Thursday, June 11, 2009

raising BA




This is going to be the start of an occasional feature here on Heckasac.  There's an important cause that's near and dear to my heart-Brew Awareness.  I'm working through the Heckasac foundation to raise BA in our immediate area.  Just 50 cents a day pledged to Heckasac's Brew Awareness campaign can buy at least two, top-quality 750 ml bottles of brew for some Sacramentan in need of a serious brew education.  Here's the sample of just one of the countless letters we have received here at BA headquarters:

Dear Heckasac-
Before you offered me enrollment in your generous program I was in a sorry state.  I thought I loved brew.  I thought I knew brew.  I always drank Blue Moon-you know with the orange in it (I shudder to think of it now), and on special occasions I would head over to the Rubicon and order a Monkey Knife Fight.  Through the actions of your foundation, and your gift of two delicious craft brews a month, I have come to see the error of my ways.  You have saved my palate, and my life.
Thank You

OK, OK.  I kid.  And I will not claim to be an expert in brew, and whatever brew you like be proud of it.  Unless it's Monkey Knife Fight.  Me and smiller just thought this would be fun.  So after that backtracking, here goes:

Saison Rue-The Bruery (pictured above)
purchased at Healthy Spirits in San Francisco (currently not available in Sac area)
$12.99?
8.5% ABV

The Bruery is an interesting new craft beer maker that has been around less than two years, yet they already have a wide array of Belgium-influenced releases.  They are located in Placencia, in Orange County.  Last night we tasted their Saison Rue.  Here's how they describe it:

"Saison Rue is an unfiltered, bottle conditioned, Belgian/French-style farmhouse ale. This is a beer of subtlety and complexity, with malted rye, spicy, fruity yeast notes, biscuit-like malt backbone, and a slight citrus hop character. With age, this beer will dry out and will become more complex with rustic notes of leather and earth from the contribution of a wild yeast strain. Being a Saison, Saison Rue is ambiguous unto itself as it is a different beer when fresh and when aged. We hope you enjoy it in all of its incarnations."

So this is a beer that contains the wild yeast Brettanomyces.  It is unfiltered, so it has a kind of cloudy, apple cider appearance, and there's a yeast shot at the bottom.  Smiller's guess was that they take a cue from Orval, and pitch the Brett in at bottling.  It definitely had a taste of rye, and just a hint of the sourness that Brett imbues, but if you were to age this bottle for six months it would probably have quite a different character.  The rye would go down and the sourness would go up.  

At 8.5% it's on the strong side for a saison, which is kind of typical of the emerging "American saison" style, where we always have to go and break all the rules.  USA! USA!  I personally prefer their Saison De Lente, which is their Spring saison.  It also has Brett, and is lower in alcohol.

45 comments:

yolkie said...

It's a little late, but I made a flyer for the show on friday (and I don't mean the Germs)
http://theyolkie.blogspot.com/

Anonymous said...

Can this one be ordered online, or do we have to make the trek to SF to purchase?

DKK

beckler said...

Healthy Spirits is worth a visit if you're in SF.

Oh yeah, here's the bruery website:
http://www.thebruery.com/

I'll post that flyer tomorrow, because I want to remind everyone about the show and the SPECIAL LIMITED EDITION EBAY GOLD ENGLISH SINGLES CASSINGLE

Anonymous said...

You can probably get it online - let me know if you want some & I can find a good place. Or we can pick you guys up some when we go to SF in early July. Hopefully the Saison de Lente will still be around when we go as well. It's really good & I'm psyched to see how it ages. One of the things a lot of people get stoked on when they first get in to good brews is aging them - myself included - but lately I've been feeling like a lot of brewers (Lost Abbey in particular) have been releasing beers that aren't good now - too strong, too sweet etc - but supposedly in a year or two they'll be great. Screw that - even if a brew will reach its peak in 2 years, it also has to be good now. These types of beers with wild yeast thrown in at bottling have re-kindled my interest in aging stuff because instead of just mellowing & becoming more integrated, they become totally different beers over time. I find that a little more interesting than aging a beer just so it mellows & comes together more (though occasionally I've been blown away by this too - I just had a 3 year old Alesmith that was fantastically mellow). With this Saison Rue, the strength of the spice should go down & the bret will come up - it'll be fun to try a bottle every 6 months til it hits the perfect balance.

And yolkie, thanks for making that flier!

-miller

archbishop said...

There needs to be more digs at Rubicon. The sooner they start making good beer instead of relying on their prime location the better.

beckler said...

i think i have a name for miller's autobiography-Fantastically Mellow

Anonymous said...

Smitty -- try to get the Germs to crash at your pad.

-- Patrone

Anonymous said...

Prediction: by morning Ed Hunter will be the new singer.

-miller

Anonymous said...

Dear BA,
I almost bought a bottle of tripel karmeliet at BevMo, but I was put off by the green bottle. I am worried that I will spend ten bones on a beer that will end up tasting like Heinekin. Please advise.

gbomb

Anonymous said...

While it's true that there's something about the green bottle that "skunks" beer quicker (same with clear I believe - brown seems to be the color of choice), your biggest concern should be BevMo & their almost complete disregard to the proper storage of brew. Let's just say a warm, bright environment isn't optimal. That said, Tripel Karmeliet won't taste like Heineken. I used to be really mad for it when tripels were my jam but I've grown tired of their sweetness. BUT, if I were buying a beer for someone who said "I'm just getting interested in triples, what should I get?" I would steer them towards TK along with Slaapmutske Triple Nightcap & St Feuillien Tripel. If you like tripels at all, I'd say you'll probably enjoy it. Personally Slaapmutske is my favorite becasue it has more hops than most triples & I think it helps balance out the sweet maltiness.

-miller

beckler said...

We went to some BevMo where all the sparkling wines were up front next to the windows in direct, hot sunlight. Yum.

Anonymous said...

Sort of an assholish nitpicky thing to ask, but how can you throw in wild yeast? Wild yeast is not the same thing as bret...

Ben

michele h said...

Brettanomyces is a type of wild yeast.

-mh

Anonymous said...

I was under the impression that Bret was a kind of wild yeast.

-miller

Anonymous said...

Oh, hey mh! I didn't refresh the page before I commented. My aversion to using the specific term Bret comes from hearing too many beer nerds say it.

-miller

beckler said...

I just wrote it because I'm lazy. But I think that there are lots of kinds of wild yeasts, right, so I wanted to be specific.

michele h said...

Yeah, "Brett" is an annoying term (to me) in the wine world too. So is the debate over whether its good or bad!

I'm not sure, but Ben might be confused by this brew because when talking about wine the term "wild yeast" pretty much exclusively refers to Saccharomyces which is what causes the alcoholic fermentation. But you'd never toss in some yeast at bottling unless you were making sparkling wine, and in that case it would never be Brettanomyces!

-mh

beckler said...

Omnibus designs crafted a BA logo! He should let me know if it's driving him crazy that I cropped it off center.

DB said...

It's funny, I was just saying that my cold, refreshing Blue Moon doesn't taste enough like biscuits and leather.

Anonymous said...

I also will defend the blue moon,
delicious~!

I had no idea it was a crappy beer, especially since the first person who convinced me to order it was Mr. Fantastically Mellow
himself.

-Natalie.

archbishop said...

For a minute, I thought you said "Brew Moon" which is a brewery on the south island in New Zealand that I went to a few times. I've got one of their labels stuck to my motorcycle pannier (the same bag that has the Mike as Che Bananas sticker). They have a pretty good stout that they import to Ireland.

I put in notice at my apartment. After over 13 years, it's now no longer a Smith residence. No idea what the rent will be, but it'll be available end of July. Now's your chance for the best porch ever!

Anonymous said...

Blue Moon's fine, it's just the bane of the brew fanatic's existence (along with Fat Tire) because it usually serves as the default placeholder for the "good beer" tap at bars. I wish I got the feeling that these types of supposed "gateway" craft beers actually made people look further in to beer. I'm sure they do sometimes.

It's just like when you're really in to anything - it bugs you that the real quality stuff rarely floats to the top.

-miller

Unknown said...

brett is bacteria, so is lacto, and sacch.

The bruery will be having a special tasting at sacbrew on the 15th with the brewer...

Unknown said...

oh one more thing...

sacbrew is now carrying Russian River Consecration batch 1 by the 750ml. 30 bucks but worth it.
By far the best flemish style domestic sour about. At least in my useless and hungover opinion

Anonymous said...

Man, thanks for letting me know about the Bruery at Sac Brewing! I'm there. I just noticed they had batch 1 Consecration - I agree - totally worth it. I can't wait to get a bottle of batch 2.

-miller

Unknown said...

oh and im wrong brett is a yeast. hehe

michele h said...

So is "sacch":

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saccharomyces_cerevisiae

-mh

michele h said...

After talking to Ben I can report that what he was doubting was the actual "wildness" of the brettanomyces that was added to this brew. If you capture it and add it, it's no longer wild. It didn't occur naturally. Just like a cultivated chanterelle isn't a "wild" mushroom. Hey, he did say he was being nitpicky!!!!

I guess it would be more accurate to say it was a "native" yeast, but I know I tend to use that and "wild" and "natural" interchangeably.

-MH

Anonymous said...

Maybe not 100% accurate but it's a term that's entered the common vocabulary regarding beer. As evidenced by even The Bruery using the term "wild yeast strain" in their own description of the beer.

-miller

Anonymous said...

Consecration!!! Deification!!

Why can't I get Russian River brew more easily? It is a crying shame.

Oh shit, I heard something funny...
Vanoni is in Estonia. (doing performance art)

my verification word is Vinvonis, which reminded me

Anonymous said...

Has anything ever rolled off the tongue as easily as 'Vanoni in Estonia'??

-miller

Anonymous said...

Nope.

I have this mental picture of him, sans sleeves, in a stoney square, in estonia, performing and genuinely confusing the locals. A boom box, Vanoni on the microphone, some scantily clad girls dancing about. Awesome.

-ec

beckler said...

who's down for a chant of "Vanoni in Estonia" tonight? Who's with me?

Anonymous said...

If English Singles can't come up with a song called "Vanoni in Estonia" by tonight's gig, we'll all be very disappointed. And that's a facklio (word verification).

Anonymous said...

OK, but it may have to be an instrumental.

-miller

beckler said...

I've got an idea for a riff

Anonymous said...

Vanoni's Baloney in Estonia can be peeped here and there on Chelsea Wolf's blog. They're travelling there together now.

http://chelsea-wolfe.blogspot.com/

Verification: Kingcrack. The drug that gave Vanoni his je ne sais quoi.

beckler said...

Hmm...the content on the blog seems to be Vanoni-free. Maybe I have my Vanoni-blocker turned on.

Anonymous said...

Did you download the Vanoni-blocker from Patrone? He always had one as I recall.

-omf

Anonymous said...

Yeah, I guess I was complaining about using the word "wild yeasts" to mean cultivated wild-type yeasts, or wild yeast strains (meaning strains that are found in the wild, I guess). When I hear that a drink is fermented with wild yeasts, I assume that means it's fermented spontaneously by the ambient wild yeasts.

That said, when I posted the comment above, I thought all cultivated yeasts were also found in the wild (popular commercial wine yeasts often claim to be cultivated from strains found naturally, i.e. wild, in the great wineries of France, for example). However, the internet tells me that yeasts reproduce sexually, so you can breed them to create domesticated yeast strains. I'm assuming that's what the most commercial of brews and wines use...

Also, a question: is it bret that imbues a beer with sourness, or is it acid-producing bacteria, like wikipedia would have me believe?

Ben

Anonymous said...

Ben -- BRETT! alone won't cause much sourness. It is more responsible for creating that 'funky' (leathery, pineappley, horseblankety, etc. depending on the strain of BRETT!) flavor behind. Since it will keep eating the sugars until there are none left, BRETT! beers will generally have a nice dry finish.

The sourness in something like a lambic is mainly caused by the bacteria -- lactic acid/lactobacilus, aceto bacter, maybe a touch of pedio...

-MD

Anonymous said...

Does anyone here know where I can find any Fantôme or Cantillon brews locally?

Corti's used to carry Fantôme, but no longer do. The closest shop I know of (and a good one too) is Monument Wine & Spirits in Concord.

Anonymous said...

Sadly I think Monument is the closest place to get those beers. For now anyway. Some friends & I are working on changing this - if you want to know more youc an email me at smiller at lvbev dot com.

-miller

Anonymous said...

Whole Foods in both the Arden & Roseville areas have a couple of Cantillons right now, but they go quickly. Sadly, it's the Roseville location that often has the better selection.

Dani

Anonymous said...

Thanks for the tip, Dani. That'll suffice until Miller here gets going.