Sentinel & Enterprise

Have your cake and drink it, too

Pastry beers are like dessert in a glass

- By Joshua t. Bernstein

Rachel Edwards has a pretty sweet job. As the head brewer of Oozlefinch Beers & Blending in Fort Monroe, Va., she thinks like a pastry chef, writing beer recipes that use toasted coconut, marshmallo­ws, fruit purées and “more vanilla beans than I can even tell you,” Edwards said.

She checks ingredient combinatio­ns with “The Flavor Bible,” a culinary reference book, then makes beers simulating sweets like Key lime pie, coffee cake and even banana pancakes topped with syrup.

“There are so many ingredient­s that you can utilize to create what I call ‘a dish in a glass,’” she said.

Most of these beers are sweetened with lactose, the sugar derived from milk, and are in such demand that the brewery’s distributo­rs buy entire batches one to two months before Oozlefinch brews them.

“People are excited to drink their carbs,” Edwards said. “They’re looking for intense flavors.”

In recent decades, the American beer industry has pushed beer to attention-grabbing extremes, brewing bitter IPAs and funky wild ales. But the more than 8,000 breweries nationwide need to attract more customers by looking beyond “hardcore beer drinkers,” said Greg Engert, the beer director and a managing partner of the Neighborho­od Restaurant Group, which operates beer bars across Washington, D.C., and the Grand Delancey in New York City.

So hundreds of breweries are aiming for mainstream appeal with so-called pastry beers inspired by beloved desserts, snacks and candies. You don’t have to be a beer geek to understand or appreciate “a barrelaged stout that’s mirroring a lava cake that they may have had at Applebee’s,” said Alex Kidd, the founder of the website DontDrinkB­eer, who claims to have coined the phrase “pastry stout.”

Nostalgia is also essential to the allure. In both its flavors and on its labels, Orono Brewing in Orono, Maine, pays homage to Hostess Fruit Pies, a cherished treat, with its pastry sour ales. Abe Furth, a founder and the head of sales and marketing, said that as a boy in rural Maine, he would “get a Hostess Fruit Pie for doing chores.” The beers offer an emotional connection to where customers grew up.

Convenienc­e stores can transcend regional preference­s, offering a culinary reference point for hungry, road-weary travelers.

In 2019, the Mid-Atlantic chain Sheetz started partnering with breweries to create beers incorporat­ing its foods and candy, such as watermelon gummy rings and blueberry muffins.

Last fall, Sheetz worked with Wicked Weed Brewing of North Carolina on Project Happy Holeidayz, brewed with Sheetz doughnut holes.

“You feel like you’re eating something while you’re having a drink at the same time,” said Travis Sheetz, the president and chief operating officer.

Decadent Ales, in Mamaroneck, N.Y., opened in 2016 with a catchy slogan — “Eat your beer” — and a focus on beers like the tiramisù imperial stout and Blueberry Frosted Pastry, an IPA reminiscen­t of a Pop-Tart.

Mimicking food can be complicate­d.

“It’s more than just, ‘Let’s just throw in marshmallo­ws and hope it tastes like marshmallo­ws,’” said Paul Pignataro, an owner and brewer.

To make the Double Toasted Marshmallo­w IPA, he brews an oat-rich beer for fluffiness, then adds scratch-made marshmallo­ws.

Liquid smoke lends toastiness, and vanilla beans and various sugars provide subdued aromatics and sweetness.

Quality ingredient­s are a major part of pastry-beer production.

“If you want to buy 300 or 400 pounds of toasted coconut, you can’t go to a retailer like Target,” said José García, the senior director of supply chain for Nuts.com.

In the summer of 2018, the sales department noticed that breweries were ordering thousands of pounds of specialty products.

The next year, the site added a special brewery sales portal that highlights commonly bought products like cacao nibs, peanutbutt­er powder and grahamcrac­ker crumbs. Last year, Nuts.com sold to more than 800 brewery customers.

“The thicker, sweeter and more dessert-driven they are, the more they sell,” said Jared Welch, a founder and the production manager of Southern Grist Brewing Co., a Nashville, Tenn., brewery whose barrel-aged beers sell out in less than a minute after they go online.

Every fermented beverage is fair game for pastry-ification. Evil Twin Brewing NYC, in the Queens borough of New York City, invented the Evil Water line of surprising­ly crisp “pastry seltzers” in flavors like vanilla ice cream, pecan pie, and mixed berries with marshmallo­ws.

The pastry seltzers were initially mocked but are now a must-have for the brewery’s customers.

“Our taproom manager told me they never see an online order for beer without at least one four-pack of seltzer,” said Jeppe Jarnit-Bjergso, the founder and an owner, who trademarke­d the term pastry seltzer.

As breweries pursue concentrat­ed flavors, pastry beers can run the risk of being overly sweet. After a recent tasting of four hazelnut-flavored pastry beers, Kidd of the DontDrinkB­eer website consumed so much sugar that he couldn’t fall asleep. “My glycemic index was so high,” he said.

For Keigan Knee, a founder and director of product developmen­t of Modist Brewing in Minneapoli­s, a pastry beer must pass the pie test: “If you order a slice of pie and it’s so ungodly sweet that you can’t eat the full slice, then it’s too sweet,” Knee said.

At their best, pastry beers deliver whimsy and delight, two words not typically associated with the past year. They transport drinkers to a time when a great dessert could make your day.

Edwards of Oozlefinch is now exploring a series of punch-inspired beers called Punch Yourself, including a version based on rainbow sherbet punch, a childhood favorite.

“Having an alcoholic version as an adult sounds pretty amazing to me,” she said.

 ?? THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Rachel Edwards, head brewer of Oozlefinch Beers & Blending in Fort Monroe, Va., has the enviable job of coming up with such beer stylings as strawberry pie, coffee cake and banana pancakes topped with syrup.
THE NEW YORK TIMES Rachel Edwards, head brewer of Oozlefinch Beers & Blending in Fort Monroe, Va., has the enviable job of coming up with such beer stylings as strawberry pie, coffee cake and banana pancakes topped with syrup.
 ?? THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Oozlefinch Beers & Blending in Fort Monroe, Va., produces beers like Das Yummy Key Lime Pie.
THE NEW YORK TIMES Oozlefinch Beers & Blending in Fort Monroe, Va., produces beers like Das Yummy Key Lime Pie.

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