If 10 years ago you had offered someone a beer that was sour, you might have been given a sideways look. Sour meant something was wrong. It certainly wasn't what beer was intended to be.
But times have changed. Sour beers are in demand. Flavors once limited to obscure brews from Belgium have been embraced by brewers across the United States. American wild ale is a recognized style category. And American beer drinkers are lining up for a taste.
Just what is a sour beer? I put that question to Niko Tonks, head brewer at Fair State Brewing Cooperative, one of the top wild-ale brewers in the Twin Cities.
"The simple, pedantic approach is to say that sour beer is beer that is sour," he said. But the category encompasses a wide range of flavors, from lemony tartness to rustic leather and barnyard funk. "So the more complex answer is that sour beers are beers that employ yeast and bacteria to produce alcohol and lactic acid."
It may not sound appealing, but it's true. Fermentation with wild yeast strains like Brettanomyces — the winemaker's enemy — and bacteria such as Lactobacillus is what gives these wild brews their funky flavor.
Brewers introduce these bugs in a variety of ways. Lab-cultured, pure strains can be added to the beer just like normal brewing yeast. Fresh wort can be left to sit for a period of time before boiling to allow lactobacillus from the surface of the malt to partially ferment its sugars, producing acid. Aging in wooden barrels, where the various organisms have taken up residence in the porous wood, is another method frequently employed.
A change of taste
The Twin Cities has long been known as a hop-centric market where pale ale and IPA are king. But drinkers here have taken a liking to the sour beers. And local brewers are obliging.
"I think the reason it's caught fire here is that we have a big beer-enthusiast community," said Tonks. "People are looking for it. They are doing trades with people on the internet for beers from the coasts. There was a call for it here locally. The simple answer is that people wanted it and so it's happening."