Got the clarity I was looking for. |
The beer pours dark copper. The head is thick, white, and frothy. The retention is good and there is beautiful lacing in the glass. The beer is cloudier than I had hoped. Clarity varies from bottle to bottle, and depends greatly on the pour. Clarity has been lacking in some of my recent batches. I have an idea why that is and what I can do to fix it. The clarity isn't a major concern and doesn't effect the taste or overall experience, but it is an area for improvement.
The aroma is a blend of sweet tropical fruit. There are notes of mango and melon. As the beer warms there are subtle pomegranate aromas as well.
Thin, foamy head with nice lacing. |
At the front of the pallet the beer starts sweet. Then assertive grapefruit and passion fruit flavors from the hops make themselves known in a big way. When I shared the beer at last week's North Shore Brewers meeting one of the other members remarked that I must really love hops after tasting the beer. That made me smile to myself for a second.
The malt flavors are multi-layered. The aforementioned sweetness from the Honey and Caramel 80 malts give way to a deeper, more fruit-like sweetness which the Caramel and small amount of Special B likely provided. The Munich malt adds additional malt flavor in a more light-handed way than just using more Caramel malt. There is also the subtle toasted notes from the Vienna malt. The malts and hops combine to give the beer a crisp finish.
This is a beer that shows my growth as a brewer. I tried brewing a red IPA last year. It was okay, but didn't have anywhere near the complexity that this beer has. With this beer I was able to apply what I've learned about water and ingredient selection. The malt bill was complex, but it wasn't a "kitchen sink" beer where I threw in so many ingredients that the overall flavor became muddled. I formulated the recipe with an idea in my head of what I wanted each ingredient to contribute and the finished beer was pretty close to that vision.
This one is a keeper!
Follow me on Instagram @wouldbebrewmaster
Like The Would-be Brewmaster on Facebook
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The malt flavors are multi-layered. The aforementioned sweetness from the Honey and Caramel 80 malts give way to a deeper, more fruit-like sweetness which the Caramel and small amount of Special B likely provided. The Munich malt adds additional malt flavor in a more light-handed way than just using more Caramel malt. There is also the subtle toasted notes from the Vienna malt. The malts and hops combine to give the beer a crisp finish.
This is a beer that shows my growth as a brewer. I tried brewing a red IPA last year. It was okay, but didn't have anywhere near the complexity that this beer has. With this beer I was able to apply what I've learned about water and ingredient selection. The malt bill was complex, but it wasn't a "kitchen sink" beer where I threw in so many ingredients that the overall flavor became muddled. I formulated the recipe with an idea in my head of what I wanted each ingredient to contribute and the finished beer was pretty close to that vision.
This one is a keeper!
Follow me on Instagram @wouldbebrewmaster
Like The Would-be Brewmaster on Facebook
Share what beers you are drinking with me on Untappd
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