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What Beers Did You Drink Today? Or Yesterday? (Part 3)


FrogPrincesse

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[Host's note:  To avoid an excessive load on our servers this topic has been split.  The discussion continues from here]

 

 

A couple of beers from a relatively recent trip to London.

 

Yakima red ale on draft. Yakima is brewed by Meantime, a brewing company located in Greenwich, using five hop varieties from the Yakima valley in Washington state. The beer was moderately hoppy with a good malt to bitterness balance. Very nice.

 

Beavertown 8 Ball rye IPA, an American-style IPA brewed in London. Love the wild label. It was caramel-colored and had a nice mix of spicy rye and resinous hops. I liked this a lot and want to try the rest of their line.

 

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Edited by lesliec
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A couple of beers from a relatively recent trip to London.

 

Yakima red ale on draft. Yakima is brewed by Meantime, a brewing company located in Greenwich, using five hop varieties from the Yakima valley in Washington state. The beer was moderately hoppy with a good malt to bitterness balance. Very nice.

 

Beavertown 8 Ball rye IPA, an American-style IPA brewed in London. Love the wild label. It was caramel-colored and had a nice mix of spicy rye and resinous hops. I liked this a lot and want to try the rest of their line.

 

 

 

You go to London to drink American style beer? :wink:

 

I wonder which hop varieties in the Yakima.  My first batch of homebrew was made with road-kill hops that fell of the harvest trucks in the Yakima valley.  You should make a trip there for the beer and wine, afterall Yakima bills itself as the Palm Springs of Washington.

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It's almost never bad to feed someone.

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A couple of local brews

 

Australian Brewery's Pale Ale. Never tried their products prior to this but they use cans. Unusual for a craft brewery. Heavily carbonated. Really needed to be decanted into a glass and even with a careful pour that took a while. Big on the citrus. Crisp. Yeasty. I rather liked this one. I reckon I'll check out the rest of their range.

 

Cooper's Vintage '14. I think I need to revisit this one as all I came away with was a sense that, yes, I liked it. I have some bottles of '13 kicking around and it seems ... more approachable than they do but it's possible this is just due to age. '14 seems a little more restrained than last year's batch. 

Chris Taylor

Host, eG Forums - ctaylor@egstaff.org

 

I've never met an animal I didn't enjoy with salt and pepper.

Melbourne
Harare, Victoria Falls and some places in between

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You go to London to drink American style beer? :wink:

 

I wonder which hop varieties in the Yakima.  My first batch of homebrew was made with road-kill hops that fell of the harvest trucks in the Yakima valley.  You should make a trip there for the beer and wine, afterall Yakima bills itself as the Palm Springs of Washington.

Funny, right? The reality is that I travel with an open mind and just try whatever knowledgeable people tell me to try! So far it's worked pretty well for me.

 

I tried to find out what the five hops in the Yakima Red were, but no luck so far. I am curious as well.

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[...]

Never tried their products prior to this but they use cans. Unusual for a craft brewery. [...]

 

Actually this is getting more and more common. We have the same trend in San Diego with craft breweries such as Modern Times and even Stone releasing some of their beers in cans. The advantages being convenience, ease of transportation, longer shelf-life, cost, etc.

 

NPR wrote a little article on this trend of craft beers in cans a few weeks ago.

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I am surprised I haven't talked about this one already, so let's take care of this omission asap.

Lightning Amber Ale. Lightning ("Better Beer Through Science") is another brewery in San Diego (Poway, to be exact). They've been around for about 10 years.

This specific beer is an English Special Bitter (ESB) done the SD way. So it has a solid malt backbone combined with more hops than you would expect for this style. It remains well balanced with a pleasantly bitter finish. Very nice accompaniement to a plate of halibut tacos.

 

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The beer board at BLAH this weekend.

 

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For the first round, went with Hottenroth Berliner Weisse, a  German-style sour ale from The Bruery (front) and Seizoen Bretta from Logsdon. Didn't care much for the Bretta (good thing, it was not mine). Very dry and almost austere (drier than the bottled version). The Hottenroth, on the other hand, was tart and crisp, interesting, and refreshing. Milk combined with tart fruit and citrus. It did not help that they were polar opposites.

 

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Second round - Ritual Hellion (Belgian strong pale ale) (back - excuse the messy table). Yeasty, apricot, with a dry, slightly bitter finish. Overall smooth.

 

For my dessert I picked Consecration from Russian River (right).

Consecration is a Belgian sour aged in Cabernet barrels. The cab influence was obvious with a lot of red fruit in the beer. It was rich, thick, potent, delicious.

 

 

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  • 3 weeks later...

Efes Filtresiz (unfiltered), a Turkish beer that doesn't suck! (The Dark is not awful. Filtresiz might be better. Regular Efes is RANCID)

 

Also, Bomonti Filtresiz is not terrible either...

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1609737_10100203822036171_49293420650100

 

Westvleteren 12.

 

I don't know if it's the best in the world, but it really does live up to the hype

 

I remember paying a not-insignificant amount for one bottle of each of the three Westvleteren offerings and postage from Belgium to Australia. My reaction was much the same as yours.

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Chris Taylor

Host, eG Forums - ctaylor@egstaff.org

 

I've never met an animal I didn't enjoy with salt and pepper.

Melbourne
Harare, Victoria Falls and some places in between

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Witch's Wit from the Lost Abbey. A very good example of witbier with the typical esters, coriander, orange peel. From recollection alone, similar to Hoegaarden but with more character. It kills me to think that I haven't been to their brewery yet; I don't know what I am waiting for. They are located in Stone's old facility in San Marcos.

 

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Purchased a few beers today. The first one I cracked open was Crown Golden Ale. I'm not fond of Crown Lager: a mass-produced beer that is marketed as something special (gold label, 'royal' name). The Golden Ale is a little better. Unremarkable but drinkable. Can't see myself throwing down the cash for a case any time soon, though. It's just ... plain

 

Murray's Rudeboy Pilsner. Bready. Crisp. 

Chris Taylor

Host, eG Forums - ctaylor@egstaff.org

 

I've never met an animal I didn't enjoy with salt and pepper.

Melbourne
Harare, Victoria Falls and some places in between

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More Moa. 99 Not Out Pale Ale. For people living in dark places the name refers to a boring sport called cricket. Supposedly this beer was developed in partnership with Shane Warne, a cricketer famous for being a cricketer and for smoking when he shouldn't be smoking and for shagging Elizabeth Hurley. The beer itself is unremarkable. The flavour profile reminds me a whole lot of the flavour profile of generic, mass-produced Australian ale.

Chris Taylor

Host, eG Forums - ctaylor@egstaff.org

 

I've never met an animal I didn't enjoy with salt and pepper.

Melbourne
Harare, Victoria Falls and some places in between

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4 Pines Hefeweizen. Fruity. Tropical fruit. Mushy fruit. Some weird lactic notes to it that didn't sit well with me. I dislike the flavour of milk. Heavy carbonation. This one's just a no.

Chris Taylor

Host, eG Forums - ctaylor@egstaff.org

 

I've never met an animal I didn't enjoy with salt and pepper.

Melbourne
Harare, Victoria Falls and some places in between

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Jo - This was a limited release in 2012. I've had it at Stone, but it's long gone from the stores. Maybe your son was smart enough to stock up on it!

 

I am so behind on my beers notes it's not even funny. 

 

Here was the beer board at Tender Greens, one of my favorite ultra-casual lunch places, a few days ago. All local brews. I had tried everything already except for the Saint Archer white ale, so I went with that. Saint Archer is another craft brewery in San Diego located in Miramar, close to where I work.

It's a typical white beer, coriander and orange, nothing offensive, and refreshing. Nice with my salad.

 

 

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Edited by FrogPrincesse (log)
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Jo - This was a limited release in 2012. I've had it at Stone, but it's long gone from the stores. Maybe your son was smart enough to stock up on it!

 

 

 

 

It has been brewed since then and this year it was brewed by Dogfish Head without the other two breweries participating, though it will rotate to the others in future years.

 

http://www.dogfish.com/community/blogfish/members/mariah/saison-du-buff-it%E2%80%99s-time-to-go-solo.htm

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It has been brewed since then and this year it was brewed by Dogfish Head without the other two breweries participating, though it will rotate to the others in future years.

 

http://www.dogfish.com/community/blogfish/members/mariah/saison-du-buff-it%E2%80%99s-time-to-go-solo.htm

Cool. Thanks for the correction!

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