Specialty Beers: Pumpkin
Pumpkin
beers were brewed regularly by colonial American brewers, who had
little or no barley malt to use in beer. Pumpkins supplied sugar
necessary for fermentation. Barley was scarce during those days, but
pumpkins and other squash varieties were common and were often used
as a fermentable. George Washington and Thomas Jefferson both brewed
beer with pumpkins.
It
is likely that dark “pumpkin
porter” beers were very common.
Sometimes we know very little about the actual look and flavor of
beers in history, because the ingredients have changed or methods of
preparing those ingredients have changed, but most beer prior to the
Industrial Revolution was probably dark in color.
In
colonial times, the malt drying process was very in-exact and almost
all dried malt was either blackened or took on a very smoky quality
from the crude drying ovens of the day. Only the widespread use of
“coke” ovens during and after the Industrial Revolution allowed
relatively smoke free malt drying at very controlled temperatures.
Food Pairings
Pumpkin beers are great with holiday
dinners and pair nicely with turkey and chicken.