Booze The recommend-a-beer thread

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Magnat from Ukraine tastes like the smell of p*ss from a portopotty left out in the summer sun way to long just after dark when it has cooled.

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Firestone Barrelworks Huck Yeah - American wild ale fermented with wild huckleberries. I have a couple of friends that work there and they hooked me and a buddy up with a case that somebody paid for at the release who then proceeded to ass out at the event and was booted. He felt pretty badly apparently so he called them a few days later, apologized and told them to go ahead and give the case to somebody deserving. That is what I call remorseful. And great for me! So, we got the beer because somebody was a jerk for a moment or two. Cool story, bro?! And yes, I highly recommend this juicy sour. I think it's one of my favorites from their bottle product.

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Hazy IPA

Just did a side by side by side by side by side tasting of some NE Style IPA and "regular" IPA. I know, this is a contentious subject out there in craft beer land - hazy IPA. Some on the side of hating 'em, others on the side of loving 'em. I rarely encounter anybody on the fence. That being said, I'll state unequivocally that I am on the side of LOVE 'EM. Yesterday we had a nice opportunity to try some super fresh samples from the Northeast and compare to our efforts here at Central Coast Brewing. We were lucky enough to get some highly regarded beers from Trillium and Night Shift (Boston and Everett, MA).

In the case of Trillium we got some Cutting Tiles, a Double IPA, and in the case of Night Shift we got some Santilli (World Beer Cup bronze winning IPA). The Cutting Tiles is a New England style double IPA while the Santilli is a "regular" IPA. So we chose to sample our Juice Almighty (NE style IPA), Foggy Hill (unfiltered double IPA), and Lucky Day IPA ("regular" IPA, World Beer Cup gold medal winner).

The Trillium Cutting Tiles is a beautiful DIPA made with raw wildflower honey. The nose started off with a hint of sulphur and evolved into stone fruit and citrus as it warmed and took on some oxygen. The fact that is was only 5 days in can made this a pretty damn good example of what turns out to be a great DIPA. We compared this with our Foggy Hill unfiltered DIPA and despite the fact that we know we are biased, we felt that our version was just a bit better. The mouthfeel on the Foggy Hill is just a bit softer and fluffier and the overall taste of citrus, fruit, and dank just had more legs with ours. In any case, highly recommend the Cutting Tiles (and Foggy Hill!).

With the Santilli from Night Shift, we had a can that was about a month old so not totally ideal, still, we knew that whatever packaging flaws we may detect, they should be minor. And that proved to be the case (so if you can get some via trade with anybody and the cans are a month or less old and kept in cold storage, go get 'em). This one had a more traditional hop nose - citrus, pine, dank, and tropical all mixed up into a wonderful aroma. We compared directly with our Lucky Day IPA and they were so near to being the same nose, so we knew we'd like this beer. The flavor was well rounded with all the nose being closely tied to exactly what you expected to taste. Massive hop taste, but not the unpleasant too bitter hop that you often get from the likes of Stone Brewing. Stone fruit, tropical fruit, citrus, resin - all present in very well balanced proportions with a solid malt backbone that just dried out like a mofo - beautiful.

The last beer we had was our very own Juice Almighty - another take we've done on the NE IPA. We think this one has been our best effort and if sales are any indication, we've hit the just right recipe that bears us brewing this one many more times. FYI, 10 bbl batch has sold out in 10 days between our tiny little tasting room and our wholesale efforts (50/50). So if you haven't gotten any of this yet, you'll have to wait. I won't go on and on about this one here as I don't want to be the guy tooting our own horn too much!

So, to summarize - Trillium Cutting Tiles and Night Shift Santilli - BOTH HIGHLY RECOMMENDED. Cheers!!!
 
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Guinness Antwerpen Stout. Though it seems obvious now, I wasn't really expecting a bit of Belgian yeast profile in this...but, yeah...Antwerp. Good stuff. If you enjoy Guinness, this is worth a try.
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KRBC is also churning out an imperial stout aged in rum barrel.
Bottling/canning this? I remember Class X being akin to drinking unicorn tears. I just wish they would bottle it. I haven't been to the brewery in years.
 
Westvleteren VIII




Apparently it's from the last batch that labels weren't required on the bottles. Bought at the brewery at the St Sixtus Abbey and hand delivered to me. It's about $100 for a 6 pack, and I've got a 6 pack at the house right now. I'm debating even opening them, because I don't know if I'd appreciate it enough, and being from the last batch with no labels, maybe it's something to hold on to. I don't know...
 
Unless you plan on reselling them, their value as a collectible is not really a concern. As for opening them, well, you don't have to open them all at once, right?
 
Sucks to hear. Speakeasy is shutting down as well. The great brewery purge may be starting. With tons of new breweries opening every week it seems, the supply is far out-weighing the demand, in my opinion. Quality and mediocre breweries alike will be closing doors as the boom recedes.
 
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