving to Africa to brew and now to Vietnam. He was the owner and turned out to be very open to discussing his operation: he ships in a container of malt and hops from Germany every 3 months and brews 40 times per month on his 10 barrel system. He regularly sold 1500 liters of beer a day in his 400 person beer hall and distributed what was left over. I told him I thought he needed a larger brewing system to which he replied that the his Vietnamese investors would not approve it. So for now, he brews at least once a day, seven days a week.
Beer prices and packaging have also varied greatly from country to country. The most costly place we have drank was our first stop, Dublin, where we paid up to $6 USD for a pint of Kilkenny on draft. Africa brought with it low prices for beer (always by the bottle, never available by draft) where we bought 750 ml bottles of domestic beer for as little as $0.60 in Uganda. All in all, draft beer has only been found in about 1/4 of the places we have visited and the preference seems to be toward large bottles (deposit required in Africa) over cans.
The closest thing I have found to homebrew abroad has been the street beer of Vietnam, known as 'bia hoi'. Always served by draft out of a shabby looking keg placed curbside, bia hoi has been easy on the pocketbook as you can sit on the sidewalk in a plastic chair drinking low alcohol draft beer for around $0.25 a glass. There was also the homemade Tibetan beer offered in Nepal which consisted of a scoops of fermented millet grain placed in a large metal stein and topped off with steaming hot water. The bitter fruit wine like drink was then sipped through a metal straw and each stein refilled multiple times with hot water until all of the alcohol and flavor had been extracted from the fermented millet.
The role beer plays in each country has varied greatly. In the largely Muslim state of Jordan it is almost non existent outsite of the tourist areas. We did not see beer for sale or have a drink for nearly 2 weeks prior to trudging through a downpour to the other side of town for a cool draft of Amstel. In Africa, beer drinking was usually reserved for the men who began drinking in the early afternoon on roughly welded bar stools placed outside wood shacks roadside. In SE Asia, drinking is done at all times of day, and it is not uncommon to see businessmen having a drink by early afternoon. Unfortunately in many countries the drinking has become a curse of the poor and I wonder how a man with thread bare clothes and no shoes can be drinking beer after beer. Then I have to remind myself that the same thing occurs back home and unfortunately there is no help for these people. Beer, as always, accompanies celebration as well in most countries. Whether it was the completion of a long work week in Ireland, a Saturday night in Capetown, a wedding in India or locals on vacation in Vietnam, there was usually a person to be found enjoying a cold one.
Tonight we have our first sips of Beer Laos, the much famed national brew of the new country we have entered.

Tuesday, February 10, 2009

The Plan

So what all goes into planning a RTW (round-the-world) trip? More than one might think...

The trip has been in the works for quite some time. Actually we have been discussing it in some capacity since we returned from our last backpacking trip in 2004. We had both recently graduated college, we were young, not sure what the world held for us, and not really sure what direction we were heading. Upon returning home we decided to try out the west coast. We loaded up the Uhaul and headed jobless to SF in October 2004. Two months later we had jobs and 3 years to the day of our move we were married in SF. Throughout this process the trip was always on our mind, usually brought up during our jaunts to our favorite pubs for happy hour or the occasional glass of wine on the couch. We knew the trip would be a realty but we were not sure exactly when or how.

We made a wise decision in our planning process about a year after we moved to SF. We opened a joint bank account which we referred to as the 'trip account' and began the process of depositing money into the account at the end of each month. We did it religiously and never missed a payment up until the time we left SF. For a brief amount of time the 'trip account' turned into a 'wedding account' but besides that this money was untouchable to us.

About 6 months ago, we knew we were starting to get in the 'ballpark' of what it would take to finance a year long RTW trip. So how much is that? Well for us we kept it simple. $100 a day. Yep that’s it. Why $100? Not quite sure but it is a nice round number and it makes the math easy so we went with it. Colleen also follows other couples online who are doing similar trips and it seems like most spend around this amount. We are a little toward the low end of most RTW budgets but it is definitely doable. With the funds in place the question was just when to leave. That opportunity presented itself in late 2008 and we marked our calendars to leave SF at the end of January 2009.

After much research and debate we decided to go with a ticket package offered through the One World alliance called the One World Explorer ticket. We have 19 segments (16 flights and 3 overland) that will act as the backbone of our travels for the next year. We purchased our ticket in the UK and therefore our first official flight is out of London. Prior to that we are heading to Ireland to see some sights and catch up with a couple old friends. Here is the rough plan (destinations can be changed for a small fee and dates can be changed at no cost...both highly likely, don't hold us to this!). I included some dates for some of the major flights between continents:

Ireland - February 10
UK – February 16
Jordan – February 18
Spain - February 26
South Africa - March 2
Namibia
Botswana
Mozambique
Malawi
Tanzania
Kenya
India - June 5
Nepal
Tibet
Thailand – July 25
Cambodia
Vietnam
Laos
Singapore – September 11
Malaysia
China – September 25
Mongolia
Japan – October 29
Brazil – November 1
Paraguay
Bolivia
Peru
Ecuador
Chile - January 9
Argentina – January 30

Most likely we will need to purchase a couple flights along with our normal regional transportation (buses yes!) that will need to come out of our daily budget.

The most common question people ask us what we are taking with us. We will carry all of our belongings in our packs on our back, 1 bag each. See pictures to the right showing all items unpacked and then packed into stuff sacks and pack-it cubes ready to be loaded into our packs. Basically it is a week's worth of shirts/pants (each of which will most likely be worn multiple times between washings). We don’t have much but chances are we might have over packed and will be sending some packages home. Interesting fact, neither of us will be wearing jeans for a full year.

We will plan to update the blog as often as possible as blog worthy experiences are encountered (hopefully we are good at determining this and you will experience and enjoy this trip with us). We will try to keep it light on history and facts and focus on our daily experiences with the people and countries we visit. We look at the adventure ahead of us as traveling and not vacationing. We don’t have a concrete itinerary or timeline we need to follow. If we are happy we might stay somewhere longer than planned, if we are not then we will move on. Chances are we will hear of new places along the way and destinations will be added and others removed. The unexpected excites us. Waking up each day without knowing exactly what you will encounter is a fascinating feeling. Our main mode of communication will be this blog so comment away if you feel so inclined and we will do our best to keep it updated.
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