Ovila Quad is a barrel-aged concoction that is aged in brandy barrels (it has a cousin aged in wine barrels which may be reviewed separately depending on our whims). This beer is a belgian trappist style brew. It's flavor is more yeasty than hoppy. The Ovila quad is sweet with a subtle hint of brandy at the finish. It's also quite potent, clocking in at 10.1% alcohol by volume.
Ovila is brewed by Sierra Nevada and some of the proceeds go to support an order of monks in Chico, California at the Abbey of New Clairvaux. These monks are rebuilding the chapter house from an ancient monastery in Spain that was purchased by William Hearst in the early 20th century and shipped stone by stone to San Francisco. Hearst purchased the stones from the monastery in order to build another spectacular castle (a la the Hearst Castle, but this time for his mother), but the project fell through as his fortunes waned in the Great Depression. The bricks were eventually given to the City of San Francisco and sat in huge crates in Golden Gate Park for decades. They were going to be used to build a museum of medieval history, but the appropriate funding was never secured. While stored in the park, the crates caught fire and many of the stones were irrevocably damaged. However, a sufficient number survived to rebuild the chapter house from the original monastery. The city gifted the remaining stones to the monks in 1994, and they broke ground on the chapter house in 2004. It is nearly complete now and can be toured by the general public.



