February 4, 2014

Mikkeller drumBAR Black Sap

Brewed By: Mikkeller in Copenhagen, Denmark (brewed & bottled at De Proef Brouwerij, Lochristi-Hijfte, Belgium)
Purchased: 375ml (12.7oz) bottle bought at West Lakeview Liquors in Chicago, Illinois; 2013
Style/ABV: Imperial Porter, 10.0%
Reported IBUs: ?

I honestly can't believe I have only ever reviewed one other Mikkeller beer, which is the
gimmicky but delicious 1000 IBUs. I guess I just prefer the Evil Twin? Ah...aha...get it? Anyway, about Mikkeller
Mikkeller is that European brewery that does things like an American craft brewery. The brewery was founded in 2006 by Mikkel Borg Bjergsø, a humble math and physics teacher who enjoyed craft beer and homebrewing. Mikkel and his childhood friend Kristian Keller bought a few American books about brewing, and began brewing beer and entering it into competitions (and winning!) for two and a half years. Eventually, Mikkel and Keller began brewing beer at the Danish microbrewery Ørbæk, and Mikkel's twin brother Jeppe began selling their beer at his beer shop. Mikkeller's first big break came with their infamous "Beer Geek Breakfast." Since then, the brewery exports beer to over 40 countries, and brews the majority of their beer at de Proef Brouwerij in Belgium. However, Mikkeller is also nicknamed the "phantom" or "gypsy" microbrewery, as they brew at a number of host facilities in many different countries; they have also brewed over 100 different beers in a wide variety of styles. You can read more about the brewery here
So yeah, tonight's brew is so OG and original there doesn't even appear to be a blurb on the website. I guess Mikkel is too busy flying around gypsy-brewing beer to update his website, IT'S OKAY I LOVE YOU ANYWAY. The bottle on this beer quietly states: "Imperial Porter brewed with coffee & aged in maple syrup barrels." That's good news for me, because I like maple syrup, coffee, and Imperial Porters. 
Mikkeller drumBAR Black Sap

The beer pours into a black, cola-esque body, kick up three fingers of sandy/tan head. The head is bready and thick, and sustaining surprisingly well. Bright light confirms the same stuff...opaque, black body, and a finger of brown head that is still hanging on. There's some nice lacing as well. 

On the aroma: surprising anise and dark fruits...probably from the coffee. If you dig a bit further, you get walloped with dense, thick, earthy coffee. I'm getting intense coffee, espresso, char, dark roast, fudge, hints of mocha or dark baker's chocolate, and some maple/pine sap sweetness. There is some oak and wood as well.

The taste is a collision of maple sap sweetness, tart dark fruits, subtle coffee, and huge char, roast, dirt, earthy espresso, and dark baker's chocolate. The front end has lots of maple sweetness and dark fruits, but the back end dials up huge roast and char, with hints of baker's chocolate, espresso, coffee, and some boozy mouthfeel. The back end even gets a bit ashy, with some leather and tobacco. 

This is surprisingly medium-light bodied, with lots of carbonation and tart fruitiness to help move things along. Palate depth and duration is surprisingly good, as the beer drops off and then kicks into second gear with huge roast and char and baker's chocolate. You really don't get any of the 10% except for some welcomed boozy complexity and warming in your chest. This is moderately complex as well. So I don't know why I'm not madly in love with this...up front: sweet maple syrup, tart dark fruits, sweeter coffee and espresso. Then, go for a jog or something and wait a minute. Better late than never, right? The mid palate shows up...about 20 seconds later (impressive), with MASSIVE roast, char, dark molasses, grilled meats, earthy dirt and coffee and espresso, dark baker's chocolate, and some ash; the back end features trailing roast and char with some leather and tobacco, boozy warming, a dry roasty finish. 

Rating: Above-Average (3.5/5.0 Untappd)

I'm feeling a Light 
Above-Average here...this is a very complex, subtle beer. It reminds me very much of The Beer That Saved Christmas, because both beers have really complex flavor profiles that don't assault your senses. You could probably miss out on everything that is good about this beer if you drink it too cold (drink at room temp), or if you drink it too fast. This beer is the type of beer you'll want to mull over for a while, and you'll want to drink the entire bottle. So don't bring this to a bottle share. The contrast of sweet maple sap/syrup and dark fruits and the huge earthy char is nice. It suggests to me that you could pair this beer with a robust cigar, grilled meats, steak, a big burger, or strong aged cheeses. I'd love to see this beer in a slightly larger bottle format, 12.7oz is just not enough to properly mull over. Especially since this wasn't cheap. But I'll toss this a soft recommendation. 

Random Thought: It's totally snowing out...and....I don't even care anymore. Whatever. I'm ready for Spring and Saisons.

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