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stone brewing company enjoy after 12.26.15 brett ipa aged beers outside
Stone Brewing Company's new beer requires at least a year of climate-controlled aging for optimum taste. (Photo: Grayson Schaffer)

Should You Cellar That Beer?

Brewers test our self-restraint with aged ales

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stone brewing company enjoy after 12.26.15 brett ipa aged beers outside
(Photo: Grayson Schaffer)

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For years, the beer industry has been telling us not to let our beer languish for months on end before drinking it.

As if we actually had that problem.

But it turns out that, like wine and whiskey (and your ability to make good decisions after drinking both), some beers get better with age. Last month, San Diego鈥揵ased added a wait-for-it beer to its lineup. The offering, called ,聽should be cellared for at least a year.

(Courtesy of Stone Brewing Company)

It鈥檚 an about-face for Stone, which has historically been a force in encouraging craft-beer lovers to hurry up and drink. In 2012, it released its Enjoy By IPA, which urged chugging before the beer hit the ripe old age of 35 days. 鈥淗op aroma and flavors are the first attributes to fade as the beer ages, so in order to fully maximize Stone Enjoy By IPA鈥檚 hop glory, it must be consumed before or by the end of the 35-day cycle,鈥 says Mitch Steele, Stone Brewing Company鈥檚 brewmaster. In other words, ahem, hop to it for optimal hops.

Generally, your instinct to drink your suds as soon as you get them is a good one. 鈥淢ost beers, you don鈥檛 want to age. I鈥檇 say 98 percent of beers you don鈥檛 want to age,鈥 says Jerald O鈥橩ennard, director of the Chicago-based .

But there鈥檚 a lot of competition in the fresh, hoppy IPA space right now. Stone figured maybe it was time to do something different. 鈥淲e had an idea that would counter the modern American craft-brewing concept of consuming IPAs fresh, and proposed developing an IPA intended for aging鈥攐ne that would evolve and become a completely different beer,鈥 says Steele.

The beer uses wild yeast called Brettanomyces鈥攐r Brett for short. Steele says that he and his team have been testing the brew monthly to see how it鈥檚 aging. Based on the tastings, a year of 鈥渞est鈥 should produce an optimal drink.

Stone鈥檚 Enjoy After Brett IPA isn鈥檛 the only beer you should age. Devin Broglie, a master sommelier and global beverage buyer for Whole Foods Market, says that Belgian strong ales, barley wine, and imperial stouts can age gracefully. 鈥淗igher-alcohol, malty-style beers are considered more age worthy as sugar and alcohol have preservative qualities,鈥 he says. Other beers that you might want to try cellaring include Deschutes Brewery鈥檚 , Three Floyds Brewing鈥檚 , and Samuel Adams鈥 , Broglie says.

For optimum results, beer should be cellared similarly to wine. Keep your bottles out of the sun鈥攅xposure to sunlight can skunk even the best bottle鈥攁nd aim to keep them between 50 and 70 degrees Fahrenheit. 鈥淎nything below 50 degrees will render Brettanomyces dormant, and anything above 70 degrees may lead to the development of off flavors,鈥 says Steele. (Also, may we suggest keeping them well out of sight to keep temptation at manageable levels?)

O鈥橩ennard personally suggests buying a few bottles and trying them every year or so. 鈥淢aybe after the first year it鈥檚 good, but the second year is even better, and then the third year it鈥檚 gone a little too far,鈥 he says, adding鈥攁nd this is important鈥攖hat older isn鈥檛 always better when aging a beer.

And thank goodness for that.

Lead Photo: Grayson Schaffer

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