One of the most-anticipated releases of the year is coming this week and is one I’ve never had the pleasure of trying. The beer is commonly known as KBS or Kentucky Breakfast Stout. It will make its nationwide debut for 2019 on Friday, March 15th. KBS is a bourbon barrel-aged imperial stout brewed with coffee and chocolate. It comes in at 12.2% ABV and will be available on draft, in 750mL bottles and in 12oz bottles.
The only breakfast stout that I’ve ever tried is one of my favorite locally crafted beers in St. Louis. It’s the Imperial Breakfast Stout from Denny Foster and Main & Mill. More specifically, the 2018 Oak-Aged Imperial Breakfast Stout is what I had. It’s brewed with cacao nibs, vanilla, cinnamon, Mississippi Mud Espresso, & maple all brought together with a bit of their Buffalo Trace BA base.
But you know what I’ve always wondered? What is a breakfast stout? So, as we near the release of KBS, I reached out to Foster to get a better understanding of what breakfast stouts are all about.
It’s not really a style so much as an idea I think. Everyone may view these stouts a bit differently but we include 5 adjuncts in our big breakfast stout that have some sort of morning connotations: maple syrup, espresso, vanilla, chocolate, and cinnamon. Each ingredient gives a pastry kind of thing and helps form an almost cinnamon roll kind of stout with a coffee chaser.
5-6 years ago when we were basically homebrewing for festivals we had a big goal of wanting to make session stouts loaded with flavor. This led immediately to a few different breakfast related beers, including our Imperial Breakfast Stout but also Morning Session Stout and Missouri Brunch Stout.
We wanted to nail these because we love stouts, love coffee in stouts, and felt that other adjuncts could work together to create layers of complexity in different ways. These stouts have led to new people getting into stouts that may not have otherwise jumped to the style.
Overall, it’s about creating something that you think people will love. We enjoy these ingredients and like to create a balance between each adjunct and the base beer. Whether it’s a breakfast stout, or Mexican chocolate stout, it’s always about showing off ingredients while making sure the base stout still shines through.
80,000 oysters ready to invade St. Louis, supported by 10 new Schlafly stouts