Beer of the Day thread (and ci-derp)
#2341
Elite Member
iTrader: (21)
Join Date: Jun 2007
Location: Rochester, NY
Posts: 6,614
Total Cats: 1,274
How much honey did you use? What kind of yeast?
I have 3 liters of maple syrup to try, which has been sitting for many years. Not sure how much water to add. I don't want to make it too weak.
I have 3 liters of maple syrup to try, which has been sitting for many years. Not sure how much water to add. I don't want to make it too weak.
#2346
Elite Member
iTrader: (3)
Join Date: Apr 2008
Location: Outside Portland Maine
Posts: 2,023
Total Cats: 19
My wife pulled one of these out of the fridge yesterday (sorry for the google photo, but that's what it looked like). I asked where she got it, and said a coworker gave it to her with no explanation. She had no idea what it was. It's as good as I had imagined, but I only got a few sips. Now I have to try to find it for myself. Very hoppy aroma, but not overwhelmingly hoppy when you drink it. Smooth and delicious all the way.
#2347
I identify as a bear.
iTrader: (8)
Join Date: Sep 2005
Location: Chicago. (The less-murder part.)
Posts: 33,210
Total Cats: 6,715
I was a little skeptical about a Caramalized Chocolate Coffee Churro Porter, but this one is pretty good. It pours with surprisingly little head, and a thin, fizzy one at that. And while it's not mind-blowing by any stretch, it's got a decent flavor and mouthfeel.
Just picked up some of Stone's new Coffee Milk Stout. I'm expecting good things from that one- Stone has a history of doing particularly amazing special stouts.
Just picked up some of Stone's new Coffee Milk Stout. I'm expecting good things from that one- Stone has a history of doing particularly amazing special stouts.
#2351
I recently had a golden draak (belgian quad) that was amazing.
Incidentally, I have drifted a bit away from imperial/quad type heavy beers and for the past couple of months I've been brewing fruit beers, which have been amazingly successful.
So far:
apricot hefe- good, strong apricot flavor and smell at first, faded fast after the first couple of weeks, was a nice orange color
raspberry hefe- basically tasted like a traditional barvarian hefe but with a strong raspberry nose/flavor. Was a deep reddish/pink hazy color.
blackberry hefe- went up to nearly 4 lbs of blackberries on top of my base hefe recipe. Still fermenting.
Next will be... whatever is on sale at the farmers market or costco.
Pic related, raspberry hefe:
Incidentally, I have drifted a bit away from imperial/quad type heavy beers and for the past couple of months I've been brewing fruit beers, which have been amazingly successful.
So far:
apricot hefe- good, strong apricot flavor and smell at first, faded fast after the first couple of weeks, was a nice orange color
raspberry hefe- basically tasted like a traditional barvarian hefe but with a strong raspberry nose/flavor. Was a deep reddish/pink hazy color.
blackberry hefe- went up to nearly 4 lbs of blackberries on top of my base hefe recipe. Still fermenting.
Next will be... whatever is on sale at the farmers market or costco.
Pic related, raspberry hefe:
#2353
I actually go a bit sweeter (ie, higher mash temp by a degree or two) on my fruit beers because it makes the fruit more recognizable. I did a whole bunch of ciders that incorporated various flavors and were incredibly dry. Mostly they just tasted interesting rather than fruity. Once I tasted a cider a few days early when it still had a bunch of unfermented sugars and it tasted amazing- like you could really taste the fresh apples. That's when I realized a lot of the fruit brewing process came down to getting the sweetness right. I think most ciders are way too sugary btw and I still prefer dry ciders, but doing a fruit beer and going completely dry is a mistake most of the time IMO.
I just finished carbonating it and I'm not really blown away by the blackberry hefe to be honest. Blackberries don't really have a strong aroma or flavor that is distinctively "blackberry" versus some other generic berry. It's not bad tasting or anything, it's just not "oh wow this tastes like raspberries/blueberries/strawberries" type reaction. Knowing that it's blackberries, I can recognize it in the beer, but again, it doesn't really announce itself unless you know to look for it.
I just finished carbonating it and I'm not really blown away by the blackberry hefe to be honest. Blackberries don't really have a strong aroma or flavor that is distinctively "blackberry" versus some other generic berry. It's not bad tasting or anything, it's just not "oh wow this tastes like raspberries/blueberries/strawberries" type reaction. Knowing that it's blackberries, I can recognize it in the beer, but again, it doesn't really announce itself unless you know to look for it.
#2355
Elite Member
iTrader: (37)
Join Date: Apr 2010
Location: Very NorCal
Posts: 10,441
Total Cats: 1,899
I can't quite believe I'm saying this, but the above does not suck.
HOWEVER
You have to go into this particular beer knowing it's from Blue Moon. It claims to be a stout but it's probably the weakest stout I've had in quite a while. It just does not have the body or bittering I've come to expect. Its an oatmeal stout so it's supposed to have a bit of sweetness, and it has that, but it does not taste like it's from the oats but rather a milk stout type of sweetness. Oddly enough it finishes a lot dryer than expected. There is a bit of particulate on the bottom of the bottle so I may roll the next one, but I don't expect it to change the body that much. The 'cappuccino' presents itself as a classic coffee type flavor that isn't overpowering or artificial, so that's a relief.
If you were to pour me a sample of this and ask me what it was, I'd tell you it's someone's homebrewing attempt at a milk stout with a coffee addition somewhere along the line. Not a fabulous example of the style but definitely a solid attempt that is totally drinkable.
All in all a solid B effort. Maybe a B+ if I'm feeling generous or had a few.
#2357
I am having that same blue moon stout right now. As a big fan of coffee stouts and porters I thinks it's pretty terrible. I can barely even taste the coffee. If you gave it to me blind I'm not even sure I would say there is coffee in it. I'm not the pickiest beer drinker and often enjoy some of the specialty or seasonal brews from the macro brewers but I honestly would never want to drink this again. It does nothing for me. Two thumbs down.
#2358
Elite Member
iTrader: (37)
Join Date: Apr 2010
Location: Very NorCal
Posts: 10,441
Total Cats: 1,899
Almost always a good decision, but gotta be in the mood for it. Usually it's a little heavy handed with the spices for me to kill a whole bottle in one sitting.
But remember, its from Blue Moon. I'm shocked that they even tried and stunned that it's even drinkable! Its like the retarded kid getting a ribbon for not poopin his pants this week.
But remember, its from Blue Moon. I'm shocked that they even tried and stunned that it's even drinkable! Its like the retarded kid getting a ribbon for not poopin his pants this week.
Last edited by EO2K; 12-24-2016 at 06:44 PM.
#2360
There are two kinds. There's the daytime kind, which is bright and welcoming and there is the nighttime kind which should never be confused with the daytime. Nighttime is dark deep and may take you to unexpected places places that the daytime cannot. But then the night-time is not suited for ordinary life and ordinary tasks, in fact the nighttime may be the answer for that sort of thing, meaning that those sorts of things may never get done. Things that take time in the night-time things that slow down and you can pause (you have to actually) and investigate carefully to find that level of objective Detachment that is only possible under the spell of the night time period seek the day but fear not the night time call us sometime.... - the bottle
I'd call it an excellent hoppy stoutly porter.
I'd call it an excellent hoppy stoutly porter.