These breweries will push the boundaries of beer at Collaboration Fest

Editor’s note: This is part of The Know’s series, Staff Favorites. Each week, we give our opinions on the best that Colorado has to offer for dining, shopping, entertainment, outdoor activities and more. (We’ll also let you in on some hidden gems.)


Beer is supposed to be fun. Yes, brewing is full of history and tradition and skill, but the reason for its existence in modern society is as a social lubricant, a communal endeavor. And fun.

And you won’t find a more pure expression of that notion than at Collaboration Fest, an annual beer gathering that brings together 180 breweries, primarily from Colorado, and 140 beers — all made specifically for this event.

The brewers can make anything they want, as long as they do it with someone else: another brewery, several other breweries, another business or organization. The beers they make can be serious attempts at experimentation, one-off larks, ironic statements or simply an excuse for people to spend a day or two together during a work week.

This year’s fest, which takes place Saturday, April 19, from 2 to 6 p.m. at The Westin Westminster, 10600 Westminster Blvd., is no different. If you go (tickets are $20-$95 and available at collaborationfest.com), you’ll find something to shock, soothe or satisfy any palate.

Here are some of the most interesting, unusual and fun beer collabs on the taplist.

  • Woods Boss Brewing and Oregon’s Silver Moon Brewing reconvened to make Stihl Crazy (After All These Years), a beer they last made six years ago. To do it, the brewers ran hot wort from the kettle down the channel of a split 12-foot section of a pine tree. The goal is to impart the character of the tree into the resulting beer, a Norwegian farmhouse-style saison.
  • You wouldn’t blink an eye at a Southeast Asian restaurant if the menu listed a spicy peanut sauce made with sriracha sauce. In a beer, though? No matter. Verboten Brewing in Loveland and Gravity Brewing in Louisville will be serving Peanut Butter Sriracha Imperial Porter. The goal, according to the breweries, is to “make something weird but not too weird.”
  • The brewers at Mountain Toad Brewing in Golden and Evergreen Brewery decided to make a beer with fonio, an ancient West African grain that is drought-resistant and sustainably grown, according to the collaboration notes. It’s also relatively new to the brewing world. “Brewing with fonio and pilsner malt created a unique beer with aromas and flavors of white wine, lychee, and citrus with a soft, rounded finish.” The beer is called Friend of Fonio.
  • Pouring beer is an art form in the Czech Republic, so much so that even foam gets a style designation all its own, called mliko. In fact, in some bars, you can drink just the foam, which, when meted out with specially screened, side-pouring faucet taps, has a rich and creamy feel that is fun to drink (and to make a foam mustache out of). A handful of local breweries offer mliko pours, including Wild Provisions Beer Project in Boulder, which has partnered with Denver’s Great Divide Brewing on TmavYeti, a Czech-style dark lager, tmave, that was aged in whiskey barrels and will be blended with more lager and poured as mliko.
  • For its unusual collaboration, Aurora’s Cheluna Brewing teamed up with Oaxaca Brewing in Mexico to make Red Tepache Sour. Made with fermented pineapple rinds and colored with cochineal, a traditional natural dye, the beer harkens back to pre-Columbian times, when tepache originated. This version also includes cinnamon and clove.

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