Solstice d’hiver (Winter Solstice)

Having just called all beer reviews into question, I thought it was time to post another beer review.

Solstice d'hiverSolstice d’hiver (Winter Solstice)
Brasserie Dieu du Ciel!,  St-Jérôme, Quebec, Canada
Style: Barleywine
11 oz. Bottle

Aroma: Aromatics are unexpectedly light. Bready with light toast. A bit yeasty. Faint dark fruits; fig. Light alcohol. Perhaps some hints of chocolate.

Appearance: Dark red amber. A bit murky with floaties (an old bottle?). Very small, off-white head dissipated almost immediately.

Flavor: The light aroma was deceiving. There is a lot going on with the flavor. Burnt sugar and bittersweet chocolate. Fresh dark fruits; dark cherries, plums, wet raisins, and some orange citrus on the tip of my tongue. The bitterness is high, but it balances sweetness of the malt.  Lingering finish of burnt caramel and earthy hops. Loads of fruit and chocolate come through even more clearly as it warms. Slight tartness. Not sour, but fruity tart.

Mouthfeel: Medium-high body. Carbonation is medium-high despite having almost no head. Prickly and bitter.

Overall Impression: A delicious and highly fruity barleywine. The bitterness does a nice job of balancing the malt without going over the top. I wish there had been more to the aroma. Nice complex malt. I like the bittersweet chocolate notes. Not something one finds in barleywines all that often. Although not my favorite of the style, it is a nice beer for sipping on a cold winter’s evening.

Goose Island Christmas Ale 2009

Continuing with the Christmas/Holiday beer theme, I tried the 2009 edition of Christmas Ale from Goose Island Brewing Co. in Chicago. The base style for this beer is an American brown ale. The folks at Goose Island change the recipe slightly each year to make it interesting. Starting this year Goose Island is donating a portion of the profits from this beer to charity. Nice touch for the holiday season. Here’s my notes:

2009 Goose Island Christmas Ale2009 Christmas Ale
Goose Island Brewing Co., Chicago, Illinois
Style: American Brown Ale
Serving Style: 22 oz. Bottle

Aroma: Nutty toffee malt with bright minty and apricot/tangerine hops. Hints of raisin. Smells of English yeast. Light alcohol.

Appearance: Chestnut brown and brilliantly clear. Full, off-white and persistent creamy head.

Flavor: Caramel, toffee, and brown sugar lead off, with toasted bread, nuts, and hints of chocolate rounding out the malt. The bitterness is moderately high, but balanced. Minty/herbal hop flavors. Nice tangerine citrus fruit. Whiffs of ginger spice and of cinnamon. Long lingering finish of bread and fruit.

Mouthfeel: Very drinkable. Medium body and medium carbonation. Slight alcohol warming.

Overall Impression: Wow! I really like this beer. Light and tasty, yet warming on a cold and snowy winter’s evening. Nice interplay of malt, hops and fruit. Balanced. Minty hops are cooling like a peppermint stick. Tangerines make this a festive Christmas candy. My burps tasted of tangerine. Nice

Bell’s Christmas Ale

Bell’s Christmas Ale made its debut last season. According to the bottle label it is a Scotch ale brewed with 100% Michigan barley and a blend of Pacific Northwest and Michigan hops. It is one of those “Christmas ales” that is so by virtue of the fact that the brewery calls it one. A pretty straightforward example of the style, there is nothing about it that specifically screams “Christmas.” It’s a fairly tasty beer nonetheless. Here’s my notes:

Bell's Christmas AleChristmas Ale
Bell’s Brewery Inc., Comstock, MI
Style: Scotch Ale
Serving Style: 12 oz. Bottle

Aroma: Caramel malt leads into loads of fruit, cherries, raisins, and figs. A faint whiff of roast. Cola-like. Perhaps a bit copper metallic.

Appearance: Amber/orange with a full, rocky, off-white head that collapsed quickly into a thin film on the surface of the beer. Crystal clear.

Flavor: The flavor very much follows the aroma. Nutty caramel malt dominates with a good deal of cherry and raisin fruitiness. The roast flavor, though still distant, is fuller than in the aroma coming on especially in the finish. The bitterness is higher than expected and there is a nice earthy/spicy hop flavor, though it remains a malt forward beer. It gets better as the initial carbonation settles and the malt character is allowed to come through more fully. Nice herbal and vanilla notes begin to come through as well. Finishes fairly dry with distant roast. The metallic notes from the aroma are there in the flavor as well, but faint.

Mouthfeel: The high level of carbonation gives this beer a carbonic bite that detracts from the rich malty flavors. Better after it has de-gassed a bit. Medium body.

Overall Impression: This beer grew on me as I drank it. It definitely benefited from being allowed to de-gas a bit. Nice caramel malt and fruit character. Even some hints of spice, although the label does not indicate that any were used in the brewing. It’s a nice beer but I think there are better examples of the style to be had. Would go well with warm shepherd’s pie on a cold wintery day like today.

Shiner Holiday Cheer

Tucked away in the south Texas hill country between Houston and San Antonio, Spoetzl Brewery has been around since 1909. It survived prohibition. It survived the arrival of the mega-breweries after prohibition’s repeal. It even survived the great brewery consolidation of the 1970s. Spoetzl’s Flagship beer Shiner Bock has been brewed since 1913 and could be seen as a holdover of an earlier and mostly lost American beer style. I have never beer a great admirer of the Shiner beers. However, last year a friend sent me a bottle of Shiner Holiday Cheer. I loved it. He sent more this year. Here’s my notes:

Shiner Holiday CheerShiner Holiday Cheer
Spoetzl Brewery, Shiner, Texas
Style: Dunkelweizen with peaches and roasted pecans
Serving Style: 12 oz. Bottle

Aroma: Peaches, peaches, and more peaches.

Appearance: Dark amber and clear. Creamy, off-white, persistent head.

Flavor: Malt balanced with brown sugar and caramel flavors. Hop bitterness and flavor are low. The real star of this beer is the fresh peach flavor. POW! Juicy, peach/apricot nectar. Nice background note of cinnamon, clove, and toast. Peach cobbler anyone?

Mouthfeel: Medium-light body. Medium carbonation. Very drinkable

Overall Impression: If you like peach cobbler this is the beer for you. The peach flavor shines but blends well with the malt and background spice notes. Light body and low alcohol make it an incredibly drinkable holiday brew. I could down a few of these.

Holiday Ales & Winter Warmers Recap

Last night the Twin Cities Perfect Pint Beer Club gathered once again, this time to celebrate Holiday Beers and Winter Warmers. Our host for the night was club member Rachel who is the only person to have attended EVERY club event. I can’t even claim that and I’m the organizer. Rachel’s condo was also the site of our very first meeting nearly a year ago. We had a record number on hand for the nearly sold-out event. As always great beer was tasted and great conversation was had.

Sam Adams UtopiasThe highlight of the evening was also the first beer we tasted; a bottle of 2007 Samuel Adams Utopias. For those who don’t know, Utopias is the gold standard of extreme beers. Made from a blend of several different beers aged in several kinds of wood and fermented to a whopping 27% ABV, Utopias is more like a spirit than a beer. It is un-carbonated and best served at room temperature in a snifter. I had tasted the 2007 previously, but it had been at least a year. The passage of time has served this beer well. Rich and warming with a complex blend of butterscotch, maple, sherry, and vanilla flavors, this was a real taste treat. Utopias was the nearly unanimous favorite for the night. Of course paying $12 for 1 ¼ ounces may have influenced people a bit.

From there we tasted our way through nine holiday beers from around the world, with examples from the United States, Great Britain, Denmark, Austria, Belgium, and Italy. We began in England with two very different examples of the classic British winter warmer, Samuel Smith Winter Welcome and St. Peter’s Winter Ale. Winter Welcome is the more traditional of the two, an excellent example of an English Old Ale. Falling somewhere between a strong bitter and a light English barleywine, this beer has beautiful caramel and toffee malt character with plenty of plum and citrus fruit to complement. While balance to the sweet side, there is enough hop bitterness and floral hop flavor to keep it light and drinkable. The St. Peter’s Winter Ale is a much darker brew, verging on a porter or brown ale. The malt has a nice nutty and biscuit character with a background of roast and deep dark fruits. Both were excellent beers, although the St. Peter’s suffered for having come after the Utopias.

Next we came back home with two classic American holiday beers, Sierra Nevada Celebration Ale and Anchor’s Our Special Ale Sierra Nevada Celebration Ale(A.K.A. Anchor Christmas Ale). To introduce the concept of holiday beers I explained to the group that it is a wide-ranging category. Whether spiced or simple, high or low gravity, a holiday beer is such because the brewer says it is. These two beers exemplify this concept. Sierra Nevada Celebration Ale is really nothing more than a great, hoppy, American IPA. While the hop flavor does emphasize the pine-resin notes of the American Cascade hops and the malt backbone is a bit heftier than some others, there is nothing specifically “Christmas” about this beer except the timing of its annual release and the holiday theme of the packaging. Anchor’s Christmas Ale on the other hand is the quintessential American holiday beer. A yearly tradition for nearly 35 years, the 2009 version is a dark and spicy beer with luscious fresh plum fruitiness underlying festive nutmeg and allspice flavor. One member said of this beer that it tasted just like the “old-time, traditional gingerbread” that he makes.

We straddled the Atlantic for the next beer, Van Twee, a collaboration between Belgian brewer De Proef and Bell’s Beer from Wisconsin. Van Twee is a mash-up of styles combining elements of a Belgian dubel and a porter, then adding fresh cherries and wild Brettanomyces yeast for a bit of barnyard funk. You can read my detailed tasting notes for this beer here. This brilliant brew inspired the quote of the night when one member stated, “This is like licking a cherry pony.” I’m not exactly sure what that means, but everyone seemed to agree…in a good way. Van Twee was one of the favorite beers of the night.

St Bernardus Christmas AleNext we had three very different examples of the Belgian strong dark style all brewed in different parts of the world, Nöel from Birreria Baladin in Italy, Klosterjul from Denmark’s Ølfabrikken, and St. Bernardus Christmas Ale from Brouwereij St. Bernardus in Belgium. Nöel is a straightforward example of the style with rich dark fruits, bready malt, and the characteristic cotton candy Belgian sugar and yeast flavors. The bottles we had exhibited slight papery oxidation, but not enough to ruin the beer. While Nöel is a good example of the style, it doesn’t really hold up to some of the better Belgian versions that are available. Klosterjul is a strongly spiced version of the style with pronounced anise flavors. Yeast-derived green banana notes detracted from my overall enjoyment of this beer, but it is still an interesting example that reminds me in some ways of a Gruit. The best of the Belgians was the St. Bernardus Christmas Ale. Built on a base of the St. Bernardus Abt 12, one of the best examples of the strong dark style, subtle spicing adds cinnamon and clove notes to the ample bready and dried dark fruit character to make this resemble bottled fruitcake. This is one of the best holiday beers out there and it was a big hit with the club.

We finished off the evening with what is perhaps the world’s foremost holiday beer, Samichlaus from Austrian Brauerei Schloss Eggenberg. SamichlausSamichlaus is brewed one day a year on December 6th, St. Nicholas Day, and then aged for eleven months before bottling. It has been described as a doppelbock, but its 14% ABV puts it at nearly twice the strength of the typical beer of that style. However you wish to classify it, it is a world-class beer. Definitely a sipper, it is remarkably drinkable for its strength. Smooth, sweet, caramel and melanoidin malt is balanced by spicy noble hops and warming alcohol, with rich dark fruits and light chocolate notes forming a compelling undercurrent. While big and sweet, it still has the crisp, clean character of a lager. Samichlaus is a beautiful beer and a fitting capper for the official tasting part of the evening.

After the official tasting, we entered the usual “free-for-all” portion of the club meeting. I want to give a shout out to Flat Earth Brewing. Club member Cory brought a growler of Grand Design, the S’more infused version of their Cygnus-X1 porter. It made for a tasty desert. Huge marshmallow aroma was a teaser for the chocolate, graham cracker, and vanilla flavor explosion that filled each sip. I have never liked S’mores. This beer might lead me to reconsider.

Follow the link for information about the Twin Cities Perfect Pint Beer Club.

Summit 90/- Scottish Style Ale

Summit Brewing Company of St. Paul gave a sneak preview last night of the second beer in their Unchained Series. For those who don’t know, the Unchained Series beers are intended to showcase the skills of individual brewers at Summit. The brewer has complete control, shepherding their beer through the process from recipe formulation to packaging. These beers aren’t the result of the brewmaster’s imagination, they are created by the folks who actually make the beer.

The second beer in the series, a Scottish 90/- brewed with heather, is the creation of brewer Eric Blomquist. The odd symbol in the name of this beer is the old sign for shilling. Back in the day in the UK, beers were taxed based upon their strength. In the case of Scottish beers there were 60/-, 70/-, 80/- and 90/-, beers. These tax designations eventually just stuck as the colloquial name for each beer. Scottish ales evolved as malt centered beers featuring sweet caramel flavors and hints of roast. This was in part because hops cannot be grown in Scotland. It is also due to the fact that the English taxed the hops that Scottish brewers imported. Fewer hops meant less expense to the brewer and sweeter more malt focused beers. The heather in this beer is a traditional ingredient for Scottish ales. In the days before hops became widely used, brewers used a number of herbs, heather among them, to bitter their beers.

Here’s my notes:

Summit 90/- Scottish Style Ale90/- Scottish Style Ale
Summit Brewing Company, St. Paul, Minnesota
Style: Strong Scotch Ale
Serving Style: 12 oz. Bottle

Aroma: Toasted pumpernickel bread with caramel sweetness. Light coffee roast. Notes of brown sugar and raisins.

Appearance: Moderate and creamy off-white head with good persistence. Maintained a film on the surface. Deep ruby/mahogany and crystal clear.

Flavor: Slanted to sweet malt, but balanced with more bitterness than I expected. The hops have a spicy/herbal character that melds with and accentuates the intense herbal flavors of the heather. Together with the sweet caramel and brown sugar malt it reminds me of spiced molasses cookies or maybe the horehound stick candy that I ate as a kid. The same toasted bread flavors from the aroma carry over to the flavor. Hints of dark fruits and orange. The finish is crisp and lingers on roasted malt and molasses.

Mouthfeel: Medium body with medium carbonation. Smooth creaminess.

Overall Impression: The folks at Summit are stepping up their game with these Unchained Series Beers. Like the Kölsch, this one is really well made. The bready, roasted, and caramel malt flavors are all well articulated. It’s on the sweet side, as it should be for the style, but the level of bittering balances it nicely, keeping it from becoming cloying. The heather gives it additional layers of interest. Not overly strong, but still works as a snifter sipper.

Van Twee

De Proef Brouwerij is a brand new entry into the Minnesota beer market. The brewery was founded in 1996 by brewing engineer and professor Dirk Naudts, who’s nickname is “The Prof”, or “de Proef” in Flemish. For the last few years Naudts has been creating wild-fermented collaboration beers with well established brewers in the US, including Signature Ale created with Tomme Arthur of Port Brewing/Lost Abbey and Les Deux Brasseurs with Jason Perkins of Maine’s Allagash Brewing. The newest release brings the Brewmaster’s Collaboration Series closer to home. Van Twee was brewed with John Mallet of Bell’s Brewing. They describe it as a “mash-up of the porter and dubbel styles blended with sour cherry juice from Michigan and brettanomyces in the secondary fermentation.” Here’s my notes:

De Proef/Bell's Van TweeVan Twee
DeProef Brouwerij, Lochristi-Hijfte, Belgium in collaboration with Bell’s Brewing, Kalamazoo, Michigan
Style: Porter/Dubel Mashup with Cherry Juice and Wild Yeast
Serving Style: 750 ml bottle

Aroma: Chocolate and cherries with a good dose of barnyard funkiness. Some dark fruits dance in the background.

Appearance: Dark red and clear with a thick, creamy, persistent off-white head.

Flavor: The malt character is like malted milk balls. Lovely dark chocolate with some caramel. Dark crystal malts also add a huge dose of plum fruitiness. This plays well with the cherry that is the second most pronounced flavor. The brettanomyces funkiness is noticeable, but not overwhelming. A nice background barnyard and light sour that supports the cherry. Some nice clove notes and hints of the Belgian cotton candy character round the flavors out. Medium-low bitterness.

Mouthfeel: Velvety. Creamy. Medium body. Moderately high carbonation.

Overall Impression: OMG! This beer doesn’t market itself as a Christmas beer, but the combination of fruit, spice, and chocolate would certainly qualify it as one. This was beautiful from start to finish. Great right from the refrigerator and still great warm at the bottom of the glass. I will need to pick up another bottle. Note to the Perfect Pint Beer Club, this might be on our holiday beer list. I had this with a home-made fennel risotto and it was a splendid match.

Widmer Bros. Cherry Oak Doppelbock

Widmer Bros. Cherry Oak DoppelbockCherry Oak Doppelbock
Widmer Brothers Brewing, Portland, Oregon
Style: Oak-Aged Doppelbock with Cherries
Serving Style: 22 oz. Bottle

Aroma: Lightly toasty melanoidin malt character dominates with faint earthy smells and a background of dark cherry. No oak to speak of.

Appearance: The low, off-white head did not persist. I managed to raised a bigger, more creamy head with a more aggressive pour. Dark mahogany with ruby highlights. Clear.

Flavor: Lightly toasty caramel malt with raisins and hints of chocolate. Very light background cherry notes. Light alcohol, but not boozy. Background rummy flavors. The Oak doesn’t have much to say. Cherry flavors come in most strongly in the finish as lingering cherry pie. Finish is a bit sweet, less crisp than expected from a lager.  Cherry and vanilla oak become somewhat more pronounced as it warms

Mouthfeel: Medium-full body and creamy. Some warming alcohol. Low carbonation

Overall Impression: This beer was a bit of a disappointment. When I first heard about it I was intrigued. Cherry, oak, and doppelbock sounded like a great combination. Unfortunately the cherry and oak play such a minor role that all one is left with is a reasonably good doppelbock. If I had wanted just a doppelbock I would have picked up a Salvator or a Celebrator.

Surly Darkness 2009

For those who don’t know, Darkness is the limited release Imperial Stout from Surly Brewing Company in the Twin Cities. It is one of those beers that has acquired cult status in the beer geek world, inspiring people to line up more than 800 deep at the brewery on the day of its release, an event known as Darkness Day, in the hopes of being one of the lucky ones who get to purchase a six-pack of 22 oz. bottles. It’s a beer world phenomenon that I have never understood, but whatever.

I have tried Darkness every year that it has been released and have never really been a fan, a heresy around these parts. Imperial stouts are not my favorite beer style to begin with, and Darkness has tended to be bigger and thicker than most, in other words more of what I don’t like about the style. But every year I get myself into a bar where this cult-ish elixir is on tap to give it a try. You really can’t be a beer connoisseur in Minnesota and not do so. This year I was pleasantly surprised. While in the past I have either not been overly fond or needed the entire pour for the beer to start grow on me, this year’s iteration was delightful from the first sip. Here’s my notes:

Surly Darkness 2009Darkness 2009
Surly Brewing Company, Brooklyn Center, Minnesota
Style: Russian Imperial Stout
Serving Style: Draft

Aroma: Rich roasted malt and sweetness with assertive pine resin hops. Dried fruits underneath.

Appearance: Pitch black with a creamy and persistent tan head.

Flavor: Huge chocolaty roasted malt, but smooth, not a bit of the acrid, burnt, or bitter flavors that can come with this much roast. Nice dark fruits. The beer has ample sweetness but is well balanced by assertive bitterness and minty/piney hop flavors. A high level of attenuation dries the beer out, leaving it remarkably drinkable. Alcohol is apparent, but not excessive.

Mouthfeel: Thick, velvety, and creamy, but not heavy. Very drinkable. Save for the alcohol, one could drink a few of these. Carbonation medium-low. Nice warming alcohol.

Overall Impression: This was a lovely beer. Not as viscous and heavy as previous years. Rich malt is well balanced by the bitterness. Resinous and minty hop flavors are a nice complement to the chocolate. Well attenuated. I have had my annual taste of darkness. I may just need to have another one this year.

Autumnal Ales Recap

Continuing on the fall beer kick, the Twin Cities Perfect Pint Beer Club met on Friday night to enjoy some of the best beers that autumn has to offer. Eleven of us gathered at the home of club member Loren to sit by the fireplace and sample nine great brews, including a good number of local and regional selections.

Furthermore Fallen AppleThe night began with Fallen Apple, the quintessential autumn offering from Furthermore Beer in Spring Green, Wisconsin. Light and refreshing, but surprisingly high in alcohol, this tasty, tart, cider/beer blend was loved by all in attendance. One member reported that while she didn’t like cider, Fallen Apple tasted enough like beer to overcome that. It was one of her favorites for the night.

Next up was Wisconsin Amber from Capital Brewery, another regional brew from Wisconsin. Capital specializes in German style lager beers. Wisconsin Amber is a smooth, balanced Vienna style lager. The sweet, toasty malt is dominant, but is well balanced by spicy German hops and a crisp lager finish. A couple of the more beer-knowledgeable members commented that they had always passed this beer up with the thought, “Wisconsin Amber…how interesting could that be?” They won’t be passing it up any more. Wisconsin Amber was the second favorite beer of the night overall.

From there we went for another essential autumn beer, pumpkin ale. We had two examples to sample and compare, Ichabod from Michigan’sDogfish Head Punkin Ale New Holland Brewing Company and Punkin’ from Dogfish Head in Delaware (thanks Stephanie). Ichabod is a session pumpkin beer, more beery than pumpkin, with rich caramel malt and nutty butterscotch flavors supporting subdued pumpkin and pumpkin pie spice. The offering from Dogfish Head is more intense. Higher alcohol, full-bodied caramel malt, and an explosion of pumpkin and spice make this a more interesting beer overall, but one that you may not want to drink more than one. Both were tasty. In the end it comes down to whether you want a nice session beer or a high-intensity pumpkin experience.

The KaiserFor Oktoberfest, we dispensed with the traditional and went for the tweaked. The first of these was Surlyfest from Surly Brewing. Surlyfest has the toasty, caramel heart of a traditional Oktoberfest cranked up with spicy rye malt and higher levels of hopping for a sharply bitter/spicy bite. This was another crowd favorite, which was a surprise to some who did not expect to enjoy a bitter Surly brew. The other Oktoberfest was The Kaiser Imperial Oktoberfest from Avery Brewing in Boulder, Colorado. This 9.3% ABV bruiser of a beer received a mixed reception. While some liked the intensely sweet malt, others found it offensively boozy and perhaps a bit overly sweet.

You can’t talk about fall beers without a wet-hop IPA. For this, I selected Harvest Ale from Founders Brewing. Unfortunately I selected and purchased this beer for the event before trying it. You can read my review below. While a couple members enjoyed it, most did not. The general consensus was that “this was not so much a hoppy beer as straight-up unsweetened grapefruit juice.” Even the usual hopheads among us had difficulty with this one. It was the only beer to remain untouched during the “free-for-all” following the formal tasting.

The remaining two beers were Autumnal Fire from Capital Brewery and Chestnut Hill from the local Lift Bridge Brewing. Capital calls Autumnal FireAutumnal Fire a “doppelbock based on an Oktoberfest personality.” I have no idea what they mean by this, but the beer makes a mighty fine doppelbock in my view. It’s a smooth and malty brew with a bit of alcohol warmth and loads of raisiny dark fruit flavors. Some felt the raisin was a bit too intense. Others liked it precisely because of the intense raisin flavors. Lift Bridge’s Chestnut Hill was the nearly unanimous favorite of the night. One of my Autumn Brew Review top five picks, Chestnut Hill is brown ale for those who think that brown ale is synonymous with boring. Packed with toasty, nutty, caramel malt, balancing spicy/herbal hop flavor and bitterness, and just a hint of nutmeg and cinnamon spice, this is one delicious brew. It’s only available on tap and the supply is running out. You will need to get it soon if you want to get it at all…unless the Lift Bridge guys can be convinced to make more.

If you want more information about the Twin Cities Perfect Pint Beer Club go here and request to become a member.