Want the world’s best mug?

It’s yours if you are a Team Captain and bring a team of 10 or more to the Tour de Brew KC. The mug is 25 ounces!

Tour de Brew KC mug

That’s big enough to share a beer with a friend but not quite big enough to feed a monk during lent. German monks would drink up to 5 liters a day!

Three hundred or four hundred years ago, a group of Paulaner monks in Bavaria …started making a stronger beer, a double beer, called dop­pel­bock,” Sorensen said. “The story goes the monks would give up eating and lit­er­ally would drink this ‘liquid bread’ to sustain them through their Lenten fast.”—CNN

Here’s a story about an Iowa man who decided to live like a monk for lent in 2011—beer every day for 46 days!

Hooray for teams! Here’s our list of teams and their (unof­fi­cial) status. There’s still time to fill out your team and get a tankard. Register now!

Hilltamers 11!

The Short Bikes 8

Good Time Gang 8

Gastinger Walker Harden + BeeTriplett Buck 6

Dill’s Gills 5

Just stop­ping for one 5

Team Burns & Mac 5

Cancer Hammers 4

Flying Fredricksons 4

Brookridge 4

3 team members—Here Kid, Hold My Beer, Team Beer, Jane’s Posers, Beer Bears, Bike Stop

2 team members—UnderPressure, Andrews McMeel Universal, 3 Abreast, Pink Foxes, Cycling Buddies, Midtown’s Best

1 team members—Dread Pirates, Team Xanon, Rob the Realtor, SixPackShuffle, Helix, RIM Riders, LocalCycling

First look at Tour de Brew KC jersey!

Well, it’s not April Fool’s Day but we got a fabric proof of the jersey this week and it came as a table cloth. As a designer, I was delighted that the colors were perfect the first time. That doesn’t happen much in the real world. Take a look for yourself.

Jerseys are still avail­able in limited quan­ti­ties so hurry and reserve yours here.

Tour de Brew KC jersey

Food to fuel your way

Tour de Brew KC is happy to announce part­ner­ships with Wilma’s Real Good Food, The Tamale Wizard and Knucklehead’s get you fed and ready to party this year.

Mary from Knucklenead’s will be firing up the grill with Italian sausage and burgers while Wilma’s Real Good Food will be offer­ing up their sig­na­ture chicken wings, meat­loaf sliders fried mashed potatos and mac ‘n’ cheese. The Tamale Wizard will add some fire to your day with their world-class tamales, black beans and three choices of fresh salsa! Vegetarians – we’ve got you covered.

We have lots of options for you too! Remember your Tour de Brew KC packet comes with tickets for lunch and 2 beerssign up today! it takes time to make all the tamales.

Knuckleheads SaloonWilma's real good food truckTamale wizard

May 22, Tour de Brew KC, let’s p-a-a-a-arty!

Tour de Brew KCBring your sun­screen, your rain gear and your bike! The Tour will roll May 22!

The party must go on! We have you covered…literally! If it rains, just do a shorter tour and come on back to Knuckleheads to pa-a-a-a-arty! Food and brew start at noon. Other fes­tiv­i­ties at 12:30, music at 2:00.

Can you think of a better way to spend your Sunday?

The KC Star has Tour de Brew KC covered! Check it out!

Bike riders invited to pedal to party, learn about beer on way

Bob’s 47 and the story of Boulevard beer

After Irish Ale in 1992, Boulevard’s second sea­sonal beer, intro­duced in 1993, was Bob’s 47, a lager, named for Bob Werkowitch a former brew­mas­ter for Muehlebach and mentor to John McDonald. Bob started at Muehlebach as an appren­tice brewer in 1938, working with his father a cellar master. In 1947 at the U.S. Brewer’s Academy he made up a recipe for a beer that he pro­claimed “one of the best beers he had ever drunk.” It is a rich, malty Munich-style Octoberfest lager. Bob gave the recipe to John and each year when the beer is released Boulevard employ­ees have a toast to honor their friend, Bob who died in 1996.

Werkowitch boulevard

On November 17, 1989, the first keg of Boulevard beer was sold to Ponak’s Mexican Kitchen just a few blocks from the brewery. John McDonald deliv­ered that half-barrel of Pale Ale in his pickup truck. A handful of reg­u­lars looked on in amuse­ment as the young upstart tapped the strange new brew.

John’s dream of a brewery started on his trips to Paris to visit his future wife. There he tasted great beers and noticed that the beers were locally made and had a local fol­low­ing. Unlike American beers, each one tasted dif­fer­ent. Belgian beers became his favorite.

In 1988, John started con­struc­tion of the brewery in a turn-of-the-century brick build­ing on Kansas City’s his­toric Southwest Boulevard. A vintage Bavarian brew­house was installed, and the first batches of beer were pro­duced in the fall of 1989.

The timing was perfect. Boulevard was at the fore­front of America’s taste switch­ing from homogenous-tasting nation­ally dis­trib­uted brews to Pre-prohibition style craft beers with a local identity.

In 2006, a major expan­sion adja­cent to the orig­i­nal brewery raised Boulevard’s brewing capac­ity to approx­i­mately 600,000 barrels per year—a sizable increase from the 6,000 barrels con­tem­plated in John’s orig­i­nal busi­ness plan. The new brewing and pack­ag­ing facil­ity is a model of sus­tain­able urban archi­tec­ture and engi­neer­ing; a three-story, 70,000 square foot build­ing housing a new, state-of-the-art 150-barrel brew­house, pack­ag­ing lines, admin­is­tra­tive offices, and hos­pi­tal­ity rooms.

Boulevard Brewing Company has grown to become the largest spe­cialty brewer in the Midwest. Our mission is simple: to produce fresh, fla­vor­ful beers using the finest tra­di­tional ingre­di­ents and the best of both old and new brewing tech­niques. Boulevard beers, known for their full flavor, dis­tinc­tive char­ac­ter, and unsur­passed quality, are cur­rently avail­able through­out [the midwest, south and western U.S.]”

Tour de Brew KC road markers will keep you on the route

What the heck is that thing? Tip de Bottom up? Them damn Bikes? The dirty Bastards are in the house? Tour de Brew ahead?

In this case the last one is very accu­rate. This symbol is the the marker that will guide the Tour de Brew KC riders but this one is point­ing to the entrance of Tour de Brew KC World Headquarters. Tour de Brew KC is one of our home­town rides, high­light­ing our local attrac­tions, serving home­town Boulevard Beer with pro­ceeds going to BikeWalkKC, a local non-profit. Win-win! Let’s do it!

Tour de Brew KC road marker

Johnson County Bicycle Club season opener, the Spring Classic Ride, May 1

Johnson County Bicycle ClubTime to train for the Tour de Brew KC with the Spring Classic Ride! A scenic, rural route leaving at 8:00 a.m. at the south­west corner of the Loiret and 95th St. parking lot in Lenexa, the Spring Classic cruises through Bonner Springs, DeSoto, Gardner and Edgerton, KS. For members of JCBC and Kansas City Bicycle Club the ride costs an inex­pen­sive $25.00. And, for non-members only $5.00 more! For this great price you get a map, roving SAGs and friendly folks with yummy snacks to keep those muscles stoked. You also get to know that part of your fee will go to support bicy­cling advo­cacy such as BikeWalkKC, KanBikeWalk or Missouri Bicycle and Pedestrian Federation.

If you’re not quite ready to ride but still would like to meet some friendly cyclists and help out, Johnson County Bike Club would be happy to have you as a vol­un­teer. To find out oppor­tu­ni­ties, contact Maury Brown here.

Next up for JCBC is the ever-popular Cider Mill Century ride in early August.

Here’s a little more infor­ma­tion about the club.

The Johnson County Bicycle Club began as an off­shoot of the Johnson County Outdoor Society in the late 1960s to promote safe recre­ational and social cycling. The club orig­i­nally was a part of the Johnson County Parks and Recreation Department.  Seeking inde­pen­dence, the club became a sep­a­rate entity in 1973.

Today, the JCBC is strictly a recre­ational cycling club whose purpose is to promote bicy­cling safety, advo­cacy, and fel­low­ship.  Although its roots and club name are cen­tered about Johnson County, JCBC’s inter­ests cover the greater Kansas City Metro and beyond.

At the end of each year, the board donates a sig­nif­i­cant potion of the club’s funds to select local and national orga­ni­za­tions in appre­ci­a­tion and support of their efforts to promote cycling in our area.