the lifestyle of the time. But this was 1984, and Bert Grant turned its meaning an about-face 180 degrees. Never would microbrewed beer be the same.
At the festival, the lines for previously popular microbrews paled in comparison to the excitement generated by Bert Grantâs Russian Imperial Stout. Proudly dressed in his Scottish kilt and bonnet, Bert offered thousands of servings of the rich, dark, heavily hopped, robust Grantâs Russian Imperial Stout. Conversion was rampant. It seemed almost evangelical. Lupulin and darkness ruled the festival. The world of beer would never be the same. Hop and stout groupies could not fulfill themselves. Bert was smiling. That year Grantâs Russian Imperial Stout took top honors in the Consumer Preference Poll. A style was born.
A brief explanation is needed, for Russian imperial stout has had a long and royal history in continental Europe and Great Britain. Brewed for royalty in olden times and still brewed in parts of Europe and the United Kingdom, its original style was not characterized by massive hoppiness. Roasted malts and barley were added with gentle consideration for flavor balance with caramel-flavored malt. Often aged for several months to a year, European versions of Russian imperial stouts were characterized by nuttiness, high alcohol and sherrified flavors. These imperial stouts are an exquisite high point of the brewerâs art and offer an experience that is rare but worth seeking. But Bert Grantâs Russian Imperial Stout was something other than âRussian.â
Bert Grant at the Yakima Brewing and Malting Company, 1986
I would call it âAmerican-styleâ imperial stout. Massive amounts of hops were added for bitterness, flavor and awondrous floral and citruslike aroma. Combined with loads of black malt and roasted barley, this pitch-black ale was supercharged with all-malt ingredients offering an alcohol level of 8.75 percent. At the time, Bert claimed, âThis is probably the strongest draft beer in North America and possibly in the world.â
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BERT GRANTâS PLANET IMPERIAL STOUT
Robust, black, roasted malt and barley character unveil themselves only to be joined by the massive citruslike hop flavors and aromas of American-grown Galena and Cascade hops and the intense, clean, refreshing bitterness of Northern Brewer hops. Rich and malty, with symphonic ale-fruity notes, this beer is satisfying for all robust stout enthusiasts. The recipe can be found in About the Recipes.
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There are lots of microbrewed beers that have since surpassed Grantâs original Russian imperial stout in alcohol, but no one has so successfully pioneered such a robust style of ale as profoundly as Bert Grant. In 1982 he founded his Yakima Brewing and Malting Company. In 1984 he took the world by storm. When Bert died in 2001, at age 74, beer maven Michael Jackson wrote, âTo whom will we turn now when the world needs saving?â
Bert, you did us proud. Your legacy lives on with every imperial strength and imperially hoppy ale. There are many who continue to remember June first and second at the 1984 Great American Beer Festival.
Matters of Beer Style
I TâS FIRST and foremost all about the beer. This is why I first whet your appetite with a few classic brewery adventures and their legendary beers. But once you begin to enjoy the flavor and diversity of beer, there may be nothing more conversational among homebrewers and beer enthusiasts than the questions dealing with what defines beer style.
Some no doubt would prefer to enjoy or make âjust beer,â and to hell with stylistic endeavors. After all âits the beer, stupid.â And then there are the royal guardians of beer styles and notaries of authenticity upholding the grand traditions of beer. I can appreciate both sides of the issue, having developed thebeer style guidelines for the Association of Brewers and various competition guidelines since 1979. What