The weather outside wasn’t exactly
frightful, but it would be pretty messy in a matter of hours. Snow was in the
forecast, which some found irritating, but others felt enhanced the festive
holiday mood in the tasting room.
Jeff McDonald and his wife Judy Duhl of White Plains stopped into
the brewery with their daughter Laura and her friend after cutting down their
Christmas tree in Easton, Connecticut. The 9-foot Douglas fir is strapped to
the car’s roof outside, eager to shake free from its nylon sheath. “We started
to go there 20 years ago, and it became a tradition,” says Jeff.
The brewery part of the excursion,
suggested by Laura’s friend, Bridget Reilly of Larchmont, is a newer
tradition that may have some staying power. Jeff likes the Freshchester Pale
Ale while Judy enjoys a small-batch selection. “I’ll tell you what’s good—the
Schwarzenegger!” she enthuses, pointing to the German black lager Schwarzer
Hund on the beer menu. “We went to Ireland, and it reminds me of Guinness.”
Laura has also opted for an offbeat
choice: a cup of sauvignon blanc. “I’m not a beer drinker,” she concedes. “But
I do like the setting here.”
She likes the wintry weather as
well. “It gives things a Christmas-y feel,” says Laura. “It reminds me of being
with my family.”
The tasting room is half full on
this cold Sunday. The Rolling Stones’ “Loving Cup” spills from the speakers. Matteo
and Dana Pungello of White Plains are loving their cups of Liquid Gold,
a beer they discovered at the new Yonkers beer and a movie joint Alamo
Drafthouse. They’re at the brewery for a friend’s 29th birthday. “We
happen to love day-drinking,” says Dana.
Matteo has also discovered the
Ginger Man, a Belgian-styled amber ale that he says goes perfectly with a
wintry day. “It’s like eating a gingerbread cookie,” says Matteo. “I probably
would not enjoy it as much in June.”
Across the tasting room, Richard
Walker of Somers and Jennifer Mandel of New York City are
celebrating passing the bar exam. When Jennifer learned of her winning score,
her employer gave her a congratulatory ice cream cake. When Richard passed, his
co-workers got him a Captain Lawrence sample glass—and 13 beer tokens.
“I’d rather have the beer, for
sure,” says Jennifer.
Richard says the malty, spicy Winter
Ale helps him cope with the frozen forecast. “I hate winter, I hate snow,” he
says. “In fact, I despise everything about winter. The only good thing about it
is Winter Ale.”
The 2 p.m. tour of the brewery wraps
up and the tour-goers fill up the tasting room. That includes Jim and Jean
Casey of Mahopac, Jim’s brother (and rival for best hair in the place) Kevin,
and a handful of Casey offspring. Jim is enjoying the darker beers on the menu,
including the small batch #69 and the Winter Ale, and taking the winter weather
in stride. “It doesn’t bother me—it is what it is. It’s part of living in New
England,” he says, employing a very broad definition of New England.
The sample lines are non-existent.
The holidays are upon us, “Exile on Main Street” is on the house music, and the
mood is upbeat. (Heck, the Jets even won.) The Casey clan takes delight in
playful ribbing--and locally brewed craft beer.
“It’s nice to have a place like this
around,” says Jim. “We need it.”
The “Notes From the Tasting Room” book is available at the brewery and on Amazon: http://www.amazon.com/Notes-Captain-Lawrence-Tasting-Room/dp/0985632844/
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