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Was hanging out with friends this weekend and since it was my birthday weekend odd ideas came up. One of these bad ideas happened at Sunday brunch when someone at the table ordered a mimosa. It was jokingly suggested that a beer mimosa of Miller High Life and Apple Juice should be made.

We took that joke seriously, and rightfully so. High Life mixed with Martinelli's is kind of shockingly close to the flavors of a mimosa. Light, fruity, effervescent and pretty darn good. Will be banging again for all future brunch beer needs.

 
Breakside Brewery, one of the award-winningest breweries in Portland (or anywhere, probably) just opened a third location and brewery, called the "Hop Lab", focusing on IPAs. I was pretty interested by their description of various regions of IPAs:

Breakside said:
• the golden, resinous, strong IPAs of SouthernCalifornia typified by friends at Pizza Port, Bagby, Beachwood, Noble Ale Works, and Ballast Point

• the soft , hazy and estery IPAs of New England in the vein of Hill Farmstead, Nightshift, and Trillium

• the piney and citric IPAs of the P acific Northwest and Northern California made timeless by Firestone Walker, Russian River, and Barley Brown’s

• the over-the-top, weighty IPAs of the Midwest inspired by Fat Heads, Columbus Brewing, Brew Kettle, Three Floyds and Surly

• the rich and saturating IPAs of the Mountain West a vein that runs from Melvin in Jackson WY south through Denver to Albuquerque, home of Bosque, La Cumbre, and Canteen

• the fruity and oily IPAs from the Southern Hemisphere.

What do you guys think?
 
Breakside Brewery, one of the award-winningest breweries in Portland (or anywhere, probably) just opened a third location and brewery, called the "Hop Lab", focusing on IPAs. I was pretty interested by their description of various regions of IPAs:



What do you guys think?
1 and 3 are basically the same, as are 4 and 5.
 
Was hanging out with friends this weekend and since it was my birthday weekend odd ideas came up. One of these bad ideas happened at Sunday brunch when someone at the table ordered a mimosa. It was jokingly suggested that a beer mimosa of Miller High Life and Apple Juice should be made.

We took that joke seriously, and rightfully so. High Life mixed with Martinelli's is kind of shockingly close to the flavors of a mimosa. Light, fruity, effervescent and pretty darn good. Will be banging again for all future brunch beer needs.


Hefeweizen and orange juice is where it's at.
 
Breakside Brewery, one of the award-winningest breweries in Portland (or anywhere, probably) just opened a third location and brewery, called the "Hop Lab", focusing on IPAs. I was pretty interested by their description of various regions of IPAs:



What do you guys think?

This:

1 and 3 are basically the same, as are 4 and 5.

But it's a better attempt at parsing regional variations in the style than most I've seen.
 
They also forgot or omitted the old-school East Coast IPA that mainly lives on at Dogfish Head and Harpoon.

And at 90% of the breweries in the southeast (Creature Comforts, Wicked Weed, Civil Society, and some others being exceptions).

Given the rock start treatment that Sam Caglione still gets down here any time he shows up at a festival or event, I suspect the Dogfish Head influence is a big part of that.
 
But it's a better attempt at parsing regional variations in the style than most I've seen.

Agreed; but at this point, does it not maybe make more sense to describe IPAs without using a regional descriptor?

Hazy IPAs, bitter IPAs, citric IPAs, piney (earthy?) IPAs, and malty IPAs?

Been thinking about this lately. Calling Monkish IPAs "new England style", building 8 a "west coast style" IPA, etc., seems kinda silly.

Or, maybe I'm over thinking it...
 
Agreed; but at this point, does it not maybe make more sense to describe IPAs without using a regional descriptor?

Hazy IPAs, bitter IPAs, citric IPAs, piney (earthy?) IPAs, and malty IPAs?

Been thinking about this lately. Calling Monkish IPAs "new England style", building 8 a "west coast style" IPA, etc., seems kinda silly.

Or, maybe I'm over thinking it...
You're probably over thinking it. But so are they.
 
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