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  • Permalink for 'The_Brew_Site/2010/03/30/Audacious_Apricot_Ale'

    Audacious Apricot Ale

    Posted: March 30th, 2010, 8:23am CEST by Jon

    Pyramid Audacious Apricot AleOne of the Pyramid brews that I received was their Audacious Apricot Ale (previously their Apricot Weizen, and before that, simply Apricot Ale), one that I’ve waxed nostalgic about on several occasions, but not that I’ve ever formally reviewed. This isn’t a “formal” review either, like my usual ones, but the beer made an impression that I wanted to write about anyway.

    I’ve called the original Pyramid Apricot Ale I drank back in the ’90s a “revelation”—when I was being introduced to craft beer, this took beer to a whole new level: fruit. (I also remember drinking Bert Grant’s Honey Apple Ale around this time and being similarly amazed at how good it was.) It was delicious and bready, like a fresh, soft baguette, and yet completely infused with luscious notes of summertime apricots—it was a perfect fruit pairing for a beer, and it set a pretty high benchmark for other fruits beers I tried.

    Apricot ales in particular, nobody else seemed to be able to get right. There was always too much “earth” and not enough “fruit,” even with (especially with) a homebrewed apricot ale I made myself (with fresh-picked apricots a friend brought back from Moses Lake, Washington—I was living in Spokane during this time). A good apricot beer should have a hint of earthiness behind the sweet, but more often than not I end up thinking “soil” or “dirt” with hints of fruit behind that.

    And in recent years, even Pyramid’s Apricot offering fell short. I don’t know exactly what it was—a lot less of the fruit character than I remember, too much filtering, using extract instead of real fruit (or maybe vice-versa)—whatever it was, it was clear that the recipe had strayed from the one I adored in the mid-90s.

    But now, with this (yet another) change to “Audacious Apricot Ale” (formerly “Apricot Weizen,” née “Apricot Ale”), I’m pretty sure Pyramid has tweaked the recipe again—in fact, I think they’ve tweaked it a long way back to the original Apricot Ale that I first encountered. I honestly opened this beer without high expectations, for all the reasons I laid out above, and frankly I was very surprised: this is a good, solid fruit beer again, with a noticeable (almost assertive) apricot presence and is well-balanced between the wheat and the fruit.

    It’s not exactly as good as I remember, but it was good enough to give me a sense of déjà vu—and that’s some serious mojo. But it is good, it’s the best Pyramid has had in years, and it’s highly drinkable at 5.1% alcohol.

    On the ratings sites, BeerAdvocate gives it a B-, while RateBeer scores 3.04/5 and puts it in their 50th percentile.

  • Permalink for 'The_Brew_Site/2010/03/29/Post_Spring_break'

    Post-Spring break

    Posted: March 29th, 2010, 8:53am CEST by Jon

    We got back Friday late from our spring break trip: South Lake Tahoe. (About 8.5 hours of driving to/from Bend.) This weekend has mostly been about vegging (or “decompressing” to make it sound more important) but I did get a Hop Press post written: about the small-ish beer scene in Tahoe. It’s introductory, and I’ll have more in-depth reviews of each of the two brewpubs I listed there.

    …And no, we didn’t drive through Truckee (home of Fifty Fifty Brewing), we drove through Reno instead. Yes, there are some breweries there but we didn’t make any other beer stops other than what was in Tahoe itself. But those were pretty good.

  • Permalink for 'The_Brew_Site/2010/03/22/Highland_Ambush'

    Highland Ambush

    Posted: March 22nd, 2010, 5:00pm CET by Jon

    BridgePort Highland AmbushHighland Ambush is a Scotch Ale in BridgePort Brewing’s “Big Brews” series, and one with a bit of a history: BridgePort first brewed it back in the 1980s as an homage to then-pub manager Stuart Ramsay. BridgePort resurrected the beer December of last year, and added the twist of partially aging it in fresh bourbon barrels.

    Interestingly, I didn’t read the label close enough before I started drinking Highland Ambush: I hadn’t realized it was barrel-aged, but you can see in my notes that the bourbon barrel wood has a strong presence even so.

    At 6.8% alcohol by volume, it’s not a “Big Brew” in the over-the-top Imperial sense, and it doesn’t have to be. It has a nice presence and the bourbon barrel aging brings a lot to the table.

    Appearance: Dark brown, nutty and a touch gold at the edges. Wood putty-colored generous head. Nice legs as it falls.

    Smell: Bready with a note of roasted malt. Some hints of spicy rich leather?—perhaps cedar or similar. (Hops?) [Note: I wrote in "bourbon" after I figured out what it was.]

    Taste: Toffee-rich and that spiciness from the nose spills into the big malt notes—tobacco, “from the wood,” something like that. [Realized it was barrel-aged after this point.] Nice touch of heat and interplay of caramelly dark malts. Tasty, spicy.

    Mouthfeel: Prickly texture complementing a medium-full body.

    Overall: Didn’t know at first it was 1/3 aged in oak bourbon barrels. Malty, tasty, and enjoyable, and I’m digging the spicy wood characters it’s full of. Bourbon comes out in the nose as it warms.

    On BeerAdvocate, it scores an overall grade of B+. On RateBeer, it scores 3.53 out of 5 and is in their 82nd percentile.

  • Permalink for 'The_Brew_Site/2010/03/21/Spring_'

    Spring!

    Posted: March 21st, 2010, 7:24am CET by Jon

    The first day of spring was pretty nice here in Central Oregon today: it got up to somewhere around 70 degrees I think. Good day for a beer, but an even nicer day for hops:

    Hop buds

    My hops are starting to sprout—today’s the first day I noticed them and some of the buds are already about an inch tall. That’s a promising start around here.

    We’re also heading into spring break here in Oregon: the kids are out of school and blogging is going to be light around here over the next week or so because I’ll be taking some time away from the computer as well. So that means no “Theme Week” this month (unless you want to call it “Spring Break Week”).

    I’ll probably queue up some posts to run occasionally during the week to keep it a little interesting though. At least one.

    In the meantime, get outside and enjoy the nice weather while you can. Unless it’s cold where you are, in which case stay inside and enjoy some warming beers. Bocks are a good choice this time of year.

  • Permalink for 'The_Brew_Site/2010/03/18/The_Beer_Hacker__Brewing_on_the_cheap__All_grain_vs._extract_brewing'

    The Beer Hacker: Brewing on the cheap: All-grain vs. extract brewing

    Posted: March 18th, 2010, 5:00pm CET by Jon

    This is the latest in a series of articles about the economic impact of brewing your own beer at home.

    One of the comments from the last “Brewing on the cheap” post mentioned all-grain brewing as “far cheaper” since you’re buying grain in bulk, and in fact an examination of all-grain brewing as compared to extract brewing is something I had been planning in this series. How economical is brewing all-grain? Let’s take a look at some assumptions and work up some costs by style, and contrast with the extract costs. Also, there are some other economics considerations I’ll touch on at the end that you should consider when making the decision as to what type of economical brewer you are going to be.

    The main difference in the two styles of brewing is that rather than using pre-processed malt extract (in the form of syrup or dried powder), you are mashing the grains yourself to convert and extract the sweet wort which you will boil for the beer. This process will give you more control over the brewing process but will significantly increase the amount of time you spend on brew day—for myself, brewing an extract-based batch of five gallons from start to clean-up takes about three to three-and-a-half hours; brewing all-grain with friends, I know the process can take five to six or more hours.

    However, by using whole grains (cracked, of course), you are “cutting out the middleman” involved with the production of extract: it goes through the exact same mashing process to extract the wort, but it is further processed (via near-vacuum evaporation) to extract the majority of the water and concentrate the wort extract down to its syrup form (about 20% water) or dried powder form (1% or less water). Naturally, you are paying for these processing costs when you purchase malt extract.

    What is the cost difference? Well, an assumption: let’s say an “average” beer uses ten pounds of grains for an all-grain batch (I’m picking up this figure from Randy Mosher’s Radical Brewing), versus a seven-pound can of liquid malt extract.

    The liquid malt extract, as we’ve previously established, will cost $18. The whole grain, if you buy it by the pound at the brew store, will cost $12.50. Why? Because the two-row malt at the brew store (my local one, anyway) costs $1.25 per pound (as opposed to the $1.90+ per pound for specialty grains). 1.25 x 10 = 12.50. Right there is a savings of $5.50.

    But, if you’re a serious all-grain brewer, then you more than likely will buy your grains in bulk—by the 55-pound bag (and store it yourself). On average this will cost you in the range of $42 (at the local Brew Shop) to $60 per bag (from this online source), which equates to a per-pound cost of $0.76 to $1.09. Ten pounds at this rate will only cost the equivalent of $7.60 to $10.90—a $7.10 to $10.40 savings over extract for this “average” beer.

    With these figures in mind, let’s update the pricing chart (again), and build a (new) table of per-beer-style costs, with comparison to the extract numbers, and notes of approximate amounts of grains used.

    Ingredient Price Price (online)
    Malt extract syrup – 7 lbs. $18.00 $16.50
    Malt extract – dried – 3 lbs. $11.00 $11.25
    Malt extract – dried – 1 lb. $4.25 $4.40
    Base grains – per pound $1.25 $1.29 – 1.39
    Base grains – per pound (bulk) $0.76 $1.09
    Other grains – per pound $1.90 $1.45
    Specialty grains – per pound $2.25 ~$2.00
    Hops (whole leaf) $3.25 – 3.95 $5.50+
    Liquid yeast $6.50 $6.00 – 10.00
    Yeast – dry $1.25 – 3.95 $1.20 – 4.00
    Corn sugar – 1 lb. $1.25 $1.00 – 2.00

    The costs-per-style in this next table are based upon the previous style cost estimates, for a five-gallon batch of homebrew.

    Style Extract price All-grain price Lbs. grain
    American Pale Ale $31.15 $20.75 - 24.05 10
    English Bitter $34.77 $21.85 - 24.49 8
    India Pale Ale $43.35 $25.77 - 29.73 12
    Double/Imperial IPA $54.92 $40.80 - 47.40 20
    Brown Ale $31.07 $20.67 - 23.97 10
    Porter $37.09 $27.25 - 30.88 11
    Stout (basic) $34.40 $24.56 - 28.19 11
    Imperial Stout $71.17 $51.99 - 59.25 22
    Hefeweizen (basic) $29.95 $18.79 - 21.76 9
    Cream Ale $29.15 $16.94 - 19.58 7-9
    Belgian Witbier $35.93 $22.51 - 25.15 8
    Barleywine ~$70 ~$52 – 59 20-22

    (Of course, my estimates on pounds of grains used are approximates only and may well be off, depending on a number of things including your particular recipes, your extract efficiency, mashing regimen, etc.)

    There is clearly a huge savings in all-grain brewing over extract brewing, even given the range of bulk grain prices. In fact, looking at the first article’s example of the retail cost for the equivalent volume of Pale Ale ($46), you’re looking at slashing the cost of the beer in half, whereas extract brewing yields a 28% savings over retail. Interestingly, the average savings in all-grain over extract works out to be about 28% also.

    Based on these numbers, should you abandon extract brewing and switch over to all-grain immediately?

    Well, not necessarily. As with everything else, there are (economic) tradeoffs. Let’s take a look at some of those:

    • Time. Do you value your time? Do you put a dollar value to your time? Remember, all-grain brewing doubles (or more) your time spent on brew day. Is saving, say, $10 worth the extra 3+ hours you’ll spend brewing? (Saving, or earning, depending on your point of view, $3.33 per hour.)
    • Initial equipment costs. If you don’t have the necessary equipment to move into all-grain brewing, then you likely need to purchase it. This won’t necessarily be cheap, so while you can amortize these equipment costs over the number of batches you brew on it, it’s still an expenditure which can push your all-grain brewing efforts into more expensive territory than extract at first.
    • Storage costs. Are you planning on buying your grain in bulk? If so, do you have a place to store it? (It needs to be dark, cool, and relatively dry.) You may need to buy something like a Rubbermaid garbage can to store the grain in and spare some closet space—and while to most people this may not seem like a significant expense (or any at all), I’ve known people (mostly real estate types) who actually would consider the cost of the square footage being used (as a percentage of your rent or mortgage costs).

    In the end, both extract brewing and all-grain brewing have their economical high points, and I’m not going to advocate for either method here—it’s entirely up to you to make up your own mind which way you want to go. But hopefully some of these numbers will prove useful in that decision-making process.

  • Permalink for 'The_Brew_Site/2010/03/18/Happy_St._Patrick%e2%80%99s_Day'

    Happy St. Patrick’s Day

    Posted: March 18th, 2010, 4:00am CET by Jon

    Coconut Cream Stout

    Homebrewed Coconut Cream Stout. Hope you’re all drinking something equally delicious.

  • Permalink for 'The_Brew_Site/2010/03/17/Deschutes_Hop_in_the_Dark_Cascadian_Dark_Ale'

    Deschutes Hop in the Dark Cascadian Dark Ale

    Posted: March 17th, 2010, 7:56am CET by Jon

    No, this isn’t a review (yet), but a note that Deschutes Brewery is set to release their first bottled Cascadian Dark Ale (also variously known as a “Black IPA”) coming up this May: Hop in the Dark. (And note they are labeling it a “CDA” rather than a Black IPA.) Here are their notes about it:

    Available May – September 2010

    Bond Street Series (22-ounce bottles and draft)

    What takes 22 brews and more than a year of experiments to reach perfection? Deschutes Brewery’s newest Bond Street Series release: Hop in the Dark Cascadian Dark Ale (C.D.A.). C.D.A. is a new style of beer that emerged recently in the Pacific Northwest, more widely known as a Black I.P.A. There has been a significant movement and debate in the region to call the style C.D.A., and Deschutes Brewery leads the way with Hop in the Dark.

    This ominous looking liquid combines prominent Northwest hops with roasted malts to create a black tinted India Pale Ale type beer. Hop in the Dark aromas come from Cascade, Amarillo, Citra and Centennial hops that float over a gentle undercurrent of velvet malt complexities.

    Deschutes Brewery invites beer lovers to take the plunge – a hop, if you will – into this new Dark Cascadian Ale.

    Beer Geek Information:
    6.5% Alcohol by Volume (ABV)
    70 International Bittering Units (IBUs)

    I’ve heard some of those 22 brews, while they were tinkering with the recipe, were rather odd, others were really good. There’s a definite advantage to using the pubs as a sort of “test lab” for these kinds of things.

  • Permalink for 'The_Brew_Site/2010/03/13/Double_Mountain_3rd_anniversary_%e2%80%93_today'

    Double Mountain 3rd anniversary – today

    Posted: March 13th, 2010, 5:59pm CET by Jon

    Double Mountain Brewery is celebrating their 3rd anniversary today with a big party at the Hood River brewery and taproom: they’ve closed off the block in front of the brewery and erected a big tent, and are featuring live music, food and reserve beers all day.

    Kölsch
    Alpenbrew
    India Red Ale
    Hop Lava
    Black Irish Stout (on nitro)
    Porter A-Go-Go
    Imperial Chaos Imperial Stout
    Nitro Pale (on nitro)
    Empire Strikes Back All-English IPA
    Devil’s Kriek
    Terrible Two Bourbon-Barrel Aged Brown Ale
    *Li’l Red Pils ‘09
    *Jumpin’ Jack Flash Pub Cider
    *Fa La La La La ‘09
    *The Vaporizer ‘09 Dry-Hopped Pale Ale

    *These last four are one-and-done, we’ll only be tapping one keg of each on Saturday.

    2:30pm: We start with a bang: Paris Slim and his band will be kickin’ some killer West Coast blues.

    4:30pm: Next up we detour down the country-folk highway with Garrett Brennan and the Great Salt Licks, featuring Lewi Longmire and Paul Brainard (on pedal steel!).
    7:00pm: A hot set as always from the incredible one-man supergroup Tony Smiley, with a little help from his friend The Bird. If you’ve never see Tony lay it down, you’re in for a special treat.
    9:00pm: We wrap it up with some crucial reggae from Chronicle, a Portland band that knows how to make a party.

    As always, the tunes are 100% free. Come early, come often…

    Our food offerings for the day will feature our regular fare plus some fresh down-home Mexican food too. Silvia (one of our wonderful servers) asked her mama to make some of her famous tamales and killer salsas. Kitchen jockeys Mark & Jonny Face will be knocking out some tasty tacos too, piled on fresh tortillas from Tortilleria De Leon in Gresham.

    A quick reminder that the gig is kid-friendly until 8pm, per OLCC regs. Our big tent will be heated, but bring something warm & dry regardless.

    There’s still time to head over to Hood River to enjoy the festivities—you’re only a short hop away if you’re in Portland, and just a couple hours away from Central Oregon and similar.

  • Permalink for 'The_Brew_Site/2010/03/10/Suggest_a_new_beer_for_Fort_George_Brewery'

    Suggest a new beer for Fort George Brewery

    Posted: March 10th, 2010, 8:12am CET by Jon

    Fort George Brewery over in Astoria, Oregon, is busy this month: not only are they celebrating their third birthday coming up on March 14th, they’re also holding a contest to suggest their next new beer. From their blog:

    We here at Fort George take being a Public House very seriously. It has been because of our great customers that we have been able to grow and better our business and for that, we would like to give back. Fort George Brewery would like your ideas for a new beer that could be made in our brewery. If you would like to see a new style of beer, would like us to try something new with our beers, or have a recipe of your own that you would like to see pouring at Fort George, submit an entry and it could end up being brewed!

    All beer entries must be able to be made with our American Ale Yeast or our Belgian yeast. The beer selected will be based on quality, creativity, availability of ingredients, and by how delicious it sounds. You may submit as many entries as you like but only one beer will be chosen.

    Click through to the blog to get the details on how to submit your beer idea. You have until April 10th to get your entry in.

  • Permalink for 'The_Brew_Site/2010/03/09/Session__38_announced'

    Session #38 announced

    Posted: March 9th, 2010, 8:32am CET by Jon

    The roundup for Session #37 has been posted (hmm, seems a little sparse; I don’t see mine or several others I remember reading listed there yet…) and the topic for The Session #38 for April has been announced:

    With Kate the Great Day a recent memory and the day of the Dark Lord fast approaching, I started thinking about what beer or beers that I would get up at 4:00 in the morning, drive across state lines, stand in a long unmoving line in the cold and rain for the chance to taste with a crowd the size of Woodstock.

    So here is my question to you (with a couple addendums).

    What beer have you tasted recently (say, the last six months or so) that is worthy of their own day in the media sun?

    And to add a little extra to it, how does “great” expectations affect your beer drinking enjoyment?

    AND If you have attended one of these release parties, stories and anecdotes of your experience will be welcomed too.

    The host for April is Beer Search Party. The usual rules apply: publish your Session blog post on Friday, April 2nd, and shoot an email or leave a comment on the host blog. And be sure to read all the others posts that day, too—putting the “group” in “group blogging” you know.

  • Permalink for 'The_Brew_Site/2010/03/06/The_Session__37__When_to_Drink_the_Good_Stuff'

    The Session #37: When to Drink the Good Stuff

    Posted: March 6th, 2010, 6:17am CET by Jon

    The SessionThree years ago this month The Session celebrated its inaugural Friday with the topic of Stouts. This month, The Session’s third birthday, we have an entirely apropos topic: When to drink the good stuff, hosted by The Ferm.

    Finding a drinking occasion that lives up to the reputation of the bottle and the story of its acquisition is not a dreadful struggle to have, but it is a struggle nonetheless. When my good friends are over and we have had a few other beverages, will we still be able to enjoy my cave aged Hennepin that I bought after my tour of the brewery and have cellared for ten years? Will I miss it like I miss that four year old Golden Monkey?

    In March, The Ferm has the honor of hosting The Session, a monthly assemblage of beer bloggers to opine on a shared topic. The March 2010 topic is “The Display Shelf: When to Drink the Good Stuff.” The topic is open ended and the rules of The Session are close to nil. You can use your post to be persuasive or therapeutic. You may choose to tell a story of a great bottle you once opened or boast of your own beer collection.

    As I write this post up, I’m enjoying a 2007 vintage bottle of The Abyss—partly in appreciation of this month’s topic, partly to celebrate The Session’s anniversary (enjoying an Imperial Stout in a nice symmetry with that first month of stouts), partly “just because.”

    All of which leads into the best answer I can give of “when to drink the good stuff”: I don’t know—it’s entirely up to you.

    What? Too anticlimactic? Well, there’s no way around it—beer can be such a subjective topic and everyone has their own tastes and preferences. The only one who can tell you when to drink that prized beer is you.

    But if you can hold on to that beer for ten or more years? My hat’s off to you.

    Now if you’ll excuse me, I believe I’m going to enjoy the last of this ‘07 Abyss…

    The Abyss 2007

  • Permalink for 'The_Brew_Site/2010/03/04/Empire_Strikes_Back'

    Empire Strikes Back

    Posted: March 4th, 2010, 8:58am CET by Jon

    I’m sure the movie is the first thing you think when you see the title of this post, but in fact it’s the name of the latest limited-release beer from Double Mountain Brewery. In fact they’re holding release parties tomorrow and Friday, and thanks to the Bend Beer Blog I know that Friday’s release party is being held here in Bend, at Brother Jon’s Pub.

    (I’d completely overlooked this, since I saw the “Moon & Sixpence Pub” in Portland as the first location and assumed it was all Portland.)

    I had to read this line about the beer from the Double Mountain blog and smirk, though:

    EMPIRE STRIKES BACK is a concept beer that answers the question, “what happens when you make a big Northwest-style IPA with all-English malt and hops?”

    Um, you have a traditional English IPA?

    Yes, completely snarky because it’s a silly concept question. But to be fair, it’s Double Mountain, so I’m sure the beer will be very good.

    The release party at Brother Jon’s is from 5 to 9pm Friday, the 5th.

  • Permalink for 'The_Brew_Site/2010/03/03/Oregon_Brewers_Festival_2010_beers'

    Oregon Brewers Festival 2010 beers

    Posted: March 3rd, 2010, 4:18am CET by Jon

    The beer list for this year’s Oregon Brewers Festival has been posted, and it’s pretty impressive! There are all the usual suspects, of course, but there are a few standouts that caught my eye:

    • Tank 7 Farmhouse Ale from Boulevard Brewing
    • Hibiscus Ginger Beer from Caldera Brewing
    • Dogfish Head (TBA)
    • Exit 4 from Flying Fish Brewing
    • Sofie from Goose Island
    • Le Freak from Green Flash Brewing
    • Strawberry Cream Ale from Laht Neppur Brewing
    • Coconut Porter from Maui Brewing
    • 7 Grain Saison from The Bruery
    • Reggae Junkie Gruit from Upright Brewing

    Seems like a lot of new appearances in this group, and it’s always nice to see far-reaching breweries making an appearance at the Brewfest.

    There’s a nice showing of some of the (relative) Oregon newcomers as well: Hop Valley, Mt. Emily Ale House, Natian Brewery, Seven Brides Brewing, Southern Oregon, Upright, and Vertigo. (Did I miss anybody?)

    All in all, based on the list in place so far, looks like it’s shaping up to be a great ‘Fest this year.

  • Permalink for 'The_Brew_Site/2010/03/03/Reminder__The_Session_is_this_Friday'

    Reminder: The Session is this Friday

    Posted: March 3rd, 2010, 3:03am CET by Jon

    Don’t forget The Session is coming up this Friday, the 5th: the topic is “The Good Stuff” (when to drink it). Since it’s the anniversary of the first Session, and given the topic is “good stuff”, I may well open a 2007 Abyss to commemorate it.

  • Permalink for 'The_Brew_Site/2010/03/02/Pyramid__Spring__Fling_Pale_Ale'

    Pyramid (Spring) Fling Pale Ale

    Posted: March 2nd, 2010, 8:31am CET by Jon

    Pyramid Fling Pale AleAh, Pyramid. Between owning MacTarnahan’s, being owned by Magic Hat, contract brewing at several locations, it’s tough to know what’s what with them. I still remember the Pyramid of the ’90s and early ’00s, with their Apricot Ale and Snow Cap in particular as strong, leading beers, so I’ve been a bit confused over the various branding changes they’ve undergone over the past few years—if it ain’t broke, don’t fix it, and I never thought their old identity or branding was broke.

    But that certainly shouldn’t stop me from enjoying the fruits of their latest efforts, their Spring seasonal, Fling Pale Ale. This is one of the three types they sent me just over a week ago, and the one I have yet to have tried (I’ve been drinking and reviewing the other two over the years).

    Fling is an American Pale Ale at 5.2% alcohol by volume; it’s moderately hopped (36 IBUs) according to their site, though brewed with three different hops.

    Appearance: Pale gold in color, clear. Bubbly—lots of beading—but a minimal pale tan head on top.

    Smell: Fresh and floral, green grassy hops. Bright. Toasty-sweet malts, raw bread dough. Nice!

    Taste: Surprising rush of bitter hops up front, not what I expected from the fresh floral notes. Clean bitterness, resiny and earthy, kind of a dandelion bitterness. A bit of cracked wheat in the malts, otherwise relatively mild.

    Mouthfeel: Medium-bodied with a crisp finish.

    Overall: A nice fresh pale ale with big hops—well-played for the Northwest crowd. Otherwise I’d call it a fairly standard pale ale.

    On BeerAdvocate, it scores an overall grade of B-. On RateBeer, it scores 3.08 out of 5, and is in their 46th percentile.