Big Bend Texas Galleries & Artists 2013 | Page 10

CRAFT BEER FOR THE BIG BEND Q&A with Steve Anderson, Big Bend Brewing Co. Whether you enjoy a cold beer or not, you’ll appreciate the creative effort that goes into the brew process. That creativity is now on display right in the Big Bend at Big Bend Brewing Co. in Alpine, Texas. Big Bend Brewing Co. will produce the two types of beer produced today – lagers and ales – with four to five varieties. Galleries & Artists sat down with brewmeister Steve Anderson, a man who really knows how to brew great beer (formally of the famous Live Oak Brewing Co. and Waterloo Brewing in Austin) to learn more about the art of brewing one of the oldest beverages known to man. Learn more at www.BigBendBrewery.com G&A: Describe for me the differences in beer? Steve: There's lagers and ales. G&A: Those are the only two. Steve: Right. And then there are subcategories of both. A pilsner is a lager beer that is the ancestor of all the big macro beers today like Bud, Miller, Coors, Heineken. It's golden colored. But with the true pilsner it's very hoppy. It's really bitter. It’s a lager. With the pilsner it's going to be mostly pilsner malt. I don't think we'll have any specialty malt in it. G&A: What does that mean? Steve: It's just a base malt. Malt is barley that's been germinated to a certain point and then dried out. But it's still viable so when you expose the endosperm with warm water then the enzymes reactivate and continue the germination process. Except now instead of making a plant it breaks the starch inside the endosperm into sugar. And then we'll remove that sugar from the grain and the water, and we boil it to sterilize it, add hops to bitter it up. And then we send it to the fermenter with yeast that will consume that sugar that we've made from it and it produces ethanol and carbon dioxide. And so then it makes beer. But that requires lots of tank space. And because we're going to be making a lager, primarily which is the pilsner, that ties up the tank for a month. G&A: So why is that? Aging? Steve: Aging, yes. The difference between a lager and an ale is the yeast, and the lager yeast ferments at a cooler temperature and so it takes a little bit longer to ferment but not a whole lot. But because it ferments at a cooler temperature it produces and retains a lot of sulfites that are unpleasant. And it takes a while for that to scrub out of the beer. It's called "green beer". G&A: Do you have yeast that you've used before that you bring to bear on this? Steve: I think I'm going to use a different strain than what I've used before for the pilsner. 10 • www.GalleriesArtists.com