Brewdog bashah Black Belgian Style Double IPA (Scotland) No. Too much. No. (7/10)
Fentimans Curiosity Cola (England) Yes, this is a soda note. But I think it belongs here anyway. A bitter slosh of herbs and amaro-like anti-sugar complexities, with just barely enough sugar to compensate, though this is decidedly on the not-sweet side of sodas. I completely love it. (6/10)
White Birch Belgian Style Pale Ale (New Hampshire) Fairly enticing. Ive realized, after extensive sampling (perhaps too-extensive), that most domestic Belgian knockoffs dont really do it for me, outside the spiced white ale genre. The reason is that they mostly stop at heaviness and sweet alcoholism without the complexity or inner life. Here, thankfully, theres more: spice, swirl, and light within. Perhaps even a woodsy note? Tasty. (6/10)
Manchester Brewing Kombat Ale (New Hampshire) Why must we fight? Straightforward and good-quality beer. Done. Next? (6/10)
Dogfish Head Saison du Buff (California) Oh, those wacky Dogfish folk. I find that they either hit a grand slam out of the park or go down swinging, and this is one of the latter at-bats. A furious attempt to achieve the pinnacle of nothing very interesting. (7/10)
Goose Island 2010 Matilda Belgian Style Ale (Illinois) Im immediately moved to hate the labels, which scream pretension and artifice, but this beer is good. Very good. The weight of the ale is expressed in a lower-gravity environment, lending it buoyancy and air, and theres a singing flavor development full of bronze and spice. I like it, a lot. (7/10)
Goose Island 2010 Pere Jacques Belgian Style Ale (Illinois) No, theres no accent on the label. Fairly intense but balanced, though theres not quite the development of flavor Id expect from the structure. Only sorta good. (7/10)
Goose Island 2009 Sofie Belgian Style Ale (Illinois) In the mode of a Belgian white, with perhaps just a little more weight than is good for it, but an otherwise firm, confident style. Just enough flavoring, just enough beer, just enough spice-fuzz texture. (7/10)
North Country Orchard Crooked Tree Cider (New Hampshire) Pretty basic. This tastes more like apple juice with the slight warmth of cider than it does an actual fermented cider. Very pleasant, but not worth the upcharge over (good, local, fresh) supermarket cider. (7/10)
Dogfish Head Indian Brown Ale (Delaware) Yeah, thats brown ale. And the first time Ive ever found a Dogfish Head beer kinda indifferent. I didnt think they had it in them. Its good. Not great. Not interesting. Just good. (7/10)
Nicoll Dry Wildflower Mead (Maine) Yeah, its mead. Dry-ish honey in drinkable form. And then? Nothing. The problem is less this beverage than my tastes; once one has delved into single-source meads, the blends seemwell, boring. So thats my bad. I can recommend it for those whose palates havent been ruined by, um, varietal bottlings. (6/10)
Fentimans Curiosity Cola (England) Yes, this is a soda note. But I think it belongs here anyway. A bitter slosh of herbs and amaro-like anti-sugar complexities, with just barely enough sugar to compensate, though this is decidedly on the not-sweet side of sodas. I completely love it. (6/10)
White Birch Belgian Style Pale Ale (New Hampshire) Fairly enticing. Ive realized, after extensive sampling (perhaps too-extensive), that most domestic Belgian knockoffs dont really do it for me, outside the spiced white ale genre. The reason is that they mostly stop at heaviness and sweet alcoholism without the complexity or inner life. Here, thankfully, theres more: spice, swirl, and light within. Perhaps even a woodsy note? Tasty. (6/10)
Manchester Brewing Kombat Ale (New Hampshire) Why must we fight? Straightforward and good-quality beer. Done. Next? (6/10)
Dogfish Head Saison du Buff (California) Oh, those wacky Dogfish folk. I find that they either hit a grand slam out of the park or go down swinging, and this is one of the latter at-bats. A furious attempt to achieve the pinnacle of nothing very interesting. (7/10)
Goose Island 2010 Matilda Belgian Style Ale (Illinois) Im immediately moved to hate the labels, which scream pretension and artifice, but this beer is good. Very good. The weight of the ale is expressed in a lower-gravity environment, lending it buoyancy and air, and theres a singing flavor development full of bronze and spice. I like it, a lot. (7/10)
Goose Island 2010 Pere Jacques Belgian Style Ale (Illinois) No, theres no accent on the label. Fairly intense but balanced, though theres not quite the development of flavor Id expect from the structure. Only sorta good. (7/10)
Goose Island 2009 Sofie Belgian Style Ale (Illinois) In the mode of a Belgian white, with perhaps just a little more weight than is good for it, but an otherwise firm, confident style. Just enough flavoring, just enough beer, just enough spice-fuzz texture. (7/10)
North Country Orchard Crooked Tree Cider (New Hampshire) Pretty basic. This tastes more like apple juice with the slight warmth of cider than it does an actual fermented cider. Very pleasant, but not worth the upcharge over (good, local, fresh) supermarket cider. (7/10)
Dogfish Head Indian Brown Ale (Delaware) Yeah, thats brown ale. And the first time Ive ever found a Dogfish Head beer kinda indifferent. I didnt think they had it in them. Its good. Not great. Not interesting. Just good. (7/10)
Nicoll Dry Wildflower Mead (Maine) Yeah, its mead. Dry-ish honey in drinkable form. And then? Nothing. The problem is less this beverage than my tastes; once one has delved into single-source meads, the blends seemwell, boring. So thats my bad. I can recommend it for those whose palates havent been ruined by, um, varietal bottlings. (6/10)