Thursday, July 8, 2010

Saranac Variety Pack

Okay, it's a six pack with one beer each of six different styles. The problem, therefore, is I get one chance to analyze. On the other hand, I've had Saranac before, mostly a few years ago when I hung out with someone from upstate New York, kinda near Saranac's brewery.

Tonight's installment is the Adirondack Lager. It's got a somewhat typical Lager fizz -- almost like a ton of very little tiny bubbles, instead of what I'd call bigger bubbles in other beers. Tough to describe, but the bubbles in a lager often will envelop the tongue like a million little pinpricks.

The flavor's nothing special. Saranac, to an extent, is like a few microbreweries I know in that every beer sort of has the same underlying taste profile -- one of those things where you can say it TASTES like Saranac made it. Long Trail and Harpoon also have that quality to them, I'd say, to a degree. No matter which beer of theirs you have, you've kinda tasted it before....this one's slightly roasty, with more bitterness underneath it.

My grade: C

gettin' STOOPID

So, I love it when a brewery tries to tackle a beer with an abundance of hops. It doesn't always taste good (Hop Monster, I'm still talking to you....), but the effort is interesting.

A really good job is done by Lagunitas of California, in an ale they call Hop Stoopid. 102 International Bittering Units. Um, whatever that means, although I suppose I could do some more research there -- especially so that I don't risk thinking of the 102 as one might the points scored in a round of Whose Line Is It Anyway?

The beer is hoppy, but it's sweet. Not so much a malty sweetness, so that's interesting. A good test of the sweetness is after you have a mouthful, give it a swirl in the front lower section of your mouth. Different beers will give you different reactions, and this one's was excellent.

The alcohol level is 8%, so a 22-oz. bottle can do a number on ya easily enough.

My grade: B+

Wednesday, July 7, 2010

Updating Red Hook

Okay, two more types of beer in that 12-pack.

First, we've got the Copper Ale. Blah. I've had another copper ale from Otter Creek in Vermont which is way better.

I understand the copper -- the beer is penny-colored. (Or "coloured" for any English/Canadian folks out there)
But it's not great at all. It's got a fake sweetness taste to it.

My grade: C-

Now the last of the 12-pack is a beer that I've gotten six-packs of by itself -- Long Hammer. This is the best Red Hook I've had. An IPA that is not too hoppy....It obviously isn't a beer you can chug five of in a row, being thicker and perhaps I'd say creamier than usual beer. But you want to. Yes it leans heavy on hops -- that's what IPAs do. But this is probably an instance of a "well-balanced" IPA -- I've had beers where the hops are just gross (Hop Monster, I'm talking to you!), and so it's good to have a beer that means to be hop-heavy, but doesn't piss you off about it.

My grade: A-

Friday, July 2, 2010

More Red Hook

Okay, the next beer from the 12-pack is what I'd probably call Red Hook's signature beer, the ESB. (Extra Special Bitter)
Ya know, the one beer from a microbrewery that you can find on tap at the bar, amidst all the usual mass-produced dreck.

Anyway, it's pretty good. The one taste profile that comes to mind, though, is syrupy. It's pretty sweet-tasting, almost to the point where you feel like you can feel the extra sugars swirl around in your mouth. Obviously, therefore, it's more malty than hoppy. But the sweetness helps in the smoothness department, too. It goes down easiliy, although it's not a chugger, by any stretch. Unfortunately, the sweetness also adds a bit of a metallic taste, though not much.

My grade: B-