Jester King Ambrée

Discussion in 'Southwest' started by bccocx, Dec 17, 2013.

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  1. bccocx

    bccocx Pooh-Bah (1,576) Jan 13, 2007 Texas
    Pooh-Bah

    Jester King Ambrée was inspired by the rustic farmhouse ales of French Flanders, particularly those brewed by Brasserie Thiriez in Esquelbecq — one of our favorite breweries in the world. Ambrée is a dry, tart, naturally conditioned amber ale fermented and matured with dozens of different strains of brewers’ yeast, native wild yeast, brettanomyces yeast, and souring bacteria. It’s 6.4% alcohol by volume, has a finishing gravity of 1.005, and is 3.5 pH.

    What perhaps is most unique about Ambrée is the time it was given to slowly ferment. Ambrée underwent a three and a half month fermentation, with the first two months spent in stainless steel and the final six weeks spent in bottles, kegs, and casks. The reason we devote considerable time to the fermentation of Ambrée, just as we do with all our beers, is because we really like the funky flavors and aromas that our yeasts produce late in fermentation. At the outset of fermentation, our yeasts are quite happy. They have plenty of food and nutrients and are able to thrive and multiply. But as time passes, the food sources dwindle, the alcohol and CO2 content rises, and the pH drops, resulting in a much less hospitable environment. As the yeasts, which are living organisms, struggle to survive they become “stressed”. It’s at this point in the fermentation we start to see development of the flavors and aromas we’re after.

    Ambrée could be made much faster if we wanted. It only takes about 7 to 10 days for the sugars in the unfermented beer, or wort, to be consumed by the yeasts. At that point, we have drinkable beer. Most ales, in fact, are made fairly quickly in a total of just two or three weeks. There’s nothing wrong with this, especially in the context of Anglo-American brewing. But as we mentioned, we allow our yeasts to continue to slowly ferment long after the initial sugars have been consumed. This is what we call allowing the beer to ferment to completion, which in our opinion, is one of the key elements that defines farmhouse brewing.

    A gravity keg of Ambrée will debut at the Austin Beer Guide Winter Issue Release Party at The ABGB on Thursday, December 19th at 6pm. The following day Ambrée will be on draught at our brewery during our tasting room hours and will continue to be served throughout the weekend at Jester King. Bottles of Ambrée (750ml) will be released at our brewery in January or February, depending on how label printing goes.

    The artwork for Ambrée was created by our own Josh Cockrell and is entitled “Franco-American Gothic”.


    [​IMG]

    http://jesterkingbrewery.com/introducing-jester-king-ambree
     
  2. FUNKPhD

    FUNKPhD Initiate (0) Apr 13, 2010 Texas

    No fruit? Lost interest...
     
  3. AdamR46

    AdamR46 Initiate (0) Nov 18, 2011 Texas

    I was just looking up this style recently. Can't wait to try it.
     
  4. starkmarvelo

    starkmarvelo Initiate (0) Jan 20, 2010 Texas

    It looks absolutely beautiful. Distro please!
     
    chopz and tx_beer_man like this.
  5. mattchow

    mattchow Savant (1,009) Jun 24, 2012 Texas

    pretty damn good.
     
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  6. rainerschuhsler

    rainerschuhsler Initiate (0) May 17, 2012 Texas

    You forgot to include the best part of that blog post:

    [​IMG]
     
    peachsheep, krmkrm, JJFoodie and 6 others like this.
  7. tx_beer_man

    tx_beer_man Pundit (902) Jan 22, 2013 Texas
    Trader

    Love Jan Der
     
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  8. bccocx

    bccocx Pooh-Bah (1,576) Jan 13, 2007 Texas
    Pooh-Bah

    The most important part! Thanks!
     
  9. TimDisaster

    TimDisaster Initiate (0) Mar 31, 2013 Texas

    I can't wait to try this.

    I will be up there Sunday. I just hope they have some left.
     
  10. WTKeene

    WTKeene Initiate (0) Jul 13, 2013 New Mexico

    I'll have to wait for bottles to be released, but this sounds fantastic. Can't wait to try some!
     
  11. Nablock

    Nablock Initiate (0) Aug 17, 2013 Texas

    This sounds wonderful! Guess I'll have to drive out in January!
     
  12. jesterkingbeer

    jesterkingbeer Pundit (865) Jun 28, 2010 Texas

    We will. We kegged eight 50 liter kegs.
     
  13. WTKeene

    WTKeene Initiate (0) Jul 13, 2013 New Mexico

    Will this see distribution?
     
  14. Indytruks138

    Indytruks138 Initiate (0) Jun 28, 2013 Texas

    Yes please, why must JK be over a 4 hour drive...
     
    thewrongtone likes this.
  15. Jack_Around

    Jack_Around Devotee (365) Aug 2, 2013 Texas

    Can't wait to get some so I can say, "Yo tengo ambrée."
     
    thewrongtone and tx_beer_man like this.
  16. jesterkingbeer

    jesterkingbeer Pundit (865) Jun 28, 2010 Texas

    While this probably isn't the most satisfying answer, whether Ambrée will see distribution depends on how sales go here at Jester King. We'll have a good indication of this pretty soon after the bottles go on sale in January or February.

    Our first batch was 30 barrels. We plan on making more at some point, but we don't have another batch scheduled during the first three months of 2014 (that's how far our brewing calendar goes right now).

    - Jeff
     
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  17. Indytruks138

    Indytruks138 Initiate (0) Jun 28, 2013 Texas

    So if you did 8 50L kegs, that leaves about 26.5 barrels left for bottles, approximately 4100 750ml bottles, or 345 cases. My math could be off and I am sure more is held back for casks/more kegs/special releases.
     
  18. WTKeene

    WTKeene Initiate (0) Jul 13, 2013 New Mexico

    Nah that's basically the answer I was looking for. The beer sounds fantastic, I'm sure you won't have any problem as far as "how sales go," haha.
     
  19. HookemHops13

    HookemHops13 Initiate (0) Mar 21, 2013 Texas

    Jeff, do yall have plans to be open on new years day?
     
  20. jesterkingbeer

    jesterkingbeer Pundit (865) Jun 28, 2010 Texas

    No, we'll be closed then.
     
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