nochtli
prickly pear golden ale – 5.1% abv
Ingredients
water, barley malt, prickly pear, lemon balm, hops, yeast
first launch
2018
Fermentor
stainless steel
hybrid fermentables
beer – prickly pear wine
Formats
12 oz bottle, 12 oz can, 20L keg
medium-light body
hay yellow with slight green hue color
malty, floral, fruty-prickly pear, cactus, cucumber, citrus-floral aroma
flavor begins with a refreshing citrusy and herbal note followed by a cactusy bitterness that ends dry with with hint of cucumber
¿HÍBRIDA?
cerveza-vino
inspiration
The name of this beer, Nochtli, is the word in Nahuatl for prickly pear. It is the fruit of Nopal, a cactus that Mexico has adopted as a
national symbol. The legend says that the god of the sun, Huitzilopochtli, ordered the Aztecs to settle and build their empire wherever they found an eagle poised on a nopal devouring a rattlesnake. Thus it was that on a little island in the middle of the ancient lake that now sits beneath Mexico City where the ancient Great Tenochtitlan was founded.
Prickly pear provides about a quarter of the fermentable sugars in this beer. It is grown in Morelos, a state with tropical climate contiguous to Mexico City. It provides the beer with a refreshing cucumber like aftertaste that is distinctive of this ingredient. Since prehispanic times, a form of prickly pear wine called Caloncho has been prepared by crushing and fermenting the fruit mixed with herbs and spices. Just as our Nochtli, it is a seasonal drink since prickly pear is only available from the months of July to October.
Lemon balm provides a subtle sweet minty citrus hint that together with the prickly pear aftertaste gives the beer a thoroughly thirst quenching quality. It is grown in Xochimilco, a region of Mexico City which holds the little that is left off the Texcoco lake system that used to surround the Great Tenochtitlan.
pairing with mexican ingredients
corn
chiles
nopal-agave-cactus
amaranth-what-barley
poultry
red meats
pairing with mexican culinary regions
Ciudad de México
Este: Hidalgo / Tlaxcala
Bajío: San Luis Potosí / Queretaro / Guanajuato / Zacatecas / Aguascalientes
Veracruz
SurOeste: Guerrero / Chiapas
pairing with cuisines of the world
mexican
peruvian
thai
japanese
chinese