danimalarkey wrote:I don't know that price is the best indicator of quality -- Sam Adams Utopia beers cost $100-150 per 24oz. bottle. Would you say it's 50 times better than most beers?
I agree that the alcohol content is more of a turn-off than anything else (same thing with Founders' Devil Dancer and Dark Horse's Double Crooked Tree). Half a bottle into it and I'm feeling really drowsy.
Davooda wrote:Fellow hopheads - I tried the 120 minute Dogfish Head last fall and I couldn't finish it. It was so astringent I thought my head was going to turn inside out. But I digress...
I had an American-style IPA last week - by O'Dells of Fort Collins, CO - that has become my new favorite and I wanted to share:
http://www.odellbrewing.com/beers/classics/ipa.aspx
After the pour, the aroma of fresh hops is so intense that I felt it must smell this way going down the rows of mature hops while they're being harvested. I am not prone to embellishment, but this may be the best balanced IPA I've had - the maltiness of the brew is a perfect foil for the bitterness imparted by the hops.
The bad news is that my friend who was kind enough to share it with me - and quite a student of the brew - says production is kinda small and distribution is mainly in Colorado. But if you can get your hands on a bottle, don't pass this one up.
Cheers,
Davooda
danimalarkey wrote:I don't know that price is the best indicator of quality -- Sam Adams Utopia beers cost $100-150 per 24oz. bottle. Would you say it's 50 times better than most beers?
Khaopaat wrote:De gustibus non est disputandum, suum cuique, etc.
Out of curiosity, how did your "pallet" evolve to "conisuer" level? Do you work in the beer/spirits industry? Taken some courses? Lifetime of sampling different & exotic beers?
Khaopaat wrote:De gustibus non est disputandum, suum cuique, etc.
Out of curiosity, how did your "pallet" evolve to "conisuer" level? Lifetime of sampling different & exotic beers?
Jamieson22 wrote:WTf is a "high end home brewer"?
Silas Jayne wrote:Jamieson22 wrote:WTf is a "high end home brewer"?
I only clone the best beers, Chimay's, Dogfisheads, Dead guys, and my home creations...To put it in laymans terms I can brew Miller Light for $6 in ingrediants, New Castle for $15, but I use so much grain and hops that my creations typically cost between 40 and a $120 to brew..Only the best.
Khaopaat wrote:De gustibus non est disputandum, suum cuique, etc.
Out of curiosity, how did your "pallet" evolve to "conisuer" level? Do you work in the beer/spirits industry? Taken some courses? Lifetime of sampling different & exotic beers?
Khaopaat wrote:I apologize in advance for ending this post on a heretical note, but I just can't get into IPAs. More of an ale & stout guy myself, though I enjoy the occasional porter.
Jamieson22 wrote:Silas Jayne wrote:Jamieson22 wrote:WTf is a "high end home brewer"?
I only clone the best beers, Chimay's, Dogfisheads, Dead guys, and my home creations...To put it in laymans terms I can brew Miller Light for $6 in ingrediants, New Castle for $15, but I use so much grain and hops that my creations typically cost between 40 and a $120 to brew..Only the best.
Sounds like you need to find cheaper places to buy your grains and hops. For $120 I could brew a 10 gallon batch that used a 55lb sack of grain and > 6lbs of hops.
Silas Jayne wrote:These are only the finest imported grains, barely's and hops..LOL, you won't find them at your local brew nieghborhood brew store. And guess how much grain is involved in brewing Dogfishead 120's?
nr706 wrote:It would be great to get some brewing discussions going that involved substance over bluster.
Jamieson22 wrote:Silas Jayne wrote:These are only the finest imported grains, barely's and hops..LOL, you won't find them at your local brew nieghborhood brew store. And guess how much grain is involved in brewing Dogfishead 120's?
Wow, must be expensive to import American grown hops to make Dogfish Head 120. I mean with the increased cost of exporting them to Europe (I guess Europe since that is where all the finest things come from) and then importing them back to the US. You are totally "high end"!
And a 10 gallon Dogfish Head clone uses about 32 pounds of base malt. Will there be an essay portion to the quiz???
Silas Jayne wrote:These are only the finest imported grains, barely's and hops..LOL, you won't find them at your local brew nieghborhood brew store.
nr706 wrote:I wasn't asking about extracts - although, well handled, some decent beers can be made with extracts. That said, I don't use extracts, either. But you seemed to make a distinction between barley and grains, which is why I asked you about adjuncts.
Puppy wrote:Somehow I can't get into it. For me, their sweetspot is probably the 60 or 90 minute IPA. The 120 minute is, for lack of a better descriptor, too INTENSE. And I think the alcohol content (~18% ?) is far higher than what I want to taste in a beer, but I guess that's just me.
I find my ales peak after about two weeks in my 32 degree fridge
JasonM wrote:Isn't that a little too cold?
Drinking quality beer at that temperature dulls the flavors.
Bud/Miller/etc, on the other hand, should be as cold as possible - for the same reason.
Silas Jayne wrote:Jamieson22 wrote:Silas Jayne wrote:These are only the finest imported grains, barely's and hops..LOL, you won't find them at your local brew nieghborhood brew store. And guess how much grain is involved in brewing Dogfishead 120's?
Wow, must be expensive to import American grown hops to make Dogfish Head 120. I mean with the increased cost of exporting them to Europe (I guess Europe since that is where all the finest things come from) and then importing them back to the US. You are totally "high end"!
And a 10 gallon Dogfish Head clone uses about 32 pounds of base malt. Will there be an essay portion to the quiz???
Hold on son...I don't use extracts...I haven't for 12 years...