Halibut Point Hefeweizen

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From our own Maria Devan!

Tucked away on a little island in Alaska is a small brewing company called Baranof Island Brewing. The brewery has been open only since 2010 so it is still very young. They started with a mere 1/2 BBL but the locals were so enthusiastic and just kept drinking up all the beer. They now are up to 310 gallon batches on all their offerings. They are very particular about the quality of the ingredients that go into their beers and are also very proud of a pristine and pure glacier fed water source. They feel that the quality of the water contributes significantly to the quality of the beer.

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Beer Profile: Elysian Savant IPA

savantIPA

Profiled by Maria Devan

Beer-Profile1-258x300 Pours an orange color, cloudy and with a dark melon like hue from deep within it. Fat creamy head of khaki foam that left plenty of clinging lace.

Nose is tropical fruit and citrus. Light fresh orange on passion fruit. No pine in the nose until it warmed a bit then it was earthy pine needles. A beautiful scent of brown sugar for malt.

Taste is outrageously good. The fruits are juicy and a bit tart too so they fully engage the palate. The earthy pine is light and the the malt becomes a soft light caramel.

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Welcome to the PGA beer rating system: one beer “Don’t bother.” Two: Eh, if someone gives it to you, drink. Three: very good, go ahead and seek it out, but be aware there is at least one problem. Four: seek it out. Five: pretty much “perfecto.”

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________________________________________Beer HERE

meMaria Devan lives in Ithaca, NY and is frequent reviewer of beer and a beer lover deluxe.

A Beer Judge’s Diary: the BJCP Test

Column update: Millie did pass, the second time… while keeping an eye out for online “quirks.”

By Ken Carman
By Ken Carman
  I’m Certified, my wife Millie is an Apprentice: a rank that will be disappearing soon. According to Mike Dixon on the Facebook BJCP judge page, probably April 1st. Millie just got confirmation: April 1st. We are both Legacy: having taken the old sit down test.
  Let’s start with “we all have our quirks.” One of Millie’s is from her mother: doing things late, or at the last moment. With her mother it’s a family joke, of sorts. Not Marilyn Jenny herself, no: everyone loves her. Nah, just Jenny last moment, or late-ism.
  The reason I’m telling you all this is she started studying, hoping to keep her BJCP status. Probably “started” 2 months ago: more I suspect. In school I was the B+ to C or D student. A’s for English, B’s History and everything else maybe a C, a few D’s. Yet when it comes to the online BJCP test this solid A student (Millie) has had a problem that makes the former high flying student fail the Legacy: twice, the online once. Continue reading “A Beer Judge’s Diary: the BJCP Test”

Beer Profile: Halibut Point Hefeweizen

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Profiled by Maria Devan

Beer-Profile1-258x300 Pours a lovely turbid banana yellow with a graceful orange blush. Fat white head of foam that fell slowly and left lovely lace. Nose is crisp wheat on a light banana with plenty of citrus. Bright orange. There is some faint clove in the background and maybe a bit of grass.

Brewed by Baranof Brewing, Alaska. 3 reviews at BA in mid to high 3 range… which usually means about an 80 on a 100 scale. About mid 3’s on Rate Beer, which usually means just a little lower.

Taste is unique.

It has a creamy yet light mouthfeel of a traditional hefe but the flavor is citrusy with orange. I like it. Makes it drink lightly like a wheat beer or a pale ale. Crisp dry wheat cracker and a bit of clove and faint white pepper and spice in the finish. The hops are lightly on the back end, just enough to accent that fruity taste and leave this one dry and refreshing.

Vive la difference is what I say. This is a unique interpretation of a hefe that many will say does not have enough banana and clove. I think they simply chose to give the citrus a nice place on the palate and the flavor in the end has plenty of banana but also plenty of orange to really brighten it and make it lovely on that wheat malt. Drinks creamy like a hefe, but has a slightly different slant on the flavor. Another great beer from this brewer. Thank you Adam for the chance to try another beer from this up and coming brewer.

Serving type: bottle

3.9

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Welcome to the PGA beer rating system: one beer “Don’t bother.” Two: Eh, if someone gives it to you, drink. Three: very good, go ahead and seek it out, but be aware there is at least one problem. Four: seek it out. Five: pretty much “perfecto.”

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_____________________________Beer HERE

meMaria Devan lives in Ithaca, NY and is frequent reviewer of beer and a beer lover deluxe.

Beer Reviews by Tom Becham

Courtesy untapped.com
Courtesy untapped.com

I just had my first taste of beer from a relatively new brewer, called Coachella Valley Brewing Company, located in Thousand Palms, California.

Yes, it’s an extremely unlikely location for craft beer. And yes, that area is more famous for its annual indie music festival than anything else. But that might change, if this beer is an indication of the brewery’s efforts.

The Coachella offering I tried was a bottled beer called Desert Swarm. Coachella calls this one a “Double Wit, with honey added”.

Indeed, the cloudy, turbid appearance matches what one would expect of a Wit. The head is sizeable, and long-lasting. The color is bright yellow, and opaque.

The nose is a bit of a surprise, though. The usual bright citrus scents of a Wit are obscured by the honey. The coriander is still slightly in evidence.

On the palate, again the citrus is in the background. Surprisingly, the honey doesn’t dominate, as I believe most of it was fermented out. Instead, more of a dryness like you would expect of a dry mead, is there. The coriander makes a subtle show of itself, and the mouthfeel is full and satisfying due to the yeast.

All in all, not really true to style, but head and shoulders above others that claim this style (Yes, I’m looking at you, Shock Top and Blue Moon). And, when you have a beer this refreshing made by a desert brewer, you can overlook a bit of variance from style standards. Just a nice warm weather quaffer.

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TomBTom Becham claims to live in Oxnard, CA, but we here at PGA know him to be an escaped leprechaun from that land of the Wee people where he used to live in a Wee Wee tree. (And everyone knows what that was used for.)

NAH, he’s just a great writer, beer lover who has graced the pages of PGA many times.

Beer Review by Tom Becham

Courtesy wiki
Courtesy wiki

I recently had the opportunity to buy a bottle of Utopias from Sam Adams. Utopias is currently the strongest beer that is brewed on a regular basis. (Several MUCH stronger ones exist; Google the website for Brew Dog if you ever have some free time and a desire to laugh your ass off at sophomoric Scottish beer-related humor.)

Yes, it is VERY expensive. My solution was to go halves with a friend, and thereafter split the bottle. After all, 24 ounces of 28% alcohol beer isn’t going to be ruined by splitting it two ways!

The 2013 batch of Utopias, according to the bottle (an attractive, copper-finished ceramic number, made to look like a huge mash tun in a modern brewery), was brewed with added maple syrup – much like Sam Adams’ earlier Triple Bock – and aged in bourbon, rum and port barrels.

With a pour on my part that was almost homicidally aggressive, I expected to get at least some small head from Utopias, but succeeded only in producing a few short-lived bubbles. The color was as black as Satan’s heart, and just as dense. This brew also left “legs” inside the glass as viscous as I would expect from the richest of dessert wines.

The port barrel aging was VERY evident in the aroma of this brew. In fact, the friend with whom I shared this bottle used to be something of a port afficionado, and he commented, “If I had five guesses about what this drink was, my first would be that it is port, and the other four would NOT be beer.”

So, yes, strong port on the nose, along with maple sugar, a strong jolt of alcohol, dark fruits, and a tiny bit of bourbon. The rum was nowhere to be observed.

The first taste was both a shock and a revelation. For those who have tasted Sam Adams’ Triple Bock (Utopias is a development of that beer), Utopias is like Triple Bock, but on steroids. The dark fruits and port come through very boldly on the palate. The alcohol bite, while strong, is not nearly what I would expect from the ABV. The maple sugar comes through on an extremely long finish.

One interesting note is the aroma left over in the bottle afterwards. Obviously, with such a lovely, collectible bottle, this one currently resides on a shelf in my work cubicle. And it has an almost overpowering aroma of maple syrup clinging to it.

All in all, a very drinkable, enjoyable brew. It doesn’t come across as beer, but it shows what beer can be stretched to, and for that reason alone, it is worth trying. In fact, this one should be on everyone’s “try before I die” list. Would I buy it again? At the price it fetches now, no. But if someone else is buying…
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10001368_272283422947213_1841407348_nTom Becham lives in Oxnard, California where he raises killer rabbits for fun, profit and as assassins. Nah, he’s just a great writer who has reviewed breweries, beers, brewers and beer related businesses as far away as Hawaii for The Professor . His current location is unknown, though the professor is using his GPS satellite hacking device right now to track him down and reward him for writing many great articles for PGA. Well, at least that’s what we’ll tell the detectives when they come a knocking.

Beer Profile: Lagunitas Brown Shugga

BrownShugga

Courtesy 1001bottlesofbeer.com
Courtesy 1001bottlesofbeer.com

Profiled by Ken Carman for PGA

From their site…

“Originally a failed attempt at our 1997 batch of Olde GnarlyWine Ale resulting in an all-new-beer-style we like to call…Irresponsible.”

ABV: 9.99%

BA rating 90% and 90
97 and 86 at Rate Beer

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9.99? You’d never know, and yes, that’s a compliment. But, what’s the noise about? It’s an IPA, and a beautiful one. Maybe a little over the top viscous-wise,: but not much. Since this was sold in March, yet brewed in October, perhaps the distinctiveness of all they did faded: but I doubt it. Compare it to Crustacean Barleywine-ish and you’ll see what I mean. Now that is an over the top Imperial IPA with a hint of Barleywine to it. (At best.)

Where is all the brown sugar go? Fermented out by an aggressive yeast, I suspect.

Great grapefruit in the nose: usual suspects probably Cascade, Amarillo… etc. Essentially American, or spin off of American, hops. Sweet, somewhat unattenuated, nose. No malts noted, but smells fresh, exciting: eager to be tossed into the palate.

Mouthfeel: solid caramel malt with a medium to high side of medium body. Grapefruity hops. Hey, this is simple. It’s a great IPA.

Taste is grapefruity hops up front with a firm body behind it that supports like any decent seas should. This ship sails exactly into American IPA territory.

Appearance foamy/pillow white head with a few big bubbles. SRM is 5-6 bronze. It’s beautiful as the light shines through like gold. Perhaps there’s something to this “old bottle,” thought there’s no cardboard sense or aged hops. The pictures I’ve seen in the glass are almost a deep red. That wasn’t this. Of course there’s always the production line snafu possibility, I suppose.

This is a very simple quaff. No matter what happened here, they wound up with a delicious IPA on the lower side of hops at best. Sierra Nevada upped the ante years ago with their over the top pale, but that only encouraged IPAs into becoming hyper. I like them, but that’s not the point. IPAs shouldn’t be hop race, but a standard one can judge by. I encourage over the top, just do Specialty or Imperial.

4.3

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Welcome to the PGA beer rating system: one beer “Don’t bother.” Two: Eh, if someone gives it to you, drink. Three: very good, go ahead and seek it out, but be aware there is at least one problem. Four: seek it out. Five: pretty much “perfecto.”

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________________________________________Beer HERE

meMaria Devan lives in Ithaca, NY and is frequent reviewer of beer and a beer lover deluxe.