February 20, 2015

Community Beer Company Public Ale

Brewed By: Community Beer Company in Dallas, Texas  
Purchased: 12oz bottle generously gifted to me; 2015 
Style/ABV: English-style Bitter/ESB, 5.5%
Reported IBUs: 38

Tonight's beer was generously gifted to me to be reviewed. This beer represents a simpler, more accessible style in the ESB -- making it a potential candidate to be representative of Dallas' so-called regular staples, much like a Spotted Cow or Shiner Bock. As always, I like to give a shout out to the brewery. The Community Beer Company is a brewery based out of Dallas, Texas. The brewery was founded in January 2013 by Kevin Carr, head brewer Jamie Fulton, and brewer/microbiologist Aric Hulsey. With a state-of-the-art brewhouse located near downtown Dallas, and an in-house yeast lab, the Community Beer Company has worked hard to become a staple of Dallas craft beer. For more info, you can check out their website or Facebook page

The Public Ale, is an Extra Special/Premium Bitter brewed with 100% Maris Otter English pale malt and English crystal malt, a blend of English, German, and American hops, and in-house English ale yeast. The bottle reads: "Inspired by the warm and joyful spirit of British public houses, or "pubs", this beer was created to share with your mates! Brewed with heirloom English Maris Otter malt, a blend of international hops and a distinct English yeast strain, this ale is a study of balance and subtle complexities. The intricate malt character is balanced by a beautiful blend of herbal, spicy and fruity hops, all in perfect harmony with the gentle fruitiness contributed by our yeast during fermentation. An easy drink to comfort any occasion, welcome to our favorite year-round session beer: Public Ale."
Community Beer Company Public Ale

The Pubic Ale pours into a hazy, unfiltered, orange body. It's almost reddish in certain lights, and orange/yellow in others. The beer has lazy, mid-sized carbonation, and a couple of fingers of caramel-tinged head. It's a fine looking beer with sustaining head retention, lacing, and carbonation. Kudos to Public Ale keeping it unfiltered and conditioned.

Bitters are not an inherently bold style...they are subtle beers, if not simple and eloquent. This has a lot of nice aromatics, with bready malts hinting at something between white and whole grain bread. There's a lot of caramel and toffee sweetness, with a hint of toast...it's very much in line with other sweet, malt-forward English/German styles of beer. What I really like about the aroma of this is the nice grassy hop notes, and the subtle berry sweetness. The aroma on this beer is less sweet and more hop-forward than something like Goose Island's Honker's Ale. With that said...

Wow. I see why this has won a gold medal in 2013 and 2014. This is fantastic, for the style. Again, using Goose Island's Honker's Ale as a baseline; this blows that away. This has an intense malt body, with lots of caramel, honey, toffee, and sweet bread. The malt sweetness gives way to some really nice hops, but more importantly, the malt sweetness gives way to this hint of minerality. It really does finish nicely, and without any overt or fake sweetness. The hops in here hint towards grassy bitterness, berry and toffee sweetness, and some crisp bitterness.

For 5.5%, this has a medium-body with fantastic palate depth, good duration, and lots of complexity. I'm really impressed with the depth of malt, yeast, and hop character in this beer. The other thing I'm really enjoying is how this never gets overly sweet or astringent. The Honker's Ale tilts towards being too sweet from time to time, which is a serious bummer. This hits bready malts, toffee, honey, and sweet caramel up front; that gives way to grassy hops, berries, toffee; and the back end has some nice yeast character, nice water bite, and a clean not-too-sweet finish. I'm not a huge ESB guy, but if this was available in my area I would consider making it a regular part of my fridge stash. 

Rating: Divine Brew (4.5/5.0 Untappd)

I'm feeling a Light 
Divine Brew on this. This is a really good American-style ESB. Or, to be more accurate, this is a really good English-style ESB brewed in America. Dallas. Think about that. If you are in Dallas and have access to this beer, you should pick it up. This is a beer (and a style of beer) that has a pretty large appeal. It's not overly hoppy, it's not overly boozy...perfect for sharing with casual or serious beer drinkers and certainly okay to pair with some fish and chips or whatever. I don't know. This does make me want to write a scathing review for the Honker's Ale. 


Random Thought: Spotted Cow is another amazing, underrated beer. It's not underrated by the thousands of people that drink it regularly, but it is underrated by beer geeks who have dismissed the style as being simple. It's not. So there is something to these simple styles of beer, and they are hard to do well. 

1 comment:

  1. Glad that you liked it! Really great depth for such a generally reserved style.

    ReplyDelete