Cascade Brewing

The Portland brewery tour train rolled on down the line from the Green Dragon to the Cascade Brewing Barrel House. The core group in the tour had been to Cascade’s brewpub, the Raccoon Lodge, on a previous trip, but fortunately they decided to include the Barrel House even though they don’t do any brewing on premises. It does house the aging barrels, and that’s good enough for me. Plus, it was on the way to the next stop. We also sat down at two separate tables here, but I somehow felt more rushed than at the Green Dragon. Oh well.

    Rob’s Picks

  • Blueberry Bourbonic – 11% – Smooth sour blueberry flavor, with bourbon finish. Somewhat heavy. Nice!
  • Rhubarb Crisp – 6.5% – Sour start, with a rhubarb blast finish that lingers.
  • Plum Rye – 7.35% – Plum aroma, flavor on finish. Very sour start. Nice broad base.
  • Shrieking Violet Blueberry – 11% – Lighter and crisper than the Blueberry Bourbonic, and really nice.
  • Kriek – Really good. Very very sour, and somewhat subtle cherry flavor.
  • Nouveau Cerise – 8.18% – Really nice and sour. Cherry “darker” than the Kriek — more complex.
    The Rest

  • Noyaux – 8.94% – A raspberry sour. Subtle start, raspberry comes through in the finish.
  • 2010 Sang Noir – 9.2% – Like a really sour sparkling wine. Very raisiny.
  • Raspberry Wheat – 5.7% – The one non-sour beer that was ordered. Basically a bubbly raspberry drink. Meh.
  • Sweetart – 8.25% – Sour and good, but nothing about it stood apart from the other sours.
  • Blueberry – Also sour and good, but after the other two blueberry drinks, this one felt and a little too light and easy.

I forgot to take a picture here, which is unfortunate because their colorful beers would have made for some great photos.

Oregon Brew Crew / Green Dragon

The Green Dragon devotes a couple of its 62 taps to the various homebrewers in the Oregon Brew Crew who release a new Green Dragon-branded beer every week or so on the in-house 1bbl brewing system. Fun!

Green Dragon remains

Remains of the Brew Crew, Buckman, etc samplers at the Green Dragon — Portland, OR

    Rob’s Picks

  • Hoppy Night CDA – Floral hoppy bite, good lingering roasted maltiness.
  • Vienna Lager – Color a bit dark for a lager, but really smooth, nice, and simple. Goes right down.

Next time I’m in Portland I’ll have to swing by the Green Dragon again to see what new delights the Brew Crew have concocted.

Buckman Brewery

The 15-person Portland brewery tour tsunami swept its way from The Commons to the Rogue-owned Green Dragon alehouse, which in addition to having 62 beers on tap also houses a distillery and two microbreweries, Buckman Brewery and Oregon Brew Crew’s 1bbl nanobrewery. Interesting set up. Buckman specializes in botanical brewing, with various herbs and spices and fruits and whatnot, which is an area that Rogue hasn’t explored too much. Anyway, there were too many of us to all sit together, and so we split ourselves across two tables. I ended up at the smaller, 6-person table, where we ordered two 4-glass samplers to cover the five Buckman and two Brew Crew beers on tap, plus a bonus Double Mountain IPA. The waitress eventually came back with two sets of the two samplers, which was a bit of a surprise but, in the end, a good problem to have. And since we were a smaller group and all seated, I was able to take more reasonable notes. Phew!

double the samplers, double the fun

Doubled up samplers of Buckman and Oregon Brew Crew at The Green Dragon — Portland, OR

    Rob’s Picks

  • Fruit Cake Stout – Decent stout, slight fruity notes but not as fruitcake-y as I feared. Slight smoky finish.
  • Chamomellow – Nice, light and bubbly, with good mellow flavor.
    The Rest

  • Black Saison – Dark in color but watery, kind of bland.
  • Side Dish Sweet Potato Brown – More body and flavor than the Black Saison, some more complex sweetness.
  • Ginger – Definitely taste the ginger. Well-made, but I don’t think I’d drink a whole pint.

So yeah, some interesting brews, but I think I still have a ways to go before I fully appreciate the world of botanical brewing.

The Commons

The first stop on the Portland tour itinerary was lunch at Hopworks, but since I had already visited it in November, I joined up with everyone at the second stop, The Commons Brewery. Initially called Beetje Brewing, they changed their name to something more pronounceable and moved into a bigger location. It’s a nice space — lots of windows and light, with stacks of aging barrels. Lots of Belgian-inspired brews.

The pacing of the tasting was completely different from Occidental — everyone stood around the little table with the taster tray, and the sampler glasses made their way around one immediately after the other. I barely had time to scribble even minimal notes, while standing, before the next taster arrived. Yikes! I eventually came to think of it as speed-tasting: a sip of each beer, and then you paired up with the one you liked best.

Commons tulips

The Commons tulip glasses (for sale, as well!) — Portland, OR

    Rob’s Picks

  • Flemish Kiss – 5.8% – malty and crisp, with an interesting bitterness
  • Pale Evening Ale – 5.8% – nice pale ale
  • Sticke – 6.8% – good brown ale, pretty dry
  • Commons Blond Ale – 6.2% – nice hoppy blond, bready
  • Madrone – 6.9% – nice sour bite, bubbly
  • Saison de Pamplemousse – 5.8% – crisp, citrusy, although I couldn’t really identify it as grapefruit
    The Rest

  • Urban Farmhouse Ale – 5.3% – Lemony aroma. Sweet, bready, bitter — odd mix. Strong bitter finish.

With this rapid, stand-up beer tasting method, I think I can now safely add “Agile/Scrum experience” to my resume…

Occidental Brewing

Well, after two and a half months of not visiting any new breweries, I ended up going down to Portland with a group of friends for a mad dash of brewery tours. Thinking I’d make the trip a bit more relaxing, I headed down the day before. The friends I stayed with then took me out to Occidental Brewing, which wasn’t on the weekend’s ambitious itinerary. Occidental does German-style beers, and I guessed that I would like their lighter beers more than their darker (dunkel/bock-style) ones. I guessed correctly. All very well-made, though — I’m just not a big fan of German-style dark beers.

Occidental samples

Samples at Occidental Brewing — Portland, OR

    Rob’s Picks

  • Hefeweizen – Lemony, bready, light. Very refreshing. Good German-style hefeweizen. Clove/banana aftertaste, but not too strong.
  • Cloudy Summer – Kolsch-style. Strong bready aroma. Great bubbliness. Good bready flavor and hoppy edge. Light, but not as light has the hefe. Yum!
  • Altbier – Slight floral hoppy aroma. Good malty base with complementary bitter back end. Slight lingering caramel flavor.
    The Rest

  • Dunkel – Sweet bock/malty aroma. Malty and slight nutty taste, not too much of that malty sweetness. Pretty good.
  • Lucubrator – seasonal Doppelbock – Similar aroma to the Dunkel. Tastes kind of like a stronger version of the Dunkel, in fact, but with a bit more of that malty sweetness. Sorta barley wine-ish in taste, but without the alcohol flavor and content.
  • Dunkelweizen – seasonal – Very unfiltered lemony aroma. Clove/banana and slight lemon flavors with malty/bocky sweetness. Reminded me quite a bit of Leavenworth’s Whistling Pig Dunkelweizen.

This sampling session was nice and relaxed. Had plenty of time to scribble down my notes between tastes and discuss the beers with Robert, who does his share of homebrewing. Felt like I learned quite a bit about beer talking with him. Maybe I should give this homebrewing thing a try — just need to find somewhere other than my little one bedroom place to do it.

Pliny the Younger

Pliny the Younger

Two small glasses (7.5 ounces) of Pliny the Younger

February means one thing (at least for some people): hunting season has officially opened for Pliny the Younger. Made by Russian River Brewing, Pliny the Younger is only available in small quantities, and only a select few alehouses here in the Seattle area get a small keg of it, and it always sells out fast. Fortunately, being unemployed means I can make it to the odd hour pourings, and that’s exactly what I (and an unemployed friend) did when it went on tap at Naked City at 2:00 pm on February 15th. Keg ran out at 2:19 pm. This was my first time trying P the Y, and I must say it was an exceptional beer. I will definitely try and find another pouring (or two) before the season ends.

Pliny the Younger – 10.5% – Strong piney aroma. Great initial bubbliness and spiciness. Strong piney and hoppy flavors. Lovely malty undertones. Long finish — grapefruit citrus flavor that mixes well with a subtle caramel taste and slight alcohol edge. Awesome!

Also on tap as consolation beers were Naked City‘s “Cry me a River” and Big Time‘s “Whiny the Complainer.” So we tried those, as well…

EPIC Ales

The day after Thanksgiving 2011 was cold and sunny, which was much better than cold and rainy, and so Jonny and I hopped on our bikes to check out two new bike paths, the Mountains-to-Sound extension on Beacon Hill and the officially opened Ship Canal Trail. Towards the end of the ride, I felt a little odd about not visiting a brewery (interesting Pavlovian effect, I suppose), and so we circled around town some more until we were back in the SODO neighborhood and locking up our bikes outside the EPIC Ales brewery. EPIC is an acronym for “Every Possibility Is Conceivable,” and they make “strange and wonderful brews.”

Update! March 16, 2012: Dropped in again for one of their Saturday beer brunches, after I saw a picture they posted to facebook of bagels they were making in-house from their own spent grain. I had one of those stuffed with their own sockeye salmon lox and fennel salad. It was so friggin’ good that I wanted seconds. Also tried two more of their beers.

Mega Update! January 10, 2015: A lot has changed at EPIC Ales since my previous update. They moved their brewing equipment into the basement of their building, expanded and re-modeled the main space, added a kitchen, and called it Gastropod. So they have sort of become a two-headed monster, so to speak, with EPIC Ales below and Gastropod above. I’ve been by a bunch of times, and the food has always been awesome. I’ve heard rumors that they’re going to open a second Gastropod elsewhere in town but forgot to ask when I was there earlier this week. Oh, and I have something like 30 more of their beers to add, as well as a new picture.

mini EPICs

6oz mini-schooners of EPIC Ales at Gastropod — Seattle, WA

    Rob’s Picks

  • Chocolate Oranges – 7% – Belgian dark ale with orange blossoms. Chocolate/coffee and light brown sugar with bright orange citrus edge.
  • Of the Earth (2014) – 6.9% – Matsutake saison. Sweet citrus-edged bubblegum start with underlying earthiness to citrus/earthy finish. Weird, right? But pretty good.
  • Old Warehouse (2014) – 5% – Blend: 25% 2.5 years old, 25% 1.5 years old, 50% 9 months old. Sour aroma. Nice level of sourness with some fruitiness. Light and tart. Hint of oxidation, but not bad (although it makes me worried about my bottle of Old Warehouse Batch #1 – guess I’ll just have to open it one of these days and find out how it is).
  • Oceanic Funk – 6.3% – A sour with smoked malt, konbu seaweed, and squid ink. Light amber color, surprisingly. Light, bright, and sour. Finishes with light lingering savory flavors and light smoke. Bit of earthy funk edge and some brininess. A very interesting beer. I liked it, but the 6oz pour was probably the right amount.
  • Flemish Plums – 7% – Plum sour aged with oak. Great balance of sweet and sour, with balsamic and lingering plum flavor. Underlying dark malty sweetness, and a touch of oaky vanilla. Awesome. In a blind taste test I would’ve guessed it was Duchesse de Bourgogne.
  • Sour Flowers – 4.4% – Light sour funk aroma. Bit of sour start with good citrus flavor from orange blossoms. Hint of lemon, too. Tartness mellows out, and you get more of the wheat. Pretty easy drinking sour.
  • Oaked Harvest – 5.2% – Oak-aged kabocha squash porter. Smooth and creamy with lots of fun flavors – coffee/chocolate, vanilla, light squash.
  • Trois – 8.3% – Fruity aroma and flavor. Very light banana/clove, some orange, and fairly sweet but with a balancing undercurrent of bitter citrus. Hint of funk.
  • Getting Dark – 6.3% – Dark ale. Tart start with a lot of carbonation. Some coffee, some rye spiciness, to light cardamom on the finish. Complex and interesting. From a bottle I picked up when it got marked down after sitting on a shelf in QFC for four months or so. I think the tartness developed over time – a definite plus, IMHO.
  • Slow Southern Steel – 6.5% – Made with smoked serrano peppers and bottle conditioned. Lots of carbonation when I finally opened it. Spicy, lightly funky aroma. Big sour start, then the spiciness comes in. Light funk as well as smokiness on the finish. Bottle #182/300.
  • Gnarly Goat – 11.5% – Bock aged in Tatoosh bourbon barrel. Bourbon aroma. Good amount of bourbon flavor, but not overpowering, going to malty nutty finish with a bit of an alcohol edge.
  • Peach-Bot 5000 – 6.5% – Peach saison. Nice light peach flavor, not too sweet, balanced well with some bitterness and light funk.
  • Ominous Nebula – 3.1% – Smoky cardamom aroma. Light amber color. Smoky, with light sugary sweetness and light cardamom. Quite light on the tongue. Light herbal hops. Very drinkable.
  • Happoshu – 5.5% – Rice-based, gluten-free saison. Cool sharp aroma. Very good balance of flavors – sweetness, coriander, alcohol, light funk. Some bitterness in the finish.
  • Springy Beer – 5% – Bready/oaty malt flavors with a touch of lemon. Light, with just enough body. Somewhat grassy finish with a bitter twist.
  • Glacier – 5.6% – Banana aroma. Banana flavor then honey sweetness, bit of clean spruce/forest, and nice bitterness. Good balance.
  • Northwest Partytime!!! – 5% – Dry-hopped sour with agave. Floral aroma. Then you take a sip, and it’s a surprisingly strong sour. Crisp and sweet, too, with some floral hop flavor on the finish. Sour all the way through.
  • Cherry Smoke Bomb – 6.4% – Very good cherry, smoke, and vanilla flavor mix. Dry, with a nice sour edge. Nothing too strong in any of these aspects – great balance.
  • Silly Goat – 9% – Sharp alcohol and malt aroma. Crisp, sweet, caramel, biscuit, with an alcohol edge. Rye finish. Lots going on but it works.
  • SAD Winter Brown – 5% – Brown ale made with lager yeast. Light and nutty, with some chocolate/coffee notes. Crisp and very drinkable. Makes me happy.
  • Anniversary Partytime!!! – 7.5% – Berlinerweisse with turmeric and kobucha. Slight banana/clove aroma and flavor. Crisp with a bit of tartness. Good rye flavor and light maltiness. Very even.
  • Solar Trans-Amplifier – 6.5% – Wit with chamomile, ginger, and rice. Interesting. Chamomile flavor with rye undertones. Fairly dry and smooth. Ginger is subtle but comes out as it warms.
  • Late Night Partytime!!! – Chocolate/coffee aroma. Very sour. Dark chocolate/coffee flavors with a bit of fig. Nutty finish.
  • Chocolate Chili Sour – Chocolate from Theo, of course, and dried chipotles. Apparently there was a chocolate beer fest recently that I missed. Anyway, good sour aroma. Good sour start. Chocolate and chili flavors not really evident, but they balance out the sourness and really fill it out. Light on the tongue. Chocolate comes through on the finish, as well as a very slight lingering heat from the chili. A very drinkable sour. From a spontaneous fermentation base that Cody made last summer.
  • Simply Winter – 7% – Rye-based. Whiskey/bourbon aroma. Strong rye whiskey taste, with some subtle malty sweetness. Nice mix. Smooth and rich — I kept salivating throughout the finish. I need to buy some bottles of this.
  • Pumpkin Pie Gose (2011) – Strong sour aroma, subtle pumpkin. Very sour/tart start but sweetens a little and the pumpkin flavor comes thru a bit. Really great sour ale interpretation. My favorite pumpkin beer (yeah, I know, that’s not saying much…).
  • Project Two – Belgian-style barley wine. Strong alcohol flavor with good caramel balance. Good lingering bitterness.
    The Rest

  • Kettlebier – 6% – Farmhouse rye ale with oolong tea. Sweet bubblegum start with bitter tannic tea flavor. Light rye. Interesting but too tannic for me. Over-steeped, perhaps?
  • Winter’s Haze – 7.5% – Big floral, herbal, and citrus, and bit of earthy hops. Light caramel, and also some bubblegum. Lingering bitter finish.
  • Salty Ghosts – 4.3% – Sour wheat with coriander and sea salt. Popcorn aroma. Sour tang with salt and coriander edges. Buttery, too. Basically salty buttered popcorn.
  • Misty Rain of the Quinalt – 7.9% – Farmhouse IPA with spruce tips. Fruity aroma. Super sweet start – strawberry, mango, and bubblegum. Then the funk comes out. Bitter finish.
  • Huckeberry Sour (Batch #1) – 5% – When I bought the bottle Cody recommended drinking it within a year, but for some reason I waited a little bit longer than that. Light and tart, but subtle metallic taste on finish and a bit of oxidation. Good amount of huckleberry flavor, though. Wish I’d opened it right away.
  • Tart Miso – 3% – Really interesting. Very light color. Quite sour, with brothy mouthfeel from miso. Very unique, definitely not for everybody. Bit too much brothy mouthfeel for me after a few sips.
  • Of the Earth (2013) – 3.2% – Medium brown color. Malty aroma. Malty, nutty, bit of earthiness, hint of sweetness. Light mushroom flavor on the finish. Interesting and not bad but not quite my thing.
  • Just in Smoke – 4.2% – Very smoky aroma and flavor. Crisp, with honey and maple sweetness. Pretty interesting but a taster was enough for me.
  • Forest – Dubbel with whiskey staves. Malty with a nice subtle whiskey edge. Very subtle sour mash flavor.
  • Super Saison – 11% – Herbal aroma. Fairly malty for a saison, with rye undertones and a bit of a bitter finish.
  • Beet Down (2012) – 5.6% – Sour and beety, with a touch of dirt on the finish.
  • Desert (2012) – Oat-based saison. Fairly strong whiskey flavor and light on the tongue.
  • Zero Minute IPA – Wet hop Lambic. Medicinal aroma. Sour, quite light, with lingering parsnip/lemon grass flavor. Really interesting. One of strangest wet hop beers I’ve had.

The menu at Gastropod changes from week to week, and each beer seems to last about a couple weeks. So yeah, there always something new to try. And just because you’ve made it this far, I’ll put the original picture down here:

original EPIC Ales taproom

Cody manning the taps on my first visit to EPIC Ales, way back in November 2011 — Seattle, WA

Flat Tail Brewing

Corvallis is a college town, and the otherwise unfortunately named Flat Tail Brewing is all about the OSU Beavers. But now Corvallis has three breweries (not counting the McMenamin’s), which is not a bad thing as far as I’m concerned. Kappy and I showed up for lunch and ordered the beaver tail-esque taster paddle to accompany it. I was a little surprised that several of the beers were made with fancy spices and whatnot, like coriander and rosehips, and two were made using open fermentation, and so I got my hopes up for some interesting brews.

taster tail

Flat Tail Brewing’s taster tail — Corvallis, OR

    Rob’s Picks

  • IPA – 6.8% – Citrusy aroma. Big hoppiness — mostly citrus flavored, but some floral, too. Decent balance — not the best IPA, but good.
  • Dusseldorf Alt – 4.5% – Really nice. I wish this had been their Pale Ale. Great maltiness and nicely balanced. Very drinkable. Unfortunately, the line “I was born in Dusseldorf, and that is why they call me Rolph” kept going through my head as I drank this.
  • Porter – 6.8% – Decent balance of dryness, hoppiness, and chocolate and alcohol flavors. Good lingering flavor.
  • De La Rose – 7.5% – Floral aroma. Nice balance of floral and other flavors. This is the one with the coriander and other spices. Complex but drinkable. I like it.
  • Six – 6.5% – Like a lighter, hoppier tripel. Good sweet caramel flavor balanced by hoppiness rather than alcohol flavor. Nice!
  • KSA – 3% – Kind of like sour cherry cider. Very sour, very strong cherry flavor, almost no maltiness or hoppiness. Pretty fun, actually. Made with cacao nibs, as well, but you really have to concentrate to notice it.
    The Rest

  • Kolsch – 5% – Light and bubbly. Somewhat lemony start to strong bready finish. But kind of dull.
  • Pale – 5.5% – Fairly light. Subtle floral hops, decent malty base. Drinkable, but nothing too interesting.
  • White Tail Wheat – 4.5% – Fairly crisp for an unfiltered beer. Nothing interesting going on with the flavors, though. Drinkable, but meh.
  • Saison de la Tail – 10% – Very light on the tongue. Strong floral hoppiness, subtle caramel sweetness. Can’t believe it’s 10%. Did they accidentally swap this one with, say, the De La Rose?

With the way the Kolsch, Pale Ale, and Wheat came out, I’m glad we skipped their Amber. I was also glad they were out of their raspberry ale and pumpkin stout. But hey, they had some good beer, and the food was decent. So, I’d say Flat Tail is a fine addition to Corvallis. Go Beavers!

Hopworks Urban Brewery

I finally headed back down to Oregon recently, mainly to visit friends but also to hit a few breweries. First up was lunch at the Hopworks Urban Brewery. I arrived in Portland a little after 1:00, and so Kappy and I were quite hungry by the time we sat down in the HUB. The place was all done up in various bike decor, frames above the bar and jerseys on the walls, and that made me feel right at home. Too bad Seattle doesn’t have a place like this. Anyway, we ordered our lunches, as well as the house-made pretzels as an appetizer. The pretzels, which looked more like bread sticks, were quite big. Very tasty, though. Then our plates arrived, and the portions were huge. I did my best with my Tofu Po’ Boy and salad, but ended up leaving most of the soft baguette. We were both still full by the time we made it to Corvallis and went out to dinner with Kappy’s wife. So much food! I’ll have to go for a run or something soon.

Hopworks taster tray

Taster tray at the hip Hopworks Urban Brewery — Portland, OR

    Rob’s Picks

  • Organic HUB Lager – 5.1% – Nice aroma. Initial light taste to strong breadiness. Very slight hop bite aftertaste.
  • Crosstown Pale Ale – 5.3% – Floral aroma. Mix of floral and bready tastes. Smooth, with a good lingering bitterness. Not bad for a floral beer.
  • Hopworks IPA – 6.6% – Hop aroma blast. Good strong hoppiness with floral and citrus notes. Nice balance of hops. Reminds me of Ninkasi’s Total Domination.
  • Survival 7-Grain Stout – 5.3% – Strong chocolate aroma. Thick and chocolatey. Bit of coffee flavor, too. A very filling beer — I’d be full after one pint. Might be a bit too much, actually, and I debated dropping it down to The Rest, but didn’t.
  • Hey Porter – 5.1% – seasonal – Interesting complex malty aroma. Dry, slightly smoky, good malty base. Some chocolate, some coffee. Pretty yummy.
    The Rest

  • Velvet ESB – 5.2% – Slight floral aroma. Good maltiness, with slight caramel flavor. Fairly crisp. Malty/floral mix kind of odd, though.
  • Deluxe Organic Ale – 6.9% – Floral aroma. Some hoppiness, some maltiness, but kind of blah. Not too interesting.
  • What the Helles – 4.5% – seasonal – Very light to start, leading to slightly bready flavor that lingers. Drinkable but, again, not too interesting.
  • Abominable – 7.3% – seasonal – Floral aroma. Strong floral taste. Bit of a malty base, but not enough of a balance for me. Pretty light for a winter ale, too.
  • Secret Alt – 4.2% – seasonal – Slight floral aroma. Bubbly and light, somewhat malty. Not so interesting, either.

They had two logo glasses for sale, as well. I went with the pint glass rather than the stein. It ended up being their BikeToBeerFest glass, which is awesome. The stein just has their logo, which is fine and all, but I’m all about the beer-biking. Maybe next year I’ll sign up for STP and have a celebration beer at HUB at the end of the ride…

Hilliard’s Beer

It was a cold and sunny November Saturday, and my climbing plans got canceled. So I called beer-biking friend Jonny and made plans for a pleasant little ride to the very new Hilliard’s Beer in Ballard. I’d read a few blog posts of theirs earlier in the year and was looking forward to visiting. We hit the Burke-Gilman and slowly made our way through the weekend throngs to Fremont, where we decided to take a detour and check out the new section of the Ship Canal bike trail. It’s still under construction, but the trail part was done — all that’s left is finishing the fencing (which made it easy to get on the trail) and doing the landscaping. Can’t wait for it to be officially open! Unfortunately, its western end was more securely gated, and we had to backtrack a little ways in order to then get to Magnolia and cross the locks.

Skillet and, eventually, the Blue Truck Special were parked in Hilliard’s parking lot and serving up food. I got the veggie option from Skillet, their fresh berry brioche dessert. It was wonderfully tasty and filling, and probably packed more calories than I burned on the whole bike ride. We sat down inside and sampled the three beers they had available. I liked them all, which made it a hard choice to pick just one for a full pint, but I went with the freshly canned Amber (just two days previous). Hilliard’s is now the third Puget Sound brewery I know of that’s canning (after 7 Seas and Two Beers), and apparently the micro-canning revolution is really taking off — the Hilliard’s guy said that Sierra Nevada is going to start canning, as well. Go figure.

Update! March 24, 2012: Finally re-visited, after hitting NW Peaks just around the corner. Got the Saison this time, but the three other beers available were the same as before. Just one food truck this time, and it looked like some pork-only outfit. Ah well. May 23, 2015: Hilliard’s has been doing well. They can’t make enough of The 12th Can when it’s football season, the hipster crowd has embraced their Chrome Satan, and it’s a party at the brewery most every weekend with live music and DJs. They’ve been doing some barrel aging and just released an IPA. Busy busy busy.

Hilliard's samples

Hilliard’s samples — Seattle, WA

    Rob’s Picks

  • The 12th Can – 4.5% – Sportsy pale ale. Floral citrus aroma and initial flavor. Light, almost watery, then breadiness kicks in. Slight lingering bitterness, with a touch of honey at the end, as well. Enough flavor going on to make up for the watery aspect.
  • Joint Effort – 5.6% – Collaboration with Redhook. Bit of malty, earthy aroma. Sweet but edgy start, with caramel and slight toasty maltiness. Light herbal hops with good bitterness. Underlying funky vegetal and earthy flavors from the hemp seeds.
  • Chrome Satan – 5.7% – California Common style, with cute “Anchor Steam” anagram for the name. Biscuity maltiness. Crisp and somewhat light, with a light bitter finish. Pretty drinkable.
  • Pils – 5.5% – Lemony aroma. Light, bready, lemony, with a nice little bitter twist and subtle herbal hops. Easy drinking.
  • Murdered Out Stout – 5.1% – Light, with coffee/chocolate flavors, and a quite pleasant mouthfeel. Interesting bridge edge, with the slightest hint of sour mash flavor. Good light bitterness on finish.
  • Amber – Very slight floral aroma. Good hoppy/malty mix, with a bit of an alcohol flavor. Not a wimpy amber.
  • Regimental Scottish Blonde – Tangy, hoppy start, bready finish, with a very subtle lemon flavor. Nice and crisp for an unfiltered beer. Very refreshing.
  • Cast Iron Stout – [Name changed to Murdered Out, but my tasting notes were different enough that I’m keeping this one here because maybe they tweaked the recipe a bit, too. Who knows.] A hoppy stout, with a strong coffee start, subtle caramel sweetness, and a Guinness aftertaste. Not too heavy, as well.
    The Rest

  • The Fino Countdown – 6.3% – Sherry barrel aged porter. Bright sherry start that mellows to chocolatey, roasty malt finish. Interesting but flavors don’t quite work together.
  • Saison – Pretty cool mix of a light tripel and slight lemon flavor. Caramel and alcohol flavors. Somewhat sweet but also has a slight sour mash edge. Bit of that clove/banana taste, too. Sort of all over the place, actually. Pretty wild beer to can.
  • Nautical Reference Pale Ale – Floral and malty.  Crisp and fairly bitter, but with a very subtle sweetness.  A little too bitter for me, though.

It’s interesting how each of the Ballard breweries has its own personality. Hilliard’s sort of feels like the popular party kid of the bunch. Very few other breweries feel that way to me. So yeah, interesting.

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