By Roger Fillion (Zester Daily)
Craft brewers increasingly are like chefs. Theyâre sprinkling herbs and spices into their beers much like a chef who wants to complement a dish. The upshot: Brewers have food in mind when selecting herbs and spices to use, ranging from basil and sage to cardamom and the worldâs most expensive spice, saffron.
âThe use of spices helps us design beers that are great for pairing with food, as well as just dang tasty,â says Tim Hawn, brewmaster at Dogfish Head Craft Brewery Inc. in Milton, Delaware.
At the annual Great American Beer Festival in Denver in September, the herb and spice category was the seventh most popular. It attracted 142 beers, behind the 149 in the coffee beer category.
Whatâs the trick to using herbs and spices in craft beers? âTry not to overdo it,â brewer Kevin Haborak, co-owner of Coastal Empire Beer Co. in Savannah, Georgia, advises. âI always start light because you can add more. And you canât take it back out.â
With fall temperatures cooling, now is a great time to add some herbs and spices to your beer drinking. Below are 13 herb and spice beers worth trying.
Allergeez (ABV: 5.7%), an American wheat beer that won a silver medal at this yearâs Great American Beer Festival (GABF), includes Texas honey, chamomile flowers and rose hips. âRose hips help with a nice and subtle cranberry tart flavor while the chamomile gives a big floral nose,â says Ryan McWhorter, founder of Panther Island Brewing, in Fort Worth, Texas.
McWhorter, the head brewer, says Allergeez came about because he had a recipe for an American Wheat Beer â but wanted to add something. His wife brewed him a chamomile flower tea and added honey. âI thought it was delicious and decided to give that a try in the wheat recipe,â McWhorter says. Rose hips were later added.
Zarabanda (ABV: 6.3%) is a Spanish take on the farmhouse-style Saison. Deschutes Brewery, based in Bend, Oregon, crafted the beer in collaboration with famed Spanish chef JosĂ© AndrĂ©s. This brew includes two ingredients AndrĂ©s likes to use in his cooking â lemon verbena and pink peppercorn â as well as dried lime and sumac.
Deschutes founder Gary Fish and AndrĂ©s began discussing the idea of collaborating on a beer âmany years ago,â according to Fish. Zarabanda was introduced last year. Deschutes said the name was inspired by the Spanish saraband dance which, âloosely translated, means popular fun or enjoyment; hubbub; racket; row; party.â
Yak & Yeti Restaurant & Brewpubâs Chai Milk Stout (5.2% ABV) was a 2013 GABF silver medalist. The chai spices are Yak & Yetiâs proprietary blend. Adam Draeger, head brewer at Yak & Yeti, which operates a brewpub and two restaurants in the Denver area, says the blend uses spices typically used in Nepali spiced tea: whole cloves, cardamom pods and cinnamon.
Chai Milk Stout is a riff on Yak & Yetiâs Milk Stout. âYou usually add milk to your chai tea,â Draeger says. He is tight-lipped about the beerâs chai spice blend: âThe only bit of info Iâll give you on the spices is that they are mixed and then finely ground and not left cracked or whole.â
Midas Touch (ABV: 9.0%), by Dogfish Head Craft Brewery Inc., is made with ingredients found in the 2,700-year-old drinking vessels from the tomb of King Midas in central Turkey. The worldâs most expensive spice, saffron, gets a starring role. âSaffron is perceived to add a bit of floral sweetness to the beer,â says Tim Hawn, brewmaster at the Milton, Delaware, brewery. He adds that saffron is âknown to bring flavors together â in this case the grapes and honey from the base fermentable materials.â
The brewery calls its Midas Touch beer âsomewhere between beer, wine and mead.â Dogfish Head, in general, uses many spices in its beers. âWhat we love about spices is the endless creativity they offer,â Hawn says. âHistorically they have been used in the culinary world, but they can also play into beer flavors.â
Cambridge Brewing Co.âs Heather Ale (5.0% ABV) snagged a silver medal at the 2012 GABF and a bronze in 2011. Each summer the Cambridge brewery crew picks heather flowers along the Massachusetts coast. âItâs really just a beautiful floral character in terms of flavor and aroma,â brewmaster Will Meyers says of the heather, noting the beer is âall about the heather.â It includes sweet gale, lavender and yarrow.
Heather Ale has roots in Europe and Scandinavia. The brewery says inhabitants of coastal Northern Europe, Scandinavia and the Northern British Isles originally crafted similar beers, adding that âfresh heather flowers and other herbs were used to balance and flavor the rustic yet sweet toasted character of the malted barley.â
The spices typically featured in pumpkin pie are featured in Boston Beer Co.âs Harvest Pumpkin Ale (5.7% ABV): cinnamon, ginger, nutmeg and allspice. To top it off, the brewery tosses âreal pumpkinâ into the mix.
The brewery says its Harvest Pumpkin Ale is a modern adaption of a traditional New England pumpkin ale. âLacking the ability to produce barley, early colonists brewed with pumpkin,â Boston Beer adds, noting the beer delivers âa smooth, rich flavor and unmistakable malty character.â
âWe wanted to make something that expressed Utah and the high desert. Sage turned out to be the perfect ingredient, but it needed to be rounded out so we added thyme and rosemary,â Matthew Allred, communications director for Salt Lake City-based Epic Brewing, says of his companyâs Utah Sage Saison (7.6% ABV). The Belgian-style ale captured a bronze at the 2012 GABF.
Epic uses fresh whole sage, rosemary and thyme for its Utah Sage Saison and steeps them in the wort kettle. âThey have a huge impact on the nose, creating a very floral, savory aroma. This is an amazing beer with roast chicken, lamb or other fall seasonal dishes,â Allred says.
Charlie Johnson, head brewer for The Brewerâs Cabinet in Reno, Nevada, says the breweryâs Royal Tea Chai Porter (5.4% ABV) was inspired by a dirty chai latte he enjoyed at a local coffee shop and âmy love of Indian cuisine.â And the taste: âItâs basically like a spiced chai latte,â Johnson says of the porter.
The brewery uses a house chai spice blend, saying the beer has âa chocolate/roast backbone. The lactose balances the spice notes with a small amount of sweetness and a velvety feel.â Johnson adds: âIâd like to think our beer is made to be paired with food â or replace it as a course.â
A âHawaiian fireâ pizza topped with pineapple and jalapeño pepper inspired 5 Stones Artisan Breweryâs Aloha Piña (6.4% ABV). The beer won a silver medal at last yearâs GABF in the Herb and Spice Beer Category. (This year, GABF added a Chili Beer category.) The Cibolo, Texas, brewery calls its Aloha Piña an American Golden Ale. The beer is flavored with roasted jalapeño as well as âmassive amounts of fresh cut pineapple,â Amarillo hops, and honey.
Dawn Patrol Imperial Molé Stout
Coastal Empire Beer Co.âs Dawn Patrol Imperial MolĂ© Stout (10% ABV) â a 2014 GABF bronze medal winner â is a seasonal stout aged four weeks on coffee, raisins, ancho and serrano peppers, cumin, nutmeg, allspice and cinnamon. The aim: achieve a background flavor profile similar to a Mexican mole sauce.
Chris Haborak, co-owner of the Savannah, Georgia, brewery, says the addition of the spices seemed like a good match with the other ingredients. âWe figured the spices would pair well with the chocolate backbone of the Imperial Stout.â
Tennessee Brew Worksâ Basil Ryeman (6.25% ABV) combines a Saison-style beer â also known as a classic Belgian Farmhouse Ale â with Thai basil. âWe love the anise, fennel and spicy characteristics of Thai basil and the interplay of these flavors with the Belgian Saison yeast,â head brewer Laura Burns says. The Nashville brewery works closely with local farmers to source its herbs.
Burns says the breweryâs Thai basil and rosemary-infused beers are intended to be âvery palatable and well suitedâ for pairing with food. âWe use herbs to add distinct flavors that interplay with traditional brewing ingredients,â she notes. âBut this also allows our beers to accentuate and help make dishes pop much like an herb does.â
Woods Beer Co.âs Local Honey (6% ABV) combines an American Pale Ale with Bay Area honey and flavors that attract bees: yarrow, eucalyptus and lavender. The Oakland, California, beer is available year-round on tap.
The base beer for Local Honey is an unhopped Pale Ale. The first batch relied on uber-local ingredients. âThe herbs and honey were originally locally foraged, by me, from my neighborhood and my own beehives,â brewer William Bostwick, the creator of Local Honey, says. âBut now that we brew it on a regular basis and on a larger scale, we canât pick enough! So we buy our herbs commercially.â
Oatmeal Raisin Cookie Ale
âWe wanted the taste and aroma to remind you of oatmeal raisin cookies,â Rebecca Batz, Aftershock Brewingâs tasting room manager, says of the Temecula, California, breweryâs Oatmeal Raisin Cookie Ale (5.5% ABV). âO.R.C.A.â won a bronze at this yearâs GABF. The beer initially was intended to be a winter seasonal brew. It became a year-round offering thanks to popular demand.
Owner and brewmaster Marvin Nigh bases the ale on his wifeâs oatmeal raisin cookie recipe. (His wife, Karen, is co-owner.) The beer includes oats, raisins and cinnamon. âMost people automatically assume this is a stout. It is not,â Batz says. âItâs just a cookie in the form of a beer.â
Copyright 2016 Roger Fillion via Zester Daily and Reuters Media Express
Thyme Has Come: 13 Brewers Using Herbs, spices By Roger Fillion (Zester Daily) Craft brewers increasingly are like chefs. They're sprinkling herbs and spices into their beers much like a chef who wants to complement a dish.