Are they really not doing an anniversary beer this year?
Surprised by this as well. I've always really liked their anniversary beers.
Are they really not doing an anniversary beer this year?
Arbre is different levels of char on an oak barrel. Which honestly sounds kinda awful since American Oak Bois was awful. Haven't had American Oak Sucre but I can't imagine it's that good eitherRemember there's also the "Arbre" series, which is some kind of beer aged in different barrel types. Wouldn't be shocked if that's basically a reboot of the Anniversary series.
Correct me if I'm wrong, but wasn't part of the hook on the anniversary series that it was a partial solera of previous years? Perhaps they completely ran out of stock of all the previous years and couldn't keep that going.
Arbre is different levels of char on an oak barrel. Which honestly sounds kinda awful since American Oak Bois was awful. Haven't had American Oak Sucre but I can't imagine it's that good either
Correct me if I'm wrong, but wasn't part of the hook on the anniversary series that it was a partial solera of previous years? Perhaps they completely ran out of stock of all the previous years and couldn't keep that going.
I really wish they would stop putting things into wine barrels.
I am pretty sure I just said it, let me scroll up and check. Yup, I did, I will say it again too. I really wish they would stop putting things into wine barrels.Said no one ever.
I am pretty sure I just said it, let me scroll up and check. Yup, I did, I will say it again too. I really wish they would stop putting things into wine barrels.
In sours I can't really pick up any wine notes. In stouts it just drys them out to me, and I am not a fan. Just to be safe though they should stop buying wine barrels.You don't like wine barrel aging on sours?
NAO Sucre was significantly better than NAO Bois. I had the same expectation going in since NAO Bois was a woody mess, but they had a much better handle on how to work with NAO last year. Doesn't necessarily mean the Arbre series will be good, but there is hope for it.Arbre is different levels of char on an oak barrel. Which honestly sounds kinda awful since American Oak Bois was awful. Haven't had American Oak Sucre but I can't imagine it's that good either
In sours I can't really pick up any wine notes.
I am not a big sour guy, I just started to get into them. Didn't like the RR sours when I tried them a long time ago, beat/FFAC I liked recently. DDG is the only LA sour I have has, and not sure on any Cascades without checking my untappd. To me most barrel aged sours are more for time to develop the yeast/bugs than flavor impartment.This is pretty surprising to me, since the barrels are so pronounced in RR's sours, some Cascade beers and others like Lost Abbey FDA. Maybe you're confusing adjuncts with barrel-aging?
I would probably stop buying expensive beer if I couldn't detect barrel-aging notes in sours.
Not infected, but I hated how NAO sucre tasted.nao bois was infect-y. nao sucre isn't.
also i have too many ******* anniversary beers does anyone want any.
nao bois was infect-y. nao sucre isn't.
also i have too many ******* anniversary beers does anyone want any.
also i have too many ******* anniversary beers does anyone want any.
I am not a big sour guy, I just started to get into them. Didn't like the RR sours when I tried them a long time ago, beat/FFAC I liked recently. DDG is the only LA sour I have has, and not sure on any Cascades without checking my untappd. To me most barrel aged sours are more for time to develop the yeast/bugs than flavor impartment.
I have no idea how wine and Saisons work. The 2 sours you mentioned are completely different beers. 1 is 100% brett while the other is brettanomyces, lactobacillus, and pediococcus. Not really comparing apples to apples. I have no idea how the Bruery handles wine barrels, but if they clean them as thoroughly as other breweries do, then the wine flavor is all but gone and you are at a basically used plain oak. I never said wine barrels made sours worse, I just don't taste wine on most wine barrel aged sours.If you don't think a wine barrel changes a sour, you should do a side by side of La Vermentoise and Le Sarrasin. Night and day. One is a pretty mediocre saison (and substandard for HF) and the other is heavenly. I don't disagree that a lot of that is just aging and letting the bugs do their work, but if you compare RR's Sanctification and Temptation there is quite a bit more depth that you get in the Temptation versus the stainless aging of Sanctification. Additionally, new oak barrels are way too harsh for most sours and spirit barrels add/change/dominate too much as well for most. Saying that no value (or detrimental value) is added from wine barrels is pretty ridiculous.
I'm a little more indifferent on no stouts in a wine barrel, but I don't have a problem with any of The Bruery's big sweet beers being dried out a little. I don't love Wineification but I do think it is substantially more drinkable than Black Tuesday on its own.
Though it's called a "100% Brettanomyces" beer, Sanctification is made with lacto and pedio, just not sacchromyces. The comparison matters, because one is wine-barrel aged and one has no oak at all.I have no idea how wine and Saisons work. The 2 sours you mentioned are completely different beers. 1 is 100% brett while the other is brettanomyces, lactobacillus, and pediococcus. Not really comparing apples to apples. I have no idea how the Bruery handles wine barrels, but if they clean them as thoroughly as other breweries do, then the wine flavor is all but gone and you are at a basically used plain oak. I never said wine barrels made sours worse, I just don't taste wine on most wine barrel aged sours.
Did not know that about Sanctification as their website says its not as sour as a beer aged with lacto and pedio. As for the microbes in a wine barrel I agree, as for the taste of actual wine I just to not pick it up. No grapes, or other wine flavors in sour beers.Though it's called a "100% Brettanomyces" beer, Sanctification is made with lacto and pedio, just not sacchromyces. The comparison matters, because one is wine-barrel aged and one has no oak at all.
Wine barrels tend to have lots of surviving microbes in them, which spirit barrels don't, which is why wine-aging a saison tends to turn it into a sour -- vielle style.
Did not know that about Sanctification as their website says its not as sour as a beer aged with lacto and pedio. As for the microbes in a wine barrel I agree, as for the taste of actual wine I just to not pick it up. No grapes, or other wine flavors in sour beers.
Sanct gets much more sour with age. My best guess is that the only reason the bacteria aren't evident early on is simply that it has a far shorter production cycle than the other Russian River sours.Did not know that about Sanctification as their website says its not as sour as a beer aged with lacto and pedio. As for the microbes in a wine barrel I agree, as for the taste of actual wine I just to not pick it up. No grapes, or other wine flavors in sour beers.
Sanct gets much more sour with age. My best guess is that the only reason the bacteria aren't evident early on is simply that it has a far shorter production cycle than the other Russian River sours.
The only sour I can think of with extraordinarily prominent wine character is Consecration. Huge Cabernet flavors. HF Art has a big wine barrel flavor, too, but it's a bit different from a sour.