New School Beer + Cider

View Original

Barrel-Aged Beer Advent Calendar Day #3: Breakside French Quarter

Breakside French Quarter

These days barrel-aged beers are so common that you could trip on a bottle of Imperial Stout and hit your head on a barleywine. Possibly inspired by southwest Portland's great neon Martini in the sky, Breakside has went against type and made a cocktail-inspired barrel-aged release called French Quarter.

As we count down the 24 days of December leading up to Christmas, we are highlighting one barrel-aged beer each day. View all of the beers on this year’s Barrel-Aged Beer advent calendar after they have been posted at https://www.newschoolbeer.com/category/ba-adventcalendar

"Many of our newer releases draw inspiration from classic cocktails," says Breakside brewmaster Ben Edmunds. "I think it's a fun way to add some variety to our portfolio of barrel-aged strong beers, where it is often easy to fall into the rut of just doing Bourbon barrel-aged strong ales. Not that there's anything wrong with those-- we do those too, but variety is the spice of life!"

Riffing off of the New Orlean's classic Vieux Carré cocktail, French Quarter is brewed as a spicy and richly rye but light bodied beer aged in brandy barrels for 15 months. The rye malt brings out notes similar to the rye whiskey in the traditional cocktail, that also features cognac, bitters and vermouth.

To achieve some of those flavors, the base beer recipe is designed to be light and dry, quite different than the sweeter, bolder beers that are often barrel-aged. With step mashing, and less specialty malts that leave residual unfermentables, Breakside designs beers like French Quarter and other cocktail-inspired beers like Beachcomber and Lavender Fizz to be lighter on the palate.

"Our barrel-aged stouts might finish between 7 and 8 deg P (other folks' finish even higher!), but the cocktail-inspired BA beers are often finishing closer to 4-5 deg Plato," says Edmunds. French Quarter sits at 9.9% ABV with just enough IBU's to add a bitter backbone at 40.

"They're not exactly crushable, but they tend to have a little more balance, lightness, and dryness than a big barrel-aged stout."

Breakside encourages you to enjoy French Quarter like a cocktail, instead of pouring into a tulip glass try an old fashioned whiskey glass and even add a large ice cube, garnish with a lemon twist and/or a brandy-soaked cherry.

French Quarter was first released in 2015 as a Cellar Reserve series beer, but has now been scaled up enough to be put into 12oz bottles and distributed in OR, WA, ID, MT, Northern California, CO.