This is one of those posts that... isn't so much written as gathered. Normally I find a brewery, have as many samples as I can stomach and really get into their guttyworks. Sometimes that is not possible to do. Sometimes I'm in a hurry to get to the next city. Sometimes I happen upon a random beer in a random bar that I don't know what to do with.
So what follows is sort of a collection. By themselves, I don't feel they have enough meat to equal a full post. So they've been mashed together. We have a couple of beers from 3floyds, a couple from Old Dominion and something from Two Brothers thrown in for good measure.
3Floyds:
I managed to get my hands on some Gumballhead from this brewery a little while back and I've been stalking this weird Indiana Brewery ever since.
Zombie Dust: In the bars and taverns of Indiana this is a beer spoken with a certain reverence usually reserved for a Deity of some kind or another. It's one of those beer that is a challenge to even taste since it has a tendency to fly off the shelf the minute it arrives. Luckily, I know some people. Well one person, but he is a fellow traveler and a good human. If you are reading Patrick, thanks again.
Anyway I picked up a lot of fruity malt on the top of this beer in the form of pear, berry and light citrus. This serves a a base for an impressive hop bill that brings a lot of citrus along with some spicy, floral hops. Worthy of the hype? Not sure. But for a heavily hopped beer, I really enjoyed it.
Alpha King: Flagship beer of 3Floyds. I loved the citrusy floral aroma on this beer. These qualities are well-balanced with the malt and the result is a nice, drinkable beer with a lot of flavor and a little kick.
Two Brothers
Domaine DuPage: This beer is described by the brewery as a 'French Country Ale'. I picked up a touch of hops on the aroma. It's got a medium body with a light toasty sweetness right before a slightly bitter, herbal finish. Nice beer, but nothing much to set it apart from every other amber ale.
Old Dominion: Another brewery from the surprisingly beer-fueled state of Delaware that I managed to find just outside of D.C.
Pale Ale: I picked up some spicy hops on the aroma from this beer. Definitely a hoppy beer, but it has enough flavor to hold against the pure back-of-the-throat bitterness. I picked up a lot of spice and pine on the flavor. It finishes quite dry but without that lingering hop character.
Oak Barrel Stout: There was a very light sweet fruit aroma on this beer. I picked up a lot of wood on the flavor along with some leather and a touch of caramel sweetness. This beer was harder to pin down because the flavor is truly complex and the flavor hits hard and almost disappears.
No comments:
Post a Comment