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Fall beers are the most popular seasonal style, thanks to Oktoberfest, wet hops and pumpkin flavors
Many are showcased at this weekend's Great American Beer Festival in Denver
The leaves are changing, football season is underway, and some pretty amazing beers are hitting shelves.
For craft brewers, cooler weather brings a shift in seasonal styles. Gone are the crisp, light, refreshing beers of summer, making way for more malty and spiced brews.
Fall beers are the most popular seasonal style, thanks to the popularity of Oktoberfest brews, wet hops and pumpkin flavors. Look no farther than the annual Great American Beer Festival, underway through Saturday in Denver, where thousands of U.S. craft brewers offer samplings of numerous fall brews.
Some the best and most creative beers are released this time of year. So throw on that hoodie and try a new fall brew to celebrate the season.
Here are 12 standouts:
Pumpkin beers
For better or worse, pumpkin beers have become the top-selling seasonal style among craft-beer drinkers. During the fall months, they’re even close to bumping India pale ales (IPAs) out of the top spot of most popular beer style. Spices like clove, nutmeg and allspice are commonly used in these brews, along with the orange gourds.
Heavy Seas Brewing Great’er Pumpkin
Baltimore’s Heavy Seas has one of the most flavorful and most powerful pumpkin beers out there. Adding to the pumpkin-spice flavors are oak, vanilla and bourbon, thanks to the aging of the beer in bourbon barrels.
Dogfish Head Brewing Punkin Ale
Dogfish Head, a leader in creative beer flavors, was doing pumpkin beer way before pumpkin beer was cool. Its Punkin is a spiced-up brown ale brewed with pumpkin, brown sugar and spices. This is the gold standard of the style and a true fall classic.
Gordgeous’ unique spice character makes this a special offering from NoDa, a Charlotte, North Carolina, brewery. It adds fresh spices just prior to brewing, so this beer not only looks good, it tastes great, too. Previously available only on draft, Gordgeous now comes in cans for easier home consumption.
This is a sweetly balanced beer that tastes like pumpkin pie. It’s probably one of the most sought-after pumpkin beers, and for good reason.
Oktoberfest beers
If pumpkin is not your thing, and believe me, there are tons of you out there, fall still has some pretty good things for you. For one, it’s also Oktoberfest season. The famed German festival features malty dark lagers called Märzens, but if you can’t make it to Munich for the big party, don’t worry – plenty of craft brewers are serving up their own interpretations of the style.
Sierra Nevada Brewing Oktoberfest
Sierra Nevada joined the Oktoberfest party this year with a unique collaboration with the German brewer Brauhaus Riegele, one of the six brewers that serve beers at the official Oktoberfest in Germany. Each year going forward, Sierra Nevada will partner with another German brewery for its fest beer offering.
This Indiana brewery is making really good beer these days, and its Oktoberfest is one of the best. While it’s on the lighter side for an Oktoberfest beer, it’s prominent hops make it nicely balanced. Other tasty offerings from Upland include Wheat Ale and Teddy Bear Kisses, a Russian imperial porter aged on cocoa nibs.
Stoudts Brewing has been quietly brewing great beer since 1987. The Pennsylvania brewery was co-founded by Carol Stoudt, a legend in the brewing community and the first woman to open a brewery since Prohibition. Its Oktoberfest celebration is one of the best in the country, and its Oktoberfest beer is an excellent, easy-drinking companion to the event.
Revolution Brewing Oktoberfest
Chicago has a rich German heritage, and Revolution Brewing honors that with its Oktoberfest offering. It uses all German malts in this one, along with German Hallertau Gold hops. After a few sips, you may be “twisting and shouting” like Ferris Bueller.
Hop harvest
At the end of August, the hop fields of the Pacific Northwest are full of ripe hop cones ready for harvesting. The majority of those hops – used for bitterness, flavor and aroma – are harvested and preserved. But some hops are set aside within 24 hours of harvest to be used in “wet hop” ales. Compared with preserved hops, fresh-cut hops add a more vibrant, earthy flavor and aroma.
The folks at Deschutes bag and brew their hops within four hours for this bright, citrusy pale ale. Luckily for them, their brewery is in the middle of Oregon’s hop-growing country. For you hopheads, Hop Trip features Nugget, Centennial and Fresh Crystal hops along with some spices (hey, it’s fall).
Sierra Nevada Harvest Wet Hop IPA
Fresh, wet Centennial and Cascade hops give this balanced beer some citrus and herbal notes, but they’re not overpowering. Pine and grassy notes also crop up at the end, but the sweetness from the malts calm things down a bit. Sierra Nevada has been at the forefront of using wet hops and releases several fresh hop beers a year.
This is a brilliantly juiced-up IPA with intense pine and tropical fruit flavor. The fresh hops, some of them harvested from Founders’ native Michigan, shine all the way through to the finish.
This year’s wet hop ale from Oregon’s Rogue brewery is something special. It’s brewmaster John Maier’s 19,000th beer for Rogue (one of which was a beer made with yeast from his beard). Don’t worry, there’s no beard yeast in this one – just Yaquina hops from Rogue’s farms, which are tossed in the brew kettle within five hours of picking.