Posts Tagged ‘Brewing’

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

 

 

 

Jolly Rodger 2012 Release Approaches

Thursday, November 1st, 2012


 As the winds rise and the chill begins to fall on the Bay Area, the brewers at Drake’s beckon forth again their swashbuckling seasonal Jolly Rodger from the fog. On Saturday, November 10 at 12pm at Drake’s Barrel House, this year’s incarnation of our always bold Jolly Rodger will emerge from the tanks to greet craft beer fans on tap and in 22 oz. bottles.

Fans of Jolly Rodger will know that this brew has over the years taken many forms and styles. Now, after years of scallywagging about and dallying with any style that caught its fancy, good ole JR is returning to it’s original form, an American Barleywine.

Originally crafted as a holiday brew that Drake’s brewers could get behind, Jolly had all the warming powers of malt and alcohol, minus the strange holiday beer ubiquitousness of overpowering pie spices, and finished with the open handed smack of bold Northwest American hops.

The 2012 Jolly Rodger is full-bodied with rich caramel malt undertones and mild biscuit malt character. Sufficient additions of West Coast hops balance the malt with pine needle aromatics and satisfying bitterness.

Release Event Details:
When: Saturday, November 10 from 12-9pm
Where: Drake’s Barrel House- 1933 Davis St., San Leandro, CA 94577
Food: Oakland’s Fist of Flour Wood-fire Pizza
Beer Availability:
Jolly Rodger will be available on tap, on cask, in growlers (2 per person), in (very limited) 5 gallon kegs (1 per person), and in 22oz bottles (6 per person limit).
We will also be pulling some barrel-aged Barleywines from our barrels to put on tap at the Barrel House for a Drake’s Barleywine Flight opportunity for the beer geeks to drool about.

Endless Hot Water = Endless Beer

Wednesday, July 11th, 2012

Beer is 90+% water by weight. Brewery cleaning and sanitation is essential to consistently great craft beer and also requires a healthy amount of clean, hot water. With these two facts in mind, the brewery upgrade we installed yesterday, while not as flashy as big, shiny, new 80 bbl tanks or a larger boil kettle, is just as exciting to us. Two new Bosch OnDemand water heaters now reside on the back wall of the Drake’s Brewery capable of continuously supplying us with up to 175 degree water, and thereby allowing us to keep our hot liquor tank consistently full and ready for another brew.

Before these heaters, we had to dip into our hot liquor supply for both brewing purposes and for the necessary cleaning steps following each brew, so by the end of the day (3 batches on average), our hot water was gone. Therefore, to allow ourselves the option of going beyond the 3rd brew in a day, we needed a way to keep the hot water flowing.

Enter our good friend Taylor Shaw, Bosch representative and coincidentally a big fan and friend of craft beer and Drake’s and her associate Tara McNamara. She came in yesterday with her crew and had the heaters installed and ready in no time. Now, our brew day can go the distance, perhaps eventually into 24 hour rotations. Long story short, endless hot water = potential for endless Drake’s beers.

As you can see, Jesse is quite happy about the addition. After the install, we all decided it was time to celebrate with a beer.

Behind-the-Scenes at Drake’s: Filling New Barrels

Wednesday, October 5th, 2011

Got some new barrels in at the brewery on Monday, and yesterday Brian got started filling them with beer. The barrels, an assortment of red wine barrels from Blacksmith Cellars in Alameda including Cabernet Franc, Sangiovese and Cabernet Sauvignon will give a great variety of flavors to our beers, and a couple of them, Brian says, will be taken in the sour beer direction.

For this batch of barrels, Brian decided to keep things lighter to balance our already good stock of imperial stout and barleywine filled barrels. Our Hefeweizen, Belgian blonde and the new Pink Boots Saison went into these barrels, and hopefully they will yield some light, fruitier style barrel-aged beers when they are ready.

Excited to try the beers? Great! See ya at the Barrel House in two years. Cheers.

A Girl and Her Beer: Pink Boots Society Scholarship Brewing at Drake’s

Tuesday, September 13th, 2011

Bottom Row: Dee Alcala, Dying Vines; Nicole Erny, Cicerone Program; Alex Nowell, Drake's Brewing Co.; Gail Ann Williams, BeerByBart.com. Top Row: April Anderson, Moylan's Brewing; Jade Saldivar, Hop Tech; Tracy Bethune, Brass Balls Brewing Co.; Kelly Saturno, homebrewer.

Earlier this month we hosted a brewing day that was pretty unique, even for us. Our brewer Alex Nowell, generally the sole source of estrogen round the brewery invited the Northern California Chapter of the Pink Boots Society to brew the very first Pink Boots Scholarship Beer. What’s that, you ask? Let’s go back to the beginning…

Alex, long a member of the Pink Boots Society, a global non-profit organization dedicated to promoting women in the beer industry, came up with the idea earlier this year to brew a special batch of beer and use the proceeds to fund a scholarship that will give one woman the means to gain the education necessary to begin a beer career.

Alex approached John Martin with the idea and quickly got approval to host the brew at Drake’s. The next step—pick a beer style and find the ingredients. Alex chose to brew a Saison, a Drake’s first. Then, using her endless charm and persuasion abilities Alex got nearly all the ingredients for the beer donated.

Jon Graber, from Country Malt out of Vancouver, Wash. donated over 1200 lbs of malt including California Select 2-row and White Wheat and Lisa White of White Labs offered up the Belgian yeast strain necessary for making this brew. Overall these gifts amount to nearly $1800. Now, when the beer is ready, every penny of the proceeds from the sales will go directly to fund a Pink Boots Scholarship thanks to these gifts.

When all the ingredients were in house all that was left was to brew the beer. On Sunday, Sept. 4, eight women filled the brew-house: milling, mashing, boiling and laughing as they brewed up a beer that will hopefully help one woman pursue a career in craft beer. The brewers of the day included April Anderson from Moylan’s, Dee Alcala from Dying Vines, and several other Pink Boots members including Gail Ann Williams from BeerByBart.com. Who made this awesome video.

The batch brewed that day, what Alex describes as a classic Saison with a California edge, is yet to be named officially, but will be released on October 12 with a release event at Beer Revolution in downtown Oakland. Other events will follow in mid-October and the beer will be available throughout the Bay Area.