Friday, January 13, 2012

Next Stop.....Railbender Ale...All Aboard!

Well....you really like the Dale's Pale Ale. We sold out of that one in record time! Don't worry. We'll try to get it back asap. In the interim, we're chugging down the the specialty and craft beer path. Next stop: Erie Brewing Company's flagship beer, Railbender Ale. This multi-award winning Scottish Ale features "a deep malt flavor, caramel sweetness lingering in a soft hop flavor." It is considered a Dark Amber. 

According to the the company, Erie, Pennsylvania was an important railroad hub in the mid–nineteenth century because the city was the site where three sets of track gauges met. Railbender Ale is named after the laborers who laid the railroad tracks. Railbender is brewed with the "pride, strength and purity symbolic of Erie’s historic railroad’s and railroad workers." The company also says that Railbender's "smooth malt flavor and astonishing drinkability will have you Hopping on the train and riding off the rails. All Aboard!"



Here's those stats you all love:
Style: Scottish Ale
Alcohol by Volume: 6.8%
Degree's Plato: 16.5
Hop Bitterness IBU's: 26

Some Awards: 
2008 Bronze Award Winner
Scottish Ale - The Great American Beer Festival (Denver, Colorado)

2009 Gold Award Winner Scottish Ale - The Great American Beer Festival (Denver, Colorado)

Among the food pairings that Erie Brewing Company suggests with Railbender are roasted meats or sausages. Try a Chorizo burrito made with our homemade Mexican Hot Sausage or Shredded Beef Enchiladas which feature our delicious slow cooked beef. Our weekend special Carne Picante offers delicious tender chucks of chuck roast. Other reviewers suggest grilled meats. Go for our chicken and steak fajitas or a char-grilled Mexican Burger.



Most reviewers agree that this is a pleasant, smooth, and drinkable beer. Stop over at the Franklin Inn and give it try. Let us know what you think of this one and how you rate it among the others we've featured recently.

Sunday, January 8, 2012

Magic Hat Drafts $2 This Tuesday!

Due to it's popularity we've decided to go another round with Magic Hat #9. This Tuesday you can take a "taste" drive of this fruity number for only $2.
That's right! 16 ounce Magic Hat Drafts
will be $2 all day on Tuesday.
 
Since spicy dishes are suggested among the best food pairing for Magic Hat #9, you'll be able to get the full experience at the Franklin Inn Mexican Restaurant. Try your #9 with a chorizo burrito or an order of wings (we only have one kind: Hot!). Make sure to tell your server you want the extra hot salsa too.

The brewer's description of #9: "Not Quite Pale Ale. A beer cloaked in secrecy. An ale whose mysterious and unusual palate will swirl across your tongue and ask more questions than it answers. A sort of dry, crisp, refreshing, "not-quite pale ale. #9 is really impossible to describe because there’s never been anything else quite like it."

Here are there stats (I'm not sure what all this means but I know some of you do!):
  • TYPE: Not Quite Pale Ale
  • YEAST: English Ale
  • HOPS: Cascade, Apollo
  • MALTS: Pale, Crystal 
  • ABV: 5.1
  • GRAVITY: 11.80 Plato
  • BITTERNESS: 20
  • SRM: 9.0

Magic Hat claims that #9 features a secret ingredient that "introduces a most unusual aroma which is balanced with residual sweetness." Many experts think the secret ingredient it is apricot. GotBeer.com says, "No. 9 does have a fruit-forward profile, but it doesn't exactly scream apricot. The flavor comes close to peach tea with a lemony tang."  What do you think? Can you identify Magic Hat #9's mysterious ingredient? Come taste it at the Franklin Inn and let us know what flavors you taste.

Saturday, January 7, 2012

Dale's Pale Ale Has Arrived at the Inn...

Well....you finished off the Smuttynose in record time, so we had to replace it with something else great. After receiving quite a few positive recommendations, John decided to give Dale's Pale Ale a try. He thinks you will enjoy it too, so we've got it for you in the infamous can or on tap for a limited time.

Beer Advocate calls Dale's Pale Ale, "One of the quintessential American hoppy pale ales of our times." It has received many accolades including:
 Top U.S. Pale Ale: New York Times
Gold Medal – 2010: World Beer Championships
World’s Best Canned Beer: Details Magazine
Top Five American Pale Ales: Ratebeer.com, 2005-2009
Gold Medal: Stockholm Beer & Whiskey Festival
Top Colorado Export: 5280 Magazine

The Brewery's description: "America’s first hand-canned craft beer is a voluminously hopped mutha that delivers a hoppy nose, assertive-but-balanced flavors of pale malts and hops from start to finish. First canned in 2002, Dale’s Pale Ale is a hearty (6.5% and 65 IBUs), critically acclaimed trailblazer that has changed the way craft beer fiends perceive canned beer."

According to their website, the brewery began hand-canning Dale’s Pale Ale on a table-top machine that sealed just one can at a time. This made Oskar Blues the first US craft brewer to brew and can its own beer.  “We thought the idea of our big, luscious pale ale in a can was hilarious,” recalls founder Dale Katechis. “And it made our beer immensely portable for outdoor enjoyment fun.”

Visit the Inn and taste Dale's Pale Ale for yourself via a can or a draft. Let us know what you think.What's your suggestion for the next draft beer on tap at the Inn?

Wednesday, December 28, 2011

Smuttynose Going on Tap at the Inn

It's on the truck and should arrive any minute:
Smuttynose Robust Porter!
Forgive the name. It sounds a little unappetizing at first but apparently it is the name of one of the islands off the coast of New Hampshire. The cute little guy in Smuttynose Brewing Company logo is one of the inhabitants of the island. Anyway, we'll be putting their Robust Porter on tap later today. Have you tried it yet?

Here is the brewer's description,"This hearty, mahogany colored ale is brewed to evoke the dark, full-bodied ales that were a favorite of dockworkers and warehousemen (hence the name “Porter”) in 19th century London. It is a good bet that when Dickens’ Mr. Pickwick sat down for a pint, we would have been drinking an ale much like our Robust Porter.This is a smooth and very drinkable beer, characterized by its well-balanced malt and hops, plus subtle notes of coffee and chocolate."

And GreatBrewers.com says, "This hearty porter is a great accompaniment to a wide array of Mexican dishes, burgers, steaks, sausages, ham, smoky flavors and chocolate desserts." I'd say this makes Robust Porter perfect for patrons of the Franklin Inn.

Here are a few stats/awards this beer boasts:
GOLD MEDAL WINNER - Porter , 2001 Great American Beer Festival
JUDGED GRAND CHAMPION - Best Porter in the USA - 10th Annual US Beer Tasting Championship
GOLD MEDAL WINNER - 2010 Mondial de la Biere, Strasbourg, France
WINNER AT THE 2011Good Food Awards in San Francisco. 

 “Full-bodied and malty with undertones of coffee and chocolate and a bright, hoppy finish, in style it’s like Cary Grant's accent: the best of British and American.” - The Boston Globe, November, 2005

VITAL STATISTICS
OG: 1064 TG: 1018
Grain Bill: pale 2-row, carastan, dark crystal, special “B,” chocolate
Hops: Cascade
IBU's: 45
Color/Number: Dark chocolate brown
ABV 5.7%

Saturday, December 24, 2011

Feliz Navidad

Merry Christmas!

We will be closed 12/24 & 12/15 
so that our staff can spend some time with their families.

We will reopen Monday 12/26 and we will also be OPEN on New Year's Eve.

Friday, December 9, 2011

What the Heck is a Cactus Pear?

Cactus Pear
 These charming models are a pair of Cactus Pears (also referred to as prickly pears or tuna ). I had heard of Cactus Pear and seen it on ingredient lists but I had never encountered a Cactus Pear up close and personal in the raw form until today. I had to take a photo to share with you. What a beautiful fruit. Just look at the gorgeous color inside.

Chef Dale ordered these to make a sauce to accompany a chocolate lava cake he is baking for a dessert feature. He explained that these "pears" grow off the paddles of the cactus. His plan was to combine cactus pear with papaya for a dessert "drizzle".  As I admired this fruit, he explained that he would scoop out the flesh and strain the seeds. Just then another cook, Leo, asked us to hand him one. Leo pulled the skin off (without gloves....they don't call them prickly for nothing) and popped the whole thing in his mouth, seeds and all. So, I shrugged my shoulders and turned to Chef Dale who promptly skinned and cut me a piece which I popped in my mouth the same way, seeds and all. Yum! It tasted like a cross between a really ripe sweet watermelon and a pomegranate. Others have described it as a non acidic kiwi.  The seeds were edible but pretty hard...not as hard as watermelon seeds but I still think it was wise of Dale to remove the seeds for the dessert sauce.  

Leo & Dale Prepping Papaya.
Intrigued by this beautiful and sweet "fruit" I went online to check out more about the cactus pear. They call it "tuna" in Mexico. I read that it has been used for thousands of years in Mexico and around the world for medicinal purposes.  It is a rich source of mineral magnesium, taurine (an amino acid), vitamin C, calcium, potassium and antioxidants. This fruit is also low in calories and in sodium and no cholesterol or saturated fat. It's a good source of fiber similar to soluble fiber that has been shown to to "sop up" cholesterol. Research has been done using the prickly pear to help manage cholesterol levels. Other studies show it helps in treating diabetes, cancer and more! It even helps fight viral infections. All this from such a sweet and pretty looking food item.
Getting Ready to Join the Cactus Pear

I am always getting compliments on my fresh fruit salads at family gatherings. I'm thinking about adding the Cactus Pear to the bowl. What do you think? Have you tried Cactus Pear? Do you have a great recipe involving this wonder fruit? I'd love to hear about it. If you've never tasted one, now is your chance. Come to the Inn over the next couple days.


Fudge Lave Cake w/Cactus Pear Papaya Sauce

This Week's Special Features

Starting to night we have an awesome line up of special features for you:

Drinks
Try a Fiery Pepper Margarita
Mason Jar Margaritas • Sangria
Sam Adams Winter Lager
Magic Hat & Dos Equis on Draft
Jarritos Mexican Soda
Appetizers
Pork Tamales, Chicken Tortilla Soup,
Mini Pork Empanadas with Green Tomatillo Salsa

Dinner Feature
Walnut Encrusted Corvina with a Lemon Lime Cilantro Beurre Blanc Sauce.
Corvina has a mild, sweet taste and is regarded as a prime table fish
in South America. Served with Plantain Chips and Rice. 12.95
Dessert
Chocolate Fudge Cake
Fresh-baked chocolate fudge cake served with
a scoop of vanilla ice cream and a papaya cactus pear drizzle.

John’s Home made Salted Caramel Ice Cream

Thursday, December 8, 2011

Fajitas Anyone?

 

This beautiful bowl of veggies will be part of your fajita dinner at the Franklin Inn today.  I couldn't resist taking a photo when I saw this lovely bowl of  peppers and onions. Leo is chopping them up for you right now.


Texans like to claim the fajitas as their invention and historical credit is given to the Mexican Vaqueros (cowboys). However, I think fajitas are a true Mexi-American collaboration. Add the Franklin Inn twist to this recipe and you've got a delicious meal.

Vaqueros were ranch workers living on the border and working cattle roundups in Texas in the 1930s. When a steer was butchered, they were given the "throwaway"or least desirable cuts of meat as part of their pay.  This tough cut of beef is known as skirt steak. The Mexican term for grilled skirt steak is arracheras. The American term fajita comes from faja which translates into "belt" or "girdle". Fajitas jumped from the obscure camp fire scene to "on the scene" sometime in the late 60s according to the various accounts. The term fajita has morphed from its original meaning and is understood by  most folks today as anything cooked and rolled in a soft flour tortilla, or grilled up on a sizzling platter. 

Food snobs turn their nose up at fajitas as being "Tex-Mex." I don't care who gets the credit for fajitas or how authentic they are because they are just good food at the Franklin Inn! And, I think, a healthy option. I can't really see fajitas being very high in calories as long as you portion control the guac and sour cream. There aren't that many ingredients involved. Fresh meat, veggies, a little oil, some garlic, salt, pepper (and hot sauce on the shrimp), etc.  I usually skip the tortilla myself but John eats them.


Traditionally, fajitas are made using skirt steak as mentioned above. But, it can be really tough even when marinaded for a long time. At the Franklin Inn, we actually use a quality sirloin for our steak fajitas. Therefore, we do not marinade our meat. You can also choose a fresh chicken breast, chorizo or spicy shrimp. And, for those abstaining from meat, our veggie fajita features portobellos and seasonal vegetables. If you can't decide, heck, get a combo fajita.  John and I sometimes order a combo fajita and split it. I always let him eat one or two of the shrimp. Beware...those shrimp are addicting. 

Friday, December 2, 2011

What the Heck is Chayote?

Our Chayote Model at the Franklin Inn.
My first experience with Chayote [chah-YOH-teh] was in Mexico.  John's parents were in the practice of renting a house in Mexico for a month at a time.  I'd get to tag along for the last week of this adventure (work schedule permitting). They'd also hire a Mexican cook or chef to come to the house and prepare meals for the duration. This was a great way to gain fresh insights into Mexican cooking, learn new techniques, recipes, brainstorm ideas, and of course, taste new foods. Rice was served with many of these meals. One cook made her rice with peas and diced veggies including chayote. At first I thought it was a green carrot. She had cut all the veggies to the same bite size shape and it had the same texture (due to being cooked in the rice). But, I was told it was "chayote."

Chayote is from the gourd family and is sometimes called Mexican Squash among other names. Apparently, it was first cultivated in Mexico and the Aztecs and Mayans ate it.  Like the tomato, chayote is actually a fruit.  It can be eaten raw and has a mild flavor.


Vegetable Medley with Chayote, Yellow Squash and Zukes.
According to Livingstrong.com the chayote  is "low in calories and chock-full of vitamins and other nutrients." A half cup has 11 calories and a couple grams of dietary fiber. It has no cholesterol or fat and is extremely low in sodium. Various sources have reported medicinal properties of chayote. A tea made from the leaves is used for lowing blood pressure, dissolving kidney stones and treating atherosclerosis (hardening of the arteries).

Have you used the chayote in your cooking? If so, I'd love to know how you prepared this popular Latin American vegetable (or fruit).

This weekend Chef Dale is including chayote in his vegetable medley along with yellow squash and zucchini. Come on out and give it a try.






Weekend Specials

Magic Hat on Draft

Try a Fiery Pepper Margarita

Spicy Chicken Tortilla Soup

Hand Made Pork Tamales

(click here to see how Karen makes them)


Pork Flat Iron Steak with Pineapple Chutney

Ancho chile marinated pork steak with a sweet pineapple chutney, sweet potato puree and a vegetable medley of chayote, yellow squash and zucchini.


Coconut Creme Brulee

John's Homemade Mocha Chocolate Chip Ice Cream