I was with Hammond and Mike G earlier in the evening on Wednesday and got to try the first of the three Haymarket beers that were tapped that night, the Belgian Pale. I was among those who voiced a suspicion that the beer was being served a bit young--I detected a slight sulfurous tinge to the nose, a byproduct of fermentation that will likely dissipate with a bit of time. I had to leave early though, and didn't get to try the other two beers that were tapped that night.
However, I was able to stop by Haymarket on my way to the train last night to try the beers I'd missed out on before. I liked the dubbel and the IPA better than I had liked the Belgian pale. The dubbel was a tad lighter-bodied and more bitter than my ideal would be but had a great deal of the kind of Belgian yeasty/fruitiness I expect from an abbey-style ale. The IPA was fairly well-balanced for the style, with assertive but not overwhelming hops.
I also inadvertently crashed some kind of press gathering for the Drinking and Writing Theater (
http://www.drinkingandwriting.com/) at the back bar, snagged some free samples of pretzel and sausages (the sausages were pretty good but the spicier of the two was a little dry) and chatted with some folks I know (Jonathon from BeerMapping.com who's an old buddy of mine, Chuck Sudo from Chicagoist who I've only met a couple of times but is a pretty good guy it seems, also got to talk to Pete Crowley and another brewer for a few moments) and some I'd just met.
One person I met last night, Steve Mosqueda from the Drinking and Writing Theater, presented a 5 minute preview of a film they made and it looks like it'll be fun to watch. It's a documentary about doing a 4-day bar crawl along the full length of Western Avenue that they say will be finished and coming out in March. After the preview I got a few words in with him 'cause I was curious not only about the 4-day, 24 mile pub crawl as a whole, but especially how it went going through Beverly.
I'm pretty familiar with that stretch of Western Avenue--the east side of the street is dry, but the west side is full of really bad "Irish" pubs serving bad beer. I have buddies who live in the area and the dart league I'm in has teams in a few of those terrible terrible bars, so I've spent many a Wednesday evening there, drinking two dollar bottles of High Life and wishing I was someplace else. It turns out that on the first day of the crawl, they started at 119th street and made their way to 95th street and don't remember much about it at all.

Then they had to walk 8 and a half miles north on the second day, hungover, 95 degrees outside, before they hit the next bar. Ugh.
Anyway I'm intrigued to see the final product (and I'm also morbidly curious and thinking about trying at least the Beverly portion of the pub crawl myself some day; it helps that I'd have places within crawling distance to crash at). Steve told me there'd be more information on their web site about it eventually but I don't see anything there now. Also, for those interested, the Drinking and Writing Theater will be putting on a show at Haymarket later this afternoon, How To Cure a Hangover, for which the brewpub will be tapping another new beer, "Ombibulous Double IPA"
So after tasting the other two beers last night, I was much more pleased than I was on my first visit Wednesday. I need to go back in a week or so and try the Belgian pale again to see how it has fared in the interim (not to mention getting a taste of that double IPA). I do expect very good things from this brewery in the future