Posts Tagged ‘Alexandra Nowell’

Alex’s Last Stand.

Tuesday, April 16th, 2013

Last Friday, Lead Brewer Alexandra Nowell climbed the brewdeck with Arno Holschuh from Blue Bottle Coffee.  Alex has been a staunch aficionado (read: addict) of Blue Bottle coffee for some time, so for her last Drake’s brew, she wanted to bring her two favorite beverages together in an imperial stout.

Yes, folks, you read that correctly. This Blue Bottle Coffee Imperial Stout (nickname: Alex’s Last Stand) will be Alexandra Nowell’s last beer at Drake’s, and while we’re very excited for her, we’re definitely bummed to lose such a talented brewer.

Where’s she going? Well, the Bay Area’s loss is the Southland’s gain. She’s heading south to the Mojave Desert to make her mark as the new Head Brewer at Kinetic Brewing Co, a brewpub just over a year old. “It’s still a real young, new market for beer, with a lot of room to grow,” says Alex.

In her time here at Drake’s Alex has certainly left her mark. She initiated and brewed the first Pink Boots Society Scholarship brew with her 2011 Pink Boots Saison, the proceeds from which fully funded two scholarships for female brewers wanting to move forward in the industry. She has led barrel program supplying the rotating barrel-aged blends and sours that have brought people from all over the Bay Area to our humble Barrel House.  She personally visited the Yakima Valley last fall to hand select our hops from the best fields and lots in Washington.

And, last but not least, she now leaves us with the first official Blue Bottle collaboration brew. The Blue Bottle Coffee Imperial Stout will be a ~9.75% imperial stout made with Blue Bottle’s Honduras Capucas, which will be added in both the whirlpool and the secondary, which should give the beans plenty of time to infuse the brew with their chocolate, nut, and fruit notes. Look for the Blue Bottle Coffee Imperial Stout at the Barrel House in the coming weeks (and we suspect some of it will find its way toward Kinetic, as well).

If you’re looking to share one last pint with Alex, she’ll be attending the Drake’s Brewing Dinner at Cannery Row in Monterey this Thursday, or you can swing by the Barrel House this Friday afternoon and try the last of her Scholarship Sour- a barrel-aged sour Pink Boot Saison. Cheers!

 

Drake’s Joins Strong Beer Month

Friday, January 18th, 2013

Just in case SF Beer Week isn’t enough for you, our friends at 21st Amendment and Magnolia have declared every February for the past decade plus to be Strong Beer Month.  Not ones to miss a party, we sent lead brewer Alexandra Nowell westward to 2nd & De Boom to collaborate with 21A’s Shaun O’Sullivan on an Imperial IPA sure to hold its own against the rest of what Strong Beer Month has to offer. Then on the brew day January 5, the Drake’s crew (including John Martin, Packaging Supervisor (and former 21A brewer) Mike Pawlicki, Marketing Director Kelsey Williams, and Sales Manager Dow Tunis) came out in force to lend a hand (or drink and supervise) as the brew commenced.

Nelson, Jade, and Helga, which was brewed Saturday, January 5 at 21st Amendment, will be a Triple IPA made with 2-row, caramalt, rye, chocolate malt, and a little roasted barley, along with a combination of New Zealand (Nelson Sauvin & Pacific Jade) and American hops (Centennial & Amarillo) set to hit 10.5% ABV.

The concept of this beer harkens back to a cask Alex made for the Aroma Coma and Aroma Prieta release on July 28th of 2012. Alex had decided to do a yin and yang sort of thing, adding NZ hops to a cask of Aroma Coma US-hopped IPA, and some US Chinook hops to a cask of Aroma Prieta NZ-hopped IPA.

Anyone who experienced the latter cask on that day can attest to its brilliance. It had all the elegant, aromatic gooseberry, lemon, tropical fruit experiences of the Nelson Sauvin, Pacific Jade, and Motueka hops with an added sturdy backbone of pine-woodsy aromas from the Chinook. It was a tremendous cask. Those who received it were lucky bastards indeed. So, Alex brought the idea to Shaun, and together they came up with the final Drake’s Collaboration submission to the strong beer month lineup at 21A.

“Expect an incredible hop aroma with a firm malt backbone, but the hops are gonna be the showcase here,” said Shaun during the brew day.
“It will have notes of tangerine, gooseberries, and muscat grapes from the NZ hops with the pine and citrus US hop backing,” added Alex.

Don’t know about you guys, but it sounds like its gonna be pretty damn good to us. The beer will be released on Friday, February 1st at 21st Amendment alongside a lineup of five other beers over 8.5% ABV at the pub and 6 other strong offerings at Magnolia. If you manage to try all 12 beers within the month, you will receive your own Strong Beer Month glass to commemorate your staunchness in the face of delicious, liver-crushing dangers. Drink Drake’s and Godspeed.

Enjoy Pics from the Brew Day below.

Stone Brewing and Drake’s Make a Beer

Wednesday, January 2nd, 2013

The bastards in the brewhouse are a little extra arrogant today. Stone Brewing’s Mitch Steele, Dave Hopwood, and Zippo Parzick are on the brewdeck with our own Alexandra Nowell to collaborate on a session ale for Celebrator Beer News’ 25th Anniversary.

This beer will be featured at the closing event of SF Beer Week, so as a gift to all of our livers, Mitch and Alex decided a session beer was in order.

Still, we couldn’t in good conscience team up with the author of IPA: Brewing Techniques, Recipes and the Evolution of the India Pale Ale without paying considerable attention to the hops.

For this brew we have chosen to use some of the new and exciting El Dorado hops we just received from the 2012 harvest. This’ll be both Alex and Mitch’s first time using the El Dorado hops. Says Alex, they’re “very fruit-forward, but without a lot of citrus. Not the typical American hop profile, and it even has a little mint.” Think strawberries, melon, and cantaloupe. Mitch added “it’s amazing because it has that really high alpha content, but the aromatics are just incredible.” It’ll be double dry-hopped, rounded out with Centennial hops, and should clock in at about 4.4% ABV and 43 IBUs.

Here’s hoping you’ll be just as excited about this brew as we are. Your first chance to try it, as well as pick the brains of Mitch & the Drake’s crew, will be at The Brewing Network’s Winter Brews Fest, January 26th at Todos Santos Plaza in downtown Concord.

Drake’s Goes to Yakima- Alex’s Hop Selection

Wednesday, December 12th, 2012

*Post by Alexandra Nowell, Drake’s Lead Brewer*

It’s one of my favorite times of the year to be a brewer.  The 2012 American harvest hops are beginning to arrive at Drake’s, and being the hop-forward brewery that we are, fresh hops and new varieties are exciting!  This year, I got to travel to Yakima Valley in Central Washington to hand select all of our American grown hops and make sure we get exactly the aromas and flavors we want from each variety.

The Yakima Valley is the largest hop growing region in the United States, 2nd largest in the world, and home to the growers who are leading the innovation of new hop varieties.  Imagine farm after farm, both large and small, with rows of hops as far as the eye can see, where during harvest time almost everywhere you go smells like hops. This is the Yakima Valley.  Basically, I got to spend a few days running around like a kid in a candy store.

Hop Selection
How hop selection works: You set up an appointment with your hop vendor (we buy our hops from multiple sources, so in this case, I had more than one appointment to attend).  When you arrive at the selection location, you are led into a room with a large table.  Then selection begins.  For each hop variety, anywhere from 2 to 10 different brewers cuts of whole hops representing a hop grown in a different location, are placed in front of you.  This is when you tear into the cut, rub the cones between your hands and deeply inhale the aromatics of the hop, analyzing and deciding whether this is the lot you want or if you want to smell the next one in line… or both.  With certain lots, you know immediately whether or not it’s up to your standard, but some are so close to the other that you want to smell each of them 3 or 4 times before making a decision.  Once you figure out which lot you want, the next variety and a new set of brewers cuts appear and you start the process over again.  We selected 9 varieties of hops this year, and all lots were of amazingly high quality, making some of my selections incredibly difficult. But that’s not exactly a bad problem to have, is it?

The Harvest
If you are not familiar with how hops are grown and harvested, allow me to introduce you to the process.  The hop plant, Humulus lupulus, is planted in the early spring.  It emerges from the ground as a vine and trained to grow up on vertical trellises.  The hop cone, which is the only part of the plant used in the brewing process, develops on the vine and continues to grow and mature throughout the growing season until harvest time, which usually begins towards the end of the summer and continues for several weeks.  The hops are picked from their vines at their peak of maturity and immediately sent to large kilns to be dried in a manner that doesn’t compromise the delicate essential oils that brewers value so highly.  Afterwards, the dried hops are baled and either sent off to be stored in freezers until they can be processed into hop pellets or sent off to breweries that use hops in whole form.

Hop Farm Visits
While the work in the small selection rooms was the main cause of my visit to Yakima, I also wanted to take the opportunity to see the farms and meet the farmers that would be supplying our hops.

I had the pleasure to spend a day at CLS Farms while they were harvesting Chinook (which just happens to be one of my favorite hop varieties).  The air was thick with dank hop aroma, and from where I stood, I could watch truck after truck roll up to the pickers, packed to the brim with vines of Chinook.  I spent a lot of my day in educational seminars about the state of the hop industry, but I also had plenty of time to wander the fields, pickers, and kilns.  Hops as far as the eye could see. It was a happy day.

Also on the itinerary was a trip to BT Loftus Ranch, one of the larger Yakima hop growers, where I was given a tour by 4th generation hop farmer, Patrick Smith.  They were harvesting Ahtanum that day and had just finished drying the new hop, Mosaic (sidenote: I am stoked for this hop – wait and see what we do with it next year).

Loftus Ranch has one of the coolest things I’ve ever seen – a small experimental hop yard.  A few vines of this, a few vines of that, some familiar names and hops that you just don’t see anymore, but many of them are known only by a number.  This is the part of the tour when I get really excited.  Knowing my interest in new and exciting hop varieties, Patrick takes me to hops that smell of pineapple, coconut,  vanilla, mango, papaya, sweet pine forests, and more.  Amazing!

Patrick Smith smells the hops at BT Loftus Ranch.

After my trip had concluded, I was left with a lingering feeling of how awesome and crucial it was to be able to connect with the growers and the environment of such a personally important brewing ingredient.  My first hop selection is an experience I will never forget.

That’s about it kind drinkers of Drake’s.  We’re excited about this year’s hop harvest, which means you should be too!  Beers with 2012 harvest hops are already starting to roll out of the brewery, so drink up.

Cheers,

Alex

 

 

 

West Coast Barrel Aged Festival Contenders 2012

Friday, November 9th, 2012

Our lead brewer Alex kinda smells like wood, wine, booze, and beer. No, we’re not commenting on Ms. Nowell’s hygenic routines. Rather, for the past few weeks, Alex has regularly been found in the barrels- pulling tastes, climbing barrels, taking notes, creating blends. After all her efforts, we now have a list of beers currently at their prime state to enter into the 7th Annual West Coast Barrel Aged Beer Festival being held in Hayward tomorrow. Fans of the barrel take note, get yourself to the fest tomorrow (before or after stopping by our Jolly Rodger Release here at the Barrel House) and put these on your must try list. Hope to see you there.

#1
Beer name- Pinot She Didn’t
Beer/Barrel Type- Drakonic Imperial Stout, Pinot Barrel
Aged- 2 years
Abv- 9%
Characteristics_ Light sour barrel aged Imperial Stout with Blackberry, Chocolate mouthfeel

#2
Beer name- Merlot To-Go
Beer/Barrel Type- Drakonic Imperial Stout, Merlot Barrel
Aged- 2 years
Abv- 9%
Characteristics_ Delightfully tart aroma with moderate cherry fruity mouthfeel

#3
Beer name- Dire Straits
Beer/Barrel Type- Barrel-aged Barleywine Ale, Bourbon
Aged- 1 year
Abv- 11.25%
Characteristics_ Big fat alcoholic cinnamon raisin cookie with slight wood, bourbon, boozy mouthfeel

#4
Beer name- Apes of Wrath
Beer/Barrel Type- 33% American Strong Ale, 33% Scotch Ale, 33% Barleywine Ale, Bourbon
Aged- 2 years
Abv- 9.25%
Characteristics_ Delightfully rich blend of bourbon barrel-aged ales, fruity esters, caramel, boozy,
woody finish

Drake’s at GABF 2012

Friday, August 31st, 2012

We are closing in on our deadline of August 31st to get our brews on the wagon headed toward the 2012 Great American Beer Festival for the festing and the judging. To meet this deadline we needed to have all of our GABF entry beers brewed and ready to go by the end of this week.
Our smallest batch at Drake’s is 15bbls, so once all the requisite kegs and cases for Denver are filled, we will have a little extra. So, for our loyal fans in our neck of the woods in the next few weeks you will be seeing some specialty brews from us made specifically for GABF. Here’s the list of our GABF entries, starting with the one-offs.

1. Drake’s Occu-Rye- 6.1%, 32 IBUs- a light amber rye ale redolent of spicy, herbaceous flavors and aromas with a light toasted malt character and a clean spicy rye finish. Created and brewed by our Cellar Master John Gillooly, this is the one beer that he says he’s been chasing his entire brewing career. We think he nailed it.

Subverting dominant Barley Grain privilege, Drake’s Occu-Rye demands equal status for long oppressed Rye grain. Further, we have ended the patriarchal dominance of Craft Brewers who insist on hiding Rye’s light under a bushel (of hops) by presenting a beer brewed with an eye-watering amount of Rye. Barley Dominance Must Die! Hella Hella Occu-Rye!

2. Scorched Earth- 10.2% ABV- Beech smoked Imperial stout. **

Last January we got together with Beer Revolution co-owner Fraggle to brew a specialty beer for the Oakland Beer Bar’s 2nd Anniversary. Given the Beer Revolutionaries’ penchant for German Rauschbiers and smoked beers of all types, we made Moscow’s Burning smoked Imperial Stout- a delicious lightly smoked, rich dark imperial stout. We found it to be pretty delicious, so when it came time to decide on a couple special ideas for our GABF entries we thought that a slightly smokier version would be right on target. Moscow’s Burned, so now we have Scorched Earth.

OTHER ENTRANTS
3. Barrel House Sour- Light Belgian ale aged in used French oak red wine barrels, and inoculated with a blend of brettanomyces and lactobacillus. Category: 24A; Wood and Barrel Aged Sour Beer; ABV 6.5% **
4. 1500- dry-hopped American Pale Ale; ABV- 5.5% **
5. Aroma Coma- double-dry-hopped American IPA; Category: 52; American IPA; ABV- 6.75% **
6. Denogginizer- Imperial IPA; Category 53; Imperial India Pale Ale; ABV- 9.75 **
7. Drake’s Gold Ale; Category 46; English Summer Ale; ABV 5.2%
8. Drake’s IPA; Category 51; American Style Strong Pale Ale; ABV 7%
9. Drake’s Amber; Category 58B; Extra Special Bitter
10. Black Robusto Porter; Category 75; Robust Porter; ABV 6.3%

** Indicates beers that will be judged and poured at GABF.

Teamwork Wins the Game

Wednesday, August 22nd, 2012

If we had to name the common ground that every single person on the crew shares, there’s no doubt that it would be an intense fascination with the process of making craft beer, tasting it, and sharing it with others.

Kelsey's manning the camera as Alex pulls from a wine barrel

Today, we got members of the whole crew involved round the brewery in various tasks. Early on in the day, Lead Brewer Alex grabbed the wine thief tool to check on the sour barrels with tasting and barrel climbing help from our Community Manager Kelsey. Then, Barrel House Manager Gabbi and DBH Bartender Antonio ascended the catwalk to help John Gillooly dry hop a 60 bbl batch of IPA. Afterwards, Tony went behind the mashtun to give Chris Dunstan a hand in graining out today’s batch of Hefe.

Having earned the brewer/kinda for a day badges. It was then time for a toast at the Barrel House for a job well done. Teamwork kids. That’s what’s up. Cheers.

Good Eatin’ in Napa

Tuesday, April 10th, 2012

When the opportunity to host a Beer Dinner with acclaimed chef Todd Humphries arose, it probably took us all of 10 seconds to jump onboard. At his restaurant The Kitchen Door in Napa’s Oxbow Public Market, Humphries has started a monthly series of beer dinners with Mutineer Magazine pairing local, seasonal comfort foods with local craft beer. Last night, we had the chance to share our beers around the Kitchen Door table alongside some truly excellent dishes prepared by Humphries and his Chef du Cuisine Chris Litts. Our Brewer Alexandra Nowell spoke between each course to give folks the low-down on our beers from the perspective that only a brewer can give.

As guests arrived they were given our Hefeweizen to start as servers passed around a fresh flatbread topped with goat cheese and olive tapanade. The fruity aroma and fresh zing of the goat cheese played very nicely with our light Hefeweizen, kicking the night off to a great start.

When the guests had all arrived, the meal began with a light arugula and asparagus salad with a creamy herb dressing pairing with Drake’s 1500. The lightness of the 1500 and the crisp citrus hop flavors went well with the light vegetables and the peppery arugula and cut through the creaminess of the dressing.

For, the second course, Humphries, an East Coast native, pulled together his take on a classic New England Clam Bake, butter poached lobster with little neck clams, marbled potatoes, corn pudding and sea beans. For this dish, they chose our Denogginizer IIPA, which has a clean hop character capable of balanced the buttery, richness of the lobster and corn pudding.

Things got seriously delicious with the third course, with a succulent serving of Chicken Marsala with morel mushrooms and spring onions paired with our Amber Ale. While we did not confirm this, we’re fairly certain the chef used the Amber in the sauce to up the pairing perfection of this dish to new heights. Our only regret is that it would have been uncouth to lick the plate clean…

If the previous dish didn’t send us road tripping down memory lane about good ole’ home cooking, the next dish certainly did. Out came a tender and delicious braised beef short rib served with classic pot roast vegetables, carrots and spring peas. Hearty and delicious and paired with our Barrel-aged Drakonic. Such a classic dish, we could have seen this paired with lots of our beers from regular Drakonic to IPA to Denogginizer.

Lastly we came to dessert with two different courses designed to satisfy those preferring a savory cheese course and those going for the rich and deeply satisfying sweet chocolate ending. First, Humphries paired a Pt. Reyes Blue cheese crouton with pickled rhubard and frisee with our Bourbon and Brandy barrel aged Drakonic Imperial stout. The intensity of the pungent blue cheese was impeccable with the strong imperial stout and the enhanced flavors of dried, dark fruits and brandy cut the richness of the cheese nicely.

At the same time, servers poured out side by side tastings of our regular Drakonic imperial stout alongside a dark chocolate pudding with sour cherries and a thin crispy “Cara Crakine” on top. We had trouble not licking the plate on this one too.

A big thanks to the whole Kitchen Door crew including Chef Humphries, Cheff Litts, Kitchen Door General Manager Tim Seberson and to the folks at Mutineer Magazine (especially Managing Editor Brian Knopf, who celebrated his birthday last night with us). Check out the rest of our pictures from the night below. Cheers.

Wood-aging: Step One

Thursday, March 29th, 2012


Wood-aging can be a fickle friend. From our experiments with oak barrels, we know that the subtle play of oak tones ranging from sweet vanilla or caramel notes to mild spiciness of clove or cinnamon to woody aromas and flavors can add dimension and complexity to our ales in a pretty satisfying way. Still, the long amount of time it takes to achieve these flavors from aging in a full barrel sometimes means the compromise of fresher flavors of the hops or malt. Also, our barrels, all former bourbon/wine/brandy barrels, have other flavor components that come into play besides the pure oak.

So, in an effort to see what a little straight oak tones can give to our fresh beers, we recently began experimenting with oak wood chips. Wood chips are small pieces of wood (in our case oak), usually about 2 inches long that have been toasted to varying degrees (untoasted, light, medium, and heavy) to achieve different flavor components. Chips with their greater surface area are able to infuse beers with oak flavors more quickly than barrels, which for us means we can get the oak flavor without losing some of the fresher flavors of our beers.

Brian began by taking growlers of a range of our fresh beers, taken anytime between when the beers had just finished and were conditioning to the point when they were ready to package. “I ran the gamut really: Denog, Barleywine, IPA, Red Eye, Drakonic, Dry Stout, and even a little Hefeweizen,” he said.

He then added a different type of oak-chip to each growler and left them to mellow. Generally Brian said, he likes to taste the beers at 1 week, 2 weeks, up to a month. So, yesterday, at about the 2 week mark of this round of tests, we gathered a seven person panel inside the Barrel House to try what we had.

Overall we came to learn that just a little bit of oak can go a long way. In some of our trials the oak did impart nice flavors but it overpowered the beer, leading us to think that maybe larger chip sizes in smaller amounts could be better. Some of our conclusions were expected—the Drakonic Imperial Stout did well with a hint of oak. Others were unexpected— who knew the Hefeweizen might taste pretty good with a very small dose of heavy toasted oak chips?

Our brewer Alex, noted how she particularly liked how the oak could be used for hoppy beers. “With wood chips, you can retain some of the bitterness and fresh hop character that falls away in the barrels.”

These fresh, oaked beers, Brian explained, could also be use to blend with some barrel-aged beers to further add complexity and freshness. But, he qualifies, “This is Step 1.” There are still many more iterations to come with this process as we work to discover exactly what method, which combinations of chips and ales, and possible what blending options will give us something truly of uncommon deliciousness.

 

For a more detailed review of oak-aging in general, this article sums things up pretty nicely. –> Using Oak in Beer

It’s Official- Drake’s is Good Food

Monday, January 16th, 2012

The Second Annual Good Food Awards was held this past weekend, and we are very happy to announce that our Drakonic Imperial Stout took top Craft Beer honors alongside just a handful of other beers. Our malty beast held it’s own against hundreds of other craft beer entries from around the country, and now it must be forever acknowledged that Drakonic is definitely Good Food.

On Friday, Brian and Alex attended the Good Food Awards ceremony at the San Francisco Ferry Building to officially accept our award amongst some of the best artisan food producers, distillers and brewers around as well as a gaggle of foodie luminaries.

Then on Saturday during the Ferry Building Farmer’s Market, Gabbi and Jeremy poured samples of Drakonic to the public in the Good Food Awards Marketplace which highlighted the winners from the previous night. The Ferry Building was buzzing with folks wanting to try the winning foods and drinks, and if anyone left that day not full, satisfied and ready for a nap, we’d be seriously surprised.

Here are our pictures from our Good Food weekend. It was delicious.