Showing posts with label American Pale Wheat Ale. Show all posts
Showing posts with label American Pale Wheat Ale. Show all posts

February 28, 2015

Revolver Brewing Blood & Honey American Ale

Brewed By: Revolver Brewing, LLC in Granbury, TX  
Purchased: 12oz bottle generously gifted to me; 2015 
Style/ABV: American Wheat Ale/Fruit Beer, 7.0%
Reported IBUs: ?

Tonight's beer was generously gifted to me, and I am excited to try it. This is a strong wheat beer described as an "ale brewed with blood orange peel, honey & spices. The bottle reads: "An unfiltered, deep-golden ale brewed with malted two-row barley and wheat. Finished with blood orange peel, Texas hone, and a blend of spices." 

The Revolver Brewing Company is a brewery based out of Granbury, TX. The brewery was founded by father and son, Ron and Rhett Keisler, with master brewer and cicerone, Grant Wood. The brewery uses in-house water from their own well, and incorporates seasonal ingredients into their beers. For more info, check out the brewery's website or Facebook page

As noted above, the Blood & Honey is an American Wheat Ale, brewed with malted two row barley and wheat. The beer is finished with Blood Orange zest, local Fall Creek Farms Honey, and other spices.
Revolver Brewing Blood & Honey American Ale

This pours into a juicy, unfiltered, orange-yellow body. It's murky and there is yeast sediment; it looks like orange juice and for all intents and purposes it might as well be. There's a firm white head that sticks around and will continue to stick around, as you'd expect with a wheat beer. It's purdy and if you like murky ass Saisons and rustic Wheat beers this is going to be right up your alley.

The aroma on this beer is overwhelmingly spice, with pretty pungent allspice, a little lavender, and maybe something in the realm of cardamom. Beneath the waves of spice is a nice dose of orange peel, which does come through on the aroma. The faint hint of malt on the nose suggests wheat beer, but it is blunted. 

I am instantly reminded of two beers: Jackie O's Paw Paw Wheat, and the Blue Moon Grand Cru. But this is better than both of those beers. For starters, it isn't a train-wreck, so it is an instant improvement upon the Blue Moon swill. Second, it is a bit lighter than the Paw Paw Wheat. I'm getting a really nice orange note, with lots of gentle spice. The spice leans towards allspice and flower/floral notes, with some cardamom in the mix. It reminds me of Blue Moon's Belgian White, and I would probably call this beer a White/Witbier if you handed it to me in a blind tasting. It's actually really nice, with orange peel and orange notes that continue to open up as you drink the beer. It's a real orange note, and I taste actual orange zest. The wheat malts ground the orange flavor, so this never drifts into a mimosa. The spice in the taste is much more mild than the spice in the aroma, which is a good thing. All things considered...I would classify this as a Witbier, and I would say it is really well executed. 

This beer is growing on me as I sip it. I'm not getting any of the mentioned 7% alcohol in the taste. This beer is medium-bodied with low carbonation that hits your tongue towards the mid palate. Palate depth is where I want it to be, and this is actually fairly complex. THIS ISN'T REFRESHING, per se. And should it be? Not at 7%...right? The carb, body weight, and heavy wheat malt finish never hint at summer beer to pound back while on the patio. I would definitely drink this in the summer, but this is truly the middle ground between something you would chug and something you would sip on. It opens up with lots of citrus peel, orange zest, and hints of grapefruit and mimosas up front; the mids roll into the spice and carbonation, dialing up some citrus zest, cardamom, tingly carbonation, champagne notes, and light allspice; the back end drops a healthy dose of wheat malts, and you get that hint of honey. The honey probably helps to weigh this beer down, and it feels like a beefed up Witbier in many respects.

Rating: Above-Average (4.0/5.0 Untappd) 

I'm feeling a Strong Above-Average here. Witbiers are not my style but this beer would certainly change my mind. It's really executed with finesse and has a refined quality about it that is hard to appreciate unless you have consumed a lot of different beers. It's clear that Revolver Brewing has a deft hand and they know how to infuse strong flavors like spices into their beer without turning it into a shit show. I would reach for this beer in the summer and treat it like a glass of sweetened iced tea. Something to sip on. I could also see this beer pairing well with a fruit salad, white fish, ceviche, and other summer foods.

Random Thought: I actually think this is a perfect "Texas" beer. It feels Texas to me.

February 7, 2015

Blue Moon First Peach Ale

Brewed By: Miller Brewing Company (MillerCoors) in Milwaukee, Wisconsin   
Purchased: 12oz bottle from a 12-pack bought at Jewel-Osco in Chicago, IL; 2015
Style/ABV: Fruit Beer/American Pale Wheat Ale, 5.6%
Reported IBUs: 15

I like peaches. About MillerCoors aka Blue Moon:

Blue Moon was first brewed in 1995 at one of MillerCoors' R&D arms; in a sandlot, in Denver, Colorado, by Keith Villa. Keith Villa is an OG player these days. He's off judging beer, and talking about his PhD in brewing from the University of Brussels. There's a PhD for everything these days. Seriously though, it's Blue Moon. Read the Wiki
Aside from the kind of rapey name, the First Peach Ale is a beer brewed with caramel and wheat malts; Mittelfruh hops; and is described as a "classic Belgian sour brown ale with an American Pale Wheat Ale." This isn't sour at all, and has tenuous ties to anything that is sour, therefore we can only conclude that Kevin Villa is actually a hack and the Blue Moon website is run by penises. First peach, seriously? 
Blue Moon First Peach Ale

This pours into a light brown, reddish-body. It's filtered and not at all hazy, and screams nothing Belgian or sour. There is a nice finger of wheat-fueled, amber-hued head. The hues are endless with Blue Moon. I really don't care about taking cheap shots, but Keith Villa is apparently a BJCP judge or something. Seriously, a sour?

The aroma on this is super inviting. A lot of people are calling this "overly" peachy and "too much peach." And maybe after drinking a proper soured fruit beer that could be said to be true. This actually nails the peach thing, with pronounced peach juice, peach tea, peach currants, peach pie, and Lipton Iced Tea: Peach. The aroma briefly dabbles in the realm of Del Monte Fruit Cocktails, but beneath all the heavy peach sweetness are some hints of caramel malts, and some slight candy sugar Belgian spice. And that's all I really got for this.

The taste is a shell of the aroma, and reverts to this basic Blue Moon profile present in all their beers. Again, Keith Villa, you fucking hack. You will forever be known as the corporate shill that brews these regurgitated saccharine-sweet wheat beers with this awful extract malt profile. I'm actually quite partial to Belgian beer, so whenever Blue Moon slaps their Belgian stamp on a product it sort of triggers all sorts of angst. Again, I could not care less that Blue Moon is owned by people that have enough money to clone, kill, and cover up Keith Villa and his whacky creations. I should say this beer tastes like Peach Lipton Tea, peach juice, Del Monte Fruit Cocktail, and misguided caramel malts. There's that underlying saccharine sweetness that tastes like making out on the dance floor with strangers and bar bathroom perfume aromas. 

Blue Moon has become the de facto "crafy" brand for MillerCoors, but the veil is thin. This might as well be Miller High Life with some peach juice thrown into the mix. In some respects, I like that, but I really think this beer would benefit from being slightly more hand job crafted. You just can't reproduce the complexities of those Belgian malts and those Belgian candy sugars in some Canadian sandlot. At any rate, this beer is too sweet for 5.6%. It's medium-bodied with blunted carb. The palate depth is full in all the wrong places, and this lacks complexity. It's not bad and at 5.6% I find it enjoyable...I obviously like something about this beer since I bought a 12-pack. Ummm...yeah.

Rating: Average (3.0/5.0 Untappd)

I'm feeling a Light 
Average on this. This has that great peach note up front, with some Lipton Tea in the mids....it's basically a glorified wine cooler until the back end drops those disjointed and artificial caramel malts. To add insult to injury, the 12-pack design for this beer is shitty and cheap cardboard. I picked up four 12-packs at the store, and each one broke at the handle resulting in a near-disaster. I feel like Blue Moon should make right by that and release the location of Keith Villa's clone factory. 


Random Thought: A 12-pack of this shit costs $14.99. That's not terrible, but you'd be much better off grabbing a 4-pack of Festina Peche for around the same price or less. Even the Lindemans' "Faro" 
Pêche is FAR AND AWAY better than this. At least that beer has some malt complexity, albeit crashing against 8 pounds of added sugar. 

On the Budweiser Super Bowl advertisement that has rustled so many jimmies...I just don't care. I really don't. I thought the ad was clever and effective. It hit its mark, and craft beer shouldn't be effected. This isn't a zero sum game anymore. Craft beer has thousands of brewers, and that's just in America. Craft beer is blowing up in other countries now, including Canada, Mexico, etc. Craft beer is also seeing a Renaissance in countries like England. So what the fuck is the big deal? So what if the commercial was emasculating or portrayed the craft beer crowd as neckbeard hipsters. Go stand in a line for any beer release...you'll be shocked to discover that it is mostly neckbeard hipsters. And many of them are as annoying if not more so than the pretentious douche pianos portrayed in the commercial. 

February 6, 2015

Marz Jungle Boogie

Brewed By: Marz Community Brewing Co. in Chicago, Illinois  
Purchased: 16.9oz bottle bought at West Lakeview Liquors in Chicago, IL; 2015 
Style/ABV: American Pale Wheat Ale, 5.5%
Reported IBUs: 10

Something something Chicago shelf turds. About the Marz Community Brewing Company:
The Marz Community Brewing Company is a brewery based out of Chicago, Illinois. The brewery launched in 2014, and was a project started by brothers Ed and Mike Marszewski, along with a handful of professional and amateur brewers. The website credits several "members of the Colletive," including Alex Robertson, Mike Marszewski, Pete Alvarado, Johanna Wawro, Michael Freimuth, Doktor Kazys Ozelis, Eric Olson, Ed Marszewski, Mike Redwick, Malread Case, Tom Piekarz, Eli Espinoza, and Tim Lange. This is like a football team or film credit roll, and I'm sure their list of contributors will expand. The brewery's POV is that they are a collective comprised of home brewers, professional brewers, and artists, that have united to make small, artisanal batches of beer. And that's all you really need to know. For more info, check out their website or Facebook.
The Jungle Boogie is an American Pale Wheat Ale brewed with rooibos tea. This pours into a dark red, brownish body...the head retention is impressive, and this is hazy as you'd expect with a wheat beer. 
Marz Jungle Boogie

The aroma is absolutely fantastic. There is an explosion of bright Mosaic hops and huge Rooibos tea that culminates in an explosion of bright tropical fruits, berries, fresh tea, green tea, intense wheat, peaches, fresh pine, and steeped tea. It's an incredibly vibrant and fresh aroma, and the fusion of the tea and hops is spot on. 

This drinks more like a pale ale than an American Wheat Ale, but I see why they are calling it that. There's a lot of bright tea notes and clean wheat notes, but beneath the tea and wheat is a serious punch of Mosaic hops. The hops not only drop pine and tropical fruit, but they also blast some lemon, resinous bitterness, and a little hemp oil. The tea notes also come in on the back end adding some tea-like bitterness. You get lots of green tea, and some earthy shades of medium/black tea. The tea-hop punch really works here.

This isn't the first fusion of tea and hops, but it's definitely the most congruent example I have had. I actually enjoy this more than the Laughing Panda Green Tea IPA, and I enjoyed that beer. This is medium-bodied with fairly flat carbonation, but it is so clean and easy to drink. Palate depth is perfect, with good depth and duration. This also unravels with a fair bit of complexity. The tea and bright Mosiac hop notes up front transition into a wheat-heavy mid, with more fruity tea/hop notes. The back end trails off with the fruit and tea, and drops some earthy green tea and lemony resin. This is dropping some peach notes as I sip on it, and it's just incredibly refreshing. I hope this is around in the summer.

Rating: Above-Average (4.0/5.0 Untappd)

I'm feeling a Strong Above-Average on this. I'm tempted to bump this up to a 4.5 but I really need to camp out on another bottle. As it stands, this is maybe the best hop-tea beer I have had. I would definitely recommend this, and the food pairings are endless. I would maybe pair this with a fish dish or sushi...but that's me. 

Random Thought: These Marz guys are really coming out the gates strong.

January 5, 2015

Jackie O's Pub & Brewery Paw Paw Wheat

Brewed By: Jackie O's Pub & Brewery in Athens, Ohio  
Purchased: 375ml/12.7oz single bottle bought at And Beer in Athens, Ohio; 2014 
Style/ABV: American Wheat Ale/Fruit Beer, 9.0%
Reported IBUs: ?

An American Imperial Wheat Ale fermented with Ohio's state fruit, the paw paw? That sounds pretty good. About Jackie O's Pub & Brewery:
Jackie O's is a brewery and brewpub based out of Athens, Ohio. The brewery was founded in 2007 by Art Oestrike and his friend, and brew master, Brad Clark. In 2012 when the production facility expanded, brew master Sean White joined the company. For more info, check out their website or Facebook.
The Paw Paw Wheat is an American Wheat Ale brewed with the paw paw. The paw paw is a tropical-esque fruit that tastes similar to bananas, mangoes, and cantaloupe, with a sweet, wild-wood flavor. It sounds pretty tasty, so let's get this into a glass. 

I love the bottle art, I'm a sucker for all things tiki-tropical. This pours into a lush and radiant bright gold body, with fantastic bronze and yellow tones. The beer is slightly hazy, and kicks up that chalky white-colored head typical to American Wheat Ales. There is some Dalmatian-spotty lacing on my glass, with glossy alcohol legs to boot. 9.0%, here's to you. Cheers. Respect beerz. 
Jackie O's Pub & Brewery Paw Paw Wheat


This has three main aromatics: huge tropical fruits, giant wheat notes, and some booze that points this in the direction of a Weizenbock or maybe a Belgian Strong Ale. I'm getting big pears, mango, tropical citrus, tropical apples, and some funky pineapple. There is definitely some wheat on the aroma, with a little clove funk, and tons of wheat fields. And, as noted already, you do get a touch of Weizenbock booze which is welcomed with this ABV.

Wow...this was not at all what I was expecting. This one is gonna require me to recalibrate, as it is incredibly thick and sweet. It reminds me of a Weizenbock and, oddly enough, strong Lagers. This has tons of wheat malts, with Pilsner-like notes, and lots of fruit. The fruit plays into some of the wheat-alcohol notes, and you get some candy notes, sweet tarts, esters that are suggestive of banana, mango, papaya, sweet melon, honeydew, cantaloupe, and some apple from the wheat.

At 9.0%, I'm not getting much booze, but this is full-bodied and sweet. The wheat adds a lot of body to the beer. This has okay palate depth, okay duration, and okay complexity. It's kind of what you would expect from the description, and that's good for me. Up front: tons of wheat, clove, banana esters, melon, mango; the mids roll into wheat, more esters, more sweet fruit notes; the back end continues to hit the fruit. This is easy-going, and very drinkable for 9.0%.  

Rating: Average (3.5/5.0 Untappd)


I'm feeling a Strong 
Average on this; 3.5. Almost Above-Average, but I feel like if you are going to jack up the ABV to 9.0%, you had better bring a lot of noise. This just sort of rolls out the promised wheat and fruit notes. It's delicious, easy-going stuff, but the price and ABV handicaps this in some respects. There are other fruity wheat beers out there that are more sessionable, flavorful, and cheaper. Having said that, this beer would pair with some spicy Caribbean flavors, mango, and chicken.

Random Thought: I still have a bunch of Jackie O's stuff laying around...I am excited. 

August 11, 2014

4 Hands Contact High

Brewed By: 4 Hands Brewing Co. in Saint Louis, Missouri
Purchased: 12oz CAN from a 6-pack bought at Whole Foods in Naperville, IL; 2014
Style/ABV: American Wheat Ale Ale, 5.0% 
Reported IBUs: ?

Even though the store shelves say otherwise, it is still Summer. About 4 Hands Brewing Co.: 
4 Hands Brewing Co. are a brewery based out of Saint Louis, Missouri. The brewery was founded in 2011 by owner/president Kevin Lemp. The brewery features a number of brewers, including ex-Goose Island guru, Will Johnston. 4 Hands is all about hand-crafted beers, and they feature a barrel-aging program that uses wine and spirit barrels. Exciting stuff. Definitely check out their website or Facebook page.
The Contact High is an American Wheat Ale brewed with "copious amounts of pacific northwest hops and dry hopping with fresh orange zest."
4 Hands Contact High

The Contact High pours into a dark yellow, deep golden body, kicking up a finger of off-white and short-lived head. Head retention exists as a faint coating, and there is short lived cling from the lacing as you swirl the beer. This has moderate carbonation. All-in-all: not a looker by any means.

The aroma, on the other hand, does catch your attention. Right up front, I'm getting HUGE orange zest. The orange zest is beefed up with big hop notes that include iced tea, crushed aspirin, honey, pine, lemon, lemon tree leaves, and huge dank citrus and citrus zest. I'm reminded a bit of Pipeworks' MariLime Law brewed in collaboration with Tired Hands

You get big orange zest in the taste as well, with punchy orange juice and orange zest showing up with assertive authority. This is refreshing and juicy, and reminds me of seltzer water and orange Fresca. The hops in here pull towards orange and pine, with some hints of iced tea and wet leaves. 

This is light, refreshing, and simple. At 5.0%, this is incredibly crushable. Canning this was a good idea, and reinforces the portability of this brew. It's not complex at all, and the palate depth feels a bit one-dimensional. As far as how this stacks up: orange zest up front; more orange and lime zest in the middle, with citrus juice, orange juice, and some hints of citrus hops; the back end drops some iced tea and leaves, with lingering orange juice. The bitterness here is mild. It really reminds me of orange soda. 

Rating: Light Average (3.0/5.0 Untappd)

I'm feeling a Decent 
Average on this. I'm a little conflicted...in this instance, I think the orange zest might actually detract from some of the potential hop flavors you can get out of a beer using just hops. I look at something like Zombie Dust and think to myself, "now that's a Pale Ale." Even the Akari Shogun has this one beat, with ease. It's a preference thing for me, but yeah. This works as a fruited beer though, and I love the 6-pack format. In cans nonetheless. I agree with the suggested food pairings: spicy foods that benefit from a hint of lime or citrus would pair wonderfully with this beer. So would poultry, and also fish or seafood, I think. Maybe a ceviche? I can't complain. This isn't a bad buy, not at around $10 a sixer.


Random Thought: Another year, another forgettable season of Food Network Star...

June 15, 2014

Horny Goat Watermelon Wheat

Brewery: Horny Hideaway (aka Horny Goat Brewing Company) in Milwaukee, Wisconsin
Contract Brewed By: Stevens Point Brewery in Stevens Point, Wisconsin
Purchased: 12oz CAN from a six-pack bought at Binny's in IL; 2014 
Style/ABV: American Wheat Ale/Fruit Beer/Adjunct Nightmare, 5.6%
Reported IBUs: 17

I'm not a beer apologist, so there's no apology needed to justify my purchase of this beer. I like watermelon, even the fake stuff, and I like wheat. Horny Goat doesn't seem to be my thing though. Their website isn't offensive, subversive, or clever. They seem to be a frat brewery, which is okay I guess. And they're in Milwaukee. It also looks like their beer is contract brewed by the Stevens Point Brewery. I dunno. About Horny Goat Brewing:  
Horny Goat Brewing and the Horny Hideaway are a brewery/restaurant founded in May of 2008The beers are developed in their brew pub in Milwaukee, Wisconsin by their brew master, Dave Reese. They have a small-batch, 10 barrel brewing system, which seems pretty legit. They also appear to contract brew some of their beer through Stevens Point. For more information, check out their Facebook page or website
The Watermelon Wheat is an abomination, no doubt. This summer brew is the result of adding "100% natural watermelon juice during fermentation so that all the sugar contributed is fermented off into alcohol, increasing the alcohol content while keeping the body light." DAE beer science? The backbone here is wheat malts, with "a touch of Vienna malt for complexity." This one also uses German hops. The can says: "Beer brewed with watermelon juice." My can also says: "Brewed by Horny Goat Brewing Company, La Crosee, WI & Stevens Point, WI" -- in case there was any mystery about the Stevens Point involvement. 
Horny Goat Watermelon Wheat: why? 

This one pours into a relatively clear orange/gold body, kicking up a finger of white head. The head is foamy and doesn't look like it is fueled by wheat. There is a lot of carbonation in here, in the form of numerous streams of tiny bubbles rising upwards. This is clean and unsuspecting, even in bright lights. You might find this in Instagram photos for frat boy date rapes, and DMB concerts, but in the can not the glass. 

The aroma here is big barley and grain. This smells like a brew house/brewery, with that distinct malted barley smell. It smells good, but I'm not getting much watermelon or wheat here. Along with the malted barley, I'm getting some wheat malts and some apple fruitiness on the aroma. It doesn't really smell like a wheat ale, let alone a watermelon wheat ale...but it smells pretty fucking amazing if you like the smell of a brewery (and I do). 

Hmmm...this tastes very much how it smells. I'm not getting any watermelon, just a lot of malted grain, barley, and wheat. There's a twinge of fake watermelon in here, but yeah. I wonder if this is a screwed up can or if there is batch variation. That's no problem though, since I have several more cans. Let's grab one...so, the second can that I am drinking is also overtly grainy. I'm getting a lot of grain in here, a lot of wheat, and some hints of apple/grape/melon and watermelon candy on the back. 

I'm on my third can here, which is a testament to my alcoholism, for sure. It's also a testament to this beer's drinkability. For some reason I felt compelled to turn on Dave Matthews and the Blues Traveler, and now I'm wearing an Aeropostle shirt. I don't even know how that happened. Does anyone else want to get rapey? I guess 5.6% is substantial enough to get you pretty buzzed, definitely more than your typical Pale Lager. This beer isn't very complex, but the light-bodied mouthfeel is pretty crushable and refreshing. Palate depth is alright. You know...I thought I was going to get a lot of fake watermelon Jolly Rancher vibes from this beer, but I'm mostly getting a lot of wheat and malt. There's some mild fruit juice, with apples and grapes and watermelon...but this is a clean malt exposition through and through. Up front: fruity apples, grapes, melon, and lots of sweet wheat malts; the mids roll into juicy malts, grain, wheat, hints of watermelon; the back end is where you get hints of watermelon Jolly Ranchers, but just hints...mostly grain...it's like a fruity brewery aroma in your glass or a homebrew. 

Rating: Light Average (2.5/5.0 Untappd)

I'm feeling a Light 
Average on this. I thought for sure I was going to be talking shit about how this tastes like fake Jolly Ranchers and 14-year-old girl's perfume. This smells and tastes like dat genuine brewery smell™. There is some subtle melon/watermelon juice in here, and it plays off the fruitiness in a way that isn't bad. Overall though, I don't think I would buy this again. They have a Pineapple Hefeweizen that I might try...maybe.

Random Thought: Happy Father's Day to all the dads out there. Hopefully you got that morning BJ and then some quiet time to drink a beer, smoke a cigar, play some golf, or whatever it is that you fancy doing on Father's Day.

April 13, 2013

Half Acre Akari Shogun

Brewed By: Half Acre Beer Company in Chicago, Illinois
Purchased: 16oz CAN from a 4-pack bought at Half Acre in Chicago, IL; 2013
Style/ABV: American Wheat Ale, 5.5%
Reported IBUs: ?

After drinking that lovely Stiegl Radler, I need something to ground out my palate before calling it a night. About Half Acre:

The Half Acre Beer Company was founded in October 2006, which is young for craft beer in general, but great for the local Chicago scene. The founders of Half Acre started out by working with the Sand Creek Brewery in Black River Falls in Wisconsin. They eventually developed their Half Acre Lager, and began distributing and selling it in Chicago during the August of 2007. The beer was successful enough that Half Acre was able to buy out a space in the Bucktown area of Chicago. With continuing sales, Half Acre was eventually able to purchase equipment from Ska Brewing Co. and moved to their current location on Lincoln Avenue on the north side of Chicago. Half Acre has been brewing at their Chicago location since 2009, and seems to be really expanding in both amount of distribution and popularity. Check out the full story HERE, and check out their website for a low-down on all their beers and info. 
If you roll over to the Akari Shogun page, you can see that this beer is an American Wheat Ale that uses the Motueka hop (a hop local to New Zealand; similar to Saaz). Clocking in at 5.5%, this is the perfect American-style-ale counterpoint to the Summer/Spring. Also, the can art is fucking awesome.
Dayum. Half Acre Akari Shogun

I'm impressed...this is one of the better looking Wheat Ales I've seen. This one pours a vibrant, almost radioactive, hazy yellow-gold color. There are some hints of bronze and orange in the body, with a hint of clarity towards the bottom. This one kicked up a finger's worth of white head. The head has great duration, and picks up some hints of white-yellow/gold in low light. There's visible carbonation in this in the form of mid-sized bubbles, but this one just has a captivating lack of clarity and a bold body. Would eye-bang again.


The aroma is bright and hoppy, with some grass, strawberry, peach, pineapple, mango, tangerine, light Aspirin...shiiiit, this reminds me of Citra hop bombs a little bit. I wonder if they use some Citra in here. There's a grain component on the nose as well...lightly toasted grain/bread...coconut? Word.


This is one refreshing beer, with big hop kick and tons of subtle grain on the back end. I'm getting sweet peaches, tangerines, strawberry, grass, mango, tropical fruits, and a nice transition to more bitter grass, kiwi, and tropical fruits. There's some pineapple in here, and just a hint of zesty hop spice. You also pick up some nice grainy complexity, with hints of grain, toast, biscuit, and a dash of mineral bitterness, undoubtedly accentuated by the hops.

This is stellar, and oh-so-drinkable at 5.5%. There's a reason they put this in a 16oz can. This has a medium-light to medium-full mouthfeel, supported by moderate carbonation. You get some carbonation on the tongue, with some bitterness that kicks in mid-palate. This one cleans up with some grain and hop bitterness; fade to dry. For the style, palate depth is great, and complexity is good to great. You get blasted with hops right out of the gate, with balanced and constrained sweetness; mid-palate rolls into more hops, and introduces some nice grain complexity; the back end continues with hops and grain, and adds a layer of bitter complexity. The finish is refreshing, hoppy, bitter, grainy, and just a touch dry.

Rating: Divine Brew

This could rival Three Floyds' Gumballhead, so as far as Midwest American Wheat Ales go, this is a Light Divine Brew
. I don't know what to say. This isn't a prolific style by any means, but these Midwest brewers are pushing it to a reasonable extreme. This beer has balance with some nice grain, and the hops are bright and vibrant. This would pair with various salads, barbecues, fruit salads, corn on the cob, ribs, hot dogs and hamburgers, and any other summer food, really. You could also go the pizza/bar food route. If this stays on shelves, this could be my new go-to in Chicago.

Random Thought: 16oz cans are awesome. I petition that we make 16oz the standard size for beers in cans.

March 27, 2013

Three Floyds Gumballhead

Brewed By: Three Floyds Brewing Company in Munster, Indiana 
Purchased: 12oz bottle from a 6-pack purchased at Three Floyds in Munster, Indiana; 2013
Style/ABV: American Wheat Ale, 5.6%/4.5%/5.0%?????

Reported IBUs: 35

If you don't feel the magic in the air tonight, you are DOING IT WRONG. About Three Floyds:
Today we go to Munster, Indiana, where Three Floyds has been brewing beer since 1996. The brewery was founded by brothers Nick and Simon, and their father Mike Floyd - hence, the name, Three Floyds. The first brewery was originally located in Hammond, Indiana. Eventually Three Floyds outgrew their original location, and moved to Munster, Indiana. After moving to Munster, and seeing an increased demand for their beer, Three Floyds began to bottle their beer. Since 2000, the brewery has continued to grow. And in 2005, the brewery opened its first brewpub. The brewery is probably most famous for their Dark Lord Stout. If you haven't heard of it, Google "Dark Lord Day." And then weep at the beer you probably will never be able to drink.
The Gumballhead is one of those "American Wheat Ale" beers. I'm actually a big fan of this style, and this is one of my favorite beers. Full disclaimer: this is the next best thing to session after Zombie Dust. Buy this by the 6-pack and there's your Friday night. The bottle states: "Red Wheat and boatloads of Amarillo hops give this American wheat brew a lemony finish. Slight haze in the bottle is yeast added for bottle-conditioning." How badass is that? This beer is named in honor of the underground comic book cat created by Rob Syers. The artwork is badass. Drink this fresh because DEM HOPS.
Three Floyds Gumballhead

This pours a sexy, slightly hazy, golden yellow color. I kicked up two finger's of thin, soapy, white head. The head sticks around (thanks, Wheat!), and this beer has a ton of streams of carbonation rising upwards. In bright light, the beer takes on a beautiful dark-golden/yellow color, with a finger of off-white head that won't die. There's nice lacing already forming; the carbonation is still streaming. This is a good looking beer.

Again...crack this open fresh. The aroma on this beer is out of this world. At 35 IBUs, it really isn't even cheating. I'm sure they dry hop this, but damn. You get blasted with huge grapefruit, mild hop spice, lemon, pine, and a hint of grass. The nose is bright, vibrant, and lively. There's a touch of pleasant astringency, rye, bubble gum, and a dash of ice tea/tea leaves. 

The taste is a wonderful follow-through. You pick up on the wheat, and there's a dash of bread/biscuit/honey snap in this. This initially opens with big bright hops, including grapefruit, strawberry, grass, pineapple, peach, and lemon. There's some rye and hop spice in the mix, and some light/pleasant astringent bitterness ala a typical American Pale Ale. 

This has a light to medium-light mouthfeel, with great palate depth and great complexity -- I mean, for the style. This is light, drinkable, and refreshing. But not at the cost of good flavor or aromas. Even if this is clocking in at 5.6%, this is STUPID drinkable. You could easily kill 6-12 of these over the course of a Saturday afternoon, or Friday night, or Monday evening, or your lunch break on work, or whenever....

Rating: Divine Brew 

This is a straight up decent to strong Divine Brew
. This is a great summer beer, a great session beer...and it's cheap, and drinkable, and vibrant, and blah blah blah. It's not Zombie Dust, no. But that will do, Pig, that will do. Food pairings? Bar food, barbecue, pizza, fast food, salads. You could even go with a light pasta dish, I think. Again, this is a great beer to kill by the 6er on a lazy Saturday afternoon.

Random Thought: My biggest regret this year was not making an effort to get tickets to the giant clusterfuck that is Dark Lord Day. Next year, I swear.