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  1. 1300 Bank Street Baltimore, MD 21231 410-522-0850 heavyseasalehouse.com Where great beer meets great food.
  2. About Heavy Seas Alehouse Heavy Seas Alehouse is a place where sailors tell stories but pyrates make legends! It is high time fans of Heavy Seas Beer are able to experience Baltimore’s best and locally owned craft brewery in its own ship. Our menu features fresh and seasonal ingredients that we source locally whenever possible. The dishes are simple in appearance with bold and assertive flavors that stand up to the intense beers we are known for…ARRRRGGGHHHH! The Alehouse is located in the Tack Factory building and combines the charm and character of the historic space with the bold industrial elements reminiscent of the Holland Tack Factory that occupied the building for more than 90 years. The Hol- land fasteners went into major league baseballs, countless school bulletin boards and enough sofas to seat all of Baltimore. During the Civil War, the building served as a hospital for Confederate soldiers. We are proud to continue the Charm City tradition of this extraordinary space! We hope you enjoy the Heavy Seas Alehouse and come back soon matey!
  3. Heavy Seas Alehouse
  4. Signage
  5. Matt Seeber Chef/Partner Matt began working in professional kitchens at the age of 15 in 1984. Originally from Philadelphia, Matt then moved to New York City where he worked for Charlie Palmer, Michael White and Tom Colicchio. From there, it was on to Las Vegas where Matt ran Chef Tom’s flagship Craftsteak at the MGM Grand. Now in Baltimore, Matt set sail with Heavy Seas Alehouse and has been received with glowing reviews and many happy guests! Vince Cassino General Manager/Partner What started as a love of cooking learned in the kitchens of his mother and grandmother has turned into a career spanning 20 years. In the beginning he was jumping out of airplanes with the 82nd airborne and running a large garrison dining facility, feeding hundreds of troops a day. Since then Vince has managed the family owned Sisson’s, corporate restaurants and franchises. Vince no longer jumps out of airplanes, instead you can find him manning the deck of the Heavy Seas Alehouse.
  6. Heavy Seas Alehouse The beer is good, but have you tried the food? by Martha Thomas, Urbanite, May 1, 2012 Brew is but one pleasing element of Heavy Seas Alehouse. Named for the predominant line of Clipper City beers, Heavy Seas Alehouse is not necessarily about the brew. In fact, beer is but one appealing element of the place, which has slipped seamlessly into the framework of its Thai and Mexican predecessors. The rough barn board walls and deep booths, the long bar and communal tables in the repurposed tack factory seem designed for merry groupings: some sampling shot glass-portioned flights of Heavy Seas presented on wooden paddles, others sipping rum from brandy glasses. In fact, the Next Big Thing at the bar is not the craft brews. The alehouse has a nicely edited selection of rums by the glass, varieties of the sugar-distilled concoction described on the menu with words like spicy, nutty, vanilla, molasses, and oak. The Dominican Republic Atlantico, for example, is somewhere between a sweet brandy and a peaty whisky—complex and meant for sipping. But the real attraction here is Matt Seeber, the Tom Colicchio protégée, who ran the celebrity chef ’s Craftsteak in Las Vegas. Seeber’s name doesn’t appear on the website or the menu, but his honed abilities are certainly in evidence, from the oyster stew with its tangy, not-too-heavy broth, fresh chives, and large fleshy oysters to the delectable desserts. Just as the non-beer set shouldn’t be deterred by the alehouse motif and the somewhat dorky pirate logo, those who eschew meat mustn’t let Seeber’s steakhouse background steer them away. The menu leans toward seafood, with a generously stocked raw bar featuring a daily selection of oysters. The smoked mussel salad is not to be missed—the smoke is just right, deep but not overwhelming, and the mussels are pretty much unadorned, save for a light dressing of lemon mayo with celery and red onion. Likewise, a lobster salad is simple: chunks of meat (just shy of a one-pounder), tossed with a discreet lime-ginger vinaigrette, with shiny strands of Japanese seaweed on the side. Of course there’s red meat here: the twenty-four-hour beef shortrib, glazed in Peg Leg beer, slides effortlessy from the bone, and the menu includes a grilled hangar steak and the Heavy Seas burger. But Seeber is egalitarian, including a vegetarian plate with root vegetables and Brussels sprouts, a por- tobello sandwich, and some nice side dishes (although the best of these, faro risotto, is laced with pork confit and decorated with bits of fresh tarragon, fennel, and parsley). The menu is simple and, although not extensive, offers possibilities for mixing and matching—raw bar and salad, appetizers and sides, a sandwich, or the whole shebang. And of course, there’s dessert, ginger cake made with stout, Earl Grey crème brulée, and the Pimlico pie, whole pecans embedded in sweet brown sugar and rich chocolate filling. Bottom line, if you go to Heavy Seas for the beer, you’ll return for much more. (Lunch and dinner daily. 1300 Bank St.; 410- 522-0850; www.heavyseasalehouse.com) Recent Press Releases photo by Sarah Thrower
  7. Ahoy! An Alehouse A beer-based restaurant anchors near Little Italy. By Suzanne Loudermilk, Baltimore Magazine, June 2012 Our waiter was excited as he described the soup of the day: a creamy elixir with porto- bellos and springtime ramps. The chef, he explained, likes to get creative with the local produce that arrives in his kitchen. But execu- tive chef Matt Seeber doesn’t just stop at the specials. His whole menu revolves around a masterful interpretation of ingredients that has taken the pub fare at Heavy Seas Alehouse to an elevated culinary level. Whether it’s a lush risotto made with the grain farro, fat sliders stuffed with Pilsener- laced Roma sausages, or addictive onion rings in a Dijon and Loose Cannon beer batter, Seeber makes sure your taste buds appreciate the full force of the cooking skills he honed as executive chef at Tom Colicchio’s Craftsteak in Las Vegas and at New York City’s Gramercy Tavern, among other locations. Seeber is just what this formerly cursed restaurant space needs. Before the Alehouse, restaurants Tsunami and Diablita tried to make a go of the outpost on the cusp of Little Italy and Harbor East—to no avail. In a short time, the Alehouse has managed to establish itself as a food-and-drink destination. The current owners have kept much of Diablita’s attractive décor, a wise move, with its dark wood, trendy brick, and sleek booths and tables. A skull and cross bones may be the restaurant’s logo, but any reference to pirates, or “pyrates” as they say, is understated. In general, the bar and dining rooms present a minimalist, comfortable setting in which to lift a pint or a fork. Heavy Seas beer, brewed by Clipper City Brewing Company, is featured in many of the restaurant’s dishes. While the Alehouse may be capitalizing on the nation’s current love of craft brews, it’s the excellent food that will bring people back. The cornbread, for instance, is simply amazing. This is not your typical Southern staple. The moist wedge of bread, in a small cast-iron skillet, has a golden mantle of rarebit—a cheese sauce made with Heavy Seas Pale Ale—and a scattering of jala- peños and bacon on the top. The Prince Edward Island mussels were also terrific in a broth of roasted garlic but- ter, tomato, fennel, and Gold Ale, as was the braised fresh pork belly, tempura fried and laced on skewers. The decadent fatty meat squares were perfectly suited to the tangy/ sweet tomato-maple dipping sauce. The carefully edited entree section appeals to a variety of palates. The roasted free-range chicken benefits from the braised kale (raised by Big City Greens in South Baltimore), fat white beans, and tomatoes. It’s described as a “casserole,” but it’s not in the traditional sense. It’s a blend of flavors, com- plete with Heavy Seas Märzen jus. It makes sense that the beer recommendation with the dish would be the toasty malt Märzen. Most dishes are paired with a suggested beer. The pan-roasted Atlantic salmon with spring artichokes, herbs, and tomatoes is also coupled with the Märzen, showing this brew’s range. And the really, really tender 24-hour beef short rib is partnered with a Peg Leg Imperial Stout, playing off the meat’s Peg Leg glaze. The hefty 16-ounce, bone-in cut also gets credit for its pickled red-onion garnish and fingerling potatoes. On another visit, we focused on the Ale- house’s lunch menu. Some say the restaurant has the best burger in town. There are a lot of worthy competitors, but we have to agree this eight-ounce, rotund patty of Creekstone Farms Angus beef is a winner. The meat is Clockwise, from left: Roasted free-range chicken; bar/dining room; chef Matt Seeber layered with sweet onions caramelized in Peg Leg stout and Stilton cheese and piled onto a spent-grain roll. The chef, in keeping with the au courant philosophy of not wasting leftovers, sends the processed beer remains to nearby Piedigrotta bakery, which turns them into hearty rolls and other products. The grilled vegetable Dagwood was also a hit with zucchini, red peppers, eggplant, red onions, and smoked Mozzarella slathered with basil mayo. A side salad featured crisp organic lettuce from Big City Greens, gently dressed in a white balsamic vinaigrette. We also sampled the fresh-made potato chips that had a subtle, delicious undertone we couldn’t place. Clever chef Seeber adds a surprising sprinkle of dried green mango powder. We’re still thinking about the desserts, too. We liked the ginger stout cake garnished with kumquat slices and a thick mound of heady Peg Leg whipped cream. The Earl Grey crème brûlée with spice cookies was a nice finish, too. But if we had to pick one to return for, it would be the decadent Pimlico pie, a 2-inch-high beauty of gooey pecans, chocolate, and brown sugar complemented by a scoop of black cardamom gelato made by Pitango Gelato. All the spoons and forks at the table were soon directed at this slice. We also appreciated the thoughtful send- off—small spent-grain raisin cookies that came with the check. Just another reminder of the chef ’s attention to detail. In a short time, the Ale- house has managed to establish itself as a food- and-drink destination.
  8. Craft Beer Cocktails are a Hot Trend in Baltimore Bars Featuring high-quality spirits, fresh ingredients and canny flavor combinations, these inventive drinks offer depth and unique textures. by Erik Maza, The Baltimore Sun, April 24, 2012 To make a cocktail, a bartender performs a complicated ballet involving spirits, mixers and garnishes, somehow juggling them all and finally bringing them in for a graceful, neat landing in your glass. At Heavy Seas Alehouse, bartender Will Helfrich has a simpler ap- proach. He grabs a tall glass, sets it underneath the beer tap and pours eight ounces of sudsy, golden beer, Heavy Seas Classic Lager. And then tops it off with homemade pomegranate lemonade. Add a sprig of fresh rosemary and you have the Little Italy bar and restaurant’s Sea Shandy. When it opened in February, the Ale- house was noteworthy mainly for being the first brick-and-mortar outpost under the name of the Baltimore craft brewer Heavy Seas. But when I sat down for dinner soon after the opening, it was its cocktail list that caught my eye: 10 items and all but three made with some combination of the house’s signature beers and a spirit, from tequila and chartreuse to rum and vodka. Beer cocktails have been popping up with greater frequency in Baltimore in recent months. You can find them at Ten Ten, Jack’s Bistro, Woodberry Kitchen, Mr. Rain’s Fun House and B&O Brasserie. The trend stems from a high interest in craft beers. “In the last two years, it’s really come into vogue,” says Tim Riley, beverage director at Harbor East’s Ten Ten. “There weren’t many of them then, and now you see more, and you see more variety in beers used.” Though beer cocktails have existed for generations, in the form of drinks like the boilermaker, the emphasis now is on craft beer cocktails. They use high-quality spirits, fresh ingredients and canny flavor combinations. They have depth and unique textures. “Beer cocktails have been around for a long time, but they’ve just gotten more sophis- ticated,” says Brendan Dorr, beverage director at B&O Brasserie “As the cocktail craft develops, people are looking for new flavors and ingredients,” confirms Ten Ten’s Riley. “Beer brings with it a breadth of flavors.” Kate Krader, Food & Wine magazine restaurant editor and editor of its annual cocktail book, says that the beer cocktail trend has taken off as beer itself has become “a huge alternative to wine and harder spirits.” She says that it just makes sense that bartenders would start to play around with it. In Baltimore, Dorr was one of the first to introduce beer cocktails on his menu, and he has been rotating them for three years at the B&O. At Woodberry Kitchen, beverage director Corey Polyoka introduced a shandy a year ago, and this winter had a fizz with bourbon, apple cider and a dark, malty beer. Polyoka points to their Blackberry Fizz as an argument for the appeal of beer cocktails. Fizz cocktails are typi- cally made with egg whites and soda water, but soda water normally dilutes the drink. “We thought, ‘Hey, beer tastes good and brings something to the party,’” he says. By us- ing Flying Dog Woody Creek White, a wheat beer, he can bring out “an insane” tropical and spice flavor to the drink. Thanks to the beer’s carbonation, it’s also “the creamiest fizz I have ever had,” he says. He says from now on, fizz cocktails at Woodberry will use only beers. At Ten Ten, Riley has been serving a variation on a ‘beermosa,’ a beer-accented mimosa, at brunch for over a year, a drink he first saw in Chicago. His uses Allagash White, a Belgian-style beer, as well as orange bitters and orange juice. He’s been rotating beer cocktails since then. Instead of making beer the cocktail’s signature element, Riley prefers to use it as an extender. His Stillwater Cup — several spirits mixed with a muddle of cucumber and mint and topped by Stillwater Cellar Door Saison – “tries to mirror Stillwater’s herbaceousness,” he says. The bitters add nuance to the cocktail, Will Helfrich, bartender at Heavy Seas Ale House, puts the finish- ing touch, a sprig of rosemary, on his “Sea Shandy” beer cocktail. The cocktail is made with Heavy Seas lager and pomegranate- rosemary lemonade. (Barbara Haddock Taylor, Baltimore Sun / April 18, 2012) photo by Barbara Haddock Taylor and cut the sweetness of the ginger liqueur and the simple syrup. And the juices from the mint and the cucumbers make it remarkably refreshing. Dorr’s first beer cocktail at B&O was called the Boxcar and was a play on a Snake- bite, a traditional half-beer and half-cider mixed drink. His version featured Allspice Dram liqueur, organic hard cider and a nut brown ale. The combination of beer and liquor made sense because beers are now made using an increasingly vast list of yeast strains, spices and herbs, which leads to more variety in flavor, Dorr says. “Herbal notes, sweet notes, candied fruit notes — a lot of the flavor profiles are very simi- lar [to those in liquor],” he says. For instance, an India pale ale and a tequila share a herb taste, and so the two complement each other. That kinship was the basis of Dorr’s latest cocktail, the Trainwreck — made up of aged tequila; Hum, a botanical spirit; and orange juice, shaken and topped with six ounces of Guinness. “I was just playing around with the most bizarre combination I could imagine,” he says. “Hum has cardamom, which has a lot of spice, and tequila plays nicely off it.” At Heavy Seas Alehouse, general man- ager Vince Cassino says the goal was to offer their customers a new way to try their beers — the cocktails include after-dinner beer cocktails, any-time drinks and some summery tiki-style cocktails — and also to appeal to those who aren’t familiar with craft beers. “If you’re not a craft beer drinker, and you come in for a beer and dinner, we don’t want to alienate you. All the beer flavors can be intimidating,” he says. “This is an easy transi- tion piece.” In their Sea Shandy, the beer is almost imper- ceptible, subtly blended with the pomegranate lemonade. “It’s nice, crisp, easy drinking,” says bartender Helfrich.
  9. Year of Good News High- lights Baltimore’s Rich Beer History Book looks at brewing scene by Frederick N. Rasmussen, The Baltimore Sun, April 21, 2012 To make a cocktail, a bartender performs a complicated ballet involving spirits, mixers and garnishes, somehow juggling them all and finally bringing them in for a graceful, neat landing in your glass. At Heavy Seas Alehouse, bartender Will Helfrich has a simpler ap- proach. He grabs a tall glass, sets it underneath the beer tap and pours eight ounces of sudsy, golden beer, Heavy Seas Classic Lager. And then tops it off with homemade pomegranate lemonade. Add a sprig of fresh rosemary and you have the Little Italy bar and restaurant’s Sea Shandy. When it opened in February, the Alehouse was noteworthy mainly for being the first brick- and-mortar outpost under the name of the Baltimore craft brewer Heavy Seas. But when I sat down for dinner soon after the opening, it was its cocktail list that caught my eye: 10 items and all but three made with some combina- tion of the house’s signature beers and a spirit, from tequila and chartreuse to rum and vodka. Beer cocktails have been popping up with greater frequency in Baltimore in recent months. You can find them at Ten Ten, Jack’s Bistro, Woodberry Kitchen, Mr. Rain’s Fun House and B&O Brasserie. The trend stems from a high interest in craft beers. “In the last two years, it’s really come into vogue,” says Tim Riley, beverage director at Harbor East’s Ten Ten. “There weren’t many of them then, and now you see more, and you see more variety in beers used.” Though beer cocktails have existed for generations, in the form of drinks like the boilermaker, the emphasis now is on craft beer cocktails. They use high-quality spirits, fresh in- gredients and canny flavor combinations. They have depth and unique textures. “Beer cocktails have been around for a long time, but they’ve just gotten more sophis- ticated,” says Brendan Dorr, beverage director at B&O Brasserie “As the cocktail craft develops, people are looking for new flavors and ingredients,” confirms Ten Ten’s Riley. “Beer brings with it a breadth of flavors.” Kate Krader, Food & Wine magazine restaurant editor and editor of its annual cocktail book, says that the beer cocktail trend has taken off as beer itself has become “a huge alternative to wine and harder spirits.” She says that it just makes sense that bartenders would start to play around with it. In Baltimore, Dorr was one of the first to introduce beer cocktails on his menu, and he has been rotating them for three years at the B&O. At Woodberry Kitchen, beverage director Corey Polyoka introduced a shandy a year ago, and this winter had a fizz with bourbon, apple cider and a dark, malty beer. Polyoka points to their Blackberry Fizz as an argument for the appeal of beer cocktails. Fizz cocktails are typically made with egg whites and soda water, but soda water normally dilutes the drink. “We thought, ‘Hey, beer tastes good and brings something to the party,’” he says. By using Flying Dog Woody Creek White, a wheat beer, he can bring out “an insane” tropical and spice flavor to the drink. Thanks to the beer’s carbonation, it’s also “the creamiest fizz I have ever had,” he says. He says from now on, fizz cocktails at Woodberry will use only beers. At Ten Ten, Riley has been serving a variation on a ‘beermosa,’ a beer-accented mimosa, at brunch for over a year, a drink he first saw in Chicago. His uses Allagash White, a Belgian-style beer, as well as orange bitters and orange juice. He’s been rotating beer cocktails since then. Instead of making beer the cocktail’s signature element, Riley prefers to use it as an extender. His Stillwater Cup — several spirits mixed with a muddle of cucumber and mint and topped by Stillwater Cellar Door Saison – “tries to mirror Stillwater’s herbaceousness,” he says. The bitters add nuance to the cocktail, and cut the sweet- ness of the ginger liqueur and the simple syrup. And the juices from the mint and the cucumbers make it remarkably refreshing. Dorr’s first beer cocktail at B&O was called the Boxcar and was a play on a Snakebite, a tra- ditional half-beer and half-cider mixed drink. His version featured Allspice Dram liqueur, organic hard cider and a nut brown ale. The combination of beer and liquor made sense because beers are now made using an increasingly vast list of yeast strains, spices and herbs, which leads to more variety in flavor, Dorr says. “Herbal notes, sweet notes, candied fruit notes — a lot of the flavor profiles are very similar [to those in liquor],” he says. For instance, an India pale ale and a tequila share a herb taste, and so the two complement each other. That kinship was the basis of Dorr’s latest cocktail, the Trainwreck — made up of aged te- quila; Hum, a botanical spirit; and orange juice, shaken and topped with six ounces of Guinness. “I was just playing around with the most bizarre combination I could imagine,” he says. “Hum has cardamom, which has a lot of spice, and tequila plays nicely off it.” At Heavy Seas Alehouse, general manager Vince Cassino says the goal was to offer their cus- tomers a new way to try their beers — the cocktails include after-dinner beer cocktails, any-time drinks and some summery tiki-style cocktails — and also to appeal to those who aren’t familiar with craft beers. “If you’re not a craft beer drinker, and you come in for a beer and dinner, we don’t want to alien- ate you. All the beer flavors can be intimidating,” he says. “This is an easy transition piece.” In their Sea Shandy, the beer is almost imperceptible, subtly blended with the pomegranate lemonade. “It’s nice, crisp, easy drinking,” says bartender Helfrich. Will Helfrich, bartender at Heavy Seas Ale House, puts the finish- ing touch, a sprig of rosemary, on his “Sea Shandy” beer cocktail. The cocktail is made with Heavy Seas lager and pomegranate- rosemary lemonade. (Barbara Haddock Taylor, Baltimore Sun / April 18, 2012) photo by Barbara Haddock Taylor photo by Jim Burger
  10. Heavy Seas Alehouse Heavy Seas Alehouse brings a winner into port by Mary K. Zajac, City Paper, April 18, 2012 Although it opened in Febru- ary, Heavy Seas Alehouse functions with the ease of an old-timer. The brick-and-beam bar and dining room, last home to Diablita, feels lived in, and the staff conducts itself like pros. Want to know where today’s raw-bar oysters hail from? They’re on it. Need a beer rec? It’s offered with a low-key mix of beer geek and aiming-to-please. That the restaurant takes its name (as well as all the tap selections) from co-owner Patrick Dahl- gren’s stepfather Hugh Sisson’s 17-year-old Baltimore-based craft brewery only adds to the sense of the history, invoking a brief wave of nostalgia for Sis- son’s late, eponymous Federal Hill brewpub of the early 1990s (Blueberry wheat beer! Bread pudding!). Even so, Heavy Seas Alehouse is very much its own creation, and a welcome one at that. Pubs have become the contemporary go-to, the common denominator for diners of varying tastes and budgets, and Dahlgren and co-owners Vince Cassino and chef Matt Seeber are clearly trying to please a broad audience, one that wants a beer, clams on the half-shell, and a hefty burger, as well as the folks who look for more formal fish or steak entrees. Not every establishment can pull this off, but Heavy Seas is going about it in the right way by keeping its menu small and well defined, with a focus on pub and regional fare. Sure, beer drinkers will be drawn to the broad port- folio of Heavy Seas offerings on tap, including seasonal and cask selections, but the bar also proffers a range of beer-influenced cocktails such as the HS Manhattan, spiked with a li- queur made with Peg Leg Stout, or the slightly sweet Sea Shandy, a mix of beer and house- made pomegranate lemonade infused with enough rosemary to give it a hint of duskiness. Though compact, the menu is also set up for lots of grazing options, and items from the raw bar, including smoked mussel salad and lobster salad, and snacks, appetizers, salads, and side dishes make up more than half of the bill of fare, suggesting the restaurant expects happy-hour nibbles to be as popular as sand- wiches or entrees. I can certainly vouch for the addictiveness of the spicy beer nuts ($5), a tumble of glossy pecans napped in spices both sweet and hot, one of five selections in the “Snack” section. Like the nuts, other “snacks” also play on traditional tavern fare, like sau- sage sliders or pickled eggs ($4.50), pink from their beet marinade and served with ancho- vies and tarragon-dusted beets, an intriguing play of sweet and sour, earthy and floral. If the night is cool, however, don’t pass up the oyster chowder ($8.50), a silky broth of cream and oyster liquor in which two freshly shucked oysters and a dice of potato, onion, and celery bob. The chowder is delicate but no wallflower, and my only suggested improve- ment is the addition of another oyster: one to share with a tablemate, two for me. You will not have the same internal struggle in sharing the buttermilk-marinated Loose Cannon- battered onion rings ($6.50), not because they are not delicious, but because the portion is staggeringly generous (they also stay crispy even as they cool—hurrah!). The menu offers three sandwiches—a Cuban, a burger, and a portobello burger—but Seeber’s successes with casual fare suggest an expert hand for entrees, and a grilled hanger steak ($24) surpasses even high expectations, particularly with the substitution of pureed celery root for mashed potatoes and the toss of bacon, pearl onions, and wild mushrooms that smother the nicely turned- out meat. Crab-stuffed flounder ($26) is fresh, but ends up mild to the point of bland despite a pretty garnish of translucent lemon slices. The real surprise (and disappointment), however, are the mussels and fries ($18), which lacked real distinctiveness and flavor, even though several fat cloves of garlic floated among the tangle of fennel slices floating in the broth. So solid was nearly everything else sampled that the mussels seemed a puzzling conundrum. Was it simply an off night for that preparation or does it need some tweaking? All of Heavy Seas Alehouse’s desserts are made in house, and the kitchen is doing clever things with ice cream infusions and beer reductions. Creme brulee is dressed up in Earl Grey tea; Pimlico pie, a chocolate, pecan, and brown-sugar confection, is paired with black cardamom gelato. The lovely, moist ginger stout cake ($6.50) tastes like the best fruitcake you ever had, only unmarred by day-glo can- died cherries and pineapple. It is garnished with whipped cream buoyed by a reduction of Peg Leg stout and candied kumquats, and while a server advises pushing the fruit off the cake if it doesn’t appeal, that would be a waste of a beautiful and tasty garnish. In a short time, Heavy Seas Alehouse is drawing happy-hour revelers, corporate shirts and ties, couples on a night out, and a clientele of varied ages and backgrounds, which speaks to the sheer comfort of the place. Although no beer is brewed on premises, Heavy Seas Alehouse feels every bit as authentic as any of Baltimore’s historic or contemporary brew- pubs. It’s a worthy addition to the lineup. Heavy Seas Alehouse is open for lunch and dinner seven days. photo by Sarah Thrower
  11. the plump, savory patties are dressed with a red cabbage slaw and pickles and served on toasted spent-grain rolls. They’re juicy little wonders. The roasted chicken entree exemplifies Seeber’s restrained approach. There are no gimmicks here, just hand- somely presented and patiently prepared pieces of flavorful chicken, served with sauteed kale and a pretty white bean and tomato casserole. An entree of stout-glazed 24-hour short ribs, served with roasted turnips and pickled red onions, is similarly effective and flavor-focused. These are approachable dishes that feel right at home in this gleaming pub. When Seeber decides to push things a little bit, it’s with side dishes like a puree of celery root and Yukon Gold potatoes, or a full-on risotto made from coarse farro grain and muscled up with pork confit and porta- bello. Keep your eyes on the specials, too. For his terrific sauteed skate preparation, Seeber dispensed brightening grapefruit, tomato, capers and fresh herbs. The skate, served with sauteed asparagus, was a midweek special, and a tantalizing taste of how far Seeber can take diners. There are treats everywhere, like the arousing smoked mussel salad from the well- tended raw bar; the house salad, composed of locally grown baby lettuces, tossed with shaved fennel, hazelnuts and blood oranges; and a dandy Angus beef hamburger topped with Stilton cheese and stout-flavored onions. Attention is paid to dessert, too. Try the Pimlico Pie, a regional version on the pecan pie, served with black cardamom gelato from nearby Pitango, or the creme brulee flavored with Earl Grey tea. But the best treat of all, and on their own There are so many things to admire about Heavy Seas Alehouse, the thoroughly win- ning new establishment in Little Italy’s Holland Tack Factory. There is the understated, comfortable decor, mercifully free of pirate paraphernalia. (Frankly, I was worried about that.) The smartly conceived menu from executive chef Matt Seeber is instantly appealing and accessible, and is being executed with impressive confi- dence. The front-of-house staff is welcoming and impressively trained. They’re fully on board with this new project, and their pride comes through. Heavy Seas Alehouse takes its name from the popular line of beers by Maryland’s Clip- per City Brewing Co., whose founder, Hugh Sisson, is the godfather of this area’s microbrew movement. Sisson has no direct involvement in this project, but it has his blessing. The most admirable thing about Heavy Seas Alehouse is how well it plays to both the beer expert and those indifferent to beer. Fans of Heavy Seas will find no fewer than eight brews on tap — and two on “cask” — on any given night, along with a bracing selection of beer-laced cocktails, like the rich and hearty Lost Cargo, made with Heavy Seas Peg Leg Stout, bourbon, port and bitters. Heavy Seas beers have been craftily worked into the pub menu, too, from the Loose Cannon in the onion-ring batter to the Peg Leg glaze on the 24-hour beef short ribs to the Marzen jus that accompanies the roasted free-range chicken. Later, there’s a terrific ginger stout cake served with Peg Leg whipped cream. Even the delicious bread and sandwich rolls are baked in part with Heavy Seas spent grain, a byproduct of the brewing process. But none of this feels forced or arbitrary — it feels like a chef fully engaged in explor- ing the possibilities and potentials of flavoring with beer. Seeber, whose most recent position was at Craftsteak, a Tom Collichio restaurant in Las Vegas, doesn’t pour beer where it’s not wanted. The everyday Heavy Seas menu is not so much playing it safe as playing it smart. Diners are getting to know, and to depend on, a solid lineup of menu items that a new kitchen is able to deliver with consistent results. Seeber has also had time to fix the few things that weren’t working. The menu’s original braised pork belly appetizer, which was confusingly paired with a slice of crab toast, has been replaced by a tempura version, five luscious nuggets ready for dipping in a tomato-maple sauce. Other things arrived on the opening menu fully formed and have stayed that way. Don’t miss the appetizer of sausage sliders. Formed from good Roma sausage and given a boost of flavor from a Heavy Seas pilsener, Restaurant Review: Heavy Seas Alehouse Takes a Winning Tack At new Little Italy restaurant, drink and food menus are buoyed by beer by Richard Gorelick, The Baltimore Sun, March 31, 2012 photo by Gene Sweeney Jr.
  12. With a name like Heavy Seas Alehouse, you might expect that the new bar and restaurant in Little Italy/Harbor East would be a shrine to the esteemed Baltimore craft brewery. Hugh Sisson, the brewery’s founder, said before the opening that licensing the name was meant as a showcase for the brand. And the beer list that was previewed underscored that point — all Heavy Seas, all the time. But for all the Heavy Seas love, this isn’t a venue that appeals to just fans of the beer. In fact, it is the first great new bar of the year, more than meeting the expectations set by the Heavy Seas name. From the service to the small details in the menu, there are no false moments here. It left me wanting to come back, hoping to finally grab a glass of the Siren Noire, which wasn’t avail- able the three nights I visited, and another bite of one of the excellent burgers, available until midnight in the late night menu — a feature that will earn it many admirers in the area. Heavy Seas Alehouse is a bar and a restaurant. Taking up a big chunk of space at the Tack Factory, it’s divided into three dining sections: a semiprivate area in the center, called the Cap- tain’s Lounge; an airy space near the entrance, and a third spot filled with booths and high-top tables that shares space with the bar. The bar seats about 12 and faces away from the diners and the street, giving it an intimate feel. The decorating scheme could have been overwhelming. Patrick Dahlgren, the brains behind the bar, had promised a — shudder — nautical theme in a nod to the Heavy Seas label. I imagined something like Disney’s Pirates of the Caribbean ride, with stuffed sea animals on some walls, novelty mermaids hanging from others, maybe even waiters wearing eye patches. (I’m half-describing Barracudas Tavern in Locust Point.) But Heavy Seas is spare, almost fastidious. The owners have chosen to play up the build- ing’s industrial look, and they’ve matched bare, exposed brick walls with colorful Heavy Seas posters that pay homage to the brand with creativity. The bar is punctuated by a tap system that, with all the colorful Heavy Seas logos lined up, looks like a box of crayons. The restraint extends to the menu, which has mercifully few pirate puns and features an admirable commitment to sustainable farming, with an acknowledgment of and thanks to its farmers and growers, which include Baltimore’s Five Seeds Farm and Big City Farm. Bar Review: Smooth Sailing at New Heavy Seas Alehouse Showcase of Baltimore brewery is one of year’s best new bars By Erik Maza, The Baltimore Sun , 6:56 a.m. EST, February 29, 2012 The beer taps inside the new Heavy Seas Alehouse. (Kenneth K. Lam, Baltimore Sun / February 22, 2012) photo by Gene Sweeney Jr. a reason for going to Heavy Seas, is the onion rings. Big, golden and crunchy, every one perfect thing, glistening in a savory bat- ter of buttermilk, whole-grain Dijon mus- tard and Heavy Seas Loose Cannon beer. They’re a triumph. And when a restaurant lavishes so much care and attention on the small things, you can bet it’s getting the big things right, too. Already, Heavy Seas has become a destination restaurant, something never remotely achieved by its predecessors in the space, Tsunami and Diablita. The previous tenants were such resounding failures that people started to wonder about the location, just on the outskirts of the Harbor East development. It turns out it wasn’t the location. Everything about the warehouse setting — the whitewashed walls, dark wood, black trim and industrial proportions — seems purposefully to evoke both shipbuilding and brewing. Aside from some painting and polishing, Heavy Seas Alehouse looks pretty much the same as it did when it was Dia- blita. (One thing needs fixing: The murky sound system sounds waterlogged.) The difference is that Heavy Seas is confidently inhabiting the space. The space will continue to grow, too. The front area is where the crowd wants to be, but there are quieter dining spaces, including an enclosed back room with a smaller back bar. An en- closed beer garden will be coming soon, too. People love it here, you can tell. There’s not a pandering moment at Heavy Seas Alehouse. Neither is there a lazy reliance on glib gastro-trends. Instead, Heavy Seas Alehouse is attracting diners by serving a quality product. Good thinking. Heavy Seas Alehouse Where: 1300 Bank St., Little Italy Contact: 410-522-0850, heavyseasalehouse.com Hours: Open daily for lunch and dinner Prices: Appetizers, $7-$17; entrees, $18-$26 Food: ✭✭✭1/2 Service: ✭✭✭1/2 Atmosphere: ✭✭✭1/2 [Key: Outstanding: ✭✭✭✭; Good: ✭✭✭; Fair or Uneven: ✭✭; Poor: ✭]
  13. Black Cannon IPA and the Below Decks Barrel Aged Barleywine, which were being dispensed from casks, the way “real-ale” fanat- ics like it. Seeber, whose most recent job was at Tom Colicchio’s Craftsteak restaurant at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas, is using various Heavy Seas brews in his broths, batters and glazes, and the menu recommends beer pairings for the entrees. Among the appetizers are things like marinated lobster salad with ginger lime vin- aigrette ($17), fried artichokes with basil pesto ($6.50) and braised bacon with house-smoked tomato and maple glaze, which is served with a piece of crab toast ($12). The half-dozen entrees include mussels and fries with a Gold Ale broth ($9 or $16), a grilled hanger steak with celery root puree, shii- take mushrooms and smoked bacon ($26), and a 24-hour beef short rib with a glaze made from Heavy Seas Alehouse is scheduled to open offi- cially on Wednesday, taking over the Tack Fac- tory space formerly occupied by Tsunami and Diablita. The key word is “officially.” The new restaurant, the first to carry the name of the popular Baltimore-based beer brand, opened its doors quietly on Feb. 7, a week ahead of its announced opening. But word got out. A day after its stealth opening, the restaurant was nicely filled. The bar was fully occupied, as were many of the bar area’s tables, which include two long, community-style high tables. A preliminary version of the first menu from executive chef Matt Seeber was up and running. The one- sheeter pushes off with raw bar and chilled seafood selections before sailing into a couple dozen appetizers, entrees and sides. A heady lineup of Heavy Seas beers were on draft, and the bartenders, in their Oxford shirts and blue aprons, were promoting the Heavy Seas Alehouse Back story: After selling his stake in Sisson’s, Maryland’s first brew pub, in the ‘90s, Heavy Seas brewery founder Hugh Sisson had re- sisted opening a namesake brew pub — state licensing laws make it difficult anyway. But he was convinced that by licensing the brand to another operator, such as his stepson, Patrick Dahlgren, he could benefit from the brand exposure, and the alehouse was born. Its home, the Tack Factory, formerly housed restaurants Diablita and Tsunami. Signature drink: Any of the beers; if the Siren Noire is out, try the Peg Leg Imperial Stout ($6). Also try one of the cask-condi- tioned ales — when I went, the Heavy Seas Pale Ale sold for $7.25. Happy hour, 5 p.m.-7 p.m., discounts $1 off all draft beer. There’s also a selection of wines, rums and cocktails, nearly all under $12 by the glass. Open: 5 p.m.-midnight Mondays-Saturdays, 4 p.m.-midnight Sundays Where: 1300 Bank St., Baltimore Parking: Street and metered parking is available. Contact: 410-522-0850; heavyseasalehouse.com Copyright © 2012, The Baltimore Sun The service is exemplary. Both bartenders and wait staff seem to be genuine fans of the place and its fare; from my stool, I could hear some recommending new beers to each other. Heavy Seas shows a canny understanding of the young people in the neighborhood by offering a late-night menu that ends at midnight and includes an excellent Angus beef burger ($15). Or- der it with the Old Bay/saffron mayo on the side for the fries. The onion rings are also mouth- watering ($6.50). In the interest of avoiding waste (and adding a neat touch), the restaurant uses the brew- ery’s leftover spent-grain for its bread, made next door at Piedigrotta bakery. As for the beer, it is doubtful that there’s this much Heavy Seas on display anywhere else except the brewery on the outskirts of Baltimore — two on cask and 14 on draft, including one rotating seasonal. It would be easy to scoff at the brand’s monopoly, but consider the name outside. (Dogfish Head’s Rehoboth Beach, Del., restaurant does the same thing.) The Peg Leg Imperial Stout is a hearty brew with a sweet undertow (it was molasses) and notes of chocolate ($6). It takes an experienced palate to detect the subtleties of cask- conditioned ales; still, my Pale Ale ($7.25) tasted particularly fresh paired with my frisee salad ($11). There are 11 other brands by the bottle, including the rich Fin du Monde and the earthy Anchor Steam from California. It is worth noting that Heavy Seas might be one of the few places in town that does beer- based cocktails — Brendan Dorr, beverage director at B&O American Brasserie consulted on the menu. The Sea Shandy ($8.25), with homemade pomegranate lemonade, is citrusy and refreshing. And the HS Manhattan ($9.75), though too saccharine for my taste — I suspect the bartender might have used too much of the Peg Leg Stout base — left my companion, a long- time fan of the classic cocktail, very satisfied. The only disappointment was that the staggeringly good Siren Noire, a seasonal imperial stout flavored with chocolate nibs, was not available all three nights I visited late last week. It would be unfair to hold the bar responsible for being out of the Siren; bartenders told me the kegs run out quickly. In many ways, its absence speaks to Heavy Seas’ huge fan base. erik.maza@baltsun.com Table Talk: Heavy Seas Alehouse Opens in Little Italy ‘Official’ opening scheduled for Wednesday, but soft debut draws a crowd The Baltimore Sun, February 14, 2012 One of the dining areas at the Heavy Seas Alehouse at 1300 Bank St. (Barbara Haddock Taylor, Baltimore Sun / February 10, 2012) photo by Gene Sweeney Jr.
  14. Heavy Seas Alehouse will officially open February 15, the pub and restaurant announced this morning. It also confirmed that Matt Seeber, a former chef at Tom Colicchio’s Craftsteak restau- rant at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas, will be its executive chef. “Baltimore at its core has a long-standing love affair with beer and we look forward to mak- ing an impression on the scene and raising the bar on the brewhouse experience,” Seeber said in a statement. The new restaurant, located in Little Italy, licensed the name and trademark of the longtime Baltimore brewer, Heavy Seas Brewing, in November. Hugh Sisson, founder of Heavy Seas, had resisted opening a storefront in addition to his brewery, in part because Maryland law prevents him from owning both. But his stepson, Patrick Dahlgren, who is running the new pub, convinced him that by licensing the name, he could both promote his brand without much risk. Dahlgren has said he was following the example of Leinenkugel’s, the Wisconsin brewery that licensed its name to a new beer garden at Power Plant Live, the first time it had ever done so. “As the Heavy Seas brand has been building up, we just thought it was ready to have a spot of its own,” Dahlgren said in November. Though Sisson won’t be actively involved in the new venue - under the licensing agreement, for instance, he can’t dictate that the Alehouse only carry Heavy Seas beer - it has a lot in common with his namesake Federal Hill brewpub, Sisson’s, which he sold in 1995. The new pub and restaurant will be managed by Vince Cassino, who was the former general manager at Sisson’s. And it will also be decorated with a nautical theme as an homage to the beer’s trademark pirate logo. Construction at the Alehouse, which is located at The Tack Factory in Little Italy, began in November. In addition to phasing out the look of the factory’s old tenant, the restaurant Diablita, Dahlgren has also said a new raw bar will be added. The restaurant sits nearly 200, in a main room and a back area. It will also have a beer garden for about 40 people. The beer list has not been finalized; Dahlgren has said the plan is to have between eight and ten drafts, in addition to a couple of casks. Seeber, according to the bio in the press release, has 25 years of experience, including time at the Gramercy Tavern in New York City. He did not address the specifics of the menu on Thursday’s announcement, but said there will be an emphasis on beer-flavored cooking and pairings. Heavy Seas Alehouse sets February Open- ing Date; Matt Seeber to be Executive Chef By Erik Maza, The Baltimore Sun, January 6, 2012 Heavy Seas’ Peg Leg imperial stout ($24). The most alluring menu item of all — onion rings with a whole-grain mustard and Loose Cannon batter ($5.50). Heavy Seas is at 1300 Bank St. (at the corner of Central Avenue and Bank). Tech- nically, this is Little Italy, but most people think of as part of the Harbor East develop- ment. For more information, call 410-522- 0850 or go to heavyseasalehouse.com. It’s bully A 250-seat American bistro named Kettle Hill will open in the old Babalu space in Power Plant Live. Former Oriole Rick Dempsey is a partner in the project, but the principals are Baltimore newcomers Desmond Reilly and Kristopher Karr. Dempsey will serve largely in an “am- bassadorial role.” The name Kettle Hill should resonate with scholars of the Spanish-American War — Kettle Hill was captured by Teddy Roosevelt and his Rough Riders, along with the better-known San Juan Hill, in a decisive battle on July 1, 1898. For Reilly and Karr, who had been working on a restaurant con- cept that would evoke the robust America of the early 1900s, it was only a matter of time before they bumped into Mr. Robust himself. “Roosevelt is an underlying theme of the whole design,” Reilly said. Kettle Hill will be robust and rugged, through and through, the partners said, from the decor, which is being guided by designer Brian Swanson, to the menu of “regional American grill fare, based around hearty robust flavors.” Joining the adventure is Sarah Acconcia, recently of 13.5% Wine Bar in Hampden, who has been named Kettle Hill’s executive chef. Kettle Hill is moving toward an April opening date, To Market Chad Gauss has left the City Cafe. His last night as the Mount Vernon restaurant’s executive chef was Feb. 5. Gauss will be opening his own restau- rant in the old Hampden Food Market. The 3,000-square-foot restaurant, to be named the Food Market, will include seating for 90 in the dining room, a 12-seat bar and an open kitchen whose focus, Gauss said, will be “basically blue-collar food in a white- collar execution.” Gauss’ partner in the Food Market is Elan Kotz, a familiar front-of-house pres- ence at Aldo’s in Little Italy. Gauss will be the Food Market’s executive chef and Kotz its general manager. Gauss said he hopes to have the Food Market, which is now in “deep construction,” open by the third week of April. No word yet about City Cafe’s post- Gauss plans. richard.gorelick@baltsun.com Copyright © 2012, The Baltimore Sun Hugh Sisson at Heavy Seas brewery
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