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Newbs: I switched to red wine myself.
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yea purple haze is always good choice when i go outFirst tried this at a popular pizza franchise (Mellow Mushroom) & have been drinking it ever since. Just one of those brews that isn't dense/bitter. Goes perfect with snacks, food, etc...
Let me preface this review by saying this: I do not enjoy pumpkin beer. Overall, it just doesn't do it for me. Something about a jazzed-up brown ale in a pint glass with cinnamon sugar around the rim just rubs me the wrong way. However, I'd heard a lot of good things about this one so I figured I'd give it its day in court. Pours a deep ruby color with a fizzy head that dissipates pretty quickly. After I poured this beer the aroma took over the room. I was sitting almost two feet away from the glass, but I got hit with overwhelming scents of pumpkin spice, cinnamon, nutmeg, and cloves. The taste matched the aroma exactly. Spiced generously, but not overly sweet and dangerously drinkable. This beer is 8%, and I'm just about to finish this one after having opened it roughly 15 minutes ago. I could get myself into trouble with this. All in all, this beer made me realize that I have to keep an open mind and not shut out an entire style based off of a few lackluster experiences. This will probably be the only sixer of this that I buy this year, but I certainly don't regret it. 9.25/10
1366. Safe to say its the oldest beer in the world. But I'm a Guinness(stout not draught) guy when winter kicks in.
The world's oldest continuously operating brewery
The Weihenstephan Brewery can trace its roots at the abbey to 768, as a document from that year refers to a hop garden in the area paying a tithe to the monastery. A brewery was licensed by the City of Freising in 1040, and that is the founding date claimed by the modern brewery. The brewery thus has a credible claim to being the oldest working brewery in the world. (Weltenburg Abbey, also in Bavaria, has had a brewery in operation since 1050, and also known as "Corn Beer" claims to be the oldest brewery in the world.) When the monastery and brewery were secularised under Napoleon Bonaparte in 1803, they became possessions of the State of Bavaria.
had this for the first time. this bear is flat out good. its got a great holiday taste to it that isn't too strong, but not too subtle, and its imperial so its packing 8%. its wayyy better than shipyard or dogfish head, although i don't really remember the dogfish pumkin ale so ill have to try that again.
anyways weyerbacher...go grab that. its
I prefer FBS close to room temperature. Hell...I prefer a lot of beers close to room temperature, come to think of it.Sunday during Breaking Bad, I sipped on a Founder's breakfast stout ( I have two left). Compared to the first time around, I let this one sit just a little bit longer getting it to near room temperature.. It's almost better warm than the 40-50 degrees I normally drink beer at.... Not much more can be said about its greatness. You taste all the things that makes it great, and then there is no weird aftertaste or anything in the swallow. A lot of stouts, the flavors just sneak in with weird notes as you are swallowing. It's tough to explain... I noticed on the bottle that the IBU (bitterness) rating is near 60... I was shocked.. I have tried a few other oatmeal stouts that went a bit too far with the hops.. Here again it was so subtle, it tasted like there wasn't any hops.
I generally prefer IPAs on the cooler side, but closer to room temperature than fridge temperature. I know what you mean, though. The styles that I find work best at room temperature are Stouts, Porters, Old Ales, Scotch Ales, English Barleywines, and Beligian Quads/Tripels. My general rule of thumb is the hoppier the beer, the lower the temperature I drink it at. ABV also plays a role. I'll drink an Imperial IPA at a slightly higher temperature than a Single IPA, probably because I enjoy a little booziness on my beers.^nice,,, never had a barley wine but that looks like one to admire, based on what I've heard about it.
Sure beats out what I'm drinking.... A 9 month old Ten Fidy is even better with age. The dark fruit/plum raisin smell and flavor is even more present. I thank the local beer store for ceiling it on their own terms. It would not have lasted at my household. Alcohol heat/taste is present in first few sips. Then its smooth sailing. After reviewing this one numerous times now, it is simply the easiest to drink 8-12% beer I have ever had. Very well rounded. I read that this years release already had a few release parties. No where to be seen just yet. I'm guessing late October.
I swear it must just be where I live but we get nothing rare or reserve series status, and it doesnt seem like any breweries locally go that route of true "rarity". The best we can get is seasonals that "sell out" eventually.
Comparison ford, have you tried IPAs at room temp? I tend to only try it with heavier sipping beers. I have let an IPA sit out to about 55 degrees and the taste changed completely. For some IPAs, its for the better. For others, bad things happen. Off flavors that are usually hidden by the temp.
In the last of what appears to be of the summer beers, I finished off some Deschutes Twilight Summer Ale. This one is almost on the hop level of a pale ale. I enjoy that out of the beer. Citrus and lemon notes galore... Seek this one out to try come May of 2014. Not many summer ales are solid (wasatch's summerbrau I had two years back and loved it. But havent had it since sadly.. Sam adams summer ale is not to my liking but will drink if only thing available on draft. And New Belgiums summer ale is pretty horrid). So this one isn't too too bad
In a quest to trying to find a solid Cream Ale to match up with a local breweries, I found a Anderson Valley Solstice summer Cream Ale..... This one was overall a very light offering. I tasted tiny hints of what appeared to be cream soda type taste, and then just light malt all around.. This to me is not what makes a cream ale great. The sweetness needed to be a bit higher.. Overall very disappointing to not find a solid canned or bottled cream ale in my area. As a standalone product, this one is a great substitute if you dont want much of any hop prescence in a session style summer setting.
I guess I know what to buy next May lol.. Homework is done on summer brews, october brews.. Winter beers next? YUP
Gonna try and make a total wine run today
I'm into blondes / wheat beers, any suggestions I should look for?