Woodland Empire tour and interview – pt 2

The most exciting part of this new brewery will be the beers that come out its doors.  There will be a regular lineup including a drinkable IPA that is a pale golden, example of the style focusing on lots of fresh hop flavor and keeping a nearly sessionable  6.2%.  A bane of contention with Rob, he confesses, is that there are plenty of bitter IPAs around but not so many with as much attention paid to body, aroma, and fresh hop flavor.  The malt bill on this one is a simple 2-Row with a 5% crystal for sweetness.  Just enough to “buoy the flavor of the hop”. That being Chinook, Centennial and Cascade, classic west coast IPA varieties.

A traditional ESB will also be offered year-round.   Made with 2-Row, and Crystal-80 added for a little sweetness and color, hopped with the traditional noble variety, Kent Goldings. That’s it.  Clearly following the “KISS” principle here.  With a pretty low final gravity, it will be dry, but with plenty of nice toffee and fruity, earthy and peppery flavors.

A  3.4% ABV English “Dark Mild” will also be a regular at Woodland.  Made with Doma coffee.  A session beer, Rob describes it as kind of a  “baby porter”.  Sounding a lot like what BJCP calls a “Southern English Brown”.  A lot of “porter” character, toffee, chocolate, and the coffee, giving it some nice complexity.

OK, now quickly, name me any Belgian beers brewed in Boise….  times up.   Save for the long running “Big Creek Trappist”, a Belgian Trippel, (and a pretty good one) that Sockeye has been making for years, there really isn’t much.

Woodland, will have one.  I didn’t get the details on their recipe, but if it is somewhat true to style it will not be so session-able.  (Not that Woodland Empire feels particularly bound by BJCP style guidelines) Trippels are typically 8-9% but light to medium bodied and light in color.  Making them an interesting contradiction to folks not familiar with the style.  The fact that not many area brewers are doing Belgians is not lost on Rob and this could be a great flagship beer that helps puts him on the map, so to speak.

 

Seasonal drafts will be more classic styles, a “winter warmer”, for instance, that hopefully there is enough time for this year.  Limited releases and one-offs will include a lot of Saisons, and Belgians.  Planned is a Bock for next fall, and an Octoberfest will go into the kettles in March in time for the Autumn festival.  A Bohemian Pils with be the spring seasonal in several months.  A twist on this being that they will be using all Idaho Cascade hops instead of the traditional Saaz.  Thus making it an “Idaho Pils”.  An example of “flipping tradition on it’s head”

A big part of how Woodland Empire will be trying to separate itself form the pack is their quarterly release of special edition one-off bottles.  As far as this “Bottle Program”, roughly, the calendar is shaping up like this:

First is an an Imperial Porter with cocoa nibs and vanilla bean hopefully available this winter after it has conditioned in the bottle long enough.  Later in March or April, we will see a Berliner-Weisse that will likely be one of the first beers they make.  A non-GMO, Idaho grown white wheat, and Idaho 2-Row malt bill but with an interesting local twist.  This tart wheat beer will get it’s sour culture from the new local bakery in Garden City,  “Acme Bakeshop”.  And since Acme’s sourdough culture is a geographically unique “Boise Air” culture, you could call this beer a “Boiseinner-Weisse”  Just another example of tradition meets local artisan influence.

The Imperial Stout that they plan to brew this coming March includes malt smoked over cherry wood, and also cherries from Emmett will be thrown in secondary and then bottle conditioned for several months to let that smoke and bitterness settle down for a December release.  This, I cannot wait for.

Rob was explaining also that when they make wheat beers, like the Wit that he talked about, they will include some spelt in the grain bill.  While the percentage of this contribution would probably not qualify it as “gluten reduced”, the qualities that it brings to the beer make for an interesting fruity raw wheat flavor and it will be the spin that they put in that style.  Also, instead of the traditional orange peel in this recipe, coriander and local lavender from Silver Fox farms in nearby Emmett. So, next fall when they have their lavender harvest, expect to see a special bottle run of a Lavener-Spelt-Coriander-Wit.  Another example of tradition meets…  well… you know.

Some great stuff to look forward to, ambitious and interesting.  These beers that are planned are going to make ripples in the Boise beer scene and the sooner they start coming out the better.

-Cheers

 

 

 

Woodland Empire tour and interview – pt 1

As most are aware by now, the craft brew scene in Boise if exploding, still.  And a couple breweries are opening in the next month or so.  Woodland Empire Ale Craft and Edge Brewing are the two about to open their doors this fall and I got a chance to visit Rob of WEAC the other day to chat about his new down town facility.

Plans for setting up shop back in March on Grove st  in the linen district downtown fell through and the site had to be moved a few blocks away to Front st. between 11th and 12th.  This pushed back their timeline a few months, but the building they landed on has some great local history. It was built in 1905 as a blacksmith’s shop where they would shoe horses for cavalry troops stabled next door, and also the original home to Yankee Machine Shop back in the ’30s.  So, horseshoes, to parts for B-17s and now artisan craft beer.  It’s nice to see evolution at work.

It will be a 15 Barrel system, Rob explaining that a lot of planning went into having room for growth as production needs are expected to increase over time.  Seating for 65 in the tasting room, with customer access to a viewing area where we can gaze in wide wonder at all the brewing equipment doing what it does.  Locally reclaimed lumber making up the 20′  bar, high end European flow-control faucets and special glassware, are just some of the details that will be making this place a cut above your standard watering hole.

A different kind of beer experience is what they are shooting for and more of a “coffee shop” atmosphere in the tasting room is the plan.  Lots of plants and original artwork on the walls including photos of the building from it’s past will be the decor.   A combination of being reverent to the old school continental beer culture, but also having a local twist to the historical styles and methods, are going to be employed…with a grand total of zero big screen TV’s.

With opening barely a month away, and most of the brewing equipment coming in a bout a week or so, all the remaining work is some electrical and plumbing.  Final inspection is November 18th and Rob feels like they are on track for that date.  It will be a great addition to the growing craft beer scene and in the next part, well talk more about the kinds of beers that these guys are planning to release, including some very interesting and esoteric brews, with a lot of focus on locally sourced ingredients.

-Cheers

 

 

 

Punk-toberfest

Fall is a great season for beer.  Oktoberfest and pumpkin beers head the list of what makes it so awesome.  Early in the season we have Harvest ales and “fresh Hop” ales and about a month later, as the days continue to get shorter and the nights cooler, the late fall offerings begin to come out.

Oktoberfest is a festival that goes for 16 days, in Munich and has been for  over 200 years.  It is typically associated with large quantities of mild lagers and the malty smooth session-able light brown style of beer that bares it’s name.  About 2 million gallons are consumed that that festival every year.

Pumpkin beers are the other harbingers of fall for most of us, and are a more wide open genre that, as long as it has pumpkin in it of any kind…qualifies. Some famous contemporary examples are Southern Tier’s”Pumking”..which I’ve had, and Elysian’s “Night Owl” which I have also had.  Both were very good, I thought.

Pumpkin can be a component in many different styles.  Less bitter and more malty beers are usually better carriers for the autumn gourd. Porters and stouts are not uncommon and Elysian’s “Dark o’ the Moon” is a good example of a Pumpkin Stout

Today I’m at 10 Barrel Brewing in Boise for their (first) annual “Pumpkin Fest”  They’ve got several pumpkin beers on tap and for an entry fee you get 6 tokens that you can spend on a little snifter of any of them. They’ve got some live music and a few jockey boxes pouring the special beers for the occasion.

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The “Pumpkin Crush” tastes suspiciously like the recent Berlinner Weisse they had on called German Sparkle Party. A light sweet-Tart kind of beer with a touch of pumpkin thrown in.  Tasty.  The “Coconut Curry” which was more like a stout with..again..just a hint of the pumpkin spice added in, and the Gourdie LaChance, which had a lot of the fall spice but not so much pumpkin.   The “Punkin Brewster” was kind of an amber with a touch of the gourd and I was not a big fan of, but it was “sessionable” as they say.

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There was also a beer that was not on the list, described by the server as the “Punkin Brewster” made with cocoa nibs.  That one was interesting but i would be surprised to see it show up on the chalkboard.

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It finished up at 6pm and I finished it up with the Bull Moose Brown ale..and a couple extra tokens..I guess I’ll use next year.  Maybe then the “Pumpkin Beers” will be a little more Pumpkin-y