Amber Hybrids
Most beers fit easily into either the ale
(top fermenting at relatively warm temperatures) or lager (bottom
fermenting at relatively cool temperatures) but there are a handful
of beers that combine some features of both ales and lagers. We call
those beers hybrids. Hybrid beers are typically divided into two
categories, the
Light Hybrids
and the
Amber Hybrids.
Amber Hybrid beers include three different
sub-styles including Northern German
Altbiers,
California Common Beers (Steam Beers)
and Dusseldorf
Altbiers.
Northern German
Altbiers
The Northern German
Altbier is a very clean and relatively bitter beer, balanced by some
malt character. The Northern German version is more often brewed
like a lager (with lager yeast) than the Düsseldorf version The
Northern version is also generally darker, sometimes more caramelly,
and usually sweeter and less bitter than Düsseldorf Altbier. Most
are simply moderately bitter brown lagers.
But
while most Dusseldorf Altbiers come from Dusseldorf, Northern German
Altbiers come from other German cities and from abroad as well.
DAB Traditional
(Germany)
and Alaskan Amber (United States) are great examples of the Northern German Altbier
style.
California Common Beer (Steam Beer)
No one really knows how or why the word
"steam" came to be associated with the style, but some speculate
that because the beer was so highly carbonated, it tended to let off
some “steam” when a keg was tapped. Brewed without refrigeration
(there wasn’t any in 1849!), the beer was highly carbonated and
under a lot of pressure in the kegs of the day.
According to the Anchor Brewing Company, the name "steam" came from
the fact that the brewery had no way to effectively chill the
boiling wort using traditional means. So they pumped the hot wort up
to large, shallow, open-top bins on the roof of the brewery so that
it would be rapidly chilled by the cool air blowing in off the
Pacific Ocean. Thus while brewing, the brewery had a distinct cloud
of steam around the roof let off by the wort as it cooled, hence the
name.
Today, Anchor Brewing Company of San
Francisco has a trademark on the phrase “Anchor Steam Beer ™” and
while the name is similar to the beers of Gold Rush days, the
quality of the beer has gone up considerably since 1849. Anchor
creates its Steam Beer ™ with the highest quality ingredients.
Because of the trademark that Anchor
Brewing owns on the “Steam” phrase, this style of beer is often
referred to as California Common. Flying Dog’s Old Scratch Amber
Lager is a second great example of the California Common beer style.
Dusseldorf Altbiers
The Düsseldorf
version is a bitter beer balanced by a pronounced malt richness.
Like
neighboring Cologne, Germany can lay claim to the Kolsch style of
beer, Dusseldorf lays claim to the origin of the Altbier
style. However, Dusseldorf has not protected the term Altbier,
so many other cities in Germany and abroad brew beers called Altbiers.
Because they are brewed at cooler temperatures like lagers but with ale yeast,
Altbiers are referred to as “hybrid” beers that don't fit readily into either the
Ale or Lager categories. "Alt" refers to the "old"
style of brewing (i.e. making top-fermented ales) that was common
before lager brewing became popular. Over the years, the yeast
strains that are used to brew Altbiers have become well adjusted to
working in cooler temperatures, like lagers.
Some breweries brew special, usually darker and richer versions of
their Altbiers called "sticke alt" ("secret alt"). These beers are
normally special occasion beers and are a stronger version of the
Dusseldorf Altbier.
Cuisine
Amber
Hybrids pair well with many different foods including pizza, poultry,
beef and fish.
Drink Amber Hybrids in a pint glass.