Tuesday, February 14, 2012

Unibroue Ephemere

Wherein Bob tries something completely different.


Now having a template to go by in reviews is a good thing, but this time around it needs to be broken. I'm going to get straight to the point: this is the first beer that I completely hated in a long time. A side effect of starting the blog is the increased drive to try new and interesting brews when I found them. So after picking up a sixer of Dead Guy I spotted this neat little bottle in the cooler and figured I'd give it a try. The label looks interesting, for 7$ for a two pint bottle it's in a accessible price range, and heck the idea of a Green Apple mixed ale doesn't seem bad by itself either. Who can blame me for being suckered in?

Seriously folks, this is the image
 Unbroue's "Brewmaster" chose to
represent himself
Unibroue is a French Canadian brewing company that's been around since 1990. If you visit their website you'll spot a lot of self indulgent horn tooting in their history, story, lexicon, and "Medals won". To be completely honest the whole thing looks flat billed frat boy douchey. This kind of alleged brewing superiority is the stuff that makes me want to drop craft beer for life and stick with predictable old Bud Light. Being proud of your beer is one thing, but having a circlejerk about how great you are on your own website is something entirely different.

So back to the beer at hand:
I got Ephemere home and chilled it out in the fridge for a day or so. After popping open the brown bag I was just a little disappointed to find that the alcohol content of this concoction is at a very modest 5.5%. I know I can't get drunk with EVERY new beer I try out, but at least a buzz would help. Anyway I poured up a glass in my slightly-classier-than-average german beer mug, took my token "IKnowHowToTryBeer" smell and got introduced to a pretty strong citrusy-tart fruit smell. Being unafraid of outlandish flavors I took a taste.

Token Beer Picture
So what does it taste like?
Just imagine for a minute that cheap white wine took beer out for a drink or two. Now beer wouldn't normally hang out with white wine, seeing as how they're from different crowds, but white wine was being awfully persistent over the last couple days and beer eventually caved. After the 2nd drink beer got up to take a piss and white wine dropped some roofies into beer's drink. White wine promptly took advantage of beer's out of mind state and date raped beer back in his apartment, letting his buddy Green Apple join in from time to time. That's pretty much what Ephemere tastes like to me. Date rape and sadness.



Enough hyperbole Bob, just review the Beer.
Anyway when you try a sip it whacks you with a light bodied, but very wheaty and green appley taste. None of this is subtle, each flavor pretty much beats it's predecessor down to assault your tongue. At the end of this overly sharp roller-coaster of flavors you'll pick up a slight spice note at the end, followed by a lingering aftertaste characteristic of old cheap beer. To top it off this stuff is carbonated heavier than Diet Coke, so after a half-pint you'll either be burping constantly or uncomfortably stuffed with the gas. If you couldn't tell by now - I don't like Ephemere.

This is an obvious niche beer maker though, so in all fairness I might not be the intended audience for this one. Maybe there's someone out there that can enjoy the overly sharp and ununified flavor of this beer, but that person is definitely not me. All in all if you spot this interesting looking bottle on the shelf somewhere, I'd say save your money. I would rather drink Keystone Light than this blasphemy.



Tuesday, February 7, 2012

Rogue Dead Guy Ale

This isn't a Review, It's a love letter.

I really wish I could adequately put into words how much I love this beer. This Ale truly is my first MicroBrew love, and like all first loves, it's the Ale I compare all others to. It's a German Maibock style Ale (and don't ask me what that means, I don't have a clue) and this particular recipe has won the World Beer Cup Silver Medal three years in a row between 2005-2007. It didn't win by accident. This is probably the best Ale I've ever tasted. Honestly a review of this beer is unnecessary: If you haven't tried it, you should.

But what's the point of a redneck beer review blog without the review?
Fine, I twisted my own arm. I'll write a review just for smiles and grins. I ran into the beer for the first time in a little bar called the Brass Monkey. I had dabbled in craft beers for awhile at this time, but the majority of my intake went off to good old Anheuser-Busch. My buddy pulled me in the place, which had just been renovated and was going through new ownership, and we walked in to observe a row of taps in a pretty small bar. After ordering up a plain old Boulevard Wheat and talking to the owner for awhile I asked about the cool looking skeleton guy sitting on a tap, and he highly recommended that I try it. I bought 3 pints that night, and had a hard time leaving.

So how is it?
The Dead Guy at my workstation.
This beer pours light, and as you can see in the picture to the side- it has a very light head. If you smell it you might be able to pick up hints of malt and hops, but it's incredibly subtle. You really need to take in a big nose-full to get much more than a "yeah that's beer" aroma. Describing the flavor is difficult for me. Mainly because when I take a sip it's akin to riding my first bike, or wrecking my car, or the first time I got completely wasted on rumplemintz and got picked up by the cops. Needless to say I have a really hard time pinning down the flavor. This beer is familiar to me, I'd have a better chance describing how air tastes.

The best I can do for you Good Reader is tell you that this beer walks the perfect line between the extravagantly flavorful but obnoxious India Pale Ales and the absolutely tasteless American Style Light Lagers that dominate beer sales in the United States. It's Malty without being too thick, hoppy without feeling like you just chewed on a pot leaf, and smooth enough to drink a ton of it but bitter enough to warn you of the repercussions. That and the bottle is really fucking cool, and serves as a decent conversation starter in the right company.

Verdict = Perfect right?
For me? Oh hell yes. Rogue Dead Guy Ale is the perfect beer for this guy. Honestly I'd drink one every day if I could, but unfortunately economics get in the way. With anything perfect there is a "well yeah but......" hanging on at the end, and for Dead Guy it's the price point and availability. Here in Nebraska it runs 12-13$ for a sixer, and about 4-6$ for a 24oz bottle. On top of that there aren't a whole lot of bars that stock it, due to it's obscurity in my market and the fact that kegs run a pretty penny as well (I've heard it's much more affordable in the West Coast where it's brewed though). But besides the astronomical price I've picked it up whenever I've found it and had the extra cash. If you're reading this you should too.

Monday, February 6, 2012

Trader Joe's 2011 Vintage Ale

A beer lover's dream

Now this is a beer I can write about.
If you guys haven't heard of Trader Joe's I suggest you Google it immediately, and then get out more. This place is awesome, it mixes healthy food with random snacks crap that 20 something bachelors love, as well as being the only grocery store I know of that brews it's own beer. I was originally hooked on their Name Tag lager (which I'm not going to talk about on this blog, it's hard to sell a $2.99 six pack as "classy") and found out about their Vintage Ale in 2010. After picking up a couple bottles then, and drinking it over the year I fell in love with this particular "Limited Edition". So today I'm going to talk about their 2011 Version

Now this beer is classy. On a scale between drinking Old Milwaukee in front of your trailer to sipping on Scotch and discussing building railroads I'd put it probably around wearing a V-Neck sweater and telling your neighbors how you acquired a bear skin rug. While Joe only brews this for a limited time, it's not exactly hard to find. All you need to do is walk into Trader Joe's around X-Mas and they should have a display like above full of the stuff. Now I fully recommend picking up at least 2 bottles, because the stuff ages pretty well. If you're a bit more of a connoisseur of finer alcohols (or like to pretend to be) you'll notice that the ale picks up a different profile as the months go on. This year the cute little cashier told me she was sitting on a 4 year old bottle, and was planning on popping it open fairly soon. Regardless I've had it brand spanking new and a few months old, and I can honestly say that each is it's own experience.

Seeing a Pattern yet?
So what does it taste like?
Well first off lets talk about how it pours and smells. This stuff is high gravity. So it pours pretty thickly and builds head quickly. A nose full will give you an almost obnoxious spicy odor, but don't worry: It smells stronger than it is. When you finally take a sip you should enjoy a fairly malty and distinctly spice flavored beer. I'm not chef or baker, so I can't tell you if it's Cinnamon, Nutmeg or Ginger. But it's pleasant and reminds you of a nice lazy winter day sitting by the fire and muttering about those damn kids half a block down.



Now before you run off and try to commit suicide for missing this delicious brew the last couple years I should say this - This Ale is far from perfect. Like a lot of the Higher Gravity drinks the flavor can be a little rough to swallow after a while, and the spice makes this particular beer seem one sided. Unlike some of the more subtle drinks I've tried this is a one note beer. It's flavor doesn't evolve as you go down the bottle, and the aftertaste is about the same as the second it hits your tongue. Of course as long as you accept that enjoying this beer is pretty easy. A whole bottle wont get you tanked (damnit), but by the end of it you should have a warm buzz not unlike what you get from sipping a glass of Gentleman Jack (without the wanton anger of course).

The final verdict.
Trader Joe's 2011 Vintage Ale is pretty good, if a little one sided. Considering the fact that it runs $5 for a 2 pint bottle I strongly recommend it for the experience of trying it. I have personally fallen in love with the stuff, and will probably pick up a case next year to introduce friends and family to it. Is it going to win any beer awards? Probably not. But you could do much worse for the price.

Thursday, February 2, 2012

Boulevard's Chocolate Ale

This is the Beer that started this whole experiment.

Ahh Boulevard. Thank you for giving me a beer to start this whole shindig off. This is the beer that could establish my beer snobbery. Seriously folks after drinking this beer I could go into a long tirade about how Budweiser is evil blah blah blah and I'd hop onto my single speed bike and ride away into the wind muttering "you've probably never heard of it". But I'll be damned if I do.

Anyway if you've missed the buzz behind this creative concoction here's a quick rundown: Boulevard teamed up with some renown chocolate guy to make an ale brewed with cocoa. Now many a brewer has made chocolate porter's and stouts, but Boulevard is the only company to try an ale (so far) and beer geeks have been going nuts over this thing. It's a limited run released right around Valentines Day and last year they sold out within the hour. To combat the demand Boulevard tripled the production and people lined up like Black Friday for the stuff. To say the least, this brew is hyped, and I got pulled into buying 2 bottles of the stuff.
So it's hyped to shit? How the fuck does it taste?

So I Tried it.
And by tried it I mean I waited all fucking day to drink this stuff. Picked it up around 2, lovingly placed it in the fridge, studied some ancient hieroglyphic programming shit, and went to class at 6. Spending all of 4 hours in class listening to a teacher drone on while fantasizing about how STUPENDOUSLY DELICIOUS this beer should be. I rushed my way home and poured up a pint. Took a nice wiff of the glass and enjoyed it's odd aroma. Lemon-y with a dash of cocoa. With my first sip I understood the hype. This ale is good.

What does it taste like?
Picture if someone took a glass of boulevard wheat, took the lemon zest down a hundred notches spiked in a bit of hazelnut vanilla and cocoa. The ale does not have the kind of flavor that punches you in the mouth. It's smooth and slow with several different layers. Honestly I felt like the glass I was drinking it out of didn't really do it justice, but I'm not about to start sipping my beer out of some fancy flute glass like some over-classy dickhead. As good as the beer is the novelty of the flavor got old after I downed the first half of the pint, but by that time the 9.1% ABV content kicked in and my attitude to this beer changed completely. All in all I drank all of a 9$ Bottle to myself and got a pretty decent buzz, with only the 2nd quarter of the bottle being less than great.

The final Verdict?
Boulevard Chocolate Ale is good, but I have the strong feeling that a good chunk of it's following stems from it's relative rarity. I'll be picking up another bottle next year, but I wouldn't bother adding this to my stable of regular beers if it were available year round. Regardless if you can find a bottle now, pick it up. It's worth it.