![Ethel Mae helps with the walnut harvest Ethel Mae helps with the walnut harvest](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhJVqtEtBAONP3QvdrFAkQutgc3hlD7ESqwgAv-iWVYWKQu2ykYT1cLhX3C9Hl8O3DtnIID0_rOOjCVoV5aL8HYHQp7n9KFPFuuNrpmUQlCk0OsGyJYRiRTq71gVtewXh1wE0Ko/s320/02+%28Small%29.jpg)
This autumn, there were more walnuts than usual. Many more. So, after a lengthy afternoon round-up, we rewarded ourselves with a special delight. We mulled beer,
![mulling a Quelque Chose beer mulling a Quelque Chose beer](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjmcvmbS_kbU1BwCR9zmLjpKQ6nWTz4_KpYQj4BQkMuXbhyphenhyphenLizQ1gZLwsfpgOkes5LtRz-JcyEp1UTS72mAHNR6xGnIjnMFcpaM2jrJXxtMvPmPxhTHiMhaeRHDUwbo87c2pa5r/s320/05+%28Small%29.jpg)
This may sound peculiar, heating a beer, but with the right beer, the aroma can be wonderful, the taste unique, and the effect, well, warming. We used Quelque Chose, an oak-aged 8% alcohol by volume (abv) tart cherry beer, produced by Unibroue, located just outside Montreal in Canada. (Pronounce the beer: KELL-kuh shows)
Method:
Two 500-ml bottles of Quelque Chose, 1/2 stick of cinnamon, 2 cloves. Put the crock pot at low. Enjoy in an hour. Delicious! (Be sparing with spices. A little bit goes a long way.)
Quelque Chose is uncarbonated, so it lends itself to heating without bubble-over. For something else (which is a rough translation of the beer's French name), try Quelque Chose ice-cold in the summer, and as a Mimosa for brunch.
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