Samuel Adams Brews ‘Space Craft’ Beer with Inspiration4-flown Hops

Boston-based brewer, Samuel Adams has taken its latest project to new heights – literally. The company’s newest brew, Space Craft, has been made with inspirationa4-flown hops from space.

The hops used in the beer orbited Earth with the Inspiration4 crew for three days in September, flying more than 585 km above the orbit of the International Space Station on board a SpaceX Dragon spacecraft.

Led by Jared Isaacman, the billionaire CEO of Shift4 Payments, the inspiration4 crew also included Hayley Arceneaux, a cancer survivor and physician’s assistant; Sian Proctor, a geoscientist and science communicator; and Chris Sembroski, an aerospace data engineer. The mission made history, in part, by being the first to enter orbit without a career astronaut on board.

Samuel Adams replied to a Twitter post by the CEO of Inspiration4 and, in addition to receiving the space-flown hops to make Space Craft, was named the official beer of the mission.

“The 66 lbs [30 kg] of Citra and Mosiac orbited hops that returned, landed right in this stellar west coast style IPA,” Samuel Adams wrote on its website.

The brewery describes Space Craft as having a “firm bitterness” with tropical notes of grapefruit, guava and passionfruit that “co-pilot” with piney and resiny hop aromas. The label art depicts the hops floating around the head of a spacesuited astronaut with what appears to be an Apollo command and service module in orbit over Earth reflecting off the suit’s helmet visor.

The name was generated from a call-out Samuel Adams had with over 5,000 responses from fans in addition with input from the brewery and Inspiration4 crew.

Samuel Adams is set to release Space Craft on Nov. 16 so that it coincides with the expected peak of the Leonid meteor shower. A four-pack of one pint (16 oz.) Space Craft cans is priced at $22.33 — an homage to the length of time that the Inspiration4 crew was in space: 2 days, 23 hours and 3 minutes.

In celebration of the release and the mission that both inspired and enabled it, Samuel Adams will be donating $100,000 to St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital, furthering the Inspiration4 crew’s successful goal of raising $200 million for pediatric cancer research and patient care.

Samuel Adams is not the first to make beer using space-flown ingredients. In 2009, the oldest brewery in Japan, Sapporo, used barley grown from seeds flown to the International Space Station to create a limited edition ale. Five years later, the Oregon-based Ninkasi Brewing Company launched yeast aboard a commercial suborbital spaceflight to make “Ground Control,” an imperial stout.

Budweiser has been working on crafting a space beer since 2017.  The Anheuser-Busch brand has funded and flown a series of experiments to the U.S. National Laboratory on the International Space Station to better understand the germination and growth of barley in the space environment.

Article info found on Collect Space