Sour Ales
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Sour Ales)
Sourness is a key component of taste and flavor, but it is not
something that North Americans typically associate with beer.
Belgians and Germans discovered the refreshing and flavorful
qualities of sour beers centuries ago and for many people, sour
beers rank among their favorites. Like lemonade, many people are
discovering that sour and tart flavors can be very refreshing.
Sour beers cover a wide range of flavors and styles and many people
associate them more closely with wine styles and flavors than with
other beers.
Berliner Weisse
Berliner Weisse is a type of wheat beer brewed exclusively in the
area of Berlin, Germany.
Berliner Weisse contains only around 2.8% vol of alcohol, making it
one of the weakest German beers. It is top-fermented, slightly
clouded and relatively sour, so the taste of Berliner Weisse differs
significantly from other German wheat beers.
It is
typically served in a large goblet with a straw. Due to the sour
taste, it is commonly drunk mixed with raspberry (Himbeersirup),
lemon (Zitronensirup), or woodruff (Waldmeistersirup) syrup, and is
then called Weisse mit Schuss (“Weisse with a shot of Syrup”). This
mixed-drink is very refreshing in the hot summer months and is
served throughout Berlin.
Flanders Red Ale
Flanders Red Ale is a style of
Sour Ale usually brewed in northwest Belgium, the western part of
Flanders. Instead of the typical brewers’
yeast, micro-organisms specifically chosen for the sour character
they produce are chosen to ferment this beer. Lactobacillus is
commonly used to produce a sour character attributable to lactic
acid. Long periods of barrel aging are employed often as long as a
year or more, to impart an acetic acid character to the beer. Red
malt is used to give the beer its unique color and often the matured
beer is blended with a younger batch before bottling to balance and
round the character.
Flanders reds have a strong fruit
flavor similar to the aroma, but more intense. Plum, prune, raisin
and black cherry are the most common flavors, followed by orange and
some spiciness. All Flanders red ales have an obvious sour or acidic
taste, but this characteristic can range from moderate to strong.
There is no hop bitterness, but tannins are common. Subsequently,
Flanders red ales are often described as the most "wine-like" of all
beers.
Flanders Brown Ale (Oud Bruin)
Oud
Bruin, also known as Flanders Brown, is a style of Sour Ale
usually brewed in northeast Belgium, the eastern part of Flanders. The name literally translates as
"old brown", referring to the long aging process which can take up
to a year. It undergoes a secondary fermentation, which takes
several weeks to a month, and is followed by bottle aging for
several more months. The extended aging allows residual yeast and
bacteria to develop a sour flavor characteristic for this style.
While some examples of an Oud Bruin may be aged in oak, typical
beers in this style are not, and this is what helps Flanders Brown
ales distinguish themselves from the more sour Flanders Red ales.
This
style of beer is medium bodied, reddish-brown, and has a gentle
malty flavor and no hop bitterness. The aroma is a complex mixture
of fruits and estery smells of plum, raisin and cherry. The flavor
is sweet, caramel, fruity, tart, and slightly acidic, caused by
various bacteria in the maturation process. In a good example, the
tartness is often balanced with a malty character, tasting of toffee
and a giving a "sweet-and-sour" impression. Commercial versions may
mix aged beer with younger, sweeter beer to temper the acidity and
create a more complex flavor.
Lambics
Unlike conventional ales and lagers, which are fermented by
carefully cultivated strains of brewer's yeasts, Lambic beer is
instead produced by spontaneous fermentation: it is exposed to the
wild yeasts and bacteria that are native to the Senne valley, in
which Brussels lies. It is this unusual process which gives the beer
its distinctive flavor: dry, vinous, and cidery, with a slightly
sour aftertaste. Traditional Lambic brewers include Cantillon, Boon,
Lindemans, Drie Fonteinen and several others.
Today
the beer is generally brewed from a grist containing approximately
70% barley malt and 30% unmalted wheat. When the wort has cooled, it
is left exposed to the open air so that fermentation may occur
spontaneously. While this exposure is a critical feature of the
style, many of the key yeasts and bacteria are now understood to
reside within the brewery and its (usually timber) fermenting
vessels in numbers far greater than any delivered by the breeze. Up
to 86 microorganisms have been identified in Lambic beer, the most
significant ones being Brettanomyces bruxellensis and Brettanomyces
Lambicus. The process is generally only possible between October and
May as in the summer months there are too many unfavorable organisms
in the air that could spoil the beer.
Lambics typically require at least
a year to completely ferment and mature, but some Lambics are aged
as long as two to three years before they are consumed.
Hops are a key component of Lambic
beers, despite the fact that it is usually impossible to detect the
flavor of hops in them. Most Lambic brewers use old hops, perhaps
two years old, that have long lost their bitter flavor and aroma.
However, the hops still retain their preservative qualities and it
is for this reason that hops are a necessity in Lambic beers.
Some drinkers prefer a sweeter
taste than the Lambic provides. The addition of brown sugar to a
Lambic creates a Lambic variant called Faro. It is an unblended
three-year-old Lambic and is usually sold on draft, although a
number of bottled versions may be found. The sugar was originally
added directly at the table by the drinker and crushed into the
drink with a mortar, and therefore did not add carbonation or
alcohol to the beverage.
Fruit Lambics
Belgian beers have been
brewed with a variety of fruits for centuries, even before hops
became a common beer ingredient. Some of the best known Belgian
fruit beers are the Fruit Lambics. The addition of fruit to the fermenting beer
creates a new layer of flavor that is sometimes very subtle and
sometimes very sweet. Varieties of fruit used in Belgium include
cherry (Kriek), raspberry (Framboise), black currant (Cassis) and
peach (Peche). Kriek is a very popular and traditional flavor in
Belgium and is found in Lambics as well as other beers, including
other Sour Ale styles like the Flanders Brown (Oud Bruin) beer.
Gueuze
Many people decline to drink
straight Lambic beers, as they can be quite intensely sour and
funky. Blending Lambics of various ages can create a brew which is
greater than the sum of its parts and this type of blend is called
Gueuze. Gueuze is a mixture of young (one-year) and old (two and
three-year) Lambics which has been bottled. A good Gueuze will be
given a year to referment in the bottle, but can be kept for 10-20
years.