December 2018 Preview Tasting
Assorted Notes:
1) In spite of the initial expectation of having an unsupervised and unmoderated Andrew vs. Steven death match tasting, we ended up with Leanne, Justin, and Luke holding it down. While the degenerate side of me enjoys watching Andrew and Steven rip on each other non-stop for 90 minutes, the serious side of me would be remiss if I didn't say that they did a stellar job. Leanne even managed to mix some soft trolling in a few times - Steven and Andrew better watch out, the balance of preview tasting power might soon be shifting.
2) I believe this has shown up either in a recent email or in the League FB group, but our draft/crowler credits for 2018 expire on Christmas day, so make sure to use them by then or elect a proxy to do so. These are not cellphone minutes circa 2005, they don't roll over.
3) Beginning this month, pickups will be available in Encinitas. If you want your included beers for December to be sent to Encinitas along with your order, you must email
[email protected] by 12/9 to request that. As an additional note, past orders can't be transferred there. If you have October or November beers at Lomaland, you'll still need to head down there to grab them.
Tasting Notes:
1) Probability Engine
Style: Dessert Stout
Score: 4.25
Notes: The batch contains 25 lbs cinnamon, 180 lbs almonds, 1.5 lbs/bbl Black House Blend coffee, and I missed the amount of vanilla, but I want to say it was 1.5 lbs? Interesting note - they recirculate the beer on coffee first, then infuse the other adjuncts in a second recirculation step. I don't know about anyone else, but I really love hearing the process nuances at these tastings. The nose opens up with a big wave of coffee followed by lightly toasted almonds, while cinnamon wafts around in the background - sufficiently restrained that I'd be surprised if even its detractors find it to be objectionable - and vanilla rounds out the aroma without being particularly noticeable in and of itself. On the palate, almond hits first, giving way to coffee and semisweet chocolate, followed by cinnamon that's more assertive than the aroma would indicate but still on the lighter end of the spectrum. This is easily the driest beer they've produced in this series - in perception, even if not by the numbers - and I'm a bit curious where they're taking the dessert stout cans as time goes on. I actually enjoyed this quite a bit more than some of the recent entries in the series, but I'm curious to see if they return to the Beastmaster/Temple of Silence template or continue down this path.
2) Wizard Blend
Style: Blend of Imperial Stouts (+ a bit of barleywine)
Score: 4.75
Notes: Several people have asked if there's a solera component to this year's blend and unfortunately, there's not, but they have set things up to resume that in 2019. That said, the final blend certainly didn't suffer from the aforementioned omission. The aroma is a textbook definition of complexity, revealing layers of dark fruits (dates, prunes, and dark cherries), dark chocolate, vanilla, bourbon, hints of sherry, caramel, toffee, and leather, all in varying orders and proportions as the beer warms and evolves in the glass. Similarly, each sip reveals a slightly different melange of flavor - with more or less the same components as on the nose - although I found the chocolate, vanilla, and dark caramel to come through in a slightly more dominant fashion. Barrel elements come to the forefront as the beer warms closer to room temperature, with touches of alcohol heat. I love Wizard Blend every year but this is likely the best yet, and I'd put it up against my favorite Firestone Walker Anniversary vintages. As hard as the Special Projects team goes with adjuncts, I think they're even better at barrel curation, selection, and blending.
3) Spider Harness
Style: Super Berliner w/ Passion Fruit
Score: 4
Notes: The first single fruited beer in the Super Berliner series, 4400 lbs of passion fruit were added to a 60 bbl batch. For those of you who are averse to math, that's a hell of a lot of passion fruit. The nose opens with a big wave of passion fruit, followed by clean lactic acidity and some hints of guava that could be entirely a mental byproduct of those fruits frequently being paired. The palate takes a similarly linear path, opening with passion fruit, a hint of grainy sweetness lurking in the background - not THP for those of you who are sensitive to that - and a clean finish. As well-executed as this is, it ultimately didn't resonate with me, as I feel like it would benefit from the addition of another fruit, as well as slightly increased acidity to help the fruit profile pop more. Don't take that (or the score "only" being a 4) as any sort of objective indictment of the beer. Based on what people were saying, this seems like it's going to be a popular one. If you enjoy passion fruit kettle sours, jump all over it, it just wasn't lighting my fire.
4) Rampart Junction
Style: Barrel-Aged Dark Sour w/ Peaches
Score: 4.25
Notes: 870 pounds of fresh peaches went into this, and the final product certainly shows that, as the fruit character is robust, to say the least. Peach skin jumps out of the glass before it's even up to your nose, followed by deep, juicy peach flesh, wine barrel character, touches of herbal tea, and light brown sugar sweetness. The palate carries considerably more acidity than the nose, perhaps a touch too much, but peach comes in on the mid-palate in a massive way, toning down the acidity and allowing touches of oak, leather, and vanilla to work around the edges and create a balanced finish. The fruit is very definitely the star of this beer, I'd prefer the acidity to be toned down a touch, and there's a slightly disjointed feeling between the way the base comes across on the nose and the palate, but it's ultimately still enjoyable.
5) News from Nowhere w/ Boysenberries, Peaches, & Vanilla
Style: Flanders Red w/ Boysenberries, Peaches, & Vanilla
Score: 4.5
Notes: The nose opens up with a heavy blend of bright berries and fleshy peaches, with the boysenberries taking a slight lead but leaving plenty of room for stonefruit goodness, while vanilla is supporting in the background along with light oak and lovely earthy funk. A moderate wave of acetic acid hits the tongue first, followed quickly by massive stonefruit and berries that present as slightly less acidic than on the nose, but still not quite hitting jammy. Vanilla is discernable but restrained in the background, along with hints of aged balsamic, wine barrel oaky notes, and light funk. I was quite optimistic about this one on paper, and the adjunct combination works beautifully, enhancing the News from Nowhere base while leaving space for it to shine through.