Bacon and Beer 2016: A Match Made in Boozy Heaven

Peanut butter and jelly. Cookies and milk. Bacon and beer. A nice jean on jean combo. Some things just go together. And lucky for you match making is a special skill of our buddies over at Two Parts. Enter: the Bacon and Beer Festival. 

If you're jonesing for a detox after your Halloweekend stop reading now. But if you're looking to spark your glutinous side and live a little, the Bacon and Beer Festival needs to be on your radar. The fest will feature beersy libations and pork inspired concoctions from local restaurants and breweries. Proceeds from the fest will benefit Metro Caring and Project Angel Heart - so drink up, it's for a good cause!

When: Saturday 2pm-5:30pm

Where: Glitter Dome

Tickets: https://www.twoparts.com/event/bacon-and-beer-2016/

Keep scrollin' for a full list of participating establishments: 

The Breweries

Alpine Dog Brewing Company

Boulder Beer Co.

Breckenridge Brewery

Call to Arms Brewing Co.

Cerebral Brewing 

City Star Brewing

Colorado Cider Company

Comrade Brewing

Goldspot Brewing Company

Great Divide Brewing

Grimm Brothers Brewhouse

Left Hand Brewing Company

Little Machine

Loveland Aleworks

Nighthawk

Odyssey Beerworks 

Our Mutal Friend 

Ratio Beerwerks

Renegade Brewing

Stem Ciders

Strange Craft Beer Co

Wit's End Brewing Company

Wynkoop Brewing Company

 

The Restaurants

Aloy Modern Thai

Bacon Social House

First Draft

Freshcraft

Hopdoddy

Interstate

Little Man

Max's Wine Dive

Rebel

Second Home Kitchen + Bar

The Colorado Pig Rig

The District

The Lobby

The Regional 

The Rosedale

Wynkoop

 

Two Parts' Coffee Bazaar Had Us All Kinds of Buzzed

The third annual Grand Coffee Bazaar hosted by Two Parts buzzed through RiNo’s art district last Saturday, under a clear blue sky, easy breeze and a mutual appreciation for beans. This event saw the third year running. Comprised of an all local lineup, the Bazaar showcased the independent coffee scene, which has been flourishing in Colorado. The event not only brought all Colorado coffee together under one roof, it brought the coffee pros and local aficionados together too. 

Boulder Organic Coffee brewers.

The event sprawled into both gallery spaces of the Redline non-profit contemporary art center, with brunch offerings and artful hand tossed mugs for sale from local artists. The event is the perfect place to take a date, co-mingle with friends, or to simply just increase your coffee knowledge. The bazaar gives all the chance to talk to the brewers about exactly what goes into the process of brewing excellent coffees, and all the flavor compound complexities that go into the mug.

Some of our favorite Coloradan coffee vendors were present, including Boxcar Coffee Roasters, Corvus Coffee, Huckleberry Roasters and Pablo's Coffee. We were also stoked to try coffee beer, which tastes as good as it sounds, and it’s a multi-purpose breakfast beverage. This event is fitting for anyone who loves waking up with a fresh cup and a warm bagel, whether you prefer a nitro cold brew from Method Roasters, or an organic, medium brew Colombian coffee from Boulder Organic Coffee. 

 

The Sophisticate’s Tea offered great Chai tea concentrates that allow you to create your favorite iced chai from the comfort of your home. We also recommend their Mountain Fog Earl Grey concentrate as well. The Sophisticate’s Tea was also a great option for for the cross-fitters who chose not to imbibe on coffee beer in the morning. 

Hi Rise Bagel folks. 

The brunch snacks were the perfect pair with an early morning bazaar experience. Hi Rise Bakery offered an amazing artichoke cream cheese sesame bagel, and Noosa Yogurt featured a spectacular chai flavored greek yogurt topped of with Olde Man Granola. While the event was pretty packed, the lines were manageable, and the coffee kept flowing forward into our complementary mugs. The brunch was more than enough to satisfy our morning hunger, and the event space was the perfect size to hold the bazaar. Spirits were as high as our adrenaline. According to our fitbits, our heart rates were happily high on a caffeine buzz as well. 

We can’t wait to drink up at next year’s Coffee Bazaar, but until then, we’re going to try and roast our friends with our newly harvested coffee knowledge! 

Sesh Fest Is This Saturday - Day Drinkers Unite!

When: Saturday, August 6, 2016
2:00pm - 6:00pm MDT

Where: Highlands Masonic Events Center

Price: $30

Tickets: https://nightout.com/events/sesh-fest-2016/tickets#.V6IhsfkrLcs 

This year's Sesh Fest features dozens of breweries paying homage to session-style beers at the Highlands Masonic Events Center. With a new location comes plenty of food, lawn games, and music to complement Colorado craft beer! Sesh Fest invites breweries to pour beers of the lighter, more sessionable variety, which means they are all under 5% ABV — all of them designed with your day drinking pleasure in mind!

What's included with the ticket? Bottomless session beer samples, access to all the games, grass and turf to relax on, sunshine (says our meteorologist intern), and a fancy new tasting glass you can keep. Each attendee will be welcomed with a cold beer and then it's an all out sesh!

Meet The Breweries: 

CAUTION: Brewing Company

TRVE Brewing Co.

Ratio Beerworks

Strange Craft Beer Company

Dad & Dude's Breweria

Call to Arms Brewing Co.

Alpine Dog Brewing Company

The Old Mine

Something Brewery

Breckenridge Brewery

Elevation Beer Company

Wonderland Brewing Company

WestFax Brewing Company

Sanitas Brewing Company

Great Divide Brewing Co

Cerebral Brewing

Mu Brewery

Fiction Beer Company

Colorado Cider Company

Upslope Brewing Company

Jagged Mountain Craft Brewery

Baere Brewing Company

FATE Brewing Company

The Brew on Broadway

Black Bottle Brewery

Storm Peak Brewing Company

Spangalang Brewery

FERMÆNTRA

The Post Brewing Company

Beryl's Beer Co.

Wit's End Brewing Company

Ska Brewing Company

Little Machine

14er Brewing Company

 

*Tickets at the door will increase to $35*

An Apple A Day Keeps ... You Drunk? | The Pressed Conference | Saturday, May 28th

Photo credit: Tobias Krause and the beautiful Amy Osgood 

Denver's first Cider Festival was last Saturday May 27th at a long-standing, but relatively unknown to us, Highland venue. It was slightly west of the jammed core area, which was great for parking purposes, at The Highlands Masonic Event Center, on 35th Ave and Federal. It was a great space for the event that took place in the front lawn with the band set up on the steps in front of the building's dramatic facade. There were a few lawn games as promised, and food trucks, a couple vendors and hammocks to lounge in. The hammocks were a bit hard to enjoy with a group of friends and tables were seriously lacking, as in there weren't any in the main area to rest your cider glasses, eat, or take tasting notes on the Cider note-taking cards we received upon arrival. That was really the only negative note, as the lines to sample ciders were expected, but without proper lounge areas we pretty much just hung out in the lines (two birds with one stone we figured). 

The Pressed Conference featured about 20 cideries from across the Rocky Mountain region, the Pacific Northwest, Texas, New England and even a few European imports! It was fun trying the different company's cider and most had multiple varieties to choose from which kept you coming back throughout to try them all. Unfortunately we didn't actually have time to try them all, but we surely sampled about 2/3 and took diligent notes to share with our readers. In addition to tasting notes, we gave each a rating between 1 to 10, with 10 as the best based on overall comparisons and personal taste. 

FIELD NOTES:

Welcome Cider - Molly's Barrel Aged Cider: Somewhat flat and generally flavorless, could have been sitting out a bit as pre-poured (2/10)
Big B's Cider - Harvest Apple: sweet and classic (6.5/10)
Colorado Cider Company - Pearsnickety: sour tasting with a slight pear taste, sour beer lovers would gravitate to this one (5/10)
Colorado Common Cider - Original: slightly sweet & dry (5/10)
C Squared Cider - Alma: flavorful, tasted like a perfect Fuji Apple, guy said it was the most "acidic" (9/10). Lila: dry with clear flavor of lavender/honey (7/10). Ginger Lime Leaf: exclusive cider for the festival, "interesting," most unique, semi sweet (8/10). This was my favorite Cider company we tried. 
Montana Cider Works - Darby Pub Cider: an ode to the classic non-alcoholic Apple cider I drank as a kid (7.5/10)
Talbott's Cider Co - Alpine Start: minimal apple flavor with a bitter finish (3/10)
Portland Cider Co - Pear: fairly dry cider, clear pear flavor  (6/10)
Wild Cider - Original: way too sweet for my taste, but a great cider for those that don't want to taste any alcohol (5.5/10)

Big B's Cider - Cherry: mild flavor, not enough cherry, balanced acidity (5/10) Harvest: tasted like a traditional non-alcoholic apple cider, also the same sweetness (7/10)
Colorado Cider Company - Cherry: delicious, refreshing and pronounced cherry flavor (9/10) 
Colorado Common Cider - House: sweet, but acidic (5/10).  Ginger: would have liked more ginger flavor (7/10)
C Squared Cider - Alma: sweet, crisp, guy said it was the most "acidic" (8/10). Lila: medium sweetness, flavorful, lavender undertones (8/10). Nona: guy said it was their driest, but I didn't find it too dry, just not as crisp and refreshing as some others (6/10)
Montana Cider Works - Darby Pub Cider: Balanced, traditional flavor (7/10). Macintosh: medium sweetness, refreshing, pure apple taste (8/10)
Portland Cider Co - Pear: fairly dry, tart, crisp pear flavor (6/10)  Maui Cruiser: most unique, very refreshing, tropical, pineapple notes, slightly sweet (8/10) 
Wild Cider - Original: sweet, tasted like a traditional non-alcoholic apple cider (6/10)

 The wide range of cideries and the wide selection each produces ensured that everyone had a good time and plenty of delicious ciders to drink throughout the afternoon and to add to their shopping lists. We had fun taste testing and discovering new ciders we loved, and left thankful our afternoon of unlimited tasting didn't turn into a sugar headache or hangover the next morning! These ciders are all grown up and we encourage you to try them out for yourself. 

According to a statistic from CiderCon this year, cider sales in the US grew 12% in 2015. Unlike some of the heavy cider cities like Portland, Chicago, and Seattle, Colorado is a little more geographically isolated from prime apple-growing areas and is still in the beer-craze faze. But  Colorado Cider Company owner-operator, Brad Page says, "Eventually the cider market will be very similar to the craft beer market. Not on the same scale, but in the variety and flavors."

Photo credit: Stem Ciders 

Lifestyle | What We Thought of the Fleakin' Flea

It’s official! 2016’s first Flea of the year reigned in over 20,000 people this past weekend! And it was quite the spectacle too, as happy hipsters, baby wielding dilfs and local goods enthusiasts flooded the streets of Denver’s River North district.  The crowds did surprise us, mainly due to the sheer chaos downtown that surrounded the launch of Denver’s new A Line... which had a wait of nearly two hours out of Union Station! Promptly abandoning our initial decision to check out the A Line launch party, we decided to ditch the lines and opt for artisan vendors, booze and to our excitement even more lines! 

The Flea was already pretty packed by the time we arrived an hour after it opened on Saturday the 23rd. It was also larger than we expected, spanning out on all sides of the ExDo building. There were booths lined along three sides of the venue coupled with a food truck courtyard, complete with seven food trucks and two ice cream trucks. The bars kept the lines moving as thirsty shoppers flooded their fronts hoping for New Belgium craft, margaritas, cocktails and other domestic spirits.

The long lines, excitement and flawless djing from veteran flea curator, Tobias Krause caused some of our four legged friends to take shameless (and adorable) naps right in the center of the of all the commotion. 

There were over 150 vendors this time making it one of the largest Denver Flea’s to date and what seemed like one of the most popular (next to their super Holiday Flea we reported on early December).  As usual, there were lots of clothing companies, body products, homemade foods and jewelry, all kinds of art and some unique home goods and furnishings. 

One of the reasons we've flocked to the Denver Flea numerous times is the diversity of unique finds situated in a fun, party-like atmosphere. You're always greeted with a boozy beverage ticket, lots of local snack samples and plenty of pretty people watching. Between all the stunning handmade pieces, art, clothes, food and people, the Flea is a nonstop beauty overload. You will most likely leave with a couple cool new things, a full tummy, plenty of FitBit steps, and a renewed appreciation for the artistic spirit thriving within Denver. 

Here's to lookin' at you Summer Flea. Fleak on, fleaks. Fleak on...

Lifestyle | Calling All Fleaks! | Spring Flea - April 23rd & 24th

The Spring Flea will take Denver's River North district by storm this weekend as over 100 vendors flood the streets for an indoor/outdoor market celebration! We promise you this is not an event to miss, so many local and unique finds, your closet and friends with Spring birthdays will thank you. Not in the shopping mood? Don't fret! Chill out in their lounge by HW Home, throw back a few New Belgium beers and enjoy music by local artists. Click here to get your tickets ahead of time! 

The Logistics: 

When: Saturday/Sunday, April 23rd & 24th

Where: EXDO Event Center (1399 35th Street, Denver, CO)

What: Entrance costs $5, but includes 1 free drink ticket. 

Vendors To Keep An Eye On:  

The Real Dill

The Real Dill

Billie

Billie

Craft Boner

Craft Boner

Spinster Sisters

Lifestyle | You've Gotta Be Fika'n Kidding Me!

Our favorite neighborhood lush is at it again! From the boozers who brought us the Summer Passport and Winter Warmer comes, Fika, your guide to Denver's booming coffee scene. While we await the *much* anticipated 2016 Summer Passport, we're excited to get buzzed on another one of Denver's vices.

 The term "Fika" originates from Sweden and is a cultural custom to remind one another that even though you're busy, there's always time to gather with friends and enjoy a cup of coffee. 

Two Part's Fika program is your road map to Denver's coziest, hippest and tastiest coffee roasters. Fika boasts 24 different coffee venues from hometown favorites like Amethyst, Huckleberry Roasters, Crema and Black Eye to venues like Bellweather and Lula Rose General Store that we cannot wait to explore. The beautiful thing is that you can enjoy 2 for 1 drinks at each venue which includes a special beverage that was concocted specifically for the Fika. It's really the perfect opportunity to get out of your coffee rut, explore some new neighborhoods and gather with fellow coffee enthusiasts. 

The cost: $20

Dates: April, 1st - October, 1st

We like our passports like we like our coffee - bold, adventurous and always up for a good deal. 

Get yours today!