Silver City Brewery

I have to say, biking from Seattle to the Silver City Brewery in Bremerton is a pain in the butt. I’ve done it pretty much twice (the first time I didn’t bike the last half mile down Auto Center Way (sounds like such a scenic road to ride on, doesn’t it?) because I was running late and the taproom was about to close). From the north, first you have to get to Poulsbo, then it’s a long-ish ride along a highway that isn’t bad until it gets to Silverdale (home of their original brewpub, but all brewing operations have since moved to Bremerton, leaving just the pub there), where it becomes the main road through town and all the cars come out to play. From the south (my successful second attempt), it’s a pleasant ride to Port Orchard, but becomes decreasingly pleasant as you ride along Bay St to Highway 16 and the horrific junction with Highway 304 at the end of Sinclair Inlet. If you manage to survive that, then it’s a bunch of hills until you get to the warehouse/industrial district where the brewery and taproom reside. I suppose the way to do it is from the east, starting at the Bremerton ferry terminal. Crossing Bremerton by bike isn’t all that much fun, either, but of the three options it is definitely the shortest.

That said, the taproom is pretty nice, and a surprising amount of people were there for a Wednesday (not that you can tell from my picture). While making my way through a four taster flight, I decided that all the bike shenanigans I’d been through with Silver City easily justified ordering a second.

Silver City Sampler

Sampler #1 at Silver City Brewery — Bremerton, WA

    Rob’s Picks

  • St Florian IPA – 6.8% – Crisp, with a good malty base, floral/citrus (grapefruit) hop mix, and nice lingering bitterness. Bubbly and a little spicy on the tongue.
  • Panther Lake Porter – 6% – Subtle start to smooth but dry coffee/chocolate flavors. Quite drinkable.
  • Whoop Pass Double IPA – 8.5% – Strong floral and grapefruit citrus hop flavors. Caramel malty base.
  • Sasquatch Stout – 6.2% – Good dryness, with coffee/chocolate and alcohol flavors that linger nicely. Not too thick, but still has a decent body.
  • Oktoberfest – 6.25% – Not too strong banana/clove flavor, with some caramel and alcohol flavors, as well. Crisp and pretty drinkable.
    The Rest

  • Ridgetop Red – 6% – Sweet banana/clove and caramel flavors. Fairly creamy on the tongue. Pretty smooth but a little too sweet for me.
  • Fat Scotch Ale – 9.2% – Amped up red. Strong banana/clove and caramel flavors, with a bit of an alcohol edge. Also fairly creamy.
  • Clear Creek Pale Ale – 5% – Light start to bready finish. A touch of floral hops.
  • Big Daddy ESB – 6% – Light start to floral hoppiness. Pretty crisp. Too floral for me, though.
  • Siri’s “FaceTime” Session IPA – 4.5% – Pilot batch. Citrus aroma. Strong citrus/grapefruit flavor with light malty base. A touch watery, but interesting. Subtle floral hops, too.

Now that it’s 2013, I’m making a new year’s resolution to finish writing up all my 2012 brewery visits (4 more to go), as well as all the updates (don’t even want to count), before it’s 2014. And pretty soon I will have at least 6 more new brewery posts to write. 2013 is going to be a busy year. Should be fun.

Der Blokken

The original plan for Tour de Kitsap 2 was to visit the Silver City taproom in Bremerton after a brief stop at Slippery Pig, but the brief stop turned into a three hour tasting session — they had six beers on tap that I wanted to sample, and then a friend I hadn’t seen in a few years coincidentally showed up, and, well, the time just disappeared.  Finally refocusing on the bike trip, I pedaled as quickly as I could from Poulsbo straight south to Silverdale, home of the Silver City Brewpub.  For some reason I was dead set on visiting the fairly new taproom at their production brewery in Bremerton, and so I kept on pedaling, but by the time I got close it was 7:40 pm, and they closed at 8:00.  And I was hungry.  Finally resigned to changing my plan, I consulted Google Maps on my phone, and plowed my way through a less-than-bicycle-friendly route across northwest Bremerton until I found a reasonable, though hilly, east-west street, and reached Der Blokken (their facebook page is more up-to-date) at 8:40.  Ferries back to Seattle that night left at 9:05 and 11:40.  Harumph!  I was too hungry to be tempted by the 9:05, and so I convinced myself that the 11:40 wouldn’t be so bad.  I ordered a very tasty and astonishingly filling portobello sandwich and a taster set of Der Blokken beers.  In addition to their own brews, they had a really good selection of other beers on tap.

Update! Made it back for one more beer after Tour de Kitsap 3 in September 2012. Was going to try a different route across Bremerton, but the biking directions app recommended pretty much the same way I’d gone before. Decided to go with the devil I knew. Der Blokken was much more happening this time around, fortunately, even though it was a week night. A bike mechanic sitting at the bar near me nodded his head sadly when I mentioned my sub-optimal trans-Bremerton biking experiences but did say that things were improving. So maybe Tour de Kitsap 4 won’t be quite as exciting. I can only hope.

Der Blokken

Taster set of Der Blokken beers — Bremerton, WA

    Rob’s Picks

  • Pactolian Pale Ale – 5.6% – Citrus aroma. Good strong maltiness with a hoppy complement. Caramel and subtle citrus flavors, too.
  • Cast-over Belgian Gold – 8.5% – Pretty light body for such a strong beer.  Banana/clove and caramel flavors, with a bit of an alcohol edge.  A light tripel.
  • Sacred Hop Double IPA – 8% – Floral aroma.  Smooth, floral, with a nice malty base, and a bit of caramel, as well.
    The Rest

  • Mutha Hefe – 5.6% – Strong sweet banana/clove flavor to bready finish.  Little too Bavarian for me.
  • Black Porter Stout – 6.5% – Interesting.  Somewhat dry, but not too much.  Bit of sweetness, bit of coffee flavor.
  • Autumn Scotch – 6.4% – Fairly sweet, with caramel flavor.  Malty base.  Very smooth, but with an edge that I couldn’t quite place.

The 2+ hours at Der Blokken went by somewhat slowly.  It was not quite how I envisioned the day’s ride would wrap up, with me sitting by myself at a mostly empty bar in Bremerton until 11:00 pm, waiting for a ferry that would eventually get me home at 1:00 am.  I have to admit, the first Tour de Kitsap was way better.  Sigh.  One of these days, however, there’s going to be a third Tour, to bag the elusive Silver City, as well as the brand new Slaughter County Brewing Company in Port Orchard.  It would be nice to include the new 7 Seas taproom down in Gig Harbor, but that probably won’t be open until the end of the year.  Then again, if I limit the number of breweries to two, maybe I’ll actually get home at a reasonable time.  Crazy talk, I know.

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