They have the so called ingredients on display at the brewery and I;ve been there several times and asked various people about the malts hops and yeast but you get different answers...and, hey, who's gonna really tell you eh?The Publican's House wrote:A few years ago - probably unchanged - Creemore went something like this:
North American two-row
Carastan malt
1% black malt
Sazz and two other continental hops- perhaps tettnanger and styrian goldings.
Spring water and copious amounts of phosporic acid to remove the temporary hardness. Hmmm, is it still spring water?
Lager yeast - rumour has it that the original culture came from Stroh's; not sure if they are still using it.
I did manage to corner one of the brewers one time and he was confident enough to tell me your malt mix is correct and it used to be imported German malt but is now domestic...same proportions and styles though. I l can confirm there are more than just saaz hops in the mix ( their hop board shows them as pellet form) ...as for the yeast??? They seem to be guarded about it and there is a separate yeast quality control lab and elaborate yeast recovery and cleaning quality processes...so the yeast figures big in the formula. I can't say much about the water conditioning but I do know it is still trucked into the plant from the source.
All I know is all these eclectic ingredients work and make a good uniue lager that defies style stereotyping.