*Before we start I'd like to make a note about my feelings on "Cascadian Dark Ales" or "Black IPA's"... I just don't like them! The label, the genre, the style, the flavours, etc. "Why are you a hater?" Well, when you consider that in the early 1700's Porters or "Stout Butt Porters" were around 6-9% ABV and 65-85 IBU's this seems to fit these Black IPA's pretty well. This sort of recipe carried on into the early 1900's with a few speed bumps along the way. Rock n' Roll had similar experiences. I do understand the idea of the carafa(de-bittered/de-husked black malt) but some are not using this. Also, "Black IPA" doesn't make sense. I-India... this beer has nothing to do with voyages or trades to India or whatever myth/legend/fact/history you want to believe. P-pale, well dude, Black ain't pale. A-ale, well 1 out of 3 ain't bad. As for "Cascadian" I see that as being lame. Everyone makes a pale ale and they use whatever hops they want. Good for them. Don't make a style as complex as this and base it on the one and only hop you can/should use. You don't see single hop IPA's being labeled as SPA (Simcoe Pae Ale) or CIPA (Centennial India Pale Ale). Okay! Yeah! I totally get the idea of what the beer should be when you get the name, but I still see this just as much as a bastardization as Keith's calling their sugary-beer (most likely a lager) an IPA. Just sayin'. If the B-A or BJCP needs another style call it a Black Bitter or X-TREME ROBUST PORTER. Now I'm being foolish, and I am not trying to take away from the quality of the beer.
This is apart of the 15th Anniversary series that Alley Kat has put out along with a Belgian Tripel, Apple Wit (Cider?), Smoked Porter, and Ginger Beer. A great idea and a lot of work for the brewers. This particular Cascadian Dark Ale is a salute to Cascade hops and the brewers of Cascadia.
I'm guilty of a heavy pour that flowed pure, opaque, jet-black, with a rocky-eggshell white head. The head was a little large (due to my aggressive pour) but great retention none-the-less. The head is similar to when you pour a rootbeer float.
The aroma is very interesting off the top. I've been sticking my nose in this for a while and it keeps getting more and more interesting, yet less and less complex every time (Tip for tasters: The olfactory system has a limit for senses and will become fatigued very quickly. So when you are not sure what you are smelling in your glass anymore, smell the skin of your sleeve, and it kind of resets everything). First on the nose, I get a cola like sensation that reminds me of Crush Birchbeer (only available in Nfld and some Sobey's across Canada where Nfld'ers are abundant...think: Fort Mac). Now, that quickly changes to roasted barley, sweetened coffee, chicory (think smelling a Tim Hortans cup that used to be full of black coffee w/o sugar and has time to cool down), then citrus and tobacco. More tobacco than citrus, it comes across like flavoured rolling papers, where the paper part is leaning towards light oxidation followed quickly by licorice root or star anise and as it warms it takes on characteristics of spiced rum. The citrus is lemon-lime and CO2. Overall I perceive the nose to be very simple despite how "loud" it is.
The flavour hits roasty right off the tip of the tongue, flows to a milk chocolate, molasses, licorice sweetness in the centre of the tongue, and finishes with that dry tobacco, mint, and light lemon-lime citrus bitterness on the finish. The finish is surprisingly dry and kind of makes me grin despite the acidity of this beer. There is a sourness (which is in every beer, hopefully) that makes the middle-back of my tongue tingle in good ways. Overall there is a big Coca-Cola flavour going on with lots of root-like qualities, roasty bits, and a long lingering sweetened licorice that remains closer to the front of the tongue. The bitterness is there as a sheet that coats the back half of the tongue but it is not as powerful as I'd like it to be. The sweetness never covers the back of the tongue or palate. Think of oil on a hot pan that moves away from the heat, well the sugar is moving away from the bitterness and flows to the front of the tongue yet remains pocketed in the bucket of the tongue.
A lot of what I described in the later half of flavour contributes to the mouthfeel, which is a nice carbonation, which I'd consider quite high for the style. The body is full, but not rich. It is really dry, but not astringent other than a little roast kicking around. This beer puts a test to the palate to wonder if you are sensing bitterness or astringency due to roasted grain or hop bitterness. This is a dry beer, but even so it's slightly watery on the finish, which aids in drinking this beer quickly.
This beer as a whole was very well done. I really dig it for what it is. It says exactly what it says it is. If this were a regular offering at a reasonable price I'd buy this in 6 packs of 12-packs. Seriously, great beer and bravo to the brewers. I look forward to sampling the other 15th Anniversary beers from Alley Kat. again, bravo on a well crafted brew!
As for food pairings: I'd put this with a bag of Doritos Sweet Chili Heat or Hawkins Cheezies, put the feet up and watch the game. Life is simple sometimes, no matter how complicated a label may seem.
This is apart of the 15th Anniversary series that Alley Kat has put out along with a Belgian Tripel, Apple Wit (Cider?), Smoked Porter, and Ginger Beer. A great idea and a lot of work for the brewers. This particular Cascadian Dark Ale is a salute to Cascade hops and the brewers of Cascadia.
I'm guilty of a heavy pour that flowed pure, opaque, jet-black, with a rocky-eggshell white head. The head was a little large (due to my aggressive pour) but great retention none-the-less. The head is similar to when you pour a rootbeer float.
The aroma is very interesting off the top. I've been sticking my nose in this for a while and it keeps getting more and more interesting, yet less and less complex every time (Tip for tasters: The olfactory system has a limit for senses and will become fatigued very quickly. So when you are not sure what you are smelling in your glass anymore, smell the skin of your sleeve, and it kind of resets everything). First on the nose, I get a cola like sensation that reminds me of Crush Birchbeer (only available in Nfld and some Sobey's across Canada where Nfld'ers are abundant...think: Fort Mac). Now, that quickly changes to roasted barley, sweetened coffee, chicory (think smelling a Tim Hortans cup that used to be full of black coffee w/o sugar and has time to cool down), then citrus and tobacco. More tobacco than citrus, it comes across like flavoured rolling papers, where the paper part is leaning towards light oxidation followed quickly by licorice root or star anise and as it warms it takes on characteristics of spiced rum. The citrus is lemon-lime and CO2. Overall I perceive the nose to be very simple despite how "loud" it is.
The flavour hits roasty right off the tip of the tongue, flows to a milk chocolate, molasses, licorice sweetness in the centre of the tongue, and finishes with that dry tobacco, mint, and light lemon-lime citrus bitterness on the finish. The finish is surprisingly dry and kind of makes me grin despite the acidity of this beer. There is a sourness (which is in every beer, hopefully) that makes the middle-back of my tongue tingle in good ways. Overall there is a big Coca-Cola flavour going on with lots of root-like qualities, roasty bits, and a long lingering sweetened licorice that remains closer to the front of the tongue. The bitterness is there as a sheet that coats the back half of the tongue but it is not as powerful as I'd like it to be. The sweetness never covers the back of the tongue or palate. Think of oil on a hot pan that moves away from the heat, well the sugar is moving away from the bitterness and flows to the front of the tongue yet remains pocketed in the bucket of the tongue.
A lot of what I described in the later half of flavour contributes to the mouthfeel, which is a nice carbonation, which I'd consider quite high for the style. The body is full, but not rich. It is really dry, but not astringent other than a little roast kicking around. This beer puts a test to the palate to wonder if you are sensing bitterness or astringency due to roasted grain or hop bitterness. This is a dry beer, but even so it's slightly watery on the finish, which aids in drinking this beer quickly.
This beer as a whole was very well done. I really dig it for what it is. It says exactly what it says it is. If this were a regular offering at a reasonable price I'd buy this in 6 packs of 12-packs. Seriously, great beer and bravo to the brewers. I look forward to sampling the other 15th Anniversary beers from Alley Kat. again, bravo on a well crafted brew!
As for food pairings: I'd put this with a bag of Doritos Sweet Chili Heat or Hawkins Cheezies, put the feet up and watch the game. Life is simple sometimes, no matter how complicated a label may seem.
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