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Wild Ale Blackberry Sauce

Wild Ale Blackberry Sauce -1

Sometimes, we have to step outside our boxes.

The ones that seem comfortable, safe, predictable. We know the boxes, and we don’t grow in there. We stagnate. The world is huge, it’s full of experiences waiting to push us past the people we’ve decided to become and into the people we can be, if we can let go for a second.

Wild Ale Blackberry Sauce

Sour beer, that might be a little bit of a let-go scenario for you. Sour beers are beers that have been infected, on purpose, by wild bacteria. I know! It sounds awful, it sounds like a problem that needs to be solved, and sometimes it is.

But this is the original beer, the way beer was first made, more for lack of options than intentionality, when beer was in its infancy. Love it or hate it, sour beers (most common are Lambics, Flanders Red Ales, goes, gueuze, wild ales, etc.) are incredibly hard to make. The balance of flavors, the wrangling of a wild strain of yeast, the way it all comes together.

Wild Ale Blackberry Sauce So what are you in for the first time you order one of these guys? Sour. You’re shocked, I know. There is a tartness that can range from a mild funk to a glass of boozy sour patch kids. It turns out, these are also hard beers to cook with.

This, my friends, is my first sour beer recipe. I used Odell Brewing's Pina Agria, a sour beer with a nice pineapple flavor, because, shockingly enough, it was brewed with pineapple. It’s a great one to try if you’re into sours.

Try a sour, if you get a chance. Add one to the flight at your next taproom visit. Maybe you’ll love it, maybe you won’t, but at least you’ll know.

Wild Ale Blackberry Sauce

 

Sour Ale Blackberry Sauce

Servings 1 1/2 cups

Ingredients
  

  • ½ lbs fresh blackberries
  • 1 cup white sugar
  • 1 cup plus 2 tbs sour ale* (I used Odell Pina Agria Pineapple Sour)

Instructions
 

  • Add blackberries, sugar and 1 cup beer to a saucepan over medium high heat. Simmer until blackberries have broken down and sauce has thickened, about 10 minutes.
  • Allow to cool to room temperature.
  • Add remaining 2 tablespoons beer, stir then add additional beer to thin to desired consistency.
  • Store in an airtight container in the fridge until ready to use. Will keep for two weeks.

 

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Comments


Maya August 7, 2015 um 8:49 am

Yay! A tart/sour beer recipe finally! Gonna try this one for sure. Keep em' coming. Thank You!

Reply

Amanda August 25, 2015 um 4:57 pm

Oooooooh this looks and sounds DELICIOUS. I’m a big sour ale and blackberry fan — it’s a win-win for me! Wondering if you think this would pair well with broiled brown sugar peaches as a dessert? I was thinking of trying them out together for a date-night-in dinner this week 🙂 Thanks in advance for your input!

Reply

Jackie August 25, 2015 um 6:13 pm

Yes to that! I’d also fill the center of the broiled peaches with a sweetened mascarpone before you drizzle with the blackberry sauce. Have fun!

Reply

Amanda August 26, 2015 um 4:35 pm

Good idea! I was thinking of doing a toasted meringue — but now you’ve given me another idea for the next time!!

Reply

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