Cellar Brews: Beer for Winemaking

2
Posted November 14, 2011 by Julia Burke in Beer

By Julia Burke, Beer Editor

PB160011I'd venture to say many of you are winemakers. I'd venture to say many others are home winemakers. And a fair number of you have undoubtedly spent some time in a cellar. So you're all too familiar with the necessity of beer during the winemaking process: to celebrate at the end of a long night of crushing; to sip while filtering (this may just be an intern thing); to enjoy in the lab while figuring out the next day's picking schedule; or just to cleanse the palate after hours of bench trials.

Beer's vivacious carbonation, pointed hop character, and sweet malt body just hit the spot on a wine-fatigued palate, and whether you're doing punchdowns in your kitchen or on a forty-thousand-liter tank, it makes a hard day's work all the more worthwhile. I thought I'd celebrate the end of the 2011 harvest with a survey of the best beers to chug while foot stomping, tote lugging, and cap punching.

Southern Tier Harvest Ale: a hop lover's harvest ale that cuts through palate fatigue like a knife

Perfect for: an end to a day of tasting barrel samples for bench trials

Butternuts Moo Thunder: a comfort-food milk stout that's as easy-drinking as chocolate milk and sticks to your ribs

Perfect for: waiting for grapes to come in in sub-40 weather

Ithaca Flower Power: a classic IPA for cool-climate winemakers with a taste for acidity

Perfect for: pressing must in your kitchen with a cheesecloth, a funnel, and a cut-up milk jug

Flying Bison Blizzard Bock: a chewy and sweet German-style winter seasonal 

Perfect for: refreshment after shoveling grapes into a crusher under the stars

Horseheads Chemung Canal Towpath Ale: an insanely drinkable cream ale

Perfect for: a post-punchdown refresher to be consumed at sunset in the vineyard

Southampton Abbot 12: a sensational Belgian quadrupel

Perfect for: an end-of-the-night treat to ease the pain of sore muscles and a wiped-out brain

Here's to a wild and wacky vintage, and New York beer's noble role in it. 


2 Comments


  1.  

    I wonder if local beers make better accompaniments? :)




  2.  
    Julia Burke

    Kovas, I’d say so! I tried to pick beers made all over the state, so there’s a relatively local one for most of our readers; tell me where you live and I’ll find you a beer :)





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