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Bluejacket Brewery and The Arsenal, Neighborhood Restaurant Group's Foray Into Brewing at the Navy Yard


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There's a good article today in the Post about Neighborhood Restaurant Group's forthcoming brewery near the Navy Yard.  It sounds like it's going to be great, but I'm curious how it will impact NRG's other restaurants.  The article mentions that Bluejacket will be brewing a fairly diverse selection of beers.  I wonder how many of these we'll see elsewhere.  My guess is that over time they'll discover a small number of fast-selling, fairly conventional beers -- a lager, an IPA, a hefeweizen, for example -- that we'll see at all of their restaurants except ChurchKey and maybe Rustico, which will get some of the more estoeric styles. It'll be interesting to see how this plays out.

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My guess is that over time they'll discover a small number of fast-selling, fairly conventional beers -- a lager, an IPA, a hefeweizen, for example -- that we'll see at all of their restaurants except ChurchKey and maybe Rustico, which will get some of the more estoeric styles. It'll be interesting to see how this plays out.

I don't know, with Greg's track record I wouldn't count on any of this being conventional in the least. This is closest I've seen to plans for a functioning, small production beer "lab" that had any chance of succeeding. Good on them for doing something really different. Whether they can sustain it financially will answer your question about what production looks like 2-3 years down the line, but you can't say they aren't going big right off the bat!

It will be interesting to see the impact of the nearby Gordon Biersch that is going in literally on top of the Nats Park Metro exit. I don't know how much lead time Bluejacket will get to build up a fan base before that opens. Selfishly I hope they siphon a lot of business so that there is a chance in hell Bluejacket won't be absolutely mobbed on game days.

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It will be interesting to see the impact of the nearby Gordon Biersch that is going in literally on top of the Nats Park Metro exit. I don't know how much lead time Bluejacket will get to build up a fan base before that opens. Selfishly I hope they siphon a lot of business so that there is a chance in hell Bluejacket won't be absolutely mobbed on game days.

I think Bluejacket will be an instant destination - within the city and people coming in from out of town to visit. Gordon Biersch will be a popular with local office dwellers at lunch and families before games (they're probably going to be up and running by opening day). Bluejacket is going to be on a different level - a nationally important brewery and bar (hopefully open in May/June). Nice thing is that it's going to be big, so getting a beer before a game should be feasable.

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I think Bluejacket will be an instant destination - within the city and people coming in from out of town to visit. Gordon Biersch will be a popular with local office dwellers at lunch and families before games (they're probably going to be up and running by opening day). Bluejacket is going to be on a different level - a nationally important brewery and bar (hopefully open in May/June). Nice thing is that it's going to be big, so getting a beer before a game should be feasable.

Oh, I wasn't implying in the least that Gordon Biersch is on the same playing field, just that they will logically take business away due to proximity and approachability of their offerings. The madhouse that is ChurchKey on any given night tells me that Greg & co. don't have much to worry about.

Bluejacket is my most anticipated local restaurant opening of probably the past 10 years (this is not an exaggeration). Well, maybe Right Proper, too. The past 2-3 years have been a dream come true for beer fans in this town.

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I am extremely excited about this place opening next week. It will be a full-scale brewery with a separate restaurant -- don't call it a brewpub. Two interesting preview articles came out today laying out some details. They expect to open with 20 of their beers on tap. 60 percent of their annual production will be sold to other restaurants and retail outlets. Kyle Bailey and Tiffany MacIsaac will prepare the menu, utilizing the spent grains from brewing for things like pastas and bread rolls.

What beers will Bluejacket debut with? Among them: Forbidden Planet, a dry-hopped kolsch made with Galaxy hops; the Scarecrow, a hoppy saison; the Imposter, a session rye IPA; Tooth & Nail, an imperial IPA; Figure 8, a wee heavy made with local figs and modeled after pastry chef Tiffany MacIsaac's figgy toffee pudding; and James & the Giant, a Belgian strong blonde ale with local peaches.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/going-out-guide/wp/2013/10/23/beer-drinkers-prepare-your-arms-bluejacket-to-open-on-tuesday/

And in addition to the 20 beer collaborations Bluejacket has done with breweries around the U.S. and Europe leading up to the opening, Engert and Parisi are also teaming up with fellow Neighborhood Restaurant Groups chefs. The duo worked with MacIsaac to create a strong Scotch ale brewed with figs, cinnamon, and nutmeg that's reminiscent of her figgy toffee pudding at Birch & Barley. Tony Chittum, who will head the forthcoming Greek-inspired Iron Gate Inn, helped conceptualize a strong Belgian-style blonde saison with notes of anise, cucumber, and mint "seasoned" with mastic, an licorice-flavored tree sap popular in Greece. And a doppelbock was inspired by the half-smoke created by Red Apron Butcher's Nate Anda. The beer uses smoked malts with the same blend of woods that Anda uses to smoke his meats and incorporates some of the same spices, including white cardamom, black pepper, nutmeg, and cayenne.

http://www.washingtoncitypaper.com/blogs/youngandhungry/2013/10/23/brew-hub-new-brewery-bluejacket-is-a-laboratory-for-food-centric-beers/

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And? And??

Ha! I was actually just about to post on this.

The space is awesome. Love it. The bar gets really, really crowded in my experience, which can make it a challenging place to meet people to have a drink and chat. The beers are great, interesting, and the selection is incredible. The ability to order tastes as well is fun, as it allows you to try a bunch of different stuff without having to commit to a full pint.

We were there for dinner this past Friday, and we ordered a whole bunch of stuff and shared things. The beef heart tartare, the crispy chickpeas and the hot charcuterie were our favorite things among the items that we ordered. The pastas we had were good, although not great. Both of the salads were just ok.

Service was an issue in our opinion. Our server was knowledgeable and helpful. When we could find him.  We probably would have ordered at least one more round, or perhaps the equivalent of more than that in tastings, if he'd been around a bit more.

Anyhow, we enjoyed it, we'll be back, and I'm really happy this place is in DC.

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I had pretty much the same experience as DCDuck a couple weeks back. Abysmal service, beers are very good and quite eclectic, and food is forgettable.

A significant note; we got there at around 3:00 on a Saturday and it was probably 3/4 full. By 6:30, it was completely packed and had I been walking in at that time instead of leaving I would have turned right back around and gone for a different bar. I can't imagine how crowded this place will be before Nats games.

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I can't imagine how crowded this place will be before Nats games.

Agreed. The first time I visited was on a Tuesday, and I was supposed to meet a friend from out of town. I walked in, started to try to

shoulder my way towards the bar, and then realized that there was no way we would be able to grab space at the bar and get food as planned. I walked out and went elsewhere. I was able to get a reservation this time, but had to make it a long ways in advance.

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Finally made it down last night and had a really good time. Snagged the last remaining bar stool at 4pm (every bar area table spot gone by 4:30). I never sit at bar tables at Churchkey because the servers are usually in the weeds running so many different beers. Not the same experience you get when you have 3 or 4 bartenders in front of you who can easily pour you a fresh beer-  so I automatically applied that to The Arsenal sight unseen. And the bartenders did a great job. Not as seasoned as the ones found at Churchkey, clearly NRG had to put out a big casting call for Bluejacket and the new guys are learning on the go. But they were super friendly and attentive. Not a single service gripe.

Beers were very good, especially the New Zealot American Pale Ale (cask) and The Panther Schwartzbier. Got the Hammertime charcuterie board, which is about 5 slices of Virginia ham with toasted bread, mustard, cornichons, etc. Nice, nothing spectacular about the ham. Wings were good. Some may not like the breadiness of them, but I don't mind. Think Hooters wings with much better poultry and frying. Tater Tots are surprisingly revised from Churchkey, square and less plump. Also fewer to the order IIRC - but still delicious.

We got out of there at around $50 a person (4) with plenty of full beers, tasters and three appetizers.

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My experience with service (drowning) and food (fried, meaty, and just fine) was similar to others. However, I wasn't as blown away with the beers as I seem to see in most reviews. It kind of struck me as they were determine to have a huge opening draft list, quality be damned. The Ingenue and Butcher in particular were weird in a "aw fuck it, let's see if anyone will drink it" sort of way. In general my table quickly moved to the lighter, basic styles. Those were executed much better.

Knowing the caliber of people behind this venture I know they will get things up and humming by spring (although this place is going to be perpetually slammed). I'm pretty happy staying away and giving them some time though.

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Incidentally we went there for lunch yesterday for the first time, and all enjoyed our food and brews. I had the merguez burger with a side of tots and thought they were well done, though the bun was a little lackluster (but I do appreciate that it's something they make themselves). I've had a much better bun on the burger from Red Apron, so hopefully this can improve.

as for the beers, I personally had 3 tastes: one of their normal IPA, one of their imperial IPA (I forget their names). neither overly hoppy but very crisp and I could easily see myself enjoying larger glasses of each. Also had a taste of the Mexican Radio mole-inspired stout, which I thought was fantastic and would pair wonderfully with a chocolate dessert (though it did just fine with my burger). I wanted to try more but my mom was with us and I know she definitely would've judged me getting 4 or 5 tastes (though it would only add up to a pint). other people in our party enjoyed their cheeseburgers, but my uncle thought his wings were mediocre. I had one and thought them to be fine, if unremarkable, but I've had far worse and better.

will definitely have to come back and navigate more of the beer menu.

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and one of my best friends is like their new brewer: a Brown bio grad who has been doing internships at breweries, but mostly wineries around the world. guess there's a shot for him to latch on in this field after all.

I hope he can bring them down to earth a little bit. He's certainly got the resume.

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I hope he can bring them down to earth a little bit. He's certainly got the resume.

sorry that was poorly written. I'm not friends with the new brewer, but my friend is basically in the same situation as this new guy at Bluejacket, also a Brown bio grad.

my friend has been jumping from winery to winery for a few months at a time (in Australia now). I'm not as familiar with the wine industry, but hoping he can get something good after doing this.

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sorry that was poorly written. I'm not friends with the new brewer, but my friend is basically in the same situation as this new guy at Bluejacket, also a Brown bio grad.

my friend has been jumping from winery to winery for a few months at a time (in Australia now). I'm not as familiar with the wine industry, but hoping he can get something good after doing this.

it was written perfectly; my own constant misuse of the word "like" was like the only reason I misunderstood it...

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I don't have any firsthand knowledge on this, but I wonder if the situation of having a brewmaster who's not an owner is similar to a restaurant being in a similar situation with a hired chef.  In the beer world it seems more the case that you hire a brewer whom you trust to brew a certain way but basically turn the keys to the brewery over to them as opposed to a chef just executing an owner's vision.

I wonder if in Bluejacket's case whether the brewer is given ingredients by Greg Englert and told to make it work somehow;  the upshot being that these are Englert's beers, not the brewmaster's and maybe the underlying reason for her leaving.   This would also explain the insistence on opening with 20 beers whereas most breweries start with a much smaller core linup, nail their execution, and then expand from there. Again, pure speculation on my part

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I wonder if in Bluejacket's case whether the brewer is given ingredients by Greg Englert and told to make it work somehow;  the upshot being that these are Englert's beers, not the brewmaster's and maybe the underlying reason for her leaving.   This would also explain the insistence on opening with 20 beers whereas most breweries start with a much smaller core linup, nail their execution, and then expand from there. Again, pure speculation on my part

This was my assumption on reading the news.

Along with I'm sure many others I was so, SO excited for this place to open.  Due to various issues it took me over a month after the debut to get down to Navy Yard and sample everything.  There is a reason I never bothered to add my comments here. I charitably had hoped they would turn things around and make it a destination to travel across town for, but most of what I've read (with the exception of a couple of stand out beers) doesn't give me much hope for the current line up.  At this point I'm waiting to see what the start of baseball season brings us.   Hopefully the vision and execution will eventually find a happy medium.

The contrast with Right Proper is significant, a brewery that focused on a few solid offerings to open up with and really knocked it out of the park (IHMO, I know they are not universally loved).

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Baseball season=volume. They will get the ship righted well before the first pitch. I can also 'only through assumption' believe that NRG looked at this spot not because of the immediate baseball surrounduings but because this area was slated for much needed development, like grocery stores and residential development being approved. Any quadrent that is in need of development and growth has to have anchors attached (subway station, a cemented large scale business-Department of Transportation helps, grocery stores) without it residential has a hard time growing and expanding.

NRG will make its steady income on the people who live down there, not visit every once in a while because they attend a baseball game.

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Baseball season=volume. They will get the ship righted well before the first pitch.

When it comes to the quality of beer that BlueJacket will be putting out I don't think those two events correlate.  How much Miller Lite do the Nats sell on game day again?

I don't think anybody is suggesting that NRG was relying on baseball crowds in order to pay the bills.  People are talking about how good the beer has been (er, not been) given the hype and talent of the principals involved.  The most recent news isn't promising in that regard.

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This is just my opinion, not based on anything I've actually heard or seen from NRG... but I think that they wanted this to be a lot more than a neighborhood/pre-game spot. They want it to be a national beer destination -- in line with Churchkey (which is) but with products of their own making. I think they want the beer they produce to be craved by beer geeks all over the world -- sold to them when they visit and eventually in bombers. Much like Dogfish (though with much, much smaller distribution goals). DFH's brewery (Milton) and pub (Rehoboth) are destinations for people outside Delaware - though their business increases seasonally like Bluejacket's will in the long run. Bluejacket has a long way to go to even get close to that level of respect. Though one thing that seems to be in line right now is that people hate the food at Dogfish Rehoboth too B)

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My comments revolved around the fact that seemingly people were put off by some service issues and food that was not up to speed. And now a departure of the brewmaster paints a cloudy picture. But as I was pointing out I think they will shake things off, regroup and get a direction that equates to being able to handle pre/post game crowds as well find a direction that fits their profile.

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I went to Blue Jacket last Sat. night for dinner. The lamb/beef burger was completely overcooked and dry. The patty was probably 70% the size of the bun and the amount of feta placed on the burger was stingy at best. The pickled cucumber was just 1/2 a dill spear (not even a whole dill spear) that promptly fell out of the burger when I picked it up. The fries were anemic and lukewarm.

Someone else in my party ordered the Bluejacket double which was advertised as a two patty burger. The patties were also dry and overcooked. The size of the patties were quite insulting considering the price of $14 (think McDonald's McDouble patty size). The beer was good, but definitely save your money and eat elsewhere.

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I have been four or so times. We went yesterday for lunch, beer, and football. Truthfully, I was surprised how empty the place was. While that is not a good sign, I hoped it was due to the 4:00 start for the Washington football club. True to form, the beers were excellent, the bartenders knowledgeable (or at least more so than I), and the food so-so. I started with a small pour of lager and progressed to an IPA and then a black wheat IPA out of the cask. The beers were balanced and subtlety complimented by the hop or added essence. My wife had some peach beer that in any other place I would expect to taste fruity and too sweet. Bluejacket brewed with just enough fruit to capture the essence without masking or overpowering the structure and balance of the beer. It was a real beer, not a fruity mess. Overall, I have been consistently impressed by the beers in their varied and true-to-form style. They are generous with samples and offer small pours (starting at $2) for the undecided.

As far as the food goes, order the tater tots and go have lunch somewhere else. The tots are simply exquisite. I've never had anything else there that impressed. Oh wait, the Cobb salad is good, but that's hardly food.

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May I rant for a second?

I tried to stop by the bottle shop at Bluejacket last night but the doors were locked.  So I popped next door to the hostess stand at The Arsenal to see what was up, and was told the bottle shop was closed due to a private party (NB: there was no signage indicating this evident).  OK, fine.  But when I asked if I could purchase any bottles to go, I was directed to the jam packed (and I mean jam packed, three-deep) bar.

There's probably no easy way to fix this sort of thing, but it was very disappointing.  I'm not patient enough to navigate a heaving bar just to buy beer to take home.

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Forgot to write about a pre-game visit last week. I'm blaming it on the crappy weather/Nats loss to the Phillies.

In short, this is a fine place to enjoy some high-quality craft beer and better-than-average bar food before a game. We arrived a couple of hours before the first pitch, and snagged a couple of seats at the bar. Initially, the service was relaxed, and there were quite a few seats, but as game time approached, the place filled up rapidly, and the service was more akin to something you'd experience during happy hour at a college bar.

That said, you'd be hard pressed to find a wider selection of excellent beers, and the surroundings, replete with brewing contraptions, are impressive. Beers are offered as tasters or full pours. Prices are reasonable for DC, particularly when you realize you can have a tasty craft beer for a maximum of $7 instead of a $10 (!) can of some crappy AB product at the game. 

We ordered buffalo wings (excellent), pickle board (unique and also excellent), and brussels sprouts (excellent). Unlike many of the other NRG spots, Bluejacket does not offer charcuterie. Again, the food is fairly priced, and a bargain compared to most of the pre-made and overpriced offerings inside the gates.

Highly recommended. 

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Hurts me a bit to say it, but I've almost never had good food at any of the NRG places that I've gone to. I'm a regular at Evening Star, been to Churchkey/Birch and Barley, Bluejacket, and Red Apron. The only place I've liked is Red Apron. But, their beer is fantastic and the people that work there are wonderful, so I keep coming back :)

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