Quest prepping 1st batch of pumpkin saison

Quest

My love for both pumpkin beers and saisons has been well-documented during the life of this blog. And while I’ve had plenty of both during the years, I have yet to try a combination of the two.

Fortunately, my friends at Quest know the fastest way to my heart as they announced on Thursday they had started brewing the inaugural batch of their fall seasonal Kermesse Pumpkin Saison. There aren’t a lot of details about it yet, but it’s a saison made with pumpkins, so it’s going to be awesome.

A release party will be held sometime during the week of Sept. 9.

RJ Rockers readies pumpkin, strawberry, pineapple brews

RJRockers

Spartanburg’s RJ Rockers have been keeping themselves busy lately, preparing one of their seasonal staples, brewing a collaboration with our beer brethren to the north and getting ready to release a new fruit brew.

On Wednesday, the brewery announced it had started brewing this year’s batch of Gruntled Pumpkin, a 7.3% pumpkin beer. While many pumpkin beers are already on the shelves – a fact yours truly has mixed feelings about – the Upstate brewery is just now getting around to brewing their foray into the style. Look for that one to hit shelves in a few weeks.

As far as new brews go, RJ is working on two fruit-infused beers. The first, Strawbeery Wheat Ale (that’s straw-beer-y), is a lightly hopped wheat ale made with 100 pounds of strawberries from Strawberry Hill in Chesnee. The beer promises to be a perfect complement to a hot summer day and has already been on tap at the brewery, but will be distributed soon, primarily to the greater Spartanburg area.

The other fruit beer RJ is working on is in collaboration with one of my favorite North Carolina breweries, Charlotte’s NoDa Brewing Co. The two breweries collaborated on a pineapple IPA they’ve dubbed PIPA Long Hoppings. Batches of the beer were brewed at both breweries, which means both Carolinas will have the chance to enjoy it when it’s released in a few weeks.

Thomas Creek brewing new Pumpkin Ale this week

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A cursory search through my archives – back when I did reviews regularly – will show you that I love everything pumpkin. Pumpkin pie, pumpkin spice, pumpkin candles, you name it. It’s my favorite smell (must be a late October baby thing) and, when put into a beer, one of my favorite flavors. (Or at least the flavors associated with pumpkin-related foods.)

So of course I’m excited about the news that Greenville’s Thomas Creek will be introducing its own pumpkin beer this year aptly named Pumpkin Ale. The 7.3% ale is being brewed for the first time this week along with TC’s Octoberfest Lager and will be released in six packs later this year.

Side note: Kudos to TC for releasing pumpkin beers closer to the time it’s actually OK to drink pumpkin beers. I love Pumking and whatnot, but if I roll my eyes anymore at the fact it’s already on shelves, they’ll fall out of their sockets.

EPIC/DC Brau Fermentation Without Representation

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EPIC Brewing Co. – Salt Lake City, UT

DC Brau Brewing Co. – Washington, DC

Fermentation Without Representation Imperial Pumpkin Porter

8% ABV

I know, I know. I said I was done reviewing pumpkin beers for the season and had moved on to winter seasonals. But it’s hard to pass up diving into one last pumpkin beer, especially one I’ve been on the hunt for.

As part of their Exponential Series and in collaboration with DC Brau, the first packaging brewery in the Nation’s Capitol, EPIC Brewing has put out an imperial porter crossed with a pumpkin beer. EPIC is just out of my reach, but my recent trip to Charlotte yielded a bottle for my enjoyment. I’d been hoping to get my hands on a bottle all season, especially after fellow pumpkin beer fanatic Bryan’s glowing review over on This Is Why I’m Drunk.

The beer pours a fairly thick deep, dark brown. It’s almost a black, but there’s just a hint of little getting through the top of the glass. Whatever head there was didn’t stick around for very long, migrating to the sides of the glass almost immediately. Not a lot of lacing, but the alcohol legs that stuck around were mighty nice.

The nose is exactly what I’d expect from a blend of pumpkin beers and imperial porters. There are the standard spices – cinnamon, clove, allspice, etc. – but they’re a bit muted. Instead, a roasted pumpkin seed scent is very strong, coupled with the roasted dark coffee notes from the porter. There’s also a thick sweetness over everything. There’s a thick almost chocolate syrup smell with big hints of caramel.

At first sip, I thought if you hadn’t told me this was a pumpkin beer, I wouldn’t have noticed. And then the finish came around, and it was most certainly a pumpkin beer. A roasted bitterness greets you first on the taste, followed with milky smooth mouthfeel and just a smidge of carbonation. The flavors in the middle of the mouth are a mix of black coffee and dark chocolate, melded perfectly together. The pumpkin used in the brewing lends a luscious mouthfeel that incredibly smooth.

As I said, the “pumpkin” in this pumpkin beer really flourishes on the finish. There’s cinnamon, nutmeg, allspice and clove. But again, unlike many other pumpkin beers, it’s subdued and muted a bit by the chocolate from the porter. It’s a really a perfect blend and something I haven’t gotten before in other pumpkin beers.

Instead of using a lighter-bodied beer as the base and letting the spices shine through, the use of an imperial porter base is a nice touch and a good alternative. It’s certainly a porter first and foremost, but the pumpkin pie spices you’d expect are also pretty strong, working well to balance one another. Like Elysian‘s Dark O’ the Moon – a pumpkin stout – it uses the spices as a way to add a twist to an already great base beer instead of just blasting you with them. A good way to end the pumpkin beer season, if I say so myself.

Sixpoint Autumnation

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Sixpoint Brewery

Brooklyn, NY

Autumnation Pumpkin/Harvest Ale

6.7% ABV

To quote “Simple Jack”: Sixpoint, you m-m-m-m-make me haaaapy.

Another change in the seasons brings another great seasonal release from the boys in Brooklyn. With Autumnation, the brewery melds the richness and full-flavored pumpkin beer style with the pungent and biting addition of wet hops. The twist on this one is this year, the drinker got to pick which hop was used. In an online vote, Citra won out over Centennial, Chinook, Amarillo and – my choice – Simcoe. (So close!)

Autumnation pours a slightly hazy rust orange color, like the color of changing leaves. The head’s about two fingers worth, really foamy and sticks around for a while. The lacing’s pretty mild and there really aren’t any alcohol legs holding on.

The nose has a strong, wet pungent hop smell of citrus. Orange and grapefruit are what pop out the most. There’s a bit of spice on the nose as well from the ginger used in the brewing, with brown sugar giving it a mellow sweetness. Definitely a good malt backbone and a bit of a nutty note as well.

On the front of the tongue is just a bit of hop bitterness and it’s got a fairly medium-bodied mouthfeel. There’s definitely a subdued wet hoppiness on the front and toward the middle of the palate. The finish starts off with a juicy orange note and blooms into a really citric, biting grapefruit flavor. The hop bitterness sticks to the roof of your mouth, but the maltiness is definitely there. It’s nutty and a bit sweet with a good bit of spice added in as well.

There’s been a lot of gnashing of teeth over the lack of a pumpkin taste in the beer. But remember: You don’t taste the pumpkin in a pumpkin beer; you taste the spices (nutmeg, allspice, cinnamon, brown sugar) generally used in pumpkin dishes. The pumpkin affects the mouthfeel more than the flavor, kind of like what oatmeal does in oatmeal stouts and porters. With that in mind, there’s only a little bit of a creaminess from the pumpkin. The malts take over more as it warms and the mouthfeel of the pumpkin becomes more noticeable, but it’s there.

And with that, Sixpoint is now 4-for-4 with me. (See: Resin, Apollo, Brownstone.)

Vegetarian Beer Chili with Dogfish Head Punkin

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When it comes to blogging about cooking and baking, I’ll leave that to my wife. But when it comes to pairing food with beer or cooking with beer, I figure I can let it slide.

Using beer as an ingredient in a recipe is a fairly new concept to me but one I’ve found that works pretty well. Unlike pairing foods with beers, where one compliments the other, cooking with beer infuses the flavor of you brew of choice with the rest of the food.

I don’t have too much experience cooking with beer aside from cooking while drinking, but every once in a while I stumble across a recipe I decide to try out. A while back I did a macaroni and cheese made with Sam Adams‘ Latitude 48 IPA, and last week I decided to try making a quick vegetarian beer chili using a recipe I found on The Mash, the blog of the Brooklyn Brew Shop. It’s fast, easy and – best of all – uses whatever beer you want.

Here’s what you’ll need:

  • 3 tablespoons olive oil
  • 2-3 medium bell peppers
  • 2 medium onions
  • 1 jalapeno
  • 3 garlic cloves
  • 1 1/2 tablespoons cumin
  • 2 1/2 tablespoons coriander
  • 6 tablespoons chili powder
  • A 28 oz. can of diced tomatoes
  • 2 15 oz. cans of kidney beans
  • A 12 oz. bottle of beer
  • Sour cream and green onion (optional)

For the beer, I selected Dogfish Head‘s Punkin. With all the spices going into the chili, I figured the flavors of Punkin would be a nice complement, and the flavor of the pumpkin would add a good flavor as well. But I imagine it’d work just as well with something roasted or rich.

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Here’s the ridiculously easy recipe:

Step 1: Finely chop the bell peppers, onions and jalapeno (after removing the seeds) and saute them in a large pot over medium heat until they’re soft.

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Step 2: Add chopped garlic, cumin, coriander and chili powder and saute for a minute or so.

Step 3: Add the cans of diced tomatoes and kidney beans and the bottle of beer and increase the heat to medium high.

Step 4: When it begins to boil, turn the heat to low and simmer for about 20 minutes.

Step 5: Enjoy!

While the flavors of Punkin didn’t really stand out, there’s definitely that sweetness from the pumpkin mixed in with everything else. None of the spices are very strong, but it does have a nice burnt and roasted note to it. It leans a little more toward the sweet side, but all in all a good and easy recipe.

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I paired it with a bottle of Westbrook‘s Marzenbier, which worked perfectly with the chili. The sweetness of the malt in the beer blended nicely with the chili flavors, and the breadiness also worked well with the richness of the tomatoes and beans.

All in all, it turned out pretty well if I do say so myself.

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Southern Tier Pumking

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Souther Tier Brewing Co.

Lakewood, NY

Pumking Ale

8.6% ABV

My first taste of Southern Tier‘s Pumking came about a year ago after hearing a lot of hype and hoopla about the beer. It took only a sip to see what all the fuss is about.

For a pumpkin beer fan like me, Pumking was everything I wanted in a pumpkin beer. It was a perfect mix of spicy, sweet and savory, and more or less tasted like a liquified pumpkin pie. It quickly and easily became my favorite pumpkin beer, and that still holds true with the 2012 batch.

Pumking pours a super clear light orange. It’s slightly brownish toward the center with maybe a finger of head that dissipates really fast. There’s really no lacing and just some mild alcohol legs.

The smell of Pumking is just amazing. You get the rich, sweet pumpkin, all the expected spices – cinnamon, clove, nutmeg, allspice – a bit of caramel sweetness and a great bready graham cracker smell to round it out. It’s everything you – or at least I – would want.

I’m not the first to say it and I won’t be the last, but this thing tastes just like liquified pumpkin pie. It really is amazing just how spot-on it is to that flavor. There’s a slight bite of carbonation and spice on the front of the tongue followed with a slightly bubbly mouthfeel. The spices are big throughout along with a slight heat from the alcohol. Big, rich pumpkin comes back on the end along with this great brown sugar sweetness. What’s really impressive is that they somehow get that pie crust taste in there. Maybe it’s the malts – or maybe it’s a placebo effect – but you really do get a sweet, bready crust flavor on it. It’s amazing stuff.

Southern Tier has never let me down. They catch a lot of flack for their bigger imperial beers, namely their Blackwater Series (Creme Brulee, anyone?), but I like how they go for the bigger-is-better mentality yet still deliver. For me, it doesn’t get much better than Pumking. I couldn’t possibly design a better pumpkin beer.