December 11, 2014

Destihl Wild Sour Series: Flanders Red

Brewed By: Destihl Restaurant and Brew Works in Normal/Bloomington, Illinois 
Purchased: 12oz CAN from a 4-pack bought at Binny's in Chicago, IL; 2014
Style/ABV: Flanders Red, 6.1%
Reported IBUs: 15

More Destihl Sours woo. About Destihl
Destihl is a brewery (Bloomington) and brewpub (Normal, IL & Champaign, IL) based out of the Midwest. Specifically, the middle of Illinois in the middle of the United States. Daaaa midwest. The brewery was founded by CEO & Brewmaster, Matt Potts, in 2007. Like many brewery founders, Potts started out as a homebrewer, and would eventually trade his law school education and law practice for those sweet barley suds. Destihl currently brews a myriad of regular and barrel-aged beers, including an increasing portfolio of tasty sour brews. For more info, check out their website
The Flanders Red is is an "acidic, sour ale with an initial impression of tart cherries and sour candy." 

This pours into a hazy, murky, dark ruby red/auburn body, kicking up two fingers of brown-tinged head. It looks like cherry juice, or your typical Flanders Red. There is good lacing on this one, and solid head retention.
Destihl Wild Sour Series: Flanders Red

On the aroma: a surprising amount of malty goodness. I'm getting cherry, brown bread, bready notes, and some coffee? What? There is definitely a Brown Ale aroma thing going on with the nose, with some hints of dusty cocoa as well. There is some faint berries and vinegar sourness in the back of this, but the aroma is mildly sour. 

This is straightforward, and does taste much like an American Brown Ale base that has been given the 12-step Flanders Red treatment. I'm getting big cherries, light vinegar tartness, lots of acid, and some nuttiness, toast, bread, and hints of dusty cocoa and coffee ala an American Brown. It's intriguing, albeit without any crazy Brett funk or oak character. Actually, I don't even know if this is aged on wood. It tastes slightly oaky, but that could just be my mind playing tricks on me + the acid and sourness messing with my head. The sourness in this beer comes in spurts, and isn't bad at all. 

This is medium-light bodied with above-average complexity. Palate depth is good, and I'm finding this to be pretty enjoyable. There is a nice balance between the ABV, body, carbonation, and sourness. I'm kind of digging how the base beer here is an American Brown Ale...it's like a new twist on this classic style. Up front: sour cherries, red cider vinegar, some burgeoning malts; the mids roll into the malts, with that Brown Ale base; the back end features lingering malts, dusty cacao, bread, faint coffee, sour cherries; and the finish is surprisingly dry. Good acidity, okay sourness.

Rating: Above-Average (4.0/5.0 Untappd) 

I'm feeling a Light Above-Average here. Solid shit, I would buy this again in the can. It would be nice to see this just sitting around on shelves. Food pairings here include grilled meats and poutine. 

Random Thought: These Destihl 4-packs are like $10? Pretty solid deal, IMO.

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