Tag Archives: Insight Brewing

Insight Brewing’s Summer Release: Crazy Aunt – A Gin and Tonic-Style Ale

A new beer release from Insight Brewing launches Wednesday (5/3) and it will set the bar high for new and creative offerings from Minnesota brewers this summer. Crazy Aunt, a gin and tonic-style ale, shows off flavors similar to a cocktail, a departure from the typical wheat-centric patio beers of summers past.

Insight’s Ilan Klages-Mundt has only recently realized his fondness for the cocktail that inspired the newest beer in their lineup. “I had my first gin and tonic in June of last year. Now it’s one of my favorite cocktails,” he said while joking about how long it had taken to try one. When asked about the difficulty of creating such a recipe, “I like a good challenge and this was a challenge.” It took seven test batches to get it right.

Crazy Aunt’s gin and tonic-like flavors come from similar ingredients as the cocktail: juniper, lime juice, coriander and tonic water.

Crazy Aunt - Gin and Tonic Beer - Insight Brewing

The 16 oz can pours a pale, straw-like hue with a witbier-like opaqueness underneath a fluffy white head. The aroma is citrus and spice, reminiscent of a lime shandy. Bright lime and mild acidity dominate the first sip and quickly transition into lemon, subtle pineyness and grapefruit pith. The unique quinine bitterness of tonic scrubs your palate clean and leaves little lingering aftertaste. At 6% ABV, alcohol contributes to its full flavor without the slightest hint of warmth.

Uniquely, Insight will also provide four cocktail recipes using Crazy Aunt as an ingredient and will host a competition later this summer for bartenders to submit their own recipes.

In addition to 4-packs, Crazy Aunt will be served on draught in the taproom and will be distributed in half and sixth barrel kegs from May through August.

No word on whose aunt may have been the inspiration for the name.

A six-pack plus one to try for Fourth of July

Sun’s out, guns out. Eh, maybe not.

But, as we look to celebrate our independence on July 4 and the mercury nears its peak, a few staples quickly come to mind, including our favorite topic around here: beer.

As someone who admittedly steers towards IPAs and stouts (I mean, who doesn’t?), it’s sometimes difficult for me to enjoy too many “summer” beers. I’ve gone to work and compiled a list of six seven Minnesota beers I recently enjoyed and encourage you to give them a go for the long weekend. As always, you, too, can share in the fortune of these Minnesota-made beers as they are available at all the finest off-sale joints (as well as taprooms), with the exception of Lake Monster’s Serpent Summer Ale.

And, here’s my usual general disclaimer: I’m not a cicerone. I’m just a guy who likes beer and relies on liquor stores for most of my beer. I’m not often disappointed, as you’ve no doubt seen in previous posts (and will see in this one). Maybe I’m easy to please.

Breweries featured: Take 16 Brewing Co., Blacklist Artisan Ales, Waconia Brewing, Fulton Brewing, Indeed Brewing, Insight Brewing and Lake Monster Brewing.

Take 16 Brewing Co., Luverne

  • Hayloft, hefeweizen (12-ounce bottle)

take16

A small southwestern brewery growing its footprint, Take 16 Brewing Co. launched in 2014. It’s steadily expanded its beer and operations, starting bottling in late 2015. Their beers can now be found in Mankato and beyond (I’ve seen them in Lonsdale and Northfield).

Like some of its better counterparts sprinkled throughout Greater Minnesota, Take 16 is definitely worth tracking down. All of its beers are clean and refreshing, but for a hot, summer day on the water, grab their Hayloft hefeweizen. It’s quickly become a go-to for a style I don’t usually drink.

 

Blacklist Artisan Ales, Duluth

  • Makrut Wit, Belgian-style wheat ale (750-ml bottle)

Here’s another brewery in the midst of growth, including opening a new taproom in downtown Duluth (aiming for opening this summer). Blacklist focuses on small batches and brews in the Belgian tradition. All Blacklist beers come in a 750-ml bomber bottles and are corked. Any decent liquor store should have a row dedicated to these guys (many do), so they’re not hard to find.

They’ve earned the shelf; Makrut Wit, made with Makrut lime leaves, popped with a smooth fruit flavor, aided by coriander and orange peel. It was a real pleaser.

 

Waconia Brewing, Waconia

  • Paradise Island DIPA (750-ml bottle)

Here’s another specialty offer from Waconia Brewing, which focuses mostly on taproom-only releases. This DIPA, like Waconia’s previous release, Waconiator, is a nice beer. I may have held on to this beer a little long before opening it, but the 25.9-oz bottle still opened to and poured with a great aroma, and had a nice balance to the beer upon consumption. I’m not shy to say I had no problem drinking this solo in one (short) sitting. Like its predecessor, this beer, coming in at 9.8 percent ABV and 88 IBU, has limited availability and can most easily be found in the west metro. You may want to work up to this one as your shoulders brown (or, redden, as it were).

 

Fulton Brewing, Minneapolis

  • War & Peace, imperial coffee stout (12-ounce bottle)

Fulton probably doesn’t need much introduction to the initiated, but for those who haven’t had the privilege to check out their lineup, their beers are ones to check out.

For me, as a break from light, crisp (and sometimes hoppy) beers, I just need to dip my toes in a stout. Look no further than the War & Peace imperial coffee stout for a change of pace as the sun dips and the air cools. Or, if you’re on the boat for fishing at dawn, have at it. It does have coffee in its name, right?

 

Indeed Brewing, Minneapolis

  • Shenanigans Summer Ale (12-ounce can)

Another brewery that doesn’t need an introduction. Indeed’s annual summer offering, Shenanigans, is known as a crowd pleaser and it didn’t disappoint me. It’s a light-bodied beer (5 percent ABV) that has the wheat and Indeed-favorite honey flavors coming through, aided by the lemon and orange notes. Strongly endorsed for golfing, fishing and anything else above ground.

 

Insight Brewing, Minneapolis

  • In the Halls of the Sunken City, saison and sauv blanc grapes (16-ounce can)

Insight Brewing is quickly gaining a reputation for sleek branding, as well as sleek beer. All four of its mainstay offerings are good, but they may not be for everyone, mostly because the “average” beer drinker may be unfamiliar with and turned off by such ingredients as sauv blanc grapes or yuzu; to those people, I say just try it, then form an opinion.

The saison, made with sauv blanc grapes, is a palate pleaser. It’ll be a refreshing beverage as your steak slowly works toward perfection.

 

Lake Monster Brewing, St. Paul

  • Serpent Summer Ale (taproom only)

One of the rare Minnesota breweries that had distribution before a taproom, Lake Monster has been on the market for a few years and benefited from honing in their flagship beers before throwing out a bunch of recipes. Both the Calhoun Claw Pilsener and Empty Rowboat IPA, the latter in particular, have been heralded by many and for good reason. They’re just good, easy-drinking beers.

But you should make a visit to the Lake Monster taproom (sweet space) and pick up a growler of the Serpent Summer Ale, a Belgian wheat style ale. It has a very smooth, citrusy taste. It’s good on the front and back.

Cheers!

Beer Careers

Yes, we all know you have always wanted to work in a brewery. Here is your chance. The beer industry is growing in Minnesota and across the nation. That growth brings jobs and opportunity. Good luck in your endeavors, just please don’t waste the time of people making delicious beer by applying if you are not qualified.


Omni Brewing is looking for a Taproom Lead
http://www.omnibrewing.com/#!careers/


Upstart Modist Brewing is looking to fill a variety of positions.
http://modistbrewing.com/jobs/


Jackpine Pine Brewery is hiring a Taproom Manager.
http://www.jackpinebrewery.com/#!careers/c22hx


Forthcoming Cedar Island Brewing is looking for a brewer.
https://www.facebook.com/CedarIslandBrewing/posts/165371307165309


Schell’s is filling the position of MN Distribution Manager.
http://schellsbrewery.com/job-openings/


Summit Brewing in St.Paul needs an Inventory Control Assistant
http://www.summitbrewing.com/employment?job=430


Insight Brewing is looking for a Head Brewer
http://www.insightbrewing.com/about/


LynLake Brewery is hiring a General Manager.
http://www.lynlakebrewery.com/contact


Did we miss any beer jobs? Add them to the comments section below.

Getting to know Insight Brewing with Ilan Klages-Mundt

Insight Brewing Maestro Ilan Klages-Mundt took a few minutes out of his busy schedule to answer our questions about his background, brewing, and the forthcoming Insight Brewing Company.


When did you start brewing?
In 2007, I traveled to Denmark with a list of the top 50 beers in the world. I walked into a bottle shop and asked the owner if they had #7 on the list, which was a Danish beer. The owner replied, “no,” but did mention that they had the #1 on the list, which was the Westvleteren 12, a Belgian Monastic brew. Having tried nothing like this in my life, before, I purchased two bottles and left. Later that day, I opened one of the bottles and had a true epiphany moment. The beer was out-of-this-world good, with complex, yet amazingly balanced characteristics! The sun seemed to start shining and my lip began to quiver. The beer really was that good!

From that moment onward, I knew that my calling was beer. I thought to myself, “Ilan, you MUST learn how beer is made, who makes it, where it came from, and what the history of this magical drink is!” Upon my return to the States, I hunkered down and began reading every brewing book I could get my hands on, while also joining a local brewing club, where I was by far the youngest member. This was the beginning of my brewing adventure, and the more learned, the deeper in love I became with the significance of beer and its cultures from around the world.

What is your “go to” commercially available beer?
It all depends on the situation, but I will readily grab Bell’s Kalamazoo Stout, Rodenbach Grand Cru, and Summit’s Saga IPA. I could list another several hundred more, but so could everyone else. There are a lot of great beers out there!

You pretty much traveled the globe brewing, biking, and documenting it on bikeforbeer.org. How big a role did it play in your decision to open a brewery?
My brewing began in college, where I was studying classical music and preparing to be a teacher. My professors saw the passion that I had for beer, and nearly forced me to apply for the Thomas J. Watson Fellowship, a program that pays for recent graduates to travel around the world for a year studying what they are passionate about; the only rules were that you had to be passionate, as well as out of the country for a full year on your own. Continue reading Getting to know Insight Brewing with Ilan Klages-Mundt