Jump to content

AaronS

Members
  • Posts

    96
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Days Won

    2

Everything posted by AaronS

  1. three floyds artic panzer wolf imperial india pale ale - 9% abv. nostalgia is undoubtedly the main reason I go out of my way to drink three floyds, but when their stuff is good it’s really good and I’m glad I bothered to go to the UES to pick this up. (the met was worthwhile too.) this is a terrific old school double ipa - there’s a bunch of sweet peach and white grape flavors that have the carmelized/marmalade character I like so much with only a little direct malt flavor. the finish is a little bit drier and has some citrus and nz hop like greenness, although the can says they only use american hops. if the year round beers that are so easy to find were anywhere near this good I’d buy almost nothing else. it may help that I’ve looked at stuff from the guy who did the can art everyday since 2000 without getting tired of it blah blah blah. strongly recommended.
  2. AaronS

    Tatiana

    I also only know one person (a couple I guess) and they don’t have connections and wouldn’t bother to go somewhere that wasn’t easy to book.
  3. tired hands only void imperial stout - 11% abv. tired hands is a main line philadelphia brewer that's a few years older than the similar breweries in this area. I haven't had that much of their stuff, they've been distributing here for at least a year but it's always the same few things and the majority of what I've had has been on tap at special events. I remember being floored by this at a tap takeover at covenoven about nine years ago where I was unable to try any hoppy beer because we showed up an hour or so after it started. this is a pretty credible americanized russian imperial stout - it opens with a bunch of bitter roasted notes that have a lot of nuance - espresso, dark chocolate, but also some grassy hops, creaminess, anise/molasses stuff, and some booze, and there's a nice mix of toffee and mint in the long finish. this is exactly the kind of huge but nuanced beer I've always liked, and the way the apparent alcohol is integrated with the other flavors reminds me a lot of the older evil twin recipes I liked so much. recommended.
  4. sierra nevada bigfoot barleywine-style ale - 9.6% abv. this is the bigger version of my other favorite sierra beer - it's got a higher abv than celebration but uses the same six ingredients. I had a slightly older one recently that was terrific - it was still hoppy, had some really well developed malt notes, and the beginning of the classic orange marmalade and caramel flavor profile you get in the good examples of english style barley wines. this doesn't really have any of that yet - the caramel and citrus are there but there's a lot of malt on top of them and this isn't as pleasant as the way I remember fresh ones. recommended if you hold onto it for a few years.
  5. walking around upper manhattan is always a little weird to me - the lower part seems so flat and devoid of nature that walking up a hill serves as a weird reminder that upper part wasn't always the way it is.
  6. industrial arts brewing power tools west coast style india pale ale bold & evergreen - 7.3% abv. industrial arts has had a beer by this name the whole time they've been open, although I think it had slightly lower abv at first and was simply an american ipa at first. I've always been a little bit frustrated by this beer, it's one of the few non-hazy ipas from a good local brewery and peekskill made a lot of great examples of this kind of beer when the industrial arts guy was there. I don't know if this changed when industrial arts moved to the larger brewery in beacon or how different the recipe is, but this is better than I remember it. you can see by looking at it that it's not a real west coast ipa, but the hop profile isn't that far off and there is some grainy malt underneath the bitterness. the basic mixture of pine and citrus with some pineapple, mango, and a little bit of peach which sounds pretty close to the way I'd describe eastern standard or one of his peekskill beers but tastes worse, probably because it doesn't walk the line between west coast and hazy ipa styles blah blah blah and another hundred blahs. still enjoyable and could be recommended to people with shitty bodegas and so on.
  7. poor man's speedball? caffeinated beer is usually good.
  8. am actually mildly curious about the alcoholic monster energy drinks you see in bodegas.
  9. here’s an excellent meal from a few days ago. highlights were the duck and the fluke but I really liked all of it.
  10. to øl B-Bon mælk imperial milk stout matured with bourbon barrel chips - brewed at de proef in belgium, 11% abv. it's been a really long time since I've had something from de proef, the belgian brewery set up for contract brewing that made almost all of the mikkeller, to øl, and omnipollo beer that I used to love so much. this beer probably goes back to those days, while the bottle is undated it tastes older than the 2019 barrel aged yule mælk's I had so many of. those had a higher abv, which usually helps things age, but this is in pretty good shape and is very enjoyable. there's a big set of roasted malt and vanilla at first that gives way to some bitterness and a very mild set of bourbon flavors that work well with the small amount of apparent alcohol. the finish has a mixture of lactose and some acidity that probably wasn't there when this was bottled, but it's easy to drink and it has the kind of simple depth that good examples of old beer do. not recommended.
  11. AaronS

    Eater

    does that have to be more than a request for a free meal?
  12. bonnie’s on fifth near second in park slope?
  13. abomination brewing company and hey, fuck 2023 too triple dry hopped india pale ale - brewed at the 12 percent brewing project in north haven ct, 9.7% abv. abomination is a pennsylvania brewer that’s been one of the 12 percent brands for a long time. their ipas are usually toward the bitter end of the north east ipa spectrum, which was a welcome break from the sweeter other half high abv ipas I drank so many of for so long. this is exactly the way I remember their beer - it’s as opaque and hazy as any ne ipa but the primary flavor is best described as hop burn and while you do get some detail after you get used to all the bitterness it never really leaves. I can’t find a record of what hops they used in this one on the web, but I’m guessing it was a lot of strata and nectaron along with maybe some citra. It’s mostly stone fruit (apricot, peach) with a little bit of berry and the tropical part of the citra flavor profile and while there’s no real malt presence there’s a decent amount of sweetness here too. this is a nice version of what I thought it would be. I picked this up because I’m pretty annoyed at how nostalgic my drinking has become but this is the kind of huge, in your face american beer I’ve always liked even if it doesn’t contain any caramel malt. mildly recommended.
  14. I went around ten years ago if memory serves.
  15. finback wellspring: riwaka pilsner pilsner naturally carbonated and dry hopped with riwaka - 5.4% abv. finback isn't really known for their lagers but I've always liked this series a lot, and riwaka hops are probably my favorite right now and this was an easy purchase. riwaka hops are full of the same lychee/rambutan/new zealand flavors you get in nelson sauvin but beers made with them usually are more delicate and nuanced than nelson ones. this is a lot hoppier than the way I remember the other beers in this series, there's not much malt character here and all you really get is the hops. there's nothing wrong with that, of course, but this isn't as much like a pilsner as I thought it would be. mildly recommended.
  16. AaronS

    Urban Hawker

    that’s only $4 more than hainan chicken house.
  17. the current format allows them to charge really high prices for their beer, I guess selling it in a slightly larger size/different format makes it a different kind of purchase than a four pack and keeps it from being shelved with them a lot of the time. four packs at the current price per ounce would be the most expensive hoppy beer almost everywhere their beer is sold by a decent margin and probably wouldn't work. 15 or 20 years ago almost every brewery was able to sell hoppy beer in 22oz bottles, which only works for high abv stouts or wild ales for almost every other brewery I can think of now. they're lucky, and it probably helps that most beer consumers can't do the price per ounce math in their head. read some beer advocate if you don't believe the last point. also if you look at the packaging it's clearly aimed at a different person than a lot of the other expensive craft stuff, and someone who is willing to pay more for really well made examples of an older style of beer making probably doesn't want 64 ounces of beer a night. it's impressive they can charge so much without chasing trends or making gimmicky beer. almost none of it above 7.5% either, which is usually a prerequisite at their price point.
  18. I see lerner on the street all the time. the conception at the end of that novel appears to be incarnate.
  19. you asked me if I'd had their another one ipa five or six years ago.
  20. better question is whether either is acceptable, there’s no need to rank them.
  21. trotter makes perfect sense, flay seems like an ironic choice but my only experience of him is eating next to him at uncle boons and thinking that his very beautiful wife seemed miserable and then seeing they got divorced shortly thereafter. I guess I can see why they would want to show their versions of what’s in child’s books.
  22. it does seem really odd to me. I was wondering if anyone here could opine about mesa grill. eta: apparently it closed in 2013, I assume whatever excellence they’re celebrating was long gone by then. charlie trotter died in 2014, and his restaurant closed the same year mesa grill did.
  23. as well as julia child and charlie trotter.
  24. so many things in that contemporary america feel that way to me. apparently he's just mentally ill.
×
×
  • Create New...