Categories
Reviews

Alley Kat Brewing Co. Blue Dragon – American Double / Imperial IPA at 7.5% ABV

Alley Kat Brewing Co. Blue Dragon American Double / Imperial IPA at 7.5% ABV (C$7.99 at Quarry Park Calgary Co-Op, 650 ml, no bottle date or best before, reviewed 14-Mar-2016)

Appearance: clear pale amber with one finger of loose ivory head diminishing gradually to a thin skim, patchy lacing. (3/5) Aroma: grainy malt, grapefruit, resin, catty. (6/10) Taste: moderate sweet, moderate-strong bitter. (7/10) Palate: medium slick body, moderate carbonation, lingering and building bitter and boozy finish. (3/5)

Big, boozy, and unsubtle. Malt forward in pretty much exactly the way I was afraid it would be. Think, corn syrup with a dash of turpentine. But in a good way? Well… in an OK way, anyway. (12/20)

6/10 #ryansbooze ryansbooze.com

Categories
Reviews

Breakside Brewery Breakside IPA – American IPA at 6.4% ABV

Breakside Brewery Breakside IPA American IPA at 6.4% ABV (C$9.99 at Quarry Park Calgary Co-Op, 650 ml, no bottle date or best before, reviewed 14-Mar-2016)

Appearance: hazy amber with two fat fingers of rocky ivory head, excellent retention and lacing. (5/5) Aroma: citrus, pine, pale malt, tropical fruit. (8/10) Taste: moderate sweet, moderate-strong bitter. (8/10) Palate: medium body, moderate carbonation, off-dry finish. (4/5)

Well balanced A/IPA with bright citrusy and piney hops, and just enough pale malt to support, without any suggestion of malt forwardness. Solid and pleasant. (16/20)

8/10 #ryansbooze ryansbooze.com

Categories
Reviews

Brewsters Brewing Company Lanigan’s Irish Ale – Irish Red Ale at 5% ABV

Brewsters Brewing Company Lanigan’s Irish Ale Irish Red Ale at 5% ABV (C$6.79 at Quarry Park Calgary Co-Op, 650 ml, no bottle date or best before, reviewed 14-Mar-2016)

Appearance: clear medium amber with one fat finger of light beige head, good retention and lacing. (4/5) Aroma: caramel and toffee malts, light smoke, nutty. (5/10) Taste: moderate-high sweet, moderate bitter. (4/10) Palate: medium body tending to watery, moderate carbonation, malty slightly metallic finish. (2/5)

“Lanigan’s Irish Ale”, huh? Sounds about as authentic as “Tipsy McStagger”. A fairly uninspiring interpretation of a stye that I find unexciting at best. Thinnish and malty, without much to recommend it. (10/20)

5/10 #ryansbooze ryansbooze.com

Categories
Reviews

Brouwerij Van Honsebrouck Bacchus Frambozenbier – Fruit / Vegetable Beer at 5% ABV

Brouwerij Van Honsebrouck Bacchus Frambozenbier Fruit / Vegetable Beer at 5% ABV (C$7.49 at Quarry Park Calgary Co-Op, 375 ml, best before 3-Sep-2016, reviewed 14-Mar-2016)

Appearance: clear amber-brown with one fat finger of dense and fluffy light purple head, excellent retention and lacing. (5/5) Aroma: sweet tart raspberry, wheat, light malt vinegar. (7/10) Taste: moderate-high sweet, moderate tart, light bitter. (6/10) Palate: medium-light body, moderate carbonation, off-dry tart and astringent finish. (3/5)

A true Belgian with authentic fruit flavour and none of the dreaded cough syrup effect. Not overly complex, and it falls a little short in delivering on the tongue, but pleasant. A little more sweetness than I’d prefer (almost but not quite cloying, presumably from the Stevia) and a fair bit less umame. (15/20)

7/10 #ryansbooze ryansbooze.com

Categories
Reviews

Deschutes Brewery The Stoic (2015) – Abt / Quadrupel at 10.9% ABV

Deschutes Brewery The Stoic (2015) Abt / Quadrupel at 10.9% ABV (C$20.30 at Willow Park Wine & Spirits, 650 ml, best before 8-May-2016, reviewed 13-Mar-2016)

Appearance: clear slightly orange-tinged pale amber with a short thin light beige head diminishing rapidly to a thin cap, patchy lacing. (3/5) Aroma: complex, pomegranate, raspberry, caramel, oak, vinous, light whiskey, dark fruit. (8/10) Taste: moderate-high sweet, moderate-low bitter, light tart. (8/10) Palate: medium-full body, moderate carbonation, malty sweet and warming finish. (3/5)

Pretty well-behaved for a double digit boozy beast, but the flavours are complex, perhaps to the point of being a little overwhelming – the blend of different barrel ageings is a bit challenging, and I’m not completely convinced that vinous oak and whiskey work all that well together. Decent Belg-ish style, but not a home run. (15/20)

7.5/10 #ryansbooze ryansbooze.com

Categories
Reviews

Asahi Breweries Super Dry – Pale Lager at 5% ABV

Asahi Breweries Super Dry Pale Lager at 5% ABV (C$2.69 at Quarry Park Calgary Co-Op, 500 ml, no bottle date or best before, reviewed 13-Mar-2016)

Appearance: clear straw with two fat fingers of fluffy white head, excellent retention and moderate lacing. (4/5) Aroma: biscuity, corn and rice adjuncts, grassy, light citrus. (4/10) Taste: moderate sweet, moderate-low bitter. (4/10) Palate: light body, lively to moderate carbonation, crisp lightly bitter and metallic finish. (3/5)

Eh. Standard pale/Euro lager with lots of adjunct character and a slightly metallic finish. Marginally better than a Coors Lite, but that’s not exactly a high bar, is it? (10/20)

5/10 #ryansbooze ryansbooze.com

Categories
Reviews

Brickworks Ciderhouse Brickworks Batch 1904 – Dry Cider at 5% ABV

Brickworks Ciderhouse Brickworks Batch 1904 Dry Cider at 5% ABV (On tap at Mill Street Brewpub YYZ, reviewed 13-Mar-2016)

Appearance: clear bright yellow with a short, short-lived white head diminishing rapidly to nothing, no lacing. (3/5) Aroma: sweet tart apples, light floral. (6/10) Taste: moderate-low sweet, moderate tart, low bitter. (6/10) Palate: light body, lively carbonation, off-dry slightly sweet and sticky finish. (3/5)

Decent dry cider, not too sweet. Interesting truly local product (the apples travel no further than 300km to the cider house) and I approve of the ingredients list (heritage apples). Unfortunately, that pretty much exhausts the list of interesting things about it, and the flavour isn’t on that list. Not unpleasant, but very straightforward and simple. As well, the initially lively carbonation drops off fairly rapidly, making this an awful lot like drinking apple juice. Which, don’t get me wrong, is fine – if you want apple juice. (12/20)

6/10 #ryansbooze ryansbooze.com

Categories
Reviews

YellowBelly Brewery / Top Shed East Coast Cream Ale – American Pale Ale at 4.8% ABV

YellowBelly Brewery / Top Shed East Coast Cream Ale American Pale Ale at 4.8% ABV (C$9.34 at NLC Stavanger, 1 l, best before 14-Apr-2016, reviewed 12-Mar-2016)

Appearance: clear straw with one fat finger of fluffy white head, excellent retention and moderate lacing. (4/5) Aroma: citrus, white wine, pale malt, field berries. (7/10) Taste: moderate sweet, moderate bitter. (7/10) Palate: medium-light body, moderate carbonation, crisp lightly bitter finish. (3/5)

Nice. Pacific Gem hops are supposed to have a blackberry aroma, but I’m finding they come through with a white wine vinous character here. Lots of citrus and fruit flavour make this a light and pleasant APA. (14/20)

7/10 #ryansbooze ryansbooze.com

Categories
Reviews

Molson Coors Canada Rickard’s Red Session Lager – American Amber / Red Lager at 4% ABV

Molson Coors Canada Rickard’s Red Session Lager American Amber / Red Lager at 4% ABV (C$3.31 at NLC Stavanger, 473 ml, bottle date 10-Feb-2016, reviewed 11-Mar-2016)

Appearance: clear slightly red-tinged medium amber with one finger of loose light beige head diminishing rapidly to a thin skim, no lacing. (3/5) Aroma: caramel malt, bready, corn, light earth/herbal. (4/10) Taste: moderate-low sweet, moderate-low bitter. (4/10) Palate: light body, moderate carbonation, off-dry finish. (3/5)

What? They had it as singles, OK? It’s not like I bought a six-pack! So, anyway, yeah: watered-down Rickard’s Red. Whee. Sort of like Molson 67, in that if you think of it as lightly beer-flavoured water, it’s not terrible. It’s not good, either, mind you. Oh my goodness, no. But, a guy could gag it down. In a pinch. If I have to. I guess. (9/20)

4.5/10 #ryansbooze ryansbooze.com

Categories
Reviews

Propeller Brewery Propeller Organic Ale – Golden Ale at 4.5% ABV

Propeller Brewery Propeller Organic Ale Golden Ale at 4.5% ABV (C$2.55 at NLC Stavanger, 355 ml, no bottle date or best before, reviewed 11-Mar-2016)

Appearance: clear straw with one fat finger of fluffy white head, excellent retention and moderate lacing. (4/5) Aroma: grassy, pale crackery malt, light citrus and floral. (6/10) Taste: moderate sweet, moderate bitter. (6/10) Palate: light body, moderate carbonation, crisp bitter finish. (3/5)

I’ve never been a fan of using “organic” as a beer descriptor – I mean, in theory, literally any style of beer can be made using 100% organic materials, so that doesn’t tell you a lot about what’s inside, does it? (Quite aside from the issue that an “organic” designation doesn’t really mean much, either.) Anyway, as far as what it is, it’s a pale pilsner-ish blonde, with grassy hops and crackery malt. Light, easy-drinking and thirst-quenching, but hardly one of Propeller’s more interesting offerings. Boring as heck and a good one to keep in the fridge for after physical labour and/or non beer-appreciating visitors. (12/20)

6/10 #ryansbooze ryansbooze.com