Posts Tagged ‘Single Serve’


»July 30th, 2010 by Zach Turner


Deconstruction, our upcoming barrel aged deconstructed golden ale, was an exercise in the art of process. Over the course of its development Joe and I had the opportunity to delve into the intricacies of a malt bill, the hop profile, our pilot system and numerous yeast stains – and how they all interact with various oak barrels with various histories.

Click to open a PDF of the full thing
Click to open a PDF of the full thing

This kind of complexity is annoying at best and unreasonably interesting at least.

Needless to say, the government took some convincing to let us sell it. Beers aged in barrels which have been used for other alcohols are regulated much the same way as malternative beverages in the US. The TTB (tax and trade bureau), who approves labels to facilitate interstate commerce for us regional brewers, requires beers with questionable ingredients, or with alcohol potentially contributed by other means than primary fermentation to be approved after reviewing a formula or Statement of Process. This could mean blending straight ethanol and flavoring into light beer or aging beer in wine or whiskey barrels. In our case, our process was many layered and after some failed submissions, we finally arrived at a 5 page description of the inception of Deconstruction in order to protect consumers from our deliberately incremental approach to brewing. Below, please find the full story (thoughtfully redacted) of Decon’s (De-con’s) life. The beer is slated to be released August 7th at a taping event at Odell. We’ll be pairing fresh western slope fruit converted into tiny pies. I’ll be securing the fruit at this weekend’s Old Town Farmer’s Market.

Keep it surreal, Zach




»December 3rd, 2009 by joe mohrfeld


It is exactly why we pilot brew, because sometimes the best laid plans do not always result in what you thought… and because experimentation is a lot of fun! We wrote a recipe for the first pilot brew for our Odell Brewing Co. Strong Belgian Golden that involved a number of ingredients and techniques we personally had little experience with. We were rewarded with a beer much different from beer we “brewed on paper”, but very inspiring to the end goal of the project. Being adventurous and rethinking what has been traditionally accepted about brewing is the reason craft brewers are always progressing while developing new beer styles, brewing techniques, and brewery equipment. Pilot brewing can produce unexpected and delicious results, even if it was not quite what we set out to do!


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»November 24th, 2009 by joe mohrfeld


The Single Serve 750ml Series has been fun for us brewers at OBC. Over the past year we have been able to design, develop and brew 5 entirely new beers for 2009. We have also been working on, or have already brewed, numerous beers for release in 2010. We are really excited about developing these new beers and we wanted to let you, the lover of hand-crafted beers, in on the process we go through in developing beers we are excited enough about to serve up to our friends. You can follow our brewers on this Blog as we work on creating and brewing a Strong Belgian Golden for release in a caged and corked 750ml bottle in 2010; from the very first email that started the project, through the various pilot batches, and concluding with the release party in our tasting room.


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»November 16th, 2009 by Joni


All of our 750 ml corked and caged bottle beers are 100% bottle conditioned. This means we add fresh, active yeast to the bottles along with some unfermented sugars to allow the beers to go through a secondary fermentation within the bottle. The beer is flat when bottled and over a period of several weeks the yeast ferments the sugars producing carbon dioxide within the bottle, giving the finished beer it.