Craft Beer & Brewing Magazine

| THE MASH: SPECIAL INGREDIENT |

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1980s mulch made from cocoa husks? Well, that nostalgic memory was conjured as soon as I open the package.”

That flavor inspired Jevne to try adding the ants to a beer. Pastrana’s mother sent five more kilos (about 11 pounds) of chicatanas. “She sent them directly from Oaxaca after they were foraged and roasted,” he says.

So, how to use the ants? They had to figure that out on their own. “Having never used an ingredient like this, and not knowing of anyone having done it before, we had no reference for the best process to use [with] these ants,” Jevne says.

They opted to get them into a richer beer—a decadent barrel-aged stout blend. “We were pioneering their usage in a way we felt would represent the product’s flavor profile properly, while pairing their characteri­stics with a beer that would lend an intensity, allowing their flavors to weave balance and coexist in harmony.”

They chose 53 gallons (200 liters) of stout that had been aging in a rye whiskey barrel, then they added 10 gallons (38 liters) of Nillerzzzz­z (that’s five Zs), their barrel-aged vanilla stout of 13.6 percent ABV. “We then added five pounds (2.3 kg) per barrel of ground chicatanas to the tank and recirculat­ed the beer on the ground ants until we thought the flavor intensity was where we wanted it,” Jevne says. “We then racked off the ants and packaged the beer.”

As it turns out, those ants weren’t quite ready to retire from their culinary career: “Our chef saved the ground ant paste that was left over,” Jevne says, “and has been experiment­ing with it. … More to come on that in future beer dinners.”

While Jevne admits that the beer sounds like a gimmick, he says “the intention is much deeper. This beer represents Forager’s exploratio­n for flavor contributi­ons from ingredient­s that reach farther than the traditiona­l or hype flavors we see every day. I would personally think beers with Oreos and waffles added are much more gimmicky than this—but hey, call me crazy.”

It’s not an easy beer to explain, and not just because it has bugs in it. The bigger problem is that few people know what those bugs are supposed to taste like. “The struggle this beer has seen is that, in my assumption, only one or two of the people who have tried the beer have ever tried a raw chicatana,” Jevne says. “This means there is no point of reference for the flavor impact of the ants for them.”

However, that flavor impact “was massive,” Jevne says. “The beer took on everything about the chicatana experience, except the crunchy texture and little legs getting caught in your teeth. … We felt that this was a beautiful representa­tion of what these ants could do for a beer and were astonished how well the flavor came through.”

Jevne says it won’t be the last chicatana beer to come from Forager. “We absolutely plan to make a beer with these again every year we can source them,” he says. “We will probably include a little bag containing a few ants with each bottle moving forward, so people can try the insect for flavor reference.

“If another insect comes to us with exciting flavors, we [will] happily try something else—but not to be gimmicky!”

He offers this advice for any brewers who want to brew with chicatanas or other insects: “Get to know the ingredient­s you plan to use and focus on a desired result,” he says. “Experiment­ation is a driving force in craft beer, so go out there and find some inspiratio­n.”

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