Well, I just returned from one of the best experiences of my life! All the photos can be found here: http://s267.photobucket.com/albums/ii303/salanis42/Sierra%20Nevada%20Beer%20Camp/
In short, it was two and a half days of continuous beer, tours, food, and more beer all taken care of by someone else.
Day zero was just an evening of drinking and meeting our fellow beer campers.
Day one we started by debating what style of beer we wanted to brew. We ended up settling on a strong IPA with freshly picked estate grown hops. Then came a tour of the main brewing facility. We finished the morning by going out into the hop fields to pick our own fresh Chinook hops that ended up being used for flavor and aroma additions when we brewed.
In the afternoon we did some more tours and went to the Abbey of New Clairvaux who is partnering with Sierra Nevada for the Ovila special release beers. Finally, more drinking in the pub. Along with great beer, they also have the best malted milk shakes I've ever had. They actually take some of the first runnings from the grain mash (the steeped grain tea), and boil them down into a real malt syrup that they use for their malts. Completely different from the malt powder you normally get. Wonderful. Then dinner. Then going out for even MORE drinking.
Day two we went to the pilot brewery to brew our camp beer. It's on the grounds and also houses the main R&D lab, but is only able to brew 640 gallons (40 kegs) of beer at one time.
I was very excited to learn that their Research and Development Head Brewer graduated from the brewing school I'll be going to. The intern working under him right now just graduated from the program earlier this year. I have high hopes for my future opportunities.
In the midst of brewing, we went down to the fermentation cellar and were able to get a few samples of several of the other special release beers they have going down there.
Lunch. More tours. More beer.
Sierra Nevada really is an amazing company. They are something like 97% solid waste efficient. Only 3% goes to landfills, everything else is recycled, repurposed, composted, used for feed, etc. They generate 85% of their own electricity. Really impressive stuff.
Here are us beer campers together with Ken Grossman (the guy with the beard who looks a bit like "the most interesting man in the world"), founder and head of Sierra Nevada. Incredibly cool guy. He told us that since we were home brewers we needed to raid their fresh hop room before we left. So I now have a gallon bag of wet, whole cone hops in my fridge to brew in the next couple of days. I gave him a bottle of my Holiday Ale to say thanks before I left.