Gose
{{Short description|German beer type}}
{{Other uses|Gose (disambiguation)}}
{{Distinguish|Gueuze}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=October 2021}}
File:GoseLeipzig.jpg, Germany]]
Gose ({{IPAc-en|g|oʊ|z|ə}}) is a warm fermented{{Cite book |last=Jane Peyton |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=N7QKCgAAQBAJ&pg=PA69 |title=Beer O'Clock: Craft, Cask and Culture |date=7 October 2013 |publisher=Summersdale Publishers |isbn=9781783720057 |page=69}} beer that is usually brewed with at least 50% of the grain bill being malted wheat (with the rest being malted barley such as Pilsner malt), fruit syrups - such as lemon and coriander - and salt - either added or as a component of the water used.{{Cite news |url=https://byo.com/article/gose/ |title=Gose: A relic returns |last=Burnsed |first=Justin | work=Brew Your Own | date=May 2011}} It acquires its characteristic sourness through inoculation with Lactobacillus bacteria, which is not a hop-tolerant bacteria and which provides only a light acidity.{{Cite news | url=https://beerandbrewing.com/make-your-best-gose/ | title=Make Your Best Gose | first=Josh | last=Weikert | work=Beer and Brewing | date=May 13, 2018}}{{Cite news | url=https://byo.com/article/gose-a-modern-take-on-an-ancient-style/ | title=Gose: A Modern Take on an Ancient Style | work=Brew Your Own}} Unlike some beers, such as India pale ales, gose beers typically do not have prominent hop bitterness, flavours, or aroma and have a relatively low alcohol content of 4 to 5% alcohol by volume.{{Cite news | url=https://www.foodandwine.com/drinks/what-gose | title=What Is a Gose? | first=Mike | last=Pomranz | work=Food & Wine | date=13 September 2023}}
Gose was first brewed in Germany. It does not comply with the Reinheitsgebot (German purity laws) because of the use of coriander and salt, but it is allowed an exemption on the grounds of being a regional specialty.{{Cite news | url=https://www.huffpost.com/entry/an-introduction-to-gose-s_b_11978444 | title=An Introduction to Gose Style Beers | work=HuffPost | date=12 September 2016}}
Gose has similarities with Berliner Weisse, which is also sour, and Belgian witbier, which also has coriander.{{Cite news | url=https://beerandbrewing.com/flavor-fever-the-tightrope-of-gose/ | title=Flavor Fever: The Tightrope of Gose | first=Randy | last=Mosher | work=Beer and Brewing | date=April 20, 2020}}
Since 2016, Leipzig, where the beer was popular for centuries, has celebrated Happy Gose Day annually on November 17th.{{Cite news | url=https://www.freepressjournal.in/lifestyle/international-happy-gose-day-2022-say-cheers-to-this-german-ritual-with-an-extra-glass-of-beer | title=International Happy Gose Day 2022: Say cheers to this German ritual with an extra glass of beer | work=The Free Press Journal | date=November 16, 2022}}
History
Gose was first brewed in between 1181 and 1470 in the town of Goslar, from which its name derives. It became so popular in Leipzig that local breweries were brewing it there by 1738. Gose was a staple drink in much of Lower Saxony for centuries.{{Cite news | url=https://www.eater.com/drinks/2015/10/30/9643780/gose-beer-germany | title=The Story of Gose, Germany's Salty Coriander Beer | first=Emily | last=Monaco | work=Eater | date=October 30, 2015}}
Originally, gose was spontaneously fermented. A description in 1740 stated, "{{lang|de|Die Gose stellt sich selber ohne Zutuung Hefe oder Gest}}" ("Gose ferments itself without the addition of yeast"). Gose was delivered, still actively fermenting, in casks to the taverns. Casks were stored in the cellar with the tap bung closed but the shive hole left open which allows some gas to escape, so that the carbon dioxide (CO2)—a by-product of fermentation from the still-active yeast—could escape. When fermentation had slowed to a point where no CO2 was emerging, the gose was ready to bottle. The barrel was emptied into a tank, whence it was filled into traditional long-necked bottles. These were not closed with a cap or cork, but with a plug of yeast (flor) which naturally rose up the neck as the secondary fermentation continued.
In 1824, Johann Gottleib Goedecke began brewing gose at a manor house (rittergut) in Döllnitz. By 1900, it was considered to be local to Leipzig and there were over 80 gose taverns in the city.
At the start of World War II, due to a food shortage, grain in Germany was allocated to bread making.{{Cite web | url=https://www.druthersbrewing.com/the-up-and-down-history-of-gose/ | title=The Up and Dow | work=Druthers Brewing}} The {{lang|de|i=unset|Rittergutsbrauerei Döllnitz}}, between Merseburg and Halle, was the last brewery producing gose. When it was nationalised and closed in 1945, gose disappeared temporarily. In 1949, Friedrich Wurzler, who had worked at the Döllnitz brewery and knew the techniques for brewing gose, opened a tiny brewery in Leipzig. Before his death in the late 1950s, Wurzler passed the recipe to his stepson, Guido Pfnister. When Pfnister died in 1966, the brewery closed and gose production again ceased.
In the 1980s, Lothar Goldhahn restored a former gose tavern and added gose to the menu, convincing the {{lang|de|i=unset|Schultheiss Berliner-Weisse-Brauerei}} on {{lang|de|i=unset|Schönhauser Allee}} in East Berlin produce the beer. He gave up the bar in 1990{{Cite web | url=https://www.leipziger-gose.com/en/gose-history/ | title=Gose history}} and it closed in 1995. However, in 1999, Tilo Jänichen teamed up with the son of the last owner of Döllnitz Manor and modified the original gose recipe for his brewery.{{Cite web | title=What the hell is a gose? | url=https://www.americancraftbeer.com/what-the-hell-is-a-gose/ | work=American Craft Beer | date=29 April 2014}}
Major producers
File:Gose_Mania.JPG, Germany (2014)]]
=Germany=
- Ritterguts Gose (Leipzig) - produces several different Gose specialities, and has been awarded the title of World's Best Traditional Beer several times{{Cite web | url=https://www.leipziger-gose.com/en/our-beers-awards/ | title=Ritterguts Gose Beer and Awards | work=Ritterguts Gose}}
- Ale Mania (Bonn) - brews a gose with more coriander than usual, but less acidity, 5.0% ABV{{Cite web | url=https://www.alemaniabonn.de/unser-bier/ | title=UNSER BIER | work=Ale Mania}}
=USA=
- Anderson Valley Brewing Company (California) - released The Holy Gose in 2014; since then has added several gose varieties to its roster, including Blood Orange, Briney Melon, Cherry, Peach, POG, and G&T Gose{{Cite web | title=History | url=https://avbc.com/about/history/ |work=Anderson Valley Brewing Company}}
- Druthers Brewing Company (New York) - brews Double Dare Strong Gose, a 7.1% ABV gose
- Martin House Brewing Company (Texas) - brews Salty Lady, a 5% ABV gose{{Cite web | url=https://untappd.com/v/martin-house-brewing-company/420271 | title=Martin House Brewing Company | work=Untappd}}
- Union Craft Brewing (Baltimore) - brews several varieties, including Old Pro, which won the silver medal in the German-Style Sour Ale category at the 2014 Great American Beer Festival{{Cite web | url=https://www.greatamericanbeerfestival.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/10/14_GABF_winners.pdf | title=2014 WINNERS LIST | work=Great American Beer Festival}}
- Westbrook Brewing (South Carolina) - brews a 4% ABV gose with sea salt and American ale yeast{{Cite web | url=https://westbrookbrewing.com/beer/gose/ | title=Gose | work=Westbrook Brewing}}
=United Kingdom=
- Burnt Mill Brewery (Suffolk) - brews a gose with Japanese lychee{{Cite web | url=https://burntmillbrewery.com/products/konbini-lychee-hibiscus-okinawan-sea-salt-gose-4-8 | title=Konbini - Lychee, Hibiscus & Okinawan Sea Salt Gose 4.8% | work=Burnt Mill Brewery}}
- Jump Ship (Edinburgh) - brews an alcohol-free gooseberry gose{{Cite web | url=https://jumpship.beer/products/ocean-drift-gooseberry-gose | title=Ocean Drift - alcohol free gooseberry gose | work=Jump Ship}}
=New Zealand=
- Parrotdog (Wellington) - released an avocado gose in 2020{{Cite web | url=https://idealog.co.nz/venture/2020/03/parrotdog-and-the-avo-tree-introduce-nzs-first-avocado-beer-avocado-gose |title=Parrotdog and The Avo Tree introduce NZ's first avocado beer 'Avocado Gose' | work=Idealog | date=22 March 2020}}
References
{{Reflist}}
Further reading
- {{Cite news | url=https://beerandbrewing.com/make-your-best-gose/ | title=Make Your Best Gose | first=Josh | last=Weikert | work=Beer and Brewing | date=May 13, 2018}}
{{Commons category|Gose (beer)|Gose}}
{{Beer styles}}
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