I was lucky to be (sorta) of drinking age in the Pacific Northwest, in the early 90's, when the whole microbrewing thing went super critical.
Blondes were a late development for brewpubs. The original brewers were disdainfully in full revolt against fizzy yellow swill, so a yellow easy drinking beer wasn't something they were keen to brew. They were, however, running businesses that were dependent upon customers that were not yet fully comfortable with the hoppy and/or dark beers that the brewers were so passionate about. Moreover, there were a lot fewer malts to brew with at the time. That's why so many early recipes were Klages 2-row and-a-pound-a C40.
Anyway, the original ones were 2-row, a bit of C-20 (when that became available) and a bit of wheat. Hops were typically Liberty and/or Willamette, often Cascades were used as a small aroma addition...because Cascades solved everything and flipped the bird at the great enemy, BudMillerCoors.
At the time, yeast strains were much less homogenized. Each brewery tended to develop and arrrive at their own strain (mostly through English methods). Those strains tended to originate from either the Ballantine/Chico lineage or from a UK stock.
The thing that I had in Seattle last year wasn't a blonde. But what passes for an IPA these days wasn't an IPA back then, either. So who am I to judge, especially when it was a pleasant beer that inspired me to write a new recipe?
I guessed the grist was pure 2-row, maybe with some wheat or carapils. The glass was poorly cleaned and greasy, so the head collapsed before it reached the bar. No hint of grain in the aroma just hops. They called it a blonde, but I think that you could make a better argument for it being a session version of contemporary West Coast IPAs. Dry in body, light in color, and stinking with hops.
I guess that's a blonde these days! Pedantry aside, I enjoyed it and brewed one of my own.
If this is of any use to you, here's my stab at the thing I had in Seattle. I used a lot of carapils because I like big billowing heads on my light colored beers. Also, I step mash, so I wanted this thing to have
some body, to set it apart from my fizzy yellow swills.
The hops bill is radically different, but the effect is much the same. I used APEX San Diego Labs for this recipe. I wouldn't suggest that. BRY-97 or one of the Chico strains at 62-63F should get you something squeaky clean. Well, clean enough with all those hops running roughshod over the top.
We're from the same neck of the woods. If you're using tap, I'd back off the gypsum by 1mg. I like my light beers to have some mineral structure, but 3mg is getting a bit too close to chunky. I think it'd be a bit better if it were a smidge softer in the water department. I'll brew it next time with 2mg gypsum.
I hope you find the following useful because I have a debt to you. As you may recall, you helped me to nail down the proper ratio for my trifecta addition at my brewing volume, which you can see represented in this recipe.
Again, thank you. It made a huge difference in my beers.
I hope you find this useful.
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