I’ve gotten many questions lately about what we have going
on in our barrels and how we prepare our barrels before use, so I figured I
would give a rundown of the projects we have in the works and our procedures. I
have to thank Peter Bouckaert, Lauren Salazar, and Eric Salazar of New Belgium
for all their help and info they provided. A lot of procedures, information, and
even some of our barrels came from them.
Over the past year or so we have grown our barrel collection
quite a bit with the barrels falling into two general categories. The first are wine and spirit barrels that are for post-fermentation aging. The second
are the sour program barrels that are inoculated with various organisms
including brettanomyces, lactobacillus, and pediococcus. As the wine and spirit
barrels become more neutral they move to the sour program.
The wine and spirit barrels are used for infusing the beer with
the aromas and flavors of what was previously in them along with the characteristics
of the type and toast of the wood. These barrels are purchased through a broker
when they are freshly emptied and given a quick hot water rinse before filling.
Currently, we have four Rum barrels and one Cognac barrel aging Deceit and a
number of Bourbon barrels aging Dark Prophet (which is currently being released).
We aren’t sure at this point what will go into these
Bourbon barrels after the Dark Prophet release but I’m leaning toward a
Quadrupel.
Before we use barrels in the sour program we partially disassembled the barrels to remove the char or wine stone from the inner surface so the souring organisms have good contact with the wood. This involves loosening the hoops to pull the heads and scraping the staves and heads. At that point they are reassembled, the hoops are tightened, and then filled with hot water to swell before being emptied.
As far as releases from the
barrels, there are no timelines set and quantities will be quite limited so don’t
expect to see them go much further than our taproom.
Recently we did a beer dinner organized by Be Local and were
paired up with Brent Lewis, Executive Chef at El Monte Grille and Lounge in
Fort Collins, to come up with a pairing for one of the courses. We chose Brent’s
Ancho Pumpkin Bisque to pair with Tropic King. We both felt the creaminess and subtle
spice of the Bisque complemented the fruity effervescence of the beer. Thank
you Brent for sharing your recipe!
Ancho Pumpkin Bisque:
2 cups heavy Cream
½ gallon Milk
1 C Roasted pumpkins
1/8 teaspoon Nutmeg
1/2 teaspoon Cinnamon
1/4 teaspoon Vanilla
1 ea Ancho chili roasted
½ fl oz Mexican Crema
Ancho Pumpkin Bisque:
2 cups heavy Cream
½ gallon Milk
1 C Roasted pumpkins
1/8 teaspoon Nutmeg
1/2 teaspoon Cinnamon
1/4 teaspoon Vanilla
1 ea Ancho chili roasted
½ fl oz Mexican Crema
Cut pumpkins in ½ and scrape the seeds out, place
upside-down on a sheet tray lined with parchment paper and roast until soft
(about 1 hour and 10 min) in a 350 degree oven. Let the pumpkins cool so that they can be handled but still
warm, scrape the “meat” out and discard the skin. Toast the Ancho chilis on the
stove top then place in a heave
bottomed pot with the cream and milk, bring to a boil then add everything else,
Bring back to a boil then blend everything together.
To serve:
Place in a cup or bowl, “lace” crema over soup and finish
with a shake of dried and ground Ancho chili.
Yield: 2 Qts