Bock beers are a little more difficult for me to write about because I just don’t have the vocabulary to describe what I taste in them. Bocks are a type of lager, originally brewed in Germany and can be anywhere from dark to pale in color. They tend to have high alcohol content as well.
The Pint Nite special at Tyler’s Taproom in Durham last night was a bock by Yuengling Brewery of Pottsville, PA. Yuengling’s Bock Beer is brown, about the same color as a Newcastle. Like other bocks, it tends toward a sweet, malty flavor with very little hops (in fact, I could only really taste the hops at all when exhaling after a sip). It’s at this point that I am unable to continue to describe a bock in any brewing vocabulary, so here goes with regular language.
Yuengling’s Bock doesn’t have a strong flavor of anything that I can pull out over any of the other flavors. It’s not hoppy at all, not too sweet, and for a higher-gravity style beer, there’s not much of an alcohol taste to it. That said, it’s pleasant tasting, and infinitely easy to drink. Forget all those light beers that advertise themselves as “refreshing”; this is the beer you want to have for a break when you’re laying asphalt on a hot summer day. That doesn’t really jive with the history of bock beer, but it’s perfect nonetheless.
Tyler’s tweet calling the glasses”pretty cool” was right on the money, too. They went with a pilsner (or Pokal, apparently, though I’d never heard that) glass, with a stylized Yuengling logo in black on the back and “Bock Beer” in red on the front. No special design, but it works well on this glass. The Yuengling logo isn’t their usual logo, and is what I think the bastard child of the NASA and Star Wars logos would be if it were born in a typhoon.
Free Glass Score: 7/10
Beer Score: 7/10
The surprise of the night, though, came thanks to none other than Ska Brewing! Mark and I hit the bar at Tyler’s right after work. When I went to get our Pint Nite specials, our buddy at the bar tells me he’s been looking for me. Apparently, someone over at Ska ran across my last post, where I expressed my dissatisfaction (read: blasted) with their Modus Hoperandi, and they called up Tyler’s to see if maybe they’d gotten a bad keg or something.
Ska, I’m shocked you care what a single amateur blogger thinks of your beer, and surprised that on top of if you called up Tyler’s to make sure it wasn’t a bad batch. I can’t retroactively adjust my score of your beer that night. I do, however, hereby award you with two “honor points”, because you cared enough to find out what was up. It’s a new point scale I had to make up just for this, and you have the distinction of being the first brewery to earn any.
Thank you, Ska, for caring. I pledge to do my part and try another Modus Hoperandi when I get a chance, and I’ll post the results. If it does indeed turn out that my first go from that night was a bad batch, I will add an amendment to the post.
Thursday, March 25, 2010
Friday, March 12, 2010
Brewday 10.03
Yep, Brewdays are getting version numbers, Ubuntu-style. I made brewing my first beer a part of my resolution list for this year, and I’m actually going to accomplish it! Yes, I’ve been slack and missed the first two months, but it’s on now! Mark, Zach, Drew and Roberta are confirmed for this inaugural Brewday, and we’ve decided on a stout. I can’t wait to see how it’ll turn out!
Wednesday, March 10, 2010
Ska Brewing “Modus Hoperandi” IPA and Dubussion Scaldis ‘07 Vintage
The last time Tyler’s Taproom featured a beer by Ska Brewing Company, I was less than impressed with the glass. Well, it’s the same glass. So, that just leaves the beer to discuss – and that’s unfortunate. Tonight’s beer was the “Modus Hoperandi” IPA. Ska bills it as “…old-man bitter. A mixture of citrus and pine that will remind you of the time you went on a vision quest with your Native American cousin…”.
To me, it tasted like a dirty sock. It was literally difficult to drink, and Mark and I mused that perhaps the tap lines were dirty or something. It was that bad. I have to admit I would probably not be crazy about it anyway, but Mark really likes hoppy beers and he grimaced each time he took a sip. Ska, I really hope this beer was bad in the keg, because I just can’t believe you would produce something that tastes so terrible.
Free Glass Score: Same as before – 4/10
Beer Score? 0. Yes, ZERO.
Update: Ska actually saw this post (who knew?) and called Tyler's to find out what was up. Major class points, Ska, major class. I have not yet had the opportunity to try this beer again, but when I do, I'll write up another review.
Scaldis '07 Vintage
The night was rescued by the Scaldis ‘07 Vintage. Dubussion, a Belgian brewer, makes a family of beer named Bush. Due to trademark issues, it’s distributed as Scaldis beer in several countries, including the United States.
The Scaldis ‘07 Vintage beer was fantastic! For a 12% beer, it had no discernible alcohol taste. Sweet isn’t the correct word, really, because it wasn’t as syrupy as that would imply. It was just not bitter. The caramel and vanilla notes were not overpowering, but added to a very complex flavor that really made this beer stand out.
No glass score for this one – it wasn’t the Pint Nite special.
Beer score: 9/10
To me, it tasted like a dirty sock. It was literally difficult to drink, and Mark and I mused that perhaps the tap lines were dirty or something. It was that bad. I have to admit I would probably not be crazy about it anyway, but Mark really likes hoppy beers and he grimaced each time he took a sip. Ska, I really hope this beer was bad in the keg, because I just can’t believe you would produce something that tastes so terrible.
Free Glass Score: Same as before – 4/10
Beer Score? 0. Yes, ZERO.
Update: Ska actually saw this post (who knew?) and called Tyler's to find out what was up. Major class points, Ska, major class. I have not yet had the opportunity to try this beer again, but when I do, I'll write up another review.
Scaldis '07 Vintage
The night was rescued by the Scaldis ‘07 Vintage. Dubussion, a Belgian brewer, makes a family of beer named Bush. Due to trademark issues, it’s distributed as Scaldis beer in several countries, including the United States.
The Scaldis ‘07 Vintage beer was fantastic! For a 12% beer, it had no discernible alcohol taste. Sweet isn’t the correct word, really, because it wasn’t as syrupy as that would imply. It was just not bitter. The caramel and vanilla notes were not overpowering, but added to a very complex flavor that really made this beer stand out.
No glass score for this one – it wasn’t the Pint Nite special.
Beer score: 9/10
Wednesday, March 3, 2010
Sierra Nevada Glissade Heller Bock
Once again, it’s Pint Nite at Tyler’s Taproom in Durham, and up on the block tonight is the Sierra Nevada Glissade Heller Bock. Mark, Drew, Zach, Charles and I hit the taproom after work and ordered up a round of the golden brew. Bocks are lagers originally from Germany, and a “Heller” bock is a pale version of the style (as opposed to the dark beers that were the original style of this family).
Sierra Nevada describes the Glissade as “remarkably mellow”, and that might be an understatement. It’s not a bad beer, but it is mellow in every sense of the word. Drew even admitted that he didn’t really like it – it didn’t have enough kick for him, I guess. I enjoyed the bock, but I can see where the rest of the guys were coming from. There’s nothing overpowering but the flavors blended well into an ultimately drinkable beer. It kind of reminds me of Boddingtons in that sense (minus the nitrogen, of course); I described it as a “Breakfast Beer”. It would be great on a hot day in the sun.
The free glass for Pint Nite was probably the best I’ve seen. The multi-color logo featured a picture of a gorgeous, peaceful valley with a silver-blue river running through it. The entire image is framed by the regular Sierra Nevada branding. The entire thing was intricate and beautiful. It fails to get the top score only because the logo is on just one side (an arbitrary rule, but one that I have, nonetheless).
Free Pint Nite Glass Score: 9/10
Beer Score: 6/10
Sierra Nevada describes the Glissade as “remarkably mellow”, and that might be an understatement. It’s not a bad beer, but it is mellow in every sense of the word. Drew even admitted that he didn’t really like it – it didn’t have enough kick for him, I guess. I enjoyed the bock, but I can see where the rest of the guys were coming from. There’s nothing overpowering but the flavors blended well into an ultimately drinkable beer. It kind of reminds me of Boddingtons in that sense (minus the nitrogen, of course); I described it as a “Breakfast Beer”. It would be great on a hot day in the sun.
The free glass for Pint Nite was probably the best I’ve seen. The multi-color logo featured a picture of a gorgeous, peaceful valley with a silver-blue river running through it. The entire image is framed by the regular Sierra Nevada branding. The entire thing was intricate and beautiful. It fails to get the top score only because the logo is on just one side (an arbitrary rule, but one that I have, nonetheless).
Free Pint Nite Glass Score: 9/10
Beer Score: 6/10
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)