Dogfish Head 60 Minute IPA

Dogfish Head 60 Minute IPABeer-a-Day #183

For all their ubiquity I can’t believe I haven’t written anything about one of these before. And I like drinking local.

Our 60 Minute IPA is continuously & intensely hopped. A session India Pale Ale brewed with Warrior, Amarillo & ‘Mystery Hop X.’ A powerful East Coast I.P.A. with a lot of citrusy hop character. The session beer for hardcore beer enthusiasts!

Light amber in color, with an off-white head. Loads of hops in the aroma; the grapefruit is pronounced. That is good, and I can taste every one of those 60 IBUs.

I will be having this again and again.

Dogfish Head 60 Minute IPA

Dogfish Head Burton Baton

Dogfish Head Burton BatonBeer-a-Day #165

This is a limited release offering from Dogfish Head.

A blend of oak-aged English strong ale and our 90 Minute I.P.A.. Citrus notes from Northwestern hops meld with vanilla notes from the oak.

I almost considered cellaring this. But I’m not good with delayed gratification. Especially for something that sounds as delicious as this. Besides, I like this admonition on the label:

Please share it with loved ones and hoard it from the non-believers.

Beautiful deep amber in color, craggy head. Loads of aroma, with big citrusy hops and all that vanilla. It’s big and it’s good. I’ll be sipping this one.

Dogfish Head Burton Baton


Dogfish Head Indian Brown Ale

Dogfish Head Indian Brown AleBeer-a-Day #163

Forget about the car companies, this is the original hybrid, a cross between a Scotch Ale, an India Pale Ale, and an American Brown. Our Indian Brown Ale is well-hopped and malty at the same time (magical). The beer has characteristics of each style that inspired it; the color of an American Brown, the caramel notes of a Scotch Ale, and the hopping regiment of an India Pale Ale. We dry-hop the Indian Brown Ale in a similar fashion as our60 Minute IPA and 90 Minute IPAs. This beer is brewed with Aromatic barley and organic brown sugar.

It’s been a long week. I deserve a reward.

Deep brown in color with a tan head. It looks like chocolate. Smells sweet. Roasty, a little chocolately, with a very nice bitterness. Damn, this is good.

Dogfish Head Indian Brown Ale


Dogfish Head Immort Ale

dogfish-head-immort-aleBeer-a-Day #150

I was thinking of doing something lighter, but the description sucked me in.

Vast in character, luscious and complex, this smooth, full-bodied ale reveals interwoven notes of maple, vanilla & oak.

According to the website, Immort Ale is made with peat-smoked barley, organic juniper berries, vanilla, and maple syrup; aged on oak and fermented with a blend of English and Belgian yeasts.

Oh my!

Clear mahogany with a strong head. Lots of aromatics, headlined with the aforementioned maple syrup and juniper berries. Lots of complex flavors; thick, with a decent amount of heat from the alcohol. This is definitely a sipping beer. I like it, and I’m going to go back and get more to cellar.


Dogfish Head Aprihop

Dogfish Head AprihopBeer-a-Day #105

Tax day, woo-hoo! Actually, I e-filed in the middle of February and have already received and spent my refund. I feel for the folks who left things to the last minute.

This is the first of several beers that my good friend Ellen got for me.

This is Dogfish Head’s spring seasonal offering. In spite of the fact that they’re fairly local to me and I brewed a clone of this beer, I haven’t had this one in a long time.

It’s the color of iced tea, with an ivory head. Malty aroma with only a bit of apricot. Bitter and sour at the same time. Interesting.

Dogfish Head Aprihop

IPA Bake Off

Back in October we tried an Octoberfest bake off (a taste test) and it wasn’t that successful. Nice.. not thrillin’, but nice. So when a different group of my friends suggested a blind IPA taste testing, I wasn’t very optimistic; but of course I was game anyway.

Surprise! Not only was it a great evening, the winners and losers made it all that much more interesting. We scored them differently than I had done previously, not just on an overall impression like the unofficial Hop-Talk rating system is built upon, but rather a much more detailed method using a standard beer judging sheet. It is based on an overall score of 50 points made up of several categories.

scoring chart

Here are the results. I rounded the averages of the four of us playing judge…

ipa-taste-test
My comments after the tasting go like this…
Rogue - Yes, it stood alone at the top.
Stone – One of my favorite IPA’s. My score for it probably would have been higher but I hadn’t just taken a break in tasting for a slice of Buffalo Pizza… probably not the best idea and probably affected the overall result.
Butternut – We were all surprised by this one, but me most of all as I really don’t like Butternut’s other brews. I’m going to have to go back for this one.
Middle Ages – While we all know and love this IPA, none of us expected it to rate so high. Glad to see it up there.
Sam Smith – I nailed the import.

I had a great time doing this… I don’t know if the flavors varied that much greater than the octoberfest styles, or if the method in judging was what made it so much better. In any case, the casual nature and long evening in which we took to do it was one for the books.

Special thanks to our servers, Ellie & Katie, and their scientific strategy to organization assuring accurate test results. (We will excuse the Yuengling Porter incident.)

Dogfish Head’s cocoa beer – Theobroma

I like Dogfish Head Brewery. They make some really interesting stuff and, since they’re just over in neighboring Delaware, local to me.

Spotted a news item today (although I’ve seen mention a few times before this) and thought I’d share.

Dogfish Head brews up ancient Aztec cocoa beer

Over the past few years, [Dogfish Head owner Sam] Calagione and his brewers have been working in conjunction with the University of Pennsylvania’s molecular archaeology department on finding – and recreating – recipes for beers of from bygone eras, which have included Midas Touch, brewed from a recipe found in the drinking vessels of the cursed king’s tomb, as well as Chateau Jiahu, a 9000-year-old Chinese recipe dating back to the Neolithic period.

The latest offering, available in September, is Theobroma, which translates to “food of the gods,” in Greek. Far removed from Greece, however, the beer is a recreation of a central American recipe for the earliest chocolate drink in existence, consumed by the Aztecs.

That certainly sounds interesting. I’ve been on a big chocolate kick lately and I find archaelogy and paleontology fascinating. Can’t wait to try it.

Dogfish Head: Theobroma

Session #6: Fruit beer – by Al

The Session - Beer Blogging FridayThis edition of the Session is sponsored by Beer, Beats & Bites. The topic:

Fruit beer.

I generally share Ron’s opinion of fruit beers. That is, I usually don’t care for them. That’s not to say I’ve never had a fruit beer I considered “good”; I have. But most of those I’ve tried—admittedly, not many—just haven’t done it for me. And even the ones I have liked I didn’t like them enough to make them a regular selection.

Then, of course, is the ubiquitous image of a lemon wedge stuck into a watery Mexican lager. Or the marketing gimmick of an orange slice in one of Coors’ Blue Moon line. (Okay, the latter isn’t that bad, but is definitely not something I would seek out.) There’s a lot of baggage where fruit and beer are concerned.

Of course, I’m not one to pass up a challenge, especially when it comes to beer. So, with a mantra of “fruit beer” running through my head, I traveled over to my favorite retailer to see what I could find. Since Maryland law allows—and The Spirit Shop encourages—purchasing singles, I was able to pick up a mixed six-pack.

I didn’t pick up, but I should mention, Wells Banana Bread Beer, and Dogfish Head’s Festina Peche. I didn’t get the former because I didn’t want to risk buying a 500ml bottle for something I wasn’t sure I would like. The latter because I already had a Dogfish Head and the “malted beverage” bit made me nervous.

Here are some brief tasting notes for the ones I’ve had so far. (No, I didn’t have all these in one sitting. I mean, I could have. I didn’t drive and it usually takes more than six to knock me on my ass, but I wouldn’t have appreciated the flavor as much of the ones I had last.

Pyramid Apricot Weizen

Thie gold-medalist of fruit beers, this adventurous unfiltered wheat beer offers a pleasing aroma and flavor of fresh apricots while delivering the smooth and refreshing character for which our wheat beers are recognized.

It says “Refreshingly Unfiltered Malt Beverage with Natural Flavor” on the label. That makes me nervous. Alcopops like Mike’s Hard Lemonade and Smirnoff Ice are also “malt beverages”. I sure don’t want anything like that.

Well, here goes nothing: It’s a hazy orangish color with a robust white head. The only aroma I get is apricots. However, the fruit isn’t as dominant in the taste. Oh, there’s plenty there, but it’s somewhat subtle and I can detect a bit of the wheat beer in the background. Not bad, but not something I’ll be buying regularly.

Pete’s Wicked Strawberry Blonde

…is truly a unique beer experience. Reward yourself with our golden lager made of the finest pale and wheat malts and Cluster Hops, with a kiss of natural strawberry flavor.

Well, we already know that Ron doesn’t like it. I think I may have had it before, but that’s in the dim-and-distant past and I can’t remember what I thought of it then. However, I’m married to a strawberry blonde, and she is occasionally wicked. So I guess I’d better try it.

Straw-colored, with a good size head consisting of small bubbles. When I stick my nose in the glass the first thing that comes to mind is strawberry Pop-Tarts®. When I drink it, I get a little of the strawberry, and some mild bitterness in the finish, and then…it’s gone. Not a lot of flavor. I don’t see further purchases in my future.

Sea Dog Raspberry Wheat Ale

…is a dry, crisp refreshing ale with the added essence of raspberries.

Okay, raspberry is my favorite fruit. I have high hopes. Pale straw in color with a white head, which doesn’t have much staying power. First impression of the aroma is that it’s like a raspberry-scented candle. My wife notes that it smells just like raspberries that have been put through a sieve. The taste seems pretty good in the beginning, but I don’t care for the finish at all.

Intermission: Not doing so well, am I? Hope springs eternal.

Lancaster Brewing Strawberry Wheat

Just in time for summer, this American wheat lager style beer with the subtle suggestion of real, fresh strawberries, is the perfect pint of true refreshment. Light and crisp, our Strawberry Wheat is a “must try” for fruit and beer lovers alike.

Oh, really? It’s a light amber color, with a fizzy head that drops pretty quickly. I get strawberry in the aroma, and perhaps a bit of clove. Medium body. I get a little bit of the strawberry and some bit of the carbonation. It’s almost like the beer isn’t there. And the carbonation reminds me of soda. Frankly, it seems more like a flavored tonic water than a beer. Fairly refreshing, but I’m not getting a lot of flavor from it.

Blue Point Brewing Blueberry Ale

A delicious golden ale brewed with real blueberries and natural flavors added.

Medium amber with a cream-colored head with some staying power. Blueberry aroma definitely present, but not overpowering. Very interesting taste. I can very distinctively taste the blueberry on one part of my tongue, and the beer on another. Kinda weird. The taste is otherwise light. Pretty refreshing. Not a ringing endorsement, I know.

Dogfish Head Raison D’Être

A deep, mahogany ale brewed with beet sugar, green raisins, and Belgian-style yeast. As complex as a fine, red wine. Voted “American Beer of the Year” in January 2000 by Malt Advocate Magazine

This is, by far, the strongest of all the beers I’m trying for this Session. (8% ABV) It’s a deep amber with reddish tones. The cream-colored is fairly thick. The aroma is roasty with a bit of a winey feel. A lot more of the roasted flavor; very robust. Reminds me a little bit of a dubbel. Unlike the other five I’ve tried, this is not a lawnmower beer. This is something you savor on a crisp autumn day.

Conclusion: One thing is very clear: I don’t really like fruit beers. I suppose in the right circumstance and with the right accompaniment any of them would be good, but as something to drink just to drink…none of them grabbed me. Of the six, I preferred the Raison D’Être the most, but it was also significantly different than the rest of them. Even so, it’s not something I’d make a habit of.

Updated: Read the Session #6 Round-up