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Browsing Tags heavy seas

Review: Heavy Seas Black Cannon IPA

March 30, 2012 · by Oliver Gray

The Blacken 

Below the bubbles of the upper deep;
Far far beneath in the glassed in sea,
His ancient, dreamless, uninvaded sleep
The Black Cannon IPA sleepeth: faintest sunlights flee
About his shadowy color; above him swell
Huge foamy heads of millennial growth and height;
And far away into the sickly light,
From many a wondrous mix and scalding brew kettle
Unnumber’d and fragrant Humulus
Winnow with giant lacing arms the slumbering brown-black.
There hath he lain for ages, and will lie
Battening upon huge malted barley in his sleep,
Until the latter fire shall heat the deep;
Then once by man and drunks to be seen,
In roaring he shall rise and on the surface be drank.

(The Kraken by Alfred Tennyson circa 1830. Modified by Oliver Gray; original here)

This beer is amazing. It’s delicious and distinct, releasing gentle wafts of coffee as it slowly settles in the glass.

I could wax poetic about how…oh wait.

This is only one of two black IPAs I’ve ever tried. Stouts and Porters are generally low on my list of favorite beers, but somehow, when mixed with the hoppiness and strength of an IPA, their status greatly improves. I’m sure this sort of beer requires an appreciation of stouts and IPAs, which may both be acquired tastes.

As I mentioned in the primer post, this was the “Mystery X” beer of my sampler pack. I’ve had it before (and loved it before) so I was excessively delighted to find 3 of them safely tucked into the back of their cardboard home.

It pours black. No-light-escaping black. Pretty much like a Guinness or a Murphy’s Stout, but with significantly less silkiness and foam. It lacks the nitrogen smoothness of a widget-can beer, but that takes nothing away from this exceptionally brewed beer.

The texture is similar to Sierra Nevada Stout. It’s lighter and easier to drink, and doesn’t feel like you’ve swallowed a loaf of marble rye whole if you take an extra large swig.

The smell is what will first captivate; powerful dark roast coffee smells supported by flowery hops. I imagine the first pot of coffee each morning makes entire breweries smell like this. It’s wonderful. I would probably be content to just sit and smell this beer, without ever taking a sip.

But I’d be a fool not to. The taste is unlike anything I can list, even the other Black IPA (which unfortunately, I had in a restaurant and didn’t have the forethought to write down) which is saying something for a small brew American beer. At first, you might think you’re drinking a full-bodied stout or porter, with roasted malt flavors backing up the fresh coffee bean smell. But then, like a wave of flavor crashing on the shores of your tongue, you’re hit with hops – lots of them – from the IPA side of the world.

The union is just great. Dandy. The bees knees (whatever that means). I won’t bother wasting more words. Just go try it.

10 out of 10

Yo ho, yo ho, a pirate's beer for me.

Next up: Smuttynose IPA!

Review: Heavy Seas Gold Ale

March 28, 2012 · by Oliver Gray

I always try to pretend that I don’t like lagers and pilsners. The purist in me wants to be an avid ale-only enthusiast, but I can’t deny my secret love for  beers that are easier on my tongue and stomach. During the oppressively hot summer months, I’ve been known to drink an excessively large number of Yuenglings. You can’t barbecue with a Guiness, unless you’re really Irish.

Heavy Seas Gold Ale is an American blonde ale in disguise. It looks, smells, and pours like a lager, but surprises you with a bold, no-nonsense taste. If you were given a glass of this in a blind taste test, you might find yourself thinking it’s a kölsch. Or perhaps a noble hopped pilsner. Or perhaps you’ll just be glad you’re drinking a very tasty beer.

This is what I would call a “July 4th” beer. It’s light and smooth enough to be refreshing on a hot summer day, but packs enough punch at 4.5% ABV to prevent disgraceful chugging. It’s the kind of beer you’d be proud to share with your neighbors, and proud to hide from the cops when you smuggle it to the local fireworks display.

It pours a semi-transparent golden color (shocker, I know) with minimal head that dissipates quickly. It smells like a generic lager or pilsner, with minor hoppy notes and a tiny hint of alcohol. It maintains a lot of carbonation even after warming to room temperature, making the initial mouth feel quite sharp, like an injection of flavor straight to your tongue. It’s what a Novocaine injection would feel like if your dentist was a pirate.

The taste is impressive in its simplicity, but is similar to other beers in the category. It lacks the wheaty qualities of Belgian blondes, and might be indiscernible as an ale for someone who hasn’t tried many varieties.

This is definitely the most Spring-worthy beer of the pack. It’s refreshing but not weak, making it far superior to any AB InBev Domestic commercially available. It blows Heineken and Stella Artois out of the water (pun intended?) in terms of satisfaction-per-sip.

That being said, I’d probably go for something with a little more character as a staple Spring beer. I’d be hard pressed to choose this over Harpoon Rasberry UFO or even Sam Adams Alpine Spring, but as a part of a sampler, it’s a solid beer.

7.75 out of 10.

This is a mighty fine "goin' to bed" beer. That's why I took this picture on my night stand.

Next up: Smuttynose Old Brown Dog Ale!

Sampler Surprise (Smuttynose and Heavy Seas)

March 26, 2012 · by Oliver Gray

My taste buds are always up for an adventure. Especially if that adventure includes hops and malted barely. I’ve plowed through my fair share of small craft samplers over the years, but never truly took the time to appreciate how good (and sometimes bad) the collections may be.

Until now.

Spring means Spring seasonals, most of which are citrusy and wheaty, which are juxtaposed to my normal beer-pallete, which is fickle and likes what it likes.

I decided to pick up two non-seasonal samplers that contained at least three of a beer I already liked, so I could at the very least enjoy one fourth of my purchase should the other nine turn out to be rancid.

Sampler #1: Smuttynose Variety Sampler

I tried my first Smuttynose (Pumpkin Ale) last fall, at the behest of my fellow beer enthusiast Justin. As one who has a voracious appetite of any combination of fruit and alcohol, I was eager to try it. Last fall alone, I tried nine new pumpkin ale varieties and I would place Smuttynose PA near the top of that list.

This sampler came all the way from Portsmouth, NH, which is the sister city to Nichinan, Japan. I don’t quite get the box or label art (maybe it’d make more sense if I was sitting on a porch of some old house in New Hampshire), but I’m not one of those weird snobs who turns his nose up at a beer based on the bottle it comes in.

The four beers in this sampler were (past tense, I drank them all):

-Smuttynose IPA (the flagship)
-Shoals Pale Ale (a heavy, highly hopped pale)
-Old Dog Brown Ale (a semi-sweet, nutty ale)
-Star Island Single (crisp, grassy, Belgian pale)

Left to right, order of enjoy-itude.

 Sampler #2: Heavy Seas Sunken Sampler

Clipper City Brewing Company of Baltimore, MD, is basically in my backyard. For those of you who don’t know Baltimore, the entire city is infused with nautical themes; an 1854 sloop-of-war (the USS Constellation) sits anchored in the harbor. I’m always a sucker for local beers, getting a giddy squeal of delight when I see “brewed in Maryland” on the label or packaging.

Heavy Seas, a pirate themed series of beers that boasts plenty of Chesapeake Bay charm. I’m sure any of these would make a marvelous match for some fresh blue crab. An additional gimmick with this sampler is that you’re given a mystery beer, marked with an iconic “X” on the box.

The names and label design of these brews is delightfully silly and clever:

-Gold Ale (a Beer World Cup 2010 winning crisp, pretty golden)
-Black Cannon IPA (a malty, hoppy, stouty IPA; this was the “mystery beer” in my case)
-Loose Cannon IPA (a traditional but abundantly hopped IPA)
-Classic Lager (a slightly sour and flavorful twist on a generic beer)

Arr, here be good beers.

Individual reviews to follow.

First up…Shoals Pale Ale!

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