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Beer & Brewer 41 Winter 2017 Teaser

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PART 2 HOW TO OPEN A BREWERY - LOCATION AND EQUIPMENT

INCLUDING

BIG BOLD BLACK THE COLOURFUL HISTORY OF DARK BEER

ISSUE 41 Winter 2017 PRICE $9.95 (NZ $11.95)

BREW

IN A BAG PHENOMENON

DUNE RATS ON NUMBER ONE ALBUMS AND COLLABORATIVE BREWS

ISSN 1834-5115

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PLUS! FOUNDERS OF AUSTRALIAN CRAFT | ASIAN INSPIRED BEER RECIPES


CONTENTS

inside... Winter 2017

HOMEBREWER 40 Welcome 41 Letters 42 Q&A FEATURES 18 Style Notes – Porters and Stouts Stefanie Collins takes a look at the history of dark beers

24 Brewery Start Up 101 In part two of his three part series Luke Robertson looks at location and equipment

30 The Founders of Australian Craft Just who were the founders of craft beer in Australia and how did they get into the brewing game?

36 Barrel Aged Beers Luke Robertson looks at the process of barrel aging and tells us who is currently doing it well

58 Beer & Food Matching When it comes to food and drink matching, wine is fine but beer is better. Tam Allenby takes a look at the art of beer and food matching

Home brewing legend John Palmer responds to one reader’s query on American Winter Ales

82

46 Recipes We’ve got a red ale, American winter warmer, coffee brown ale, a couple of porters and a coffee-choc stout

48 GABS: Asian Persuasion There’s been an influx of beers influenced by Asian flavours at GABS this year and we’ve got the recipes

52 Brew in a Bag Our Homebrew Editor has a look at the phenomenon that is Brew in a Bag

54 Education Homebrewer technical editor Jake Brandish takes a look at the importance of temperature in fermentation

56 Homebrewer Club We look at the difficulties experienced when home brewing in the Northern Territory

“We’re not as prominent in the brewing world as in other worlds, but that’s not to say we don’t drink our fair share of beer to try and get across who’s releasing good beer at the moment” – Danny Beusa, Dune Rats

22 52

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64

REGULARS 3 Editor’s Letter 6 The Brew What’s happening and things to do

6 News The latest in Aus/NZ beer industry

12 World News 14 Bits & Bobs 15 New Venues 68 Tasting Notes Stouts, porters, ciders and new releases

78 Directory 82 A Pint With… We chat with the Dune Rats about number one albums and collaborative brews

Pairing beer with toasties wil cure your winter blues! 36

30

46

WINTER 2017  5


STYLE NOTES

STOUTS VS

PORTERS

PORTER AND STOUT CAN LAY CLAIM TO LOTS OF THINGS, SUCH AS BEING THE FIRST INDUSTRIALISED BEER STYLE OR FLOODING A SLUM IN LONDON. STEFANIE COLLINS INVESTIGATES THE HISTORY OF DARK BEERS

L

ike a lot of history, there are

staggering number of calories to get through

as Guinness, though there is still some

many stories of the origins of

a hard day of labouring in a time when

debate on whether stouts and porters can

porter and its cousin, stout.

nutrition in the lower classes was severely

really be considered different styles. More

Also, like much of history,

lacking. Hence calorie dense dark beers would

on that later.

the majority of the stories are

have sustained them.

repeated so often that they’ve become part of

historian Lisa Grimm points out that

THE DEATH & REBIRTH OF PORTER

the origin myth by default.

potentially the practice of calling a beer

While brewers continued to make stout

‘porter’ was imported from the Netherlands,

unabated, the porter style began to die out

the 18th Century in London, and the most

due to trading links, where a beer known as

under pressure from the rise of lager and

popular story names one Ralph Harwood, a

‘poorter’ was being consumed as early as the

the dark beer slot increasingly being filled

local brewer who in 1722 created a beer that

14th Century.

by stout, leading to the cease of production

fabrications that have been

The first mention of porter came during

was originally called ‘Entire’. It was a brewery

Although, beer writer and amateur

Let’s not forget about stout. The term

of Porter in the UK by the 50s. Funnily

made version of the beer mix that was being

‘stout porter’ was applied to stronger

enough, Guinness brewed its last official

sold over the bar called ‘Three Threads’ (local

versions of porter through much of the 18th

porter in 1974.

vernacular for ‘three thirds’ because the

Century, as indeed the term ‘stout’ just

blend the barkeep poured on request was one

implied ‘strong’. It was applied to other beer

the style, with Anchor Brewing Company

third each beer, ale, and strong beer).

styles as well – during the same era you could

becoming the first American brewery to

order a ‘stout pale ale’ and no one would

create a porter since Prohibition, in 1972.

believes that that whole story is rubbish,

think you were strange. It was only later that

The revival in the UK began when the

and the brew was in fact named after the

it became synonymous with dark beer styles.

Penrhos microbrewery (founded by Monty

Eventually, stout became its own distinct

Python member Terry Jones) introduced a

However, beer historian Martyn Cornell

street and river porters that drank it en masse. These workers would have required a

18  www.beerandbrewer.com

style, helped along by a little brewery known

It was the Americans that rejuvenated

Porter in 1978.


STYLE NOTES

of roasted flavours, generally without burnt

Goat, thinks it’s important that the two

qualities, and often has a chocolate-caramel-

styles are separated.

malty profile”. ABV sits around 4.0 – 5.4 per

“A stout in my mind is a lot drier than a

cent, while IBU is 18-35. As for stouts, they

porter,” he says. “The best porters have that

vary wildly, which we will address later on.

really nice ruby colour to them, and to me a

As to whether or not these styles can be

porter is much more malt driven, while stouts

considered different in modern brewing,

are more inclined to be hoppy – especially the

Glenn Harrison, Head Brewer at Temple

American styles. The acidity of the underlying

Brewing Company, which brews New World

beer works better with a big, punchy,

Order Classic American Stout says it’s the

resinous dry-hopping regime.”

million dollar question. “Personally speaking stouts must be

IF YOU LIKE STOUTS AND PORTERS WHY NOT TRY: Dark Lager – A darker and sweeter version of international pale lager with a little more body and flavour. Helles Bock – A strong, malty German lager beer with a hop character that is more apparent than in other Bocks. Rauchbier – A malty German amber lager with a balanced Beechwood smoke character. British Brown Ale – A malty, caramelcentric British ale without the roasted flavours of a Porter. Eisbock – A strong, full-bodied, and malty dark German Lager with very strong flavours.

LOCAL DRINKERS

black,” he says. “Secondly I feel stout should

According to Harrison, dark beer styles are

have more of the roasted barley and dark malt

not as popular as he would like them to be,

flavour and are generally, for my liking, more

adding that Australians are “still scared of

heavy bodied. Though, in saying that there

the dark when it comes to beers”. He also

are robust porters out there that are thick,

believes that porters can be just as refreshing

alcoholic and black as spades, so I don’t think

and “thirst quenching” as some of the other

I have made things any clearer.”

normal go-to styles in summer.

Tim Penton, Head Brewer at Taverner’s

“It’s up to brewers and the industry to

Boutique Brewery in Launceston, who’s

try and think of new ways to engage people

Honey Porter won a silver medal at this years’

into drinking darker beers outside the winter

Australian International Beer Awards (AIBA)

months,” says Harrison.

– the highest award in that category for 2017

Penton agrees that beers are still very

– says that the boundaries in a lot of the style

seasonally driven, despite stouts that are

guidelines have been blurring over the last

served with nitrogen tending to be popular

five to 10 years.

year round “because the nitrogen gives them

“I suppose Porter helps to differentiate

a creamy texture it softens the flavour”. He

between a lighter style dark beer and a

adds that the popularity of dark beers has

heavier style but those were back in the days

increased in the last five years as brewers

when there was really no hop character and it

have added hop notes and beer

was all malt driven,” he says.

style guidelines have changed to reflect

Ian Morgan, Head Brewer at Mountain

that preference.

Glenn Harrison, Head Brewer at Temple Brewing

IT’S COMPLICATED Porter and stout were for a long stretch of brewing history interchangeable. According to the late, great Michael Jackson (the beer writer, just so we’re clear) “lower-gravity porters evolved into mild ales, those in the middle range retained their original designation (only to vanish for decades before their recent revival), and the fuller-bodied versions came to be known as stouts”. According to Beer Judge Certification Program (BJCP), English porter is in the Brown British Beer category, while the various stouts are designated Dark British Beer. Porter is classified as “a moderatestrength brown beer with a restrained roasty character and bitterness. May have a range

WINTER 2017  19


The Lord Nelson Hotel back in the day

FOUNDERS OF AUSTRALIAN CRAFT

Pioneering

Craft

BACK IN THE 1970S AND ‘80S BEER CHOICE WAS LIMITED, DOMINATED BY A DUOPOLY OF BREWERIES AND WITH FEWER THAN 20 SMALL BREWERIES STRUGGLING TO EXIST. BUT THERE WERE A FEW PIONEERS THAT LED THE CHARGE IN TURNING THAT AROUND, AS DEBORAH JACKSON AND ANDY YOUNG REPORT

I

by CUB). While Coopers, the largest Australian-owned brewery was also around, the family-owned brewery was enduring some financial hardship during the 1970s and ‘80s when Australia’s thirst for lagers boomed at the expense of traditionally brewed ales like Coopers. But there were a group of pioneers who bucked that trend and kick started what would become a revolution of craft beer in Australia.

SYDNEY’S OLDEST BREWPUB In 1986, Blair Hayden along with his mate Duncan MacGillivray and a few others had started to notice the campaign for real ale had been gaining momentum in the UK and people were starting to become interested in what was going on outside of the major breweries. So they set their sights on opening a brewpub. After looking at more than 150 different venues, the pair came across The Lord Nelson, and the rest is history. “I was looking for a building that was interesting. I had lived in

n today’s market craft beer dominates. While the per capita

the UK and as we were going to brew ales anyway, and our brewing

consumption of beer in Australia has been on a long-term

equipment had come from the UK, it seemed appropriate that we

decline for many years, much of this is attributable to

would try and remain on that same sort of style.

decreases in the consumption of traditional beer brands. Euromonitor International data shows that between 2011 and 2016, per capita beer consumption in Australia

declined more than 9.5 per cent from around 84 litres per person to

“We weren’t interested in ever making lagers, just natural ales and no light beers, because if you want a light beer just have half of a beer, there’s not much point in having a light beer if you want flavour.” Hayden told Beer & Brewer that their arrival on the beer scene came

76 litres per person. However, craft beer consumption in Australia is

as a surprise to consumers who would come into the pub and be

burgeoning and the local production of craft beer continues to grow.

perplexed by the fact they didn’t sell VB.

But this was not always the case. In the years following the Second

“Our arrival was a bit of a change because people would come into

World War, the market was basically owned by the duopoly of Carlton

the pub and ask for a VB, and we’d say we don’t sell VB, and they’d

and United Breweries (CUB) and Tooth and Co. (which was later bought

look perplexed and walk out the door, and look up at the sign to

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FOUNDERS OF AUSTRALIAN CRAFT

double check that this was actually a hotel,” said Hayden. “But people got over that eventually and we showed them that we were a brewery and were making beer on the premises.” The Lord Nelson has always brewed top fermented natural ales and have only ever served their own beers over the bar. “The breweries bought taps and bought the owners who were forced to use their beers. In our case we decided that one of the most important things in the new beers that we would make is that they would all look different. I believed in those early days people were just drinking what they were served and didn’t know any different,” said Hayden. “I’ve always described beer in the same way as people would describe wine and talk about it in the same sort of terms. But they are all different – the hops created different aromas and different

Who would you say were the Founders of Australian Craft? “Certainly in Victoria people like Paul Holgate, he was around when we were around. When we first started [Mountain Goat], the Grand Ridge brewery was just about the only craft beer brewery operating in Victoria. Obviously Little Creatures was around at the same time. “Then you’ve got the guys like Chuck Hahn and Phil Sexton. Willie Simpson has been important in the background as a journalist first and just a mouth for craft beer, and now he’s got his own brewery too. I mean those are the names that I recall that were around when we first started,” David Bonighton, Co-founder of Mountain Goat.

bitterness levels and the types of malt we use also create different Cam Hines and David Bonighton in the early days of Mountain Goat

Chuck Hahn aromas and different colours in the beers that we made.” Hayden told Beer & Brewer that while the initial movement towards

that role Hahn helped the company to understand the importance of micro brewing and nursery brewery. After some time as Chief Brewer,

real ale was founded by people who were a bit “alternative”, he said

Hahn said “I got sick of flying around all the time so I convinced Lion

“it was good because what it did was raise the awareness that mass

to let me go back to the original small brewery – the Hahn brewery –

produced beers don’t have to always be the be all and end all”.

and start up a new brewing company, James Squire”. The Malt Shovel Brewery is still going strong, as is Hahn, who is still a regular and

THE GODFATHER OF CRAFT

hugely respected judge at beer competitions around the world.

Craft. Beer. Legend. No-one can argue with Hahn’s influence on the Southern Hemisphere’s craft beer scene and for pushing the quality

INDUSTRY HEAVYWEIGHT

that the category now takes for granted. Having worked with Coors in

With a CV that includes Brewmaster at the Swan Brewing Company,

the US for 10 years, helping to establish Coors Light, Hahn moved to

Co-founder of the Matilda Bay Brewing Company and Co-founder

Australia in 1983 to run the Tooheys and Resch’s breweries. He then

of the Little Creatures Brewing Company, Phil Sexton’s position as

had a stint in New Zealand, working on Steinlager and helping that

a forefather of Australia’s craft beer scene is undisputed – he’s a

beer to win the 1985 Beer World Cup.

heavyweight of the industry.

Hahn then moved back to Sydney and in 1988 he started the

Sexton is a science graduate from the University of Western

Hahn Brewery in Camperdown, launching the well regarded Hahn

Australia, who also holds a Master of Science Degree in Fermentation

Premium beer. At the time the Hahn Brewery was Australia’s largest

and Brewing Science from the University of Birmingham in England. It

microbrewery, but – like so many other businesses – it was not

was this time in England that influenced Sexton’s love of the English

immune to the ‘recession we had to have’ and in 1993 Hahn sold

Brown Ale, a beer which also utilises his skill as a winemaker.

the brewery to Lion Nathan – although Hahn has said since that he prefers to think of the move as a merger. Lion made Hahn its Chief Brewer for the whole group and as part of

After setting up Brewtech in 1983 to brew boutique beers, Sexton said that he found it hard to break into being listed at local licensed premises because the influence of the big brewers at the time. In a

WINTER 2017  31


Q&A

Winter Warmers JOHN PALMER, OUR AMERICAN CORRESPONDENT AND HOMEBREWING LEGEND RESPONDS TO ONE READER’S QUERY ON AMERICAN WINTER ALES

Q: HI JOHN,

are going to have this much variety in flavour, we can’t have

I’m looking to brew a couple of great beers for winter. At the

them all shouting at one another trying to be heard; keep the

moment I extract brew but am looking to move to BIAB. What do

proportions small and even, so that there is a conversation

you think are the most important characteristics of winter beers

between them and not just noise. If you have a preferred

(American Winter Ales or any others) and can you please provide a

speaker, orange or clove perhaps, then by all means draw

recipe? Thanks!

that one out by increasing its proportion, but keep the rest at

A: Ah! The beers of winter! Perfect for curling up next to the fireplace or heater with a good book. Winter Warmer is not a rigid style but very open to local interpretation.

background levels so that there is no confusion as to whom you should be paying attention. The hops are another strong source of beer flavour

Generally, they are a six-to-eight per cent ABV ale with a full

and character, and they can either help or hinder your

body and a malty finish. They are usually darker beers, such

construction. Some of the highly fruity hop varieties may well

as porters, stouts, or old ales, with a complex flavour profile

complement the beer, but the resin and herbal varieties may

of esters, alcohol, and often spices. It is very important not to

clash with the spices. Look for hop varieties that have some

overdo the spices! This should be a beer that can be quaffed,

of the same spice and fruit characters that we expect to see

not a beer that saturates your palate after half a glass.

from the yeast.

Let me say three words about spices. “Don’t boil them!”

One of my favorite winter warmer type beers is a

Boiled spices taste woody with a bitter aftertaste. Hot

weizenbock because it fits with the season and the foods

steeping is the way to do it. Put your spices in a mesh bag or

that are commonly made. Granted it doesn’t get quite as cold

sock and place them in the kettle for 15-30 minutes after the

in Australia as it does in the US, but even 10°C is enough to

boil with the heat off. Cold steeping works well too but you

make it worthwhile to have a hearty stew and pumpkin pie.

get less flavour and more aroma. Use some restraint when

A weizenbock has banana and clove esters from the yeast, a

choosing the amount and variety of spices that you put into

medium body, and graham cracker maltiness; in short, it is a

your beer. Pumpkin pie contains three spices: cinnamon,

great base beer to build a winter warmer from. The next step

cloves, and ginger, and it only uses a teaspoon of each. One

is to add in some complexity to this beer, and for that we can

or two spices are usually sufficient for a spiced beer, and

turn to specialty malts and spices.

usually not much more than you would use in a pie, because

The base malt for this recipe is a 50/50 blend of English pale

remember, this is a beer, not a pie. These spices are supposed

ale malt and wheat malt to develop a rich breadiness. Next we

to accent the beer flavour, not the other way around.

add Briess Carabrown malt to develop a solid Graham Cracker

Now let’s talk about flavour complexity. Rule number

crust flavour. Aromatic Munich 20L malt, caramel wheat malt

one: you can’t have complexity without balance. Complexity

and dark chocolate malt round out the dark bread and sweet

without balance is mud, so don’t try to mix more than a

bun flavours and will support the fruit and spice flavours. The

few flavours. The beer is supplying several malty flavours,

special addition to increase the alcohol and add hints of fudge

ranging from bready, bread crust, toast, caramel, to cocoa,

is the use of Indonesian Gula Jawa coconut sugar. This sugar

and the yeast is supplying fruity esters and alcohol. Basically

has a depth of flavour, containing coffee, cocoa, and fudge

we are talking about a fruitcake with touches of cocoa. What

aspects. For spices we will add Ceylon cinnamon and orange

fruit flavours go well with cocoa? Well, orange and raspberry

zest. I have tried adding cloves and ginger with this recipe but I

to name two. What spices work well with dark bread and

feel that less spice is generally better. These two spices fill out

cake? Well, cinnamon, ginger, and cloves certainly. If we

the flavour profile without dominating the beer.

42  Home Brewer


Palmer’s Winterbock – All-Grain Expected Brew Figures OG: 1.067 FG: 1.016 ABV: 6.4% IBU: 22 Volume: 23 litres

Ingredients 2.5kg Pale Ale malt 2.5kg Wheat malt 900g Weyermann CaraWheat (55L) 450g Briess Carabrown malt (55L) 450g Aromatic Munich (20L) 115g Briess Dark Chocolate Malt (400L) 450g Gula Jawa Coconut Sugar 30g Mandarina Bavaria (8%AA) 50g Orange zest (approx. 2 oranges) 20g Ceylon Cinnamon stick WLP-351 Bavarian Weizen yeast (or Safbrew WB-06)

Method 1. Mash at 67°C and mash out at 76°C 2. Sparge and bring to the boil 3. Boil for 60 minutes, adding the Mandarina Bavaria hops for the duration 4. After flameout add the orange peel and cinnamon in a mesh bag and steep for 30 minutes 5. Remove spices, whirlpool and chill to 17°C 6. Transfer to fermenter and pitch yeast. Ferment at 17°C 7. When gravity is at, or near 1.016 and is consistent over consecutive days, bottle or keg 8. Allow beer to mature for 8-12 weeks for best results

Palmer’s Winterbock – Extract with Specialty Grains Expected Brew Figures OG: 1.067 FG: 1.016 ABV: 6.4% IBU: 22 Volume: 23 litres

Ingredients 2kg Wheat DME 2kg Pale Ale Dried Malt Extract (DME) 900g CaraWheat (Weyermann 55L) 450g Carabrown malt (Briess 20L) 450g Aromatic Munich (20L) 115g Dark Chocolate malt (Briess 400L) 30g Manadarina Bavaria hops (8%AA) 450g Gula Jawa Coconut Sugar 50g Orange zest (approx. 2 oranges) 20g Ceylon Cinnamon stick WLP-351 Bavarian Weizen yeast (or Safbrew WB-06)

Method 1. Bring 11.5 litres of water to 69°C and steep the cracked grains in a small grain bag for 30 minutes 2. Add the Pale Ale DME and 225g of the Wheat DME and bring to the boil 3. Boil for 60 minutes, adding the Manadarina Bavaria for the duration 4. Turn off the heat after the 60 minutes (flameout) and add remaining Wheat DME and Gula Jawa sugar, then stir to dissolve 5. Put the orange zest and cinnamon in a mesh bag and steep or 30 minutes in the hot wort as it cools 6. 6. Transfer wort to your fermenter and top up to 23 litres with very cold water 7. Pitch yeast, and ferment, at 17°C 8. When gravity is at, or near 1.016 and is consistent over consecutive days, bottle or keg 9. Allow beer to mature for 8-12 weeks for best results

WINTER 2017  43


FEATURE

GABS: Asian Persuasion

THERE’S BEEN AN INFLUX OF BEERS INFLUENCED BY ASIAN FLAVOURS AT GABS THIS YEAR. CHRIS THOMAS TALKS WITH TWO OF THE BREWERS WITH ASIAN INSPIRED BEERS AND GETS THEIR RECIPES TOO!

48  Home Brewer


G

ood Beer Week (GBW)

a number of brewers who have been

is full of outstanding

inspired by the flavours of Asia.

beer and food

Really, it shouldn’t come as a surprise

matching events and

that Asian flavours are making their

degustation dinners,

way into beers. After all, the flavours

but the crowning

associated with Asian cooking are

event is renowned for ambitious festival

usually clean and crisp like many beers

beers inspired by food.

on the market.

In past years at GABS, many of these

Subtle use of fresh Asian herbs, fruits

beers have carried a sweet theme

and vegetables like chilli, coriander,

with plenty of dessert or chocolate

ginger, kaffir lime and lemongrass add

bar themed beers. The two most

freshness and complexity to beers with

recognisable and readily available of

a lighter base, especially lagers, pilsners

these thus far have been Big Shed’s

and even saisons.

3 Ravens: Little Ravens Mango Lassi IPA – All Grain Mango Lassi IPA Expected Brew Figures OG: 1.070 FG: 1.016 ABV: 7% IBU: 45 Volume: 20 litres

Ingredients 3.5kg Pale Malt 1.5kg Vienna Malt

Golden Stout Time and La Sirene’s

much since its debut at GABS in 2014,

Q&A WITH THE BREWERS – 3 RAVENS AND MORRISON’S BREWERY

while Big Shed’s Golden Stout Time

Brendan O’Sullivan, Head Brewer at

followed suit in 2015.

3 Ravens (Vic) has designed a unique

30g Galaxy hops

Belgian Praline. La Sirene’s Belgian Praline has graced our shelves pretty

1kg Rolled Oats 1kg Lactose 1g Green Cardamom Seeds

take on Asian Flavours with the Little

125g Denail hops

making your beer taste like your favourite

Ravens Mango Lassi IPA. It’s described

80g Lemondrop Hops

sweet treats. Many of the beers are

as a mildly acidic and fruit forward

inspired by different cultures and food

‘Milkshake IPA’ inspired by the popular

styles from around the world. Two Birds

Indian yoghurt drink, Lassi.

But GABS is about more than just

Taco Beer started its life as a Festival Beer

Taking a completely different path is

and is now a staple in their range and one

Paul Morrison, Head Brewer at Morrison

of their biggest selling beers. Recently

Brewery in Tasmania. Morrison and his

the Taco Beer has found its way into cans

team have designed a Green Curry & Rice

and is selling like hot cakes – now there’s

Saison brewed with coconut, galangal,

an idea for next year… hot cakes with

kaffir lime, lemongrass, coriander and

bacon and maple syrup.

chilli. They even added rice to go with the

This year at GABS there has been

green curry.

50g Ella Hops 500g Mango Puree Lactobacillus Starter Wyeast London Ale III (1318)

Method 1. Mash for 60 minutes at 66°C ensuring a minimum 50ppm calcium level 2. Start first boil for 15 mins, then chill to appropriate souring temp (between 32 to 49 depending on your chosen bacteria strain) 3. Sour with healthy lactobacillus starter ~5-10million cells/mL at appropriate souring temperature for 12-16 hours (or until pH <3.8) 4. Start second boil and add all Galaxy for a 60min boil 5. Add any brewing salts for the 60min boil 6. Add 1kg lactose for 15 minutes left on the boil 7. Add 1g green cardamom seeds for 5 minutes left on the boil 8. Add 60g Denali for whirlpool 9. Ferment with 6-8 million cells/mL Wyeast 1318 at 17 - 20C 10. Dry hop with 80g Lemondrop, 65g Denali, 50g Ella for five days.

Notes: See Grain & Grape kettle souring video on YouTube or search for ANHC 2016 slides for more info on starters/souring.

3 Ravens Head Brewer Brendan O’Sullivan taking a healthy sniff of hops

Brewing salt additions to achieve 20ppm Magnesium, and 60-70ppm Calcium Avoid kettle finings

WINTER 2017  49


BEER & FOOD MATCHING

THE PERFECT MATCH TAM ALLENBY TALKS TO THE EXPERTS AND SOME OF THE COUNTRY’S TOP BREWPUBS TO UNLOCK THE SECRETS OF MATCHING BEER WITH FOOD

58  www.beerandbrewer.com


BEER & FOOD MATCHING

F

or years, pairing beer and food

incredibly well is a really good, bitter German

was a gastronomic practice sadly

pilsner with a deep or pan-fried flathead – for me

overlooked. Beer’s grape-derived

that is fucking heaven,” says Master Brewer and

cousin wine had a monopoly, with

Director Education at The Institute of Beer, Neal

the basic principles of pairing it

Cameron. “You’ve got that lovely, bitter crispness

with food – at least the ‘red with a

of the pilsner to cut through the fat and you’ve

steak, white with seafood’ approach – having long

got so much flavour in the fish. I use an Australian

since passed into common knowledge.

Brewery pilsner and it’s just lovely.

Around the same time that more flavoursome

“The Germans do it so well with their food as

beers began to become popular – thanks, in large

well. The entirety of German cuisine is some sort

part, to the increased popularity of craft in the

of meat with some sort of potato, and their beers

marketplace – many began realising that there was

tend to be more malt driven – your Bock’s and your

more to beer and food than a schooner of bland lager

Helles and that sort of thing – with a big, rounded

and a bag of salty crisps at the local (though that is

mouthfeel, just go so well with fatty dishes and

still a great combination). In fact, as many experts

heavy potato,” says Cameron.

attest, beer and food matching is just as rewarding

When we asked Waldhorn about her favourite

a pursuit as wine pairing, and can lead to hitherto

food and beer match, she said picking just one “is

unexperienced flavour and aroma combinations.

like asking if I have a favourite child.” Beer and

So, how does one actually go about pairing beer

cheese is one personal favourite of hers: fresh goat’s

with food? Well, we’ve done the hard work for you

curd with a Belgian Witbier, a matured cheddar with

– so pull up a barstool, crack a beer and read on –

an ESB, or an intense blue with a rich stout.

we’ll make an expert of you yet.

“One of my most memorable pairings was actually divine in its simplicity,” she adds. “A freshly

THE BASIC PRINCIPLES – ‘THE THREE C’S’

shucked oyster with a light, citrusy German Kölsch… [it was] so clean, so simple and so wonderful.”

As with any food and beverage pairing, the flavour between your matches; if the food or beer

FOOD AND BEER MATCHING IN THE WILD

completely overpowers the other, then the whole

Even though many restaurants are recognising

point of ‘matching’ is made redundant. From here,

the value of beer and food pairing, in mainstream

most experts agree that the best place to start is

dining there’s still a long way to go. “When you

with ‘the three C’s’: that is, a beer should either

compare the care and loving attention even

complement, cleanse/cut through, or contrast with

relatively low-end restaurants give to their wine

the chosen food pairing.

list, versus the generic, bland beers on their beer

most important thing is it to find a balance of

Kirrily Waldhorn, ‘Beer Diva’ and educator,

list it’s almost mind blowing really – they seem to

explains that complementing is all about matching

understand wine but don’t seem to understand the

similar flavour characteristics between food and

need to do the same with beer,” says Cameron.

beer, with the aim of them working in “delicious

On the other hand, there are an increasing

harmony together”. Cleansing is “the beer acting

number of venues getting on board, hosting beer

as a palate cleanser… those wonderful bubbles

degustation dinners or even building a beer focus

from the carbonated foam are a perfect broom for

into their menu design. Brewpubs, of course, are at

sweeping through any richness on the palate”,

the forefront of this, the Prancing Pony Brewery in

while contrasting can be the most rewarding “when

the Adelaide Hills being a great example.

done well” – after all, opposites do attract.

Corinna Steeb, CEO of Prancing Pony, says that

There’s a final rule as well: don’t forget that

for her venue, beers always come first in the pairing

taste is subjective, so if you want to try something

equation: “the food has to fit with the beer, and not

different that clashes with these principles, go for

the other way around,” and she adds that every dish

it! The freedom to create your own taste sensation

on the menu has a recommended beer (or two) to go

is a beautiful thing, and as Waldhorn says: “One

with it.

person’s perfect pairing could be another’s disastrous duo.”

“We have an antipasto platter, a summery selection for which we would always recommend our Sunshine Ale, Achtung! Helles or our Clockwork

CLASSIC COMBINATIONS

Orange American Pale Ale. Our meat platter

So what are some of the experts’ favourite

with different styles of sausage and cured meats

combinations?

goes great with our Amber Ale, the caramelised

“The one you hear about and I think works

Cooking With Beer Beer and food might combine beautifully in the mouth, but they can also work in tandem in the kitchen. “It’s infinitely more difficult to cook with beer than it is with wine,” says Corinna Steeb from Prancing Pony. “If you have an IPA, which has a lot of hoppiness, the hops can have an overbearing dominance and make every dish bitter. So you have to be quite innovative with what you do – our chef does some really crazy dishes using beer. Cooking with beer goes way beyond beer batter, trust me, and we don’t even make one because we find it too basic.” One of these dishes at Prancing Pony is the ‘Fried Drunk Chicken’, a chicken thigh sloshed in buttermilk and India Red Ale, crumbed in seasoned panko crumbs and served with house-made ‘beer-oli’. But it doesn’t have to be complicated, so why not try some of these? • Beer can chicken: drink half a beer, then shove the rest of the can up its ‘you-know-what’. The liquid in the upright beer can will evaporate keeping the meat moist. • Combine lager with treacle, ketchup and mustard to create a marinade for ribs or wings. • Braise lentils with wheat beer, shallots, stock and thyme for a cracking side dish. • Make a ‘rarebit’ mix with spring onion, butter, egg, cheese and stout for a next-level cheese on toast.

characters bringing out the meat really well.”

WINTER 2017  59


ENTERTAINING – FOOD

get TOASTED THE COMFORTING AND FAMILIAR EMBRACE OF A TOASTIE IS DYNAMITE FOR CURING THE WINTER BLUES – AND EVEN MORE SO WHEN PAIRED WITH A BEER

D

arren Purchese may be a pastry chef with a sweet tooth and a flair for

culinary theatrics, but from an early age he has also made a mean cheese on toast – and still does – as Chefs Eat Toasties Too so scrumptiously attests. When he is not hard at work with his wife Cath at Burch & Purchese Sweet

Studio in Melbourne’s Chapel Street, or appearing on MasterChef, Darren can often be found at home in the kitchen whipping up a gastronomic treat inspired by the simplest of meals: the not-always-so-humble toastie. Chefs Eat Toasties Too is packed to the brim with delicious toasted and grilled creations, and best of all, they’re simple and easy to make. “I love toast,” explains Purchese. “I know I’m not the only one. There’s nothing better than hot toast with a thick layer of melting butter threatening to dribble down your arm, or bubbling melted cheese on a slice of your favourite bread. “Cheese on toast and toasties are my thing. If pastry and chocolate are my profession and passion, then toasties are my hobby and obsession. “Hopefully this book will open your eyes a little wider to the myriad of possibilities for the humble toastie. I hope this helps you lift your own toastie game at home. Happy grilling!” - So what are you waiting for?

This is an edited extract from Chefs Eat Toasties Too by Darren Purchese published by Hardie Grant Books RRP $29.99 and is available in stores nationally Photographer: ©Brendan Homan

www.beerandbrewer.com 64  www.beerandbrewer.com


Cubano: barbecued marinated pork shoulder, emmental + dill pickle The ‘Cuban’ sandwich originated in Florida, probably catering to the tastes of local immigrant workers. There seem to be many variations but essentially this is a ham and cheese toastie and this is my version.

Pro tips Marinate the meat for the Roasted marinated pork shoulder overnight and have the meat in the oven the next day by 10am at the latest. The meat can then be enjoyed for dinner, and the left-over pieces refrigerated and then used for barbecued Cuban sangas the next day. I have used baguettes, but you could use a brioche bun or try to find a real ‘Cubano’ loaf, which is a soft, ovalshaped baguette.

Makes: 4 Prep time: 20 minutes Toasting method: Cast-iron sandwich grill pan and oven Bread: 4 Cuban loaves or 4 individual baguettes, cut in half lengthways Ingredients 200 g (7 oz) Mayonnaise, storebought Kewpie mayonnaise is fine 2 garlic cloves, grated 4 tablespoons finely chopped fresh coriander (cilantro) leaves salt flakes freshly ground black pepper 8 cos (romaine) lettuce leaves

Roasted marinated pork shoulder (makes 16 slices) 2kg (4lb 6oz) pork shoulder, upper half (also known as Boston butt – you need to pre-order this from your butcher)

8 Dill pickles (page 9), sliced lengthways 12 slices emmental or gruyère American mustard

500g (1lb 2oz) pineapple flesh, cut into chunks then blended to a coarse consistency

12 slices Roasted marinated pork shoulder, lightly charred on a hot barbecue

2 tablespoons finely chopped fresh oregano leaves

Method

3 tablespoons cumin seeds, lightly toasted

1. For the roasted marinated pork shoulder, remove the excess fat from the pork and use a sharp knife to score diagonal cuts in the top of the meat.

4 garlic cloves, finely grated 3 large green chillies, cut lengthways, seeded and chopped 2 jalapeños, cut lengthways, seeded and chopped Juice and finely grated zest of 2 limes 40g (1½oz) fresh ginger, peeled and finely grated 80ml (2 ½ fl oz/ ⅓ cup) light olive oil

2. Combine the remaining pork ingredients in a bowl then rub the mixture all over the pork.

3. Transfer everything to a glass bowl and again massage the meat well with the marinade. Cover with plastic wrap and leave in the refrigerator overnight. 4. The next day remove the pork from the refrigerator and preheat the oven to 150°C (300°F). 5. Drain the marinade from the pork and place the meat in a roasting tin. Cook the pork in the oven for 1 hour. Remove the tin from the oven and cover with foil. Reduce the oven temperature to 110°C (230°F) and cook for a further 7 hours, or until the meat is super tender. Slice as needed and, if desired, barbecue each slice to obtain char marks before using in toasties or sandwiches. 6. For the toastie, place the cast-iron grill pan and lid together and heat them for 5 minutes on the stove top over medium heat. Lift the lid, open up the baguette and place it on the grill. Toast for 1 minute to bar-mark the inside of the bun, then remove from the heat. Repeat with the remaining baguettes. 7. Combine the mayonnaise with the grated garlic, chopped coriander and salt and pepper to taste and spread this liberally on one side of each baguette. Fill the sandwiches first with the lettuce and then the barbecued pork, followed by the pickles and the cheese slices. Finish with as much American mustard as you like and close the sandwiches. 8. Preheat the oven to 180°C (350°F). Lift the lid on the cast-iron grill pan and place a baguette inside. Top with the hot lid and press down to squeeze the sandwich shut. Transfer the pan to the oven and cook for 6 minutes to toast and melt the cheese. Remove from the oven. Repeat with the remaining baguettes, then serve.

WINTER 2017  65


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