Last time I was in Wisconsin, I brought a few friends back with me. I've been aware of New Glarus for a while now. I previously talked about one of their beers that came back with me during the first of these bottle beer tours. I had the opportunity to acquire a few more of it's cousins for an unofficial family reunion.
Two Women: A lager brewed in honor of the women of brewing as done by two companies run by women, New Galrus and Weyerrmann malting. It has a slightly grassy aroma. I picked up notes of peach and nectarine along with some grassiness from the hops. I think I detected a touch of vanilla in there as well.
Totally Naked: This is a beer brewed just as the label suggests. Malted barley, hops, water and yeast. It is simplistic and it's suppose to be. It has a light, grassy aroma. The flavor is slightly malty with almost no detectable hops. For a beer brewed to be a simple refreshing drink on a hot summer day, it hits the mark pretty well.
Dancing Man: Belgian wheat beer. It has a heavy clove aroma. At first, the flavor was really, really intense. The tropical fruit, peach, clove and spice was almost too much at first, but as the beer warmed and my palate adjusted, I found it to be pretty enjoyable.
IIPA: I had to laugh at the label description for this beer, "More the 85 provocative IBUs reverberate cleanly through this Double IPA. Local Wisconsin hop saturation from kettle boil to dry hop cellaring dominates this elegant and lustful sensory enchantment. You hold a deceptively seductive Original Gravity of 20.9 Plato, following the always 100% natural bottle fermentation. Luscious English Maris Otter malt is the essential heart of this voluptuous Double IPA. Surrender is inevitable, so enjoy now!
I don't want to alarm anyone, but I think my beer might be hitting on me.
Apparently this a beer where they turn their brewer loose on whatever idea might be floating around his little mind. This particular idea had citrus and herbs and spice apparent on the nose. It's smooth, although those hops come on in force. There's a moment where the malt holds them back, but they are there and they hit the palate hard with a dry, herbal grassy flavor that affect the back of the throat more then anything. The finish is remarkably clean for a beer like this... though I don't think it's quite the 'lustful sensory enchantment' they claim. Come to think of it, I don't know what a lustful sensory enchantment is, but I'll have to ask my wife if she's willing to do that.
Berliner Weiss: This is the second example of one of New Glarus' experimental beers. This is a obscure style that charmed the likes of Napoleon in centuries past. This pours very pale and clear from the bottle. Has that wheaty, carbonated aroma of a light pilsner beer. And the flavor... was not at all what I was expecting. It is extremely tart. The light color hides a lot of body, but it's still has a fizzy mouthfeel. The flavor is refreshingly lemony, like a carbonated light lemonade. Not bad, but I don't think I'd drink a lot of this.
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