Westbrook to can Gose

Westbrook

Westbrook is reportedly preparing to add a fourth beer to its line of canned brews, making it only the second craft brewery in the country to can the style.

According to a reliable source, the Mt. Pleasant brewery will begin canning their Gose this summer as a seasonal offering. The brewery’s interpretation of the German sour wheat beer comes in at 4% ABV and is currently a seasonal beer available on draft and in 22 oz. bottles.

The beer will be the fourth canned offering from Westbrook, joining White Thai and their IPA, as well as the upcoming unnamed rye pale ale. All three of those beers will be offered year-round.

It’ll be the second time an American craft brewery has canned a beer in the style. A search of CraftCans.com yields only one other result for a canned gose in the U.S.: Mo’s Gose from Armstrong Brewing Co. in San Francisco.

Oberon returns

Bell's Oberon

It may not feel like spring here in South Carolina, but just like the blooming flowers, signs of a warmer season are beginning to pop up here and there.

Take, for example, the cases of Bell’s Oberon that arrived in stores this week. The 5.6% summer wheat ale – one of my favorites of the season – has returned to shelves to warm your insides. It’s one of the brewery’s more popular and celebrated offerings, but unlike Hopslam, you won’t see people murdering others to get their hands on some.

(Sadly, we’re not as lucky as Arizona, Florida and Puerto Rico, which get Oberon year-round. Lucky.)

You shouldn’t have any trouble finding this one.

Thomas Creek Stillwater Vanilla Cream Ale returns in April

TCStillwater

Today marks the first day of spring, and if your favorite spring seasonal beer hasn’t hit shelves yet, it probably will soon.

One of my favorites from South Carolina – Thomas Creek‘s Stillwater Vanilla Cream Ale – hit the bottling line yesterday as the above Instagram photo shows. The 4.5% cream ale will begin hitting markets in bottles and draft again in April.

Son of a Peach returns

soap

Spring is right around the corner, and in South Carolina that means the return of one of the state’s popular seasonal beers: RJ Rockers’ Son of a Peach.

The spring seasonal produced by the Spartanburg brewery is a 6% ABV unfiltered wheat ale brewed with real peaches. Stores statewide have already started receiving shipments here and there, but the brewery announced today more shipments were going out to local distributors. You should see it popping up more and more in the next week or so.

Christmas Beers Bring Christmas Cheer

What would the holidays be without alcohol? Copious and copious amounts of alcohol in all forms to help you get through the insanity of family, shopping, holiday parties and the like. Fortunately, there are plenty of holiday appropriate beers to help you get through it all. Here’s what I enjoyed during this week.

After having our own mini Christmas at our new home, my wife and I drove back to my parent’s house in Georgia to celebrate Christmas with them. I have the good fortune of having an easy-going, non-dysfunctional family, so I don’t need a lot of alcohol to help me cope. But that didn’t stop me from bringing along a bottle of St. Bernardus’ Christmas Ale to enjoy and share with loved ones.

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At 10%, the spiced Belgian strong dark ale does plenty to keep you warm and toasty. A malty nose brings hints of cocoa, plums, caramel, black pepper, cloves and that classic Belgian yeastiness. A similarly complex taste follows, with a strong effervescent quality leading off flavors of berries, plums, cocoa powder, leather, tobacco, sweet bread, cinnamon and other spices. St. Bernardus always impresses me, but it also impressed my younger brother – a newly 21-year-old frat boy – and my dad, whose tastes lean toward “dark, heavy stuff.” It was a good way to warm up on Christmas Eve.

After returning home to Columbia on Christmas Day, my wife and I tucked in to some holiday selections from my cellar. We started with a 2009 bottle of Samichlaus Classic, a 14% doppelbock from Austria that previously held the title of strongest beer in the world.

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At 14%, there’s just a slight hint of booziness on the nose, accompanied by a big, sweet malt character, hints of rum-soaked raisins, caramel, figs and a bit of maple syrup and just a slight alcohol burn on the back. The alcohol certainly hits you more on the taste, but it fades quickly into this sweet, rich, full-bodied blend of caramel, toffee, butterscotch, figs and a big malty sweetness with an almost hard candy quality. The sweetness is definitely cut well by the alcohol, which you can feel warming in your chest after a few sips.

As we settled in for the annual Doctor Who Christmas special, I popped a bottle of the 2011 Santa’s Little Helper imperial stout from Port. Last Christmas, I enjoyed the bourbon barrel-aged version but help on to the standard version for this year.

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The coal-black 10% imperial stout presented with aromas of bittersweet chocolate, a touch of booze and a little bit of licorice, all underneath a cozy cover of big roasted coffee and espresso. Those roasted malts impart a big bitterness on the front of the tongue followed with a bitter coffee finish. There was a ton of espresso, dark chocolate, roasted malts and cocoa on it, but it’s not overly chocolatey or sweet at all. There may have been a slight infection in my bottle as there was this strange almost cough syrup quality on the finish. There was a phenolic burn on the back, kind of like the sweeter alcohol finish from NyQuil. It didn’t turn me off at all, and it honestly kind of worked with the bitterness.

The third of four Christmases this year was spent at my mother-in-law’s house on Wednesday. With all due respect to my in-laws, they are a bit more … eccentric than my family, and two little ones running around only add to the insanity. That’s why I was happy to walk in to the middle of a holiday beer tasting orchestrated by my sister-in-law, which included the St. Bernardus Christmas Ale, Rogue‘s Santa’s Private Reserve Ale, Grand Teton‘s Coming Home Ale 2012 and, for dessert, some Lagunitas Cappuccino Stout. I also got sent home with bottles of each, as well as a Rogue Farms Single Malt Ale and a Westbrook Dark Helmet. Add that to the two six-packs of SweetWater Festive Ale my brother got me and the SweetWater IPA and Terrapin Liquid Bliss “reinbeers” from my mom, and this was quite a holiday helping.

Whatever you celebrated this season, and whatever you’ll celebrate in the weeks to come, may your world be filled with delicious brews and good times. Cheers to all, and to all a good night.

Coast Rye Knot Brown

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Coast Brewing Co.

Charleston, SC

Rye Knot Brown Ale

6.2% ABV

A quick glance through my archives will tell you my eh/meh relationship with brown ales. Some really do stand out, but more often than not, the style just falls flat for me. I’ve got nothing against it. It just doesn’t do it for me.

And then I have Coast‘s Rye Knot Brown Ale and realize everything else pales in comparison.

Rye Knot was the first seasonal Coast ever put out and has since become their fall seasonal. Along with the usual chocolate malts, rye is also used, giving it a great spicy character you don’t get in most brown ales. I love rye, and this it definitely works in this beer. I’ve had it a few times before but never really had the chance to sit down and appreciate it, so here we go.

The appearance is pretty surprising for a brown ale. There were two to three fingers of a really fluffy head that left behind some really strong lacing, and a nice foamy film lingered over the top of the the beer. It’s not the thin, weak head I’ve encountered in a lot of brown ales.

The nose gives off those classic brown ale notes, with a toasted nuttiness and a bit of caramel. And on the back is a really nice spiciness from the rye. There’s just a hint of a chocolate note and a little bit of roasted coffee, but overall it that classic brown ale with a slight twist.

There’s a mix of spice and carbonation that really bites on the front of the tongue. The carbonation continues throughout the mouth, scrubbing the palate. The sweeter notes are stronger toward the front of the taste, with caramel and chocolate taking the lead. That develops into a rich nuttiness as it moves further to the back. And then on the finish, there’s a big mix of the spice from the rye and roasted coffee.

Even with all the carbonation, the beer is incredibly creamy. The mouthfeel is silk, a nice contrast to the biting flavors toward the finish. I’ve had Rye Knot a few  times in the past but I don’t remember it being this good. It’s an example of contrasts that work in perfect harmony. The sweetness of the chocolate malts and  caramel flavors compared with the spices from the rye and crispness of the carbonation. It’s easily a great twist on the style that makes it one of the best browns I’ve had.

EPIC/DC Brau Fermentation Without Representation

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EPIC Brewing Co. – Salt Lake City, UT

DC Brau Brewing Co. – Washington, DC

Fermentation Without Representation Imperial Pumpkin Porter

8% ABV

I know, I know. I said I was done reviewing pumpkin beers for the season and had moved on to winter seasonals. But it’s hard to pass up diving into one last pumpkin beer, especially one I’ve been on the hunt for.

As part of their Exponential Series and in collaboration with DC Brau, the first packaging brewery in the Nation’s Capitol, EPIC Brewing has put out an imperial porter crossed with a pumpkin beer. EPIC is just out of my reach, but my recent trip to Charlotte yielded a bottle for my enjoyment. I’d been hoping to get my hands on a bottle all season, especially after fellow pumpkin beer fanatic Bryan’s glowing review over on This Is Why I’m Drunk.

The beer pours a fairly thick deep, dark brown. It’s almost a black, but there’s just a hint of little getting through the top of the glass. Whatever head there was didn’t stick around for very long, migrating to the sides of the glass almost immediately. Not a lot of lacing, but the alcohol legs that stuck around were mighty nice.

The nose is exactly what I’d expect from a blend of pumpkin beers and imperial porters. There are the standard spices – cinnamon, clove, allspice, etc. – but they’re a bit muted. Instead, a roasted pumpkin seed scent is very strong, coupled with the roasted dark coffee notes from the porter. There’s also a thick sweetness over everything. There’s a thick almost chocolate syrup smell with big hints of caramel.

At first sip, I thought if you hadn’t told me this was a pumpkin beer, I wouldn’t have noticed. And then the finish came around, and it was most certainly a pumpkin beer. A roasted bitterness greets you first on the taste, followed with milky smooth mouthfeel and just a smidge of carbonation. The flavors in the middle of the mouth are a mix of black coffee and dark chocolate, melded perfectly together. The pumpkin used in the brewing lends a luscious mouthfeel that incredibly smooth.

As I said, the “pumpkin” in this pumpkin beer really flourishes on the finish. There’s cinnamon, nutmeg, allspice and clove. But again, unlike many other pumpkin beers, it’s subdued and muted a bit by the chocolate from the porter. It’s a really a perfect blend and something I haven’t gotten before in other pumpkin beers.

Instead of using a lighter-bodied beer as the base and letting the spices shine through, the use of an imperial porter base is a nice touch and a good alternative. It’s certainly a porter first and foremost, but the pumpkin pie spices you’d expect are also pretty strong, working well to balance one another. Like Elysian‘s Dark O’ the Moon – a pumpkin stout – it uses the spices as a way to add a twist to an already great base beer instead of just blasting you with them. A good way to end the pumpkin beer season, if I say so myself.