Las Vegas Review-Journal

These beers offer a pungent whiff of place

Lambic-style brewing catching on across US

- By Daniel Fromson New York Times News Service

HAYS COUNTY, Texas — In a former machine shop here in the Texas Hill Country, Jeffrey Stuffings, a founder of Jester King Brewery, led a tour group up a narrow staircase, to a loft where dozens of oak barrels surrounded what looked like an enormous copper sheet pan. Stained-glass windows bathed the pan in a pink and orange glow.

“This vessel right here is called a coolship,” Stuffings said.

It’s a specialize­d piece of equipment, he explained in reverent tones, used in Belgium to brew the sour style of beer known as lambic, which is made through a traditiona­l process that Jester King has been following since 2013. On cool winter nights, the brewers open the loft to the elements and pump in a lambicstyl­e recipe made with raw wheat and aged hops.

“There’s so much steam that you would not be able to see me,” Stuffings said. “The coolship kind of creaks and groans.”

The miracle of the lambic process — which yields some of the world’s most complex and captivatin­g beers, has caught on in America only recently — is what happens next: The beer starts to ferment spontaneou­sly, no starter required.

To ferment most beers, brewers tend a culture of microbes and add it to each batch: typically a “pure culture” of brewer’s yeast, or in the case of many farmhouse and sour beers, like Jester King’s core offerings, a mix that includes yeast and bacteria isolated from the wild.

In the coolship, however, the microbes attacking the liquid have never been cultivated — “yeast that either floated in from outside, yeast that was already naturally occurring in this room, yeast that was maybe living in this ceiling,” Stuffings said.

Transferre­d to oak barrels, the beer ferments for a year or longer, each barrel varying according to the microbes’ whims. Some will have undesirabl­e flavors and be dumped. Some of the beer may be aged with fruit, traditiona­lly cherries or raspberrie­s. The final steps involve the blending of individual barrels, an art through which the brewers shape what nature gave them.

Though it predates modern brewing science and played a role in many historical beverages, spontaneou­s fermentati­on is now regarded as costly, inefficien­t and above all unpredicta­ble. But this has not stopped dozens of American brewers from finally attempting it, and, in some cases, making it a fixture of their businesses or even their singular focus.

If the process resembles winemaking, the flavors are winelike, too: Artisanal Belgian lambic, in contrast to the melted-popsicle versions with which many consumers associate the term, is dry and low-alcohol but as dense with taste as Champagne or Chablis.

Lemony and oaky, fruity and mineral, it can be powerfully tart and fragrant — challengin­g to new initiates but compelling to converts. And as with wine, brewers influenced by the style often speak of terroir: the roles of geography and climate, which affect the balance and activity of microbes, yielding beers that reflect where they’re made.

“It is a very romantic and mystical style,” said Levi Funk, of Funk Factory Geuzeria in Madison, Wisc. Funk began filling barrels in 2015 and opened a taproom last June.

Coolships have sprung up from Maine, where Oxbow Brewing introduced its Native/wild spontaneou­s beer in August, to Southern California, where Beachwood Blendery released its first Coolship Chaos bottles in June. Outside Trenton, N.J., the Referend Bier Blendery, which uses only spontaneou­s fermentati­on, celebrated its first anniversar­y in December; in Nashville, Tenn., Yazoo Brewing first filled its new coolship last February.

Stuffings has consulted other brewers, and Belgium’s High Council for Artisanal Lambic Beers, to introduce a new certificat­ion mark — Méthode Traditionn­elle — that Americans can use to market lambic-style beers made according to Belgian tradition.

It’s unclear how many producers will rally behind the mark and the detailed standards it requires. They are a loose band of explorers, and even as they worship Belgium, they often combine spontaneou­s fermentati­on with nontraditi­onal techniques, flavors or aesthetics.

Black Project Spontaneou­s and Wild Ales, which Sarah Howat started in Denver with her husband, James, in 2014, has begun using the certificat­ion mark (which James Howat helped develop) for some of its beers, but others don’t qualify.

“We do use methods from when we were experiment­ing and playing,” Sarah Howat said. One beer sometimes featured in their blends is aged not in barrels but in steel tanks, which are regularly topped off with new beer, a version of the solera method used for sherry.

A decade ago, when Allagash Brewing in Portland, Maine, installed what is generally recognized as America’s first coolship, beer like Black Project’s was inconceiva­ble, said Rob Tod, Allagash’s founder. It was widely believed that lambic-style beers simply couldn’t be made outside Belgium. Eventually, Allagash even trademarke­d the word “coolship.”

“We didn’t think anyone would be interested in using that name,” Tod said.

Today, he said, so many brewers are using the word on their labels that Allagash has stopped enforcing the trademark.

One reason is lambic’s ever-growing cult following: Hunted on pilgrimage­s to Belgium and bartered on internet forums, the style has inspired a devotion to spontaneou­s beer in general. Sarah Howat said visitors have waited overnight outside Black Project for bottle releases, and Funk, who presells beer online, said he received almost 60,000 page views for a release of 1,000 bottles.

Still, production volumes remain tiny, and the beers almost never make it to retail shelves. For curious drinkers uninterest­ed in sidewalk sleepovers or hitting refresh, the best way to try them is to visit their producers’ tasting rooms.

The upside is that you get to experience both the beverage and where it comes from. It could be Tillamook, Ore., where the microbes of the coastal climate give De Garde Brewing’s beers a unique earthiness and minerality, said its head brewer, Trevor Rogers.

Or it could be the Texas Hill Country. After the tour, Stuffings sat at a picnic table outside the old machine shop and opened several bottles, which varied from softly sour and herbal — the pure spontaneou­s beer itself — to a musty, petrol-y offering aged with Texan white-wine grapes. He mused about how he was “infatuated” with their elegance, their texture, the airiness of their foam.

But as he sat, glass in hand, beneath live oaks and the late-summer sun, he seemed happiest for the invisible life around him, which delivered “the ultimate connection to time and place.”

 ??  ?? Jeffrey Stuffings, left, a founder of Jester King, and head brewer Averie Swanson stand over the coolship, where ambient microbes have begun fermenting lambic-inspired beer, at the brewery outside Austin.
Jeffrey Stuffings, left, a founder of Jester King, and head brewer Averie Swanson stand over the coolship, where ambient microbes have begun fermenting lambic-inspired beer, at the brewery outside Austin.
 ??  ?? Michael Calle, a Jester King brewer, removes spent aged hops from the brew kettle at the end of the boil, before the unfermente­d beer is transferre­d to the coolship.
Michael Calle, a Jester King brewer, removes spent aged hops from the brew kettle at the end of the boil, before the unfermente­d beer is transferre­d to the coolship.

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