
(BJ's Restaurant and Brewhouse; BBC Tap Room)
Inquire about the American Pale Ale (aka "APA") at Louisville's BBC Tap Room, and you'll get a virtual education in this classic American beer style: Made with Special Pale, Caramunich, Flaked Barley, and Special B malts and bittered with Centennial and Willamette hops, it's a rich, copper colored ale with a full-bodied bitter hops flavor supported by generous amounts of malt.
Ask the same question about the APA at the new BJ's Restaurant and Brewhouse in Oxmoor, and you may hear something like what a friendly server told me: "It's a light beer. Well, one of our lighter beers." She paused, then grinned conspiratorially. "They train us not to tell people it's 'bitter'."
That pretty much spells out the difference between these two joints for me. BJ's, a 30-year-old Southern California chain, has recently broken out of the West and Southwest with new locations east of the Mississippi in Ohio, Florida, and now in Kentucky with the launch of a large and very well capitalized brewhouse at Oxmoor Center.
BBC, a small and entirely local operation, makes keg and bottled beer for Louisville's Bluegrass Brewing Co., and offers the beers on draft in a tiny tap room in front of the brewing operation at Clay and Main streets.
Despite a certain hilarity among Louisville locavores who discovered that BJ's house-brand beers are trucked over from its brewing facility in Reno, Nev., in fairness I've found the company's beers good, tasty examples of craft brewing, made in close compliance with American craft-beer standards. Indeed, in contrast with the server's script, the BJ "Piranha" Pale Ale is a pretty good example of the genre, made with two-row Pale, Crystal and Wheat malts, and hopped up with American Chinook and Cascade hops to 45 International Bittering Units ... and that's a lot.
Indeed, BJ's beers are so carefully representative of standard craft brews that an aspiring beer judge could do worse than taste through BJ's lineup, repeatedly, as a good way to learn to recognize beer styles.
BBC Tap Room brewer Dave Pierce knows a thing or two about craft brewing himself, having been a pioneer in the microbrewery and brewpub movement - in Louisville and nationally - for some 20 years.
We've recently checked out the beers and, as applicable, the goodies at both tap rooms.
Full reports in LEO and on LouisvilleHotBytes.
BJ’s Restaurant and Brewhouse
7900 Shelbyville Road
326-3850
National Website: http://www.bjsrestaurants.com
Robin Garr’s rating: Food: 78 points. Beer: 84 points
BBC Tap Room
636 E. Main St.
584-2739
http://www.bluegrassbrew.com
Robin Garr’s rating: Food: Unrated (no food service). Beer: 95 points