Jolly Pumpkin Artisan Ales

Jolly Pumpkin Artisan Ales is a brewery in Dexter, Michigan founded by Ron and Laurie Jeffries in 2004. Jolly Pumpkin produces unfiltered and unpasteurized beers.

Jolly LLC
IndustryAlcoholic beverage
Founded2004
Headquarters2319 E Bishop Circle Dexter, Michigan, USA
ProductsBeer
OwnerRon Jeffries
ParentNorthern United Brewing Company
Websitejollypumpkin.com

Production edit

Jolly Pumpkin beers are aged in oak, including wine barrels, former bourbon barrels and large foudres. The wood contains naturally occurring microbiological cultures including brettanomyces. These cultures impart a flavor profile in the beers described as leathery, earthy, wild and funky.[1] This style of beer has been described as farmhouse ale or American wild ale. The Jolly Pumpkin beer is aged anywhere from 4 weeks up to 2 years or more.[2]

Reception edit

Their Oro de Calabaza won the 2004 Gold and the 2005 Bronze Medal in the Belgian- and French-style ale category at the Great American Beer Festival.[3] Their Bam Bière won the Bronze Medal in the 2009 Great American Beer Festival and was named the 21st best beer in America by Men's Journal.[4]

Products edit

Year-round beers edit

Year-round beers include:

  • Oro de Calabaza ("Pumpkin gold") (8% abv), described as a Franco-Belgian-style strong golden ale.
  • La Roja (7.2% abv), a Flanders red ale.[5]
  • Bam Bière (4.5% abv), described as a light farmhouse ale or saison.
  • Blanca (4.8% abv), low calories farmhouse witbier.

Special releases edit

Their occasionally available Grand Reserve beers include:

  • La Roja Krieked: A version of this beer aged with cherries was offered at the 2008 Michigan Brewers Guild Festival.
  • Madrugada Obscura Grand Reserve: This was barrel-aged for 18 months. It was offered only on draft at the First Annual Stone Sour Fest in July 2007 and was a special tap at the 2008 Michigan Brewers Guild Festival.
  • Perseguidor ("Pursuer"): A limited-release, custom-blended ale which is oak-aged an additional six months before release. There have been five releases.
    • Batch 1 (7.2% abv): A blend of Bam Biere and La Roja[6] This batch was offered at the 2006 Michigan Brewers Guild Festival and released during the fall of 2006.
    • Batch 2 (8% abv): Also known as "Oro de Calabaza Reserve," this batch was a blend of Oro de Calabaza and Bam Biere.[7] This batch was only offered on draft at the First Annual Stone Sour Fest in July 2007.
    • Batch 3 (abv unknown): This was offered at the 2008 Michigan Brewers Guild Festival and released in 750 mL Bottles in early August 2008.[8]
    • Batch 4: released January 2009. A blend of 3-year-old La Roja, 3-year-old Madrugada Obscura and 1-year-old Noel de Calabaza. Conditioned for 6 months in 12-ounce bottles.[9]
    • Batch 5: released January 17, 2010. A blend of La Roja Grand Reserve, Luciernaga Grand Reserve, and Bam Biere Grand Reserve. Blend was aged on oak for 6 months and then bottle-conditioned for 6 months. 480 bottles were produced.[10][11][12]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ http://www.northernbrewer.com/wyeast.html "Produces the classic sweaty horse hair character indigenous to beers of this region; gueuze, lambics, sour browns."
  2. ^ "F.A.Q." JOLLY PUMPKIN ARTISAN ALES. Retrieved 2023-06-05.
  3. ^ CraftBeer.com | 404[permanent dead link]
  4. ^ "Jolly Pumpkin Artisan Ales - Our Family of Beers". Archived from the original on 2008-11-03. Retrieved 2008-10-17.
  5. ^ http://www.allaboutbeer2.com/beertalk/reviews.cgi?action=beer&id=1018 Archived 2008-01-13 at the Wayback Machine Beer Talk: La Roja Artisan Ale
  6. ^ "Jolly Pumpkin Perseguidor (Batch 1)". RateBeer.
  7. ^ "Jolly Pumpkin Perseguidor (Batch 2)". RateBeer.
  8. ^ "Jolly Pumpkin Perseguidor (Batch 3)". RateBeer.
  9. ^ Nason, Adam (16 December 2008). "Jolly Pumpkin releases P4 on Jan. 2nd". BeerPulse.
  10. ^ Baetens, Melody (7 January 2010). "Beer events and wine tastings rev up in state". The Detroit News. p. M.15.
  11. ^ Nason, Adam (7 January 2010). "Jolly Pumpkin Perseguidor 5 to be released on Sunday, Jan. 17th". BeerPulse.
  12. ^ Bardallis, David (17 January 2010). "Line stretches down Main Street for Jolly Pumpkin beer release". The Ann Arbor News. Retrieved 18 February 2022.

External links edit