Brewer: Brouwerij Van Steenberge, Belgium
Beer Name: Bornem Triple Abbey Ale
Style: Tripel (strong pale ale)
ABV: 9.0%
One day this weekend, and I'm not sure which day (because over the past week, my schooling, working, sleeping, eating, and videochatting have all melded together into one huge indiscernible mess of hours), I decided to buy lots and lots of beer. Because that way, I wouldn't have to make multiple beer runs throughout the week (efficiency is my main goal in life).
Anyhow, I went to my usual beer spot, Mr. Dunderbaks, and I picked three lovely brews, which I will save for later posts. But then I remembered that one time, I had fantastic beer luck at the ABC Liquor store just a little further down the road (and admittedly, their prices were better, too). So I hopped in the car and took a little trip down Fletcher Ave. And I must say, I made a good decision, my friends.
I bought a 6-pack of different Belgian beers, all brewed at the same brewery: brouwerij Van Steenberge. ...Embarrassingly, I can't remember how much I paid for it, but I will say this: I remember being thrilled at how (relatively) little I was paying for each beer, compared to what I'd just spent at Dunderbak's.
Tonight, I decided to crack open the tripel ale (there is a dobbel in the pack, as well).
Good call... good call.
I came in from work tonight, after nine hours in front of a computer screen. I threw down my purse and briefcase (which I tote around only to increase my professional appearance... really I just cart around skittles and fun-size twix bars in it), peeled off my pants, walked to the kitchen, and in my trousersocked-feet and rather conservative knit sweater, I promptly poured the contents of the 330ml stubby bottle into my Waterloo records pint glass... though I'd have poured it into a tulip glass if I'd have had one.
What a lovely mist drifted out of the top of the bottle right before I poured it! And a lovely aroma, too -- definitely a typical Belgian tripel abbey scent: rich yeastiness and a mild fruity/citrusy undertone. If witbier weren't my favorite sort of beer, I might say that abbey ales were. Anyway, I couldn't even pour the entire 330ml into my pint glass, at least not all at one time, because the fluffy, off-white head was so thick. Which was a very welcome change, compared to my last two entries. You can see in the picture that even after I managed to pour the entire thing into my pint glass, the head still poked up over the top. I must admit -- and maybe this makes me an 8-year-old -- overly fluffy heads are my weakness when it comes to beer. It's like I'm eating alcoholic cotton candy! Anyway, this head was quite lovely, and persisted for ages (like 8 or 10 minutes). Unsurprisingly, it left pretty rings of ecru lace around the inside of my glass as I drank the brew. The ale was a fantastic, consistently deep golden brown throughout, and it was very, very clear. I don't think there was any sediment.
Once the head finally went down enough for me to actually drink the beer, I was happily content with its taste. Yes, the beer is a bit dry and a bit alcoholic (but come on, it's a tripel!). But I liked it very much! One forum stated that it had a nice banana finish, which I tasted once it was pointed out to me. I might not have picked up on it otherwise.
The taste was a bit off toward the end of me drinking it; but to be fair, I spent over an hour on it because I kept getting distracted with other things like making a bite of dinner, checking email, and giggling at myself for no real reason (it was a 9% beer, after all).
I would buy this again, certainly. In my less-than-expert opinion, I'd say that St. Bernardus makes a better-tasting tripel, but the head on this beer was to die for. =)
Thursday, December 10, 2009
Thursday, December 3, 2009
Oh, excellent!
Thanks to to an online article from the Washington City Paper (which laid out for me the differences between beer geekiness and beer snobbiness), I found an exceptionally clear and well-thought-out guide to all terms beer-related.
Win!
Now I can sound less uninformed when I write about beer. =D
Win!
Now I can sound less uninformed when I write about beer. =D
Tuesday, December 1, 2009
Pinkus Organic Munster Alt Beer
Brewer: Brauerei Pinkus Muller, Munster
Beer Name: Original Munster Alt Beer
Style: Alt Beer
ABV: 5.10%, but I didn't see that on the bottle!!
I purchased this delectable organic altbier at the same time as the Georg Schneider's Wiesen Edel-Weissen, from precisely the same bottom corner of the same bottom shelf at Mr. Dunderbak's. And so I was a bit worried about the freshness of the beer, but hoooooooly cow I shouldn't have worried my little head! This beer wins.
I paid $4.99 for 500 mL (a metric pint, which, thrillingly, does not fit into my Waterloo Records pint glass). The bottle is cheery and red, with fun black and white antique-y photos of people I can only assume boast the last name of Pinku.
I smelled the brew before I even poured it, and for a moment, I thought that I'd accidentally picked up a Lindeman's Cherry Lambic. Delicious cherries!! Oh, it smelled phenomenal. After my initial shock, I admitted that the cherry smell wasn't as strong as it would be in a kriek, but the distinct smell was still there. I poured a beautiful nutmeg-colored beer into my pint glass, which had a nice little foamy head (though not quite as nice as some other beer sites have made it out to be... which could simply be a consequence of -- again -- me picking up a beer from the back corner of the very bottom shelf at the store).
This altbier's taste made me want to hold the brew in my mouth and swish it around for a bit before I swallowed it... delicious. It tasted how it looked and how it smelled: it had a yummy (and appropriately seasonal) undertone of a deep red fruit and a subtly crushed nutty spice. Incredible. The first sip floored me, and I thoroughly enjoyed the rest of the drink. I thought it held its flavor quite well, even through my distractions in the kitchen and with a drop-in guest. It probably took me over an hour to drink the whole thing, and I relished the last, somewhat sediment-y, drop just as much as I did the very first.
I had never heard of an altbier until I purchased this one, and Beer Advocate told me that it was a Dusseldorf specialty brown ale. It also told me that an alt beer is smooth and delicate, which both my boyfriend and I sort of scoffed at. How can a brew be delicate? Oh, but it is, my friends. It is. What a delicious mellowed and smooth brew it is! I don't know how to tell you what it means for it to be "delicate"... it just is. Very delicate, very lacey and soft, and very faerie-like. I could easily drink two or three of these in one sitting.
The Merchant du Vin webpage suggests serving this with cured ham, sweetbreads, or lasagna, all of which sound like they would be very much enhanced with a bottle of this sweet nectar. =) Next time, I'll be sipping on this with a dinner of vegetarian lasagna and cuban bread, instead of greedily cracking it open after a long day at work, and then downing it like a parched wanderer.
Liquid love. =)
Sunday, November 29, 2009
Georg Schneider's Weisen Edel-Weisse Ale
Brewer: Private Weissbier-Brauerei Georg Schneider & Sohn, Munich
Beer Name: Wiesen Edel-Weisse Ale
Style: wheat beer
ABV: 6.2%, but I never saw that on the bottle!!
I purchased this lovely bottle of organic wheat beer from Mr. Dunderbak's on Bruce B. Downs, my go-to beer spot. I paid $5.59 for a metric pint (500 mL), which I think is fair. =)
I pulled it off the very end of the very bottom shelf, where it was sort of hidden behind a few other beers, which should have been my first clue. I poured it in my Cap City Brewery pint glass and found that I was simultaneously thrilled with the color and entirely disappointed in the lack of foamy head.
The color is pretty much what I love to see in a witbier: a very pretty light golden color, and it has just a little hint of romantic, delicious red when I hold it up to the light. However, the head (what little of it there was) disappeared immediately after I finished pouring it, which was a disappointment. The smell is lovely: a strong wheaty and yeasty smell, with maybe a bit of light, sweet, fruitiness. And the taste is incredible -- like what a witbier should taste like, except maybe fruitier. It's very sweet, one of the sweetest wheat beers I've had (which is entirely fine with me).
I am sad about the lack of foam; the beer is just sort of flat all around. I don't know how to tell whether a beer is flat because it's simply flat, or because it needs more bottle conditioning. The ale itself is very palatable and quite lovely in taste; I'd serve it at a summer barbeque if I could be assured that my bottles were properly carbonated.
I'll probably buy it again if I can make sure that I get ahold of one that's just been delivered to the store, and not been sitting on the shelf for ages. =)
Labels:
georg schneider,
Hefeweizen,
wheat beer,
Wiesen Edel-Weisse Ale,
witbier
A New Bloggie!
I like beer. I like blogs. I like my cousin, who's also started a beer blog. I like my boyfriend, who has not started a beer blog, but who certainly encourages way too much beer consumption on my part. And all of these factors are inspirations for the birth of A Bottle A Day (Or, as I've only just realized -- "ABAD," which is a rather unfortunate abbreviation for what I hope will become a blog of just the opposite nature. Damn.)
And so, my friends, I've decided to grace the internets with my own little beer insights. I'll admit: I've started this blog for purely selfish reasons -- I have reached a point in my beer consumption where I've simply lost track of all I've drank, my thoughts on each beer, and sometimes even whether or not I'd buy the beer again (a situation which only occurs after beer 3... or sometimes beer 2. Yes, I'm a lightweight. What?!). Anyway, this is my way of keeping up with what I love (or hate, for that matter).
A rather important aside: I don't claim to know much of anything about beer! I've never brewed my own, and honestly, I couldn't tell you too much about the process itself aside from the fact that I know fermenting occurs. =) I just know that I love beer, and deep down, I hope that some of my rambles about the fabulosity of Lambic or the spectacularity of Hoegaarden can convert some beer-haters over to the world of beer appreciation.
xo!
And so, my friends, I've decided to grace the internets with my own little beer insights. I'll admit: I've started this blog for purely selfish reasons -- I have reached a point in my beer consumption where I've simply lost track of all I've drank, my thoughts on each beer, and sometimes even whether or not I'd buy the beer again (a situation which only occurs after beer 3... or sometimes beer 2. Yes, I'm a lightweight. What?!). Anyway, this is my way of keeping up with what I love (or hate, for that matter).
A rather important aside: I don't claim to know much of anything about beer! I've never brewed my own, and honestly, I couldn't tell you too much about the process itself aside from the fact that I know fermenting occurs. =) I just know that I love beer, and deep down, I hope that some of my rambles about the fabulosity of Lambic or the spectacularity of Hoegaarden can convert some beer-haters over to the world of beer appreciation.
xo!
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