Rogue - Beehive To Bottle -- Honey Kolsch Returns

imageFrom Rogue:

INDEPENDENCE, ORE – Rogue Farms announces a collision with Mother Nature and 7,140,286 honeybees with the release of Honey Kolsch. Brewed with honey that is uncapped, extracted, and filtered, Honey Kolsch is made with Rogue Farms barley, and hops grown across from our hives. Honey Kolsch is a toast to hardworking honeybees everywhere and a nod to growing the revolution in beekeeping.

imageIn the past year, US beekeepers have lost 42% of their colonies. While beekeepers can make up for some of these losses by splitting their hives, there is still more that can be done. In addition to splitting our hives, we send our honeybees on a California vacation during the winter to avoid the chilly and wet Oregon air. When they return in early spring, they get nectar from the blossoms in our Hazelnut trees, Big Leaf Maples, daffodils and tulips abundant in Oregon. They have now moved on to wild berries and our growing crops including pumpkins, marionberries and jalapeños. We also plant wildflowers just for our honeybees so they have a bonus round of pollen and nectar to produce honey.

With the split hives and abundant flow of late spring nectar this year, Rogue Farms honeybees made honey that highlights the proprietary pallet of the Wigrich Appellation - imparting unique floral aromas into the beer. Crisp and refreshing, Honey Kolscharrives just in time for summer. Find it on draft and in yellow 750 mL bottles nationwide.

About MyBeer Buzz

Founder, owner, author, graphic designer, CEO, CFO, webmaster, president, mechanic and janitor for mybeerbuzz.com. Producer and Co-host of the WILK Friday BeerBuzz live weekly craft beer radio show. Small craft-brewer of the craft beer news sites and one-man-band with way too many instruments to play........Copyright 2007-2024 mybeerbuzz.com All Rights Reserved: Use of this content on ANY site without written permission is not allowed.

0 comments (click to read or post):

Post a Comment

Please leave a comment...I do moderate each comment so it may not appear immediately...and please be nice! You can also comment using Disqus (below) or even comment directly on Facebook (bottom).