Beer Review: Founders Nemesis 2010

September 10th, 2010

I'm sorry, but I think we're just friends now. I might be open to a relationship in a few months. Will that work?

Founders Brewing Company in Grand Rapids, MI

How important is aging? I’m not asking this in an NBC special sort of way or in an attention-grabbing headline in the style of the Huffington Post or the Drudge Report. Rather, I’m asking this when it comes to beer.

I understand that brewers these days are making more and more brews that are meant to be preserved and held onto for as little as a few months and for as long as a few decades. I get this. The beer changes over time. Different flavors appear as fermentation continues. But with the proliferation of so many of these beers on the market, I’m having a hard time choosing which ones I want to open immediately like Christmas presents and which ones I need to put away in my tiny closet and attempt to not drink for the next few months. Should these beers that can be aged for quite some time actually be aged, or should they be drinkable right out of the bottle? Or should they be real firecrackers right on the day or bottling, only to become truly perfect gems after sitting in your beer cellar (*cough closet cough) for a number of years?

I only bring this up because of how much I actually enjoy the Founders Nemesis 2010 edition, a black IPA/barleywine hybrid. It’s a special beer that is released only once. Founders even notes that this can be a rather experimental beer. And I’m quite OK with all of this. I only have to think how much better this beer could be if it sat around for a few years. Then what would we have?

Part of the reason I have trouble with hanging onto beer is not only the space issue, but the temperature issue. I know you’re supposed to keep them at cooler temps at all times, but I can’t say I have a big enough fridge or a dedicated beer fridge yet in my apartment to make this happen. I don’t even know if having them stored at 70 degrees makes that much of a difference, but I feel like if I keep a beer around for so long, I should keep it in ideal conditions.

The other reason I have trouble with holding onto beers is, well… most of the special bottles I pick up look awfully fucking delicious. Black IPA and barleywine? This is why I couldn’t hang onto Nemesis 2010 for more than a few days. The color on it was as magnificent as any of my other Founders lovers, a dark and very rich brown with a gorgeous chocolate-cream head just barely sitting on top of the snifter when it was swirled around. The smell was thick with molasses and a rather boozy, almost bourbon-like, scent. The beer looked quite syrupy, more so than expected, and the first taste confirmed that immediately. A heavy and thick curtain of really dry and earthy malt kicks in immediately with just the slightest background of a barleywine’s sweetness. The malt really hangs on the tongue for generations, and adds a bit of smokiness that mixes with a hop tickle near the absolute end. I really waited for the barleywine’s scene, but somewhere along the editing process, it hit the cutting room floor. I had a hard time finding any real sweetness or a blast of alcohol (especially considering the 12% ABV), and even the high IBU level left me a little disappointed. The warmer it got, the less sweet it became. Not exactly a knock-out punch.

What I’m trying to get at is this is a very good black IPA. The flavors here are thicker and richer than many others I’ve had. But I’m missing the barleywine crunch. I would assume that if this bad boy hung out for quite a few more months or years, this would develop into a deep and succulent beer with more layers than an onion. As is, drink it for the great black IPA qualities, but save it for the feast of flavors that will surely come later.

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Alaskan Announces Pilot Series

April 19th, 2010

Alaskan Brewing Company recently announced they will be launching a new line of beer. Their “Pilot Series” will be kicked off with Alaskan Raspberry Wheat Ale on the first of May. They plan on releasing a few more beers this year under the same line including an Imperial Black IPA and another release of their Alaskan Barley Wine.

“Each new recipe is first created on our 1-barrel experimental brewhouse, perfected in our 10-barrel pilot brewhouse, then put to the test through our Rough Draft series of draft-only beers distributed in Alaska,” explains Alaskan Production Manager Dave Wilson. Those special brews that stand out to the Brew Crew and their fans in Alaska graduate to a limited release in the Alaskan Pilot Series. “Alaskan Raspberry Wheat has been one of our favorite Rough Drafts.”

The new beers will be available in 22 oz bombers and will be distributed to all ten states that currently receive Alaskan beers, so look for it in stores soon!

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Back in Black

March 11th, 2010

The beer scene is always changing. Twenty years ago, there were very few microbreweries to be heard of, and you surely weren’t stopping by the local tap room for a pint or your constitutional three. Recently (and this may just be a Montana phenomenon) we have seen a lot of new, experimental, high octane brews. The latest craze, however, hasn’t seem to hit Montana: the Black IPA. There have been a few, I remember a great one from Blacksmith Brewing Company at the MBA Oktoberfest.

Read the rest of this entry »

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Beer Review: Black Scratch Fever

December 29th, 2009

HopCat/PussyCat Beer Guild in Grand Rapids, MI

About six months ago, I remember seeing some online articles that were discussing the mysterious black IPA. Some were stating that a black IPA could not really exist, and others were saying it has been around for ages so stop talking like it’s a new beer, you freakin’ idiots! (You know how Internet message board arguing goes, you insecure little ninny!) Whether it’s new or not, I’d never seen nor heard of a black IPA before, and I’d never even been given the chance to sample one until I found myself in arguably the best bar in America, HopCat in Grand Rapids, Mich.

Beer Advocate has already beaten me to heaping praise upon HopCat, naming it the third best bar in the world. I’ll second virtually anything stated over at Beer Advocate, and I’ll also point out that their Crack Fries may be the most delicious fries on the planet. But we’re here for the beer and when I saw one of those mysterious black IPAs show up on the menu, a double black IPA for that matter, named Black Scratch Fever, I was immediately sucked in. Claw away, pussy cat.

Served in a beautiful, 12 oz snifter, the Black Scratch Fever looked like a deep, dark porter with just a touch of scorched hazelnut tossed in. The beer didn’t have a whole lot of head, and the smell pulsated with solid notes of coffee and bitter malt. I was hoping to find some noticeable hops hints in the nose, but all of those were annihilated by the strong malt. The taste and mouthfeel were unlike anything I’d ever had in a beer before. A slimier, but also cloyingly thinner, mouthfeel of a porter was the first characteristic, with a blast of bitter, coffee-flavored malt exploding on the tongue. The 8.1% ABV was immediately identifiable as well, with a rush of booze clouding over what I was hoping would be the hop hints. The endnotes were even stranger, with a deluge of bittersweet chocolate malt pounding against a trickling of a slightly dense hop touch. It tasted like a porter on steroids, but not quite a stout either. Absolutely unique in the flavor presentation.

Certainly one of the most perplexing beers I have ever sampled, Black Scratch Fever presented the mystique I’d been hoping for all along with the black IPA. After I finished the glass, I tried to convince myself that I wanted another. It certainly was a dark beer, and it was most definitely different, but the endnotes were almost too strange a combination to beckon me toward another glass. This was a nice treat and something I’ll remember for quite sometime, but maybe not a beer I’ll be dreaming about when I head back west in a week. Regardless, if you find a black IPA on the menu at your favorite bar, don’t pass on it. It may be as mysterious as you think.

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