Summit Brewing Company opened in 1986, a member of what I
suppose is the second wave of microbrewery openings. Or does the mid-80s still
count as first wave? Regardless, it's the grandpappy of Minnesota craft
breweries. Yeah, August Schell opened around the time the Civil War was getting
underway but that makes it a legacy brewery, not a product of the late 20th
century microbrewing trend. If you look at Wikipedia's list of Minnesota
breweries, most of them have opened in the past 10 years and all except 4 opened
this century. Were Minnesotans just hidebound in their love for Hamm's? Or
maybe the Gopher State was saddled with some restrictive beer laws until fairly
recently.
While Summit brews enough beer to be in the top 25 craft
breweries nationally, I rarely see it mentioned. Perhaps this is simply because
I don't follow many Minnesotans on Twitter. But, if they are brewing somewhere
in the vicinity of 120,000 barrels a year, somebody is drinking it. This humility
is typical of the Upper Midwest where braggadocio and ostentatiousness are left
to coasties.
Truth be known, I don't drink a lot of Summit but I have
some every few months. Their Dakota Soul and Keller Pils are both great beers. Feeling
like it had been too long since their beer had graced my refrigerator, I picked
up their Winter Ale, it being winter and all. Minnesota is just next door and
they feel the brunt of Old Man Winter just like we do so it should hit the
spot.
And it tasted not totally unlike a bock too. There was a
moderate malt sweetness with a little raisin in there as well as some bread. Maybe
even a hint of tobacco somewhere in the background as well. It was well
carbonated with a nice fizzy bite. But, unlike bocks generally, it was oddly light-bodied.
The finish was pleasantly dry with hops giving a lasting peppery/minty zing
that really lingered.
I cannot honestly say this was a bad beer, because it wasn't.
However, it was rather thin to my taste. The flavors were all quite good but I
was expecting a bit more of them to build something headier for a winter seasonal.
Very much on the plus side was the minty burst after I swallowed. It left a burning
sensation on my tongue that was truly bracing, though not excessive. It was
wonderful.
This was my first taste of Winter Ale so I cannot compare it
to batches from years past. Maybe it was lighter than usual this year. Until
next winter, I will stick with Dakota Soul or Keller Pils.
Junk food pairing: To compensate for the lack of body, get
yourself a bag of cinnamon sugar lefse chips and consume liberally.
1 comment:
Summit used to be a solid player in Chicago. I have the closed cardboard case which held six 12-oz. bottles of Great Northern Porter downstairs in the beer cellar.
We toured there in 2010 for the breweriana annual meeting. But after that, concordant with the rise in popularity of Surly, it withdrew from Illinois.
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