So a local craft beer bar hosts an annual homebrew competition. This competition takes 25 entries and chooses the top 5 to be re-brewed for a beer and music festival, where the public votes on the winner. I'd submitted entries the previous two years, making it to the festival both times. The first year my Belgo-American Pale Ale placed third, and last year my Honey Wheat placed second.
A month and a half ago, I was talking to one of the owners of the bar, and she talked me into participating again. I wasn't planning on doing it, partly because of time, and also I just didn't know what to submit. She suggested a fruit beer. She said I should brew something that women like because that's who I should appeal to at the festival if I make it again. When I asked what type of fruit beer to brew, she said "something with raspberries."
I immediately thought of this recipe.
Now I normally don't do fruit beers. I've tried brewing them two other times, and both ended up getting dumped. Total failures. But I had no other ideas, so I heeded the owner's advice and gave this one a shot.
The brew day and fermentation went as plannned. No hiccups. I added the raspberries, and a week later they were white, just as the OP said they would. I racked the beer and took a sample. YUCK! I thought it was terrible! Very sharp bite to it. I thought if this is what it's going to taste like, there's no way I'm going to that festival a third time. But I've been brewing long enough to know a beer can mellow dramatically in just a week or two. So I let it sit in the bright tank for two weeks.
I just bottled this yesterday, and took another sample. HOLY FRIGGIN' CRAP! This beer is awesome! The sharp bite is completely gone, and you get a wonderful raspberry fruitiness. My competitors are in trouble! Thank you to the OP for a fantastic recipe!
Sorry for the long-winded post. I'll keep you all posted on how this does in the competition.