While I am probably wrong, I attribute the contemporary inundation
of store shelves every late summer/autumn with products made with cinnamon,
nutmeg, ginger, allspice, and clove (maybe even mace) to Starbucks and their
Pumpkin Spice Latte which they unleashed upon us earlier this century sometime.
"Pumpkin spice" foods just seemed to go apeshit in its wake.
Of course, the spices themselves have rich culinary
histories that long predate Europeans pairing them with a particular winter
squash native to North America. Aside from allspice, which is indigenous to the
Caribbean, they all come from the East Indies which are probably not called that
anymore. But that was their moniker back when Christopher Columbus figured that the spice must flow and he consequently sailed west in search of them so
he could get in on the spice trade which was quite profitable. Indonesians were
cooking with these spices before any white people knew what pumpkins and coffee
were.
Back in the Middle Ages, European cooks had various spice blends
in their repertoire. Amongst the most popular was Powder Douce, a mellow one
and, while recipes for it certainly varied, it was commonly made of ginger,
cinnamon, clove, sugar, and nutmeg. It's stronger cousin, Powder Forte, was
often a mix of ginger, cinnamon, clove, cubebs, grains of paradise, and black
pepper. Look familiar? I honestly don't know if the blend of spices commonly
used to season pumpkin derives from these medieval concoctions but I'd bet it
does.
I remember seeing jars of McCormick Pumpkin Pie Spice mix when
I was a kid and the internet tells me the term "pumpkin spice" dates back
to 1936. But it is ubiquitous this time of year these days in a way that it
wasn't, say, 20 or more ago. There just weren't pumpkin spice lattes, cookies,
breakfast cereals, pretzels, artificial coffee creamers, yoghurt, popcorn, kale
chips, margarine, cream cheese, almonds, and so on. And there were a lot fewer pumpkin
beers.
Which leads me nicely to the subject of this blog post,
Lakefront's Pumpkin Lager.
I am not sure when Lakefront started brewing it, but I think
they've being doing so for a while now.** Lakefront throws in everything including
the kitchen sink here. It is brewed with pumpkin and not just the associated spices.
Plus, they don't skimp on those spices. They use them all: cinnamon, allspice,
ginger, nutmeg, clove, and mace. Most pumpkin beers are ales but, as the names
indicates, this is a lager.
It being a fall beer, Pumpkin Lager is medium bodied. I
caught a hint of fizz amidst the spices which take pride of place here. Nutmeg/mace
and cinnamon were the leaders of the pack. Pumpkin doesn't, as far as I can
tell, add much flavor to beer. To my tastebuds, it gives a slight starchy
smoothness to the beer as well as a mellow earthy flavor that is easily hidden by all of the
spices. Finally, I tasted a hint of grain underneath it all.
On the finish, some bitterness emerged and I could taste
hops for the first time. There was a peppery flavor that lingered which I think was the hops and
perhaps some ginger in combination. The nutmeg/clove/cinnamon thing was relegated
to the back of the line here.
This is an excellent beer. There's very little sweetness
which is why I think of it as not aspiring to mimic pumpkin pie like so many
pumpkin beers do. Instead, it tastes like a beer with spices. It had a pleasing
smoothness to it and I loved the peppery
zing on the finish. At 6.1% A.B.V., it's a tasty bulwark against the encroaching cool of autumn.
Junk food pairing: You can't go wrong by washing down a tube
of Pringles Rotisserie Chicken crisps with some Pumpkin Lager.
** I emailed Lakefront about this and a marketing person replied, "I believe the first time we made the lager was in 1989".
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