October is the time for some monster beers! Month number four of my yearlong series to support New Jersey breweries focuses on big beers with ABVs in the double digits: That might come back to haunt you.
Be afraid, be very afraid…
Blueberry Braggot, 15% ABV
Flying Fish Brewing Company, Somerdale
Flying Fish is one of New Jersey’s OG breweries and Blueberry Braggot is a leftover from their imaginative Exit Series beers. And while the Exit Series was discontinued, this honey ale lives on. The beer is fermented with Belgian yeast and drinks like a big Belgian Trippel. The blueberry lingers in the nose and is surprisingly dry and drinkable. Lurking in a dark corner, the 15% ABV will stalk you, ready to pounce if you’re not careful.

Jacked-O-Lantern, 12% ABV
Source Farmhouse Brewery, Colts Neck
How could I pass up a Halloween-themed triple-cream ale for this article? Actually, I couldn’t. Jacked-O-Lantern is conditioned on organic Peruvian coffee beans, pumpkin spice, and milk sugar. If you’re a pumpkin spice hater, fear not. The spice is very subtle, and the milk sugar gives a pronounced sweetness as well as a rich mouth-feel. The coffee really asserts itself on the nose of this beast. Does that make this Source Farmhouse Brewery option a breakfast beer? Maybe, but I’d still wait until the lights are out.

Carrington Event, 10.4% ABV
Icarus Brewing, Lakewood
Icarus Brewing isn’t afraid of monster beers. Imperial Stouts and Triple New England IPAs appear regularly on their tap and can lists. Carrington Event is one of the latter. It’s heavily oated, has a touch of lactose to add to the body, and has a hop list as long as my arm. What was the Carrington Event, you ask? It was the largest geomagnetic storm in recorded history. Thankfully, it happened in 1859. Back then it caused fires from sparking telegraph lines. Can you imagine what it would do to our electric grid now? Scary! Tropical notes and a touch of sweetness belie such sinister implications.

Stacking Casks Blend 8, 14% ABV
Kane Brewing Company, Ocean Township
For this article, maybe I should call it Stacking Caskets? At 14% ABV, I suppose it’s scary enough. Beers don’t get much more complex than this one, which is a blend of two bourbon barrel aged barleywines. One is oat based, the other is rye based. Both spent about three years in the barrel. As if that wasn’t enough, the blend then spent three more months in a cognac puncheon (a wine cask). The result is a big bourbon nose, hints of vanilla bean, and a little sharpness from the cognac. Sip slowly and savor this beastie. There a lot to contemplate here.

Please approach these monsters with caution. They are both delicious and dangerous at the same time. As any horror movie aficionado will attest, discretion is always the better part of valor.








I’ve lived in the shore area since my teenage years, and I consider myself a local.











Farm Fest Marzen: Source Brewing Company, Colts Neck
Zed’s Original Marzen Hungarian Style Lager: Zed’s Beer (Bado Brewing), Marlton
Festus Haggen: Ashton Brewing, Middlesex
Festivus Marzen Style Lager: Frye Brewing Company, Point Pleasant














As Halloween candy, and, dare I say it, Christmas decorations, pop up in stores where there were once sand shovels, buckets, and beach towels, I also find that I’m starting to anticipate crisp mornings, earlier twilights, and weekends spent at area farms.
My husband and I recently attended Locals Night, where all are actually welcome! Johnson’s Locust Hall Farm is home to a field that faces the setting sun, and as the light fades (during the “Golden Hour,” everything is bathed in a magical golden glow. 
























