Showing posts with label Ted Miller. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ted Miller. Show all posts

06 October 2008

R bistro's Brugge Beer Dinner

It's been a while since we mentioned one of these, but we've got an upcoming beer dinner to tell you guys about. This one's a doozy: Regina Mehallick, chef of R bistro, is teaming up with Ted Miller to bring you a five course dinner paired with five Belgian beers from Brugge Beer. You'll see below that they're using the three standard Brugge beers with a pair of beers to be determined later.

R bistro's Brugge Beer Dinner
Tuesday, October 14th, 2008, 6:30 PM

~Amuse Bouche~
Potato Rosti with Crème Fraiche & Smoked Eel

with Brugge White


~First Course~
Mussel & Clam Soup with Oysters & Rouille

with Brugge Black

~Second Course~
Mixed Grill of Rabbit with Grilled Belgian Endive,
Roasted Figs & Hazelnuts

with a Brugge Beer (YTBD)

~Cheese Course~
Kirkham’s Lancashire Cow’s Milk Cheese
& Vermont Shepherd Goat Cheese

with Brugge Tripel de Ripple

~Dessert~
Dark Beer Ice Cream with an Apple Scone

with a Brugge Beer (YTBD)
Reservations are $65 (tax and gratuity included) and can be made by calling (317)423-0312. The announcement was made on Friday and mentions that they expect to fill up quickly, so call ASAP if you want to get in on this dinner. R bistro is located at 888 Massachusetts Ave.

07 July 2008

Indiana Brewers Dinner to Benefit Red Cross for Indiana Flood Relief

As part of Indiana Beer Week, the Brewers of Indiana Guild are throwing a VIP Brewmaster's Dinner with chef Greg Hardesty on Friday, July 18th from 6 to 9pm. Having been to a few beer dinners before, and having heard the fantastic reputation of Chef Hardesty, I can't recommend attending enough. Tickets are $75, and available at Broad Ripple Brewpub and Brugge Brasserie.

Here are a few more details on the dinner from Ted at Brugge:
Dig this menu from Greg. Let's get the word out fast. This gig is 2 weeks away and we have a few tickets to sell. Like 200 @ $75 a pop. Remember, the profits will be donated to the Red Cross for Indiana Flood Relief and that donation should be in the neighborhood of $9,000 which is a decent neighborhood. Thanks to Kevin Matalucci for that fantastic idea. I'll do whatever I can, but I need your help people. Still working on pairings, but rest assured they will be very fun and appropriate.

Menu:

Salad of Indiana tomatoes and sweet corn with basil vinaigrette
Wasabi scented fingerling potatoes with wilted Asian "slaw" greens
Seven bean summer ragout with applewood smoked bacon
Grilled Fischer Farms beef sirloin with mocha ancho chili glaze
Grilled Fischer Farms pork loin with spicy salsa verde
Bittersweet chocolate fudge cake
Barley wine panna cotta with marron glacé

Ted Miller
Brugge Brasserie


The original version of this post was filled with errors. I think it's correct now.

05 December 2007

Our New Year's Party keeps getting better

Not long after I sent out the New Year's invite, I received an email from Ted Miller of Brugge Beer/Brasserie, in which he suggested that maybe we'd like to try on a "delectable little pilot brew from the TH plant. It's a Strong Belgian Blonde thing. I know you've got another Strong Belgian Blonde thing on that night, but I thought that might be kinda fun."

I'd agree.

So near midnight we'll introduce a Hoosier Beer Geek first - A Hoosier Beer Geek 2007 Commemorative Ale - Sint Sylvester Vooranvond from Brugge Beer.

What's the "Sint" about? Let's consult the sacred-texts.com
In Belgium, New Year’s Eve is called Sint Sylvester Vooranvond, Saint Sylvester Eve. The réveillon, or New Year’s Eve family party is thrown. At midnight everyone kisses, exchanges good luck greetings, and drinks toasts to absent relatives and friends. The cities, cafés, and restaurants are crowded with people who bid farewell to the Old Year.

"Sylvester" is the nickname popularly applied to the lazy boy or girl who rises last on the final day of the year. Since "Sylvesters" traditionally have to pay a forfeit to their brothers and sisters, each child tries to be first to bound out of bed on the morning of December 31.

Girls, especially, try to be industrious on this day because of the old saying that one who does not finish her handwork by sunset will remain an old maid throughout the year.

20 September 2007

The Hoosier Beer Geek 6 Pack - Ted Miller, Brewer/Owner of Brugge Brasserie and Brugge Beer

The Hoosier Beer Geek 6 Pack is a feature where we run six questions by the folks behind the scenes at breweries to get a little more insight into what they do and like and how they got their start. The Knights of the Beer Roundtable would like to thank our fourth guest, Ted Miller from Brugge Beer.

1) Who are you and where do you work?

Ted Miller - Brugge

2) What inspired you to start brewing beer? How did you get your start?

My grandfather was a man who loved food and drink. On Saturdays as a child we would walk from his place at Riley Towers in downtown Indy to the city market. He would expose my brothers and I to different varieties of olives, peppers, etc. I think it was his love of food that eventually turned me into the outrageous snob I am today. All kidding aside, his appreciation for quality and pushing us to be adventurous and his propensity to have fun probably had much to do with my eventual career as that philosophy parallels my beer philosophy.

I got my start by pestering the living bejeezers out of the great folks over at the Broad Ripple Brewpub for about 4 weeks straight in September of '90 until they finally made a deal. The GM said, "Don't come back until the end of October and you can have a job. Just please, please go away." It's all history from there. Thanks, John.

3) What's your brewing mission? What are you trying to accomplish with your beer?

It's all about being Knighted. After I saw this (First American brewer knighted by the Knighthood of Brewers' Mashstaff in Belgium - Realbeer.com article) I had to change my long term goals. Previously, my goals had been of the rather ho-hum sort. Brew beer that excites people, strive to innovate, take risks, that kind of stuff.

4) Was there a beer that you benchmarked your own against? How did you know your beer was good enough to take to the general public?

Not really. Well, not a particular beer that is. My aim is to brew beers as worldclass as the hundreds of worldclass beers I respect and enjoy. I suppose all of them looked at from that perspective are a benchmark.

This Brugge thing is the first project that I actually own. So all of those other suckers I worked for the past 16 years had to deal with my complete lack of talent. Luckily, like a monkey, I can learn after a couple thousand brews.

5) What beer are you proudest of? Which of your beers is your personal favorite? Why?

That's a tough one. Here at Brugge, I'd say the Diamond Kings is probably our defining achievement. Those wild beers can go afoul quick. We've been pretty fortunate that both releases have been right about where we intended them to be.

We haven't been brewing our Pilsner recently for some small brewery reasons, but I think that was probably my go to beer. The reason is quite simple really. I like beer. A lot. Because of that, I tend to drink a few at a time. I can drink a few pilsners and still be a reasonably responsible adult.

6) Which beers outside of your own do you enjoy? What beer do you wish you came up with? Why?

I adore Gueuze in all of its funky forms. Kevin Matalucci from the Broad Ripple Brewpub and I often pack our families into the cars and head up to Symphony on the Prairie and drink gueuze paired with stinky cheeses. He's pretty much a snob too. I think Three Floyds brew some of the best beer in the country and the gang from up there are a hoot! The craft beer market is a little behind in Indiana when compared to other states, but I've got to say we are pretty lucky because we've got some spectacular beers being made here. Just not enough of it......yet. Keep posted to www.Brugge-Beer.com for details.

I wish I came up with the beer credited to Ninkasi, I guess. "On feast days, the populace would convene at the temples of Ninkasi to join in eating bread and drinking beer. They knew that the gods would be convened above do the same in their realm. Such communal carousing often culminated in ecstasy, when all inhibitions faded and the revelers reached a state of being that was held to be beneficial for both spiritual well being of both the immortal gods and their mortal followers. The faithful would throw themselves with abandon into their intoxicated joy, while the gods would lose their fear and thus fight ever more courageously against all the adversities that might afflict their people below. As the alcohol spread its glow among the worshippers, the priestesses would carry forth with erotic songs and dances designed to arouse themselves, the great mother goddess Ninkasi, and the gathered crowd before them. The priestesses would then turn into maidens of easy virtue, and a Sumerian chap could consider himself lucky, if he was chosen at such an occasion to consummate with one of them the ultimate act of fertility." Pretty easy one, heh?

Anything you'd like to add?

Brugge is going to be brewing very soon in Terre Haute. Look for draft products to roll out first. Bottles to follow in 750mls. We're really quite excited about this new project.

* * * * *

Although Ted is excited about Brugge Beer in bottles, I think the Hoosier Beer Geeks are even more so. We wish to thank Ted for taking the time to answer our questions, and for his dedication to good beer.