Bad Jimmy’s

It took a long time for Bad Jimmy’s Brewing Company to open. I think they were originally aiming for April 2013, but didn’t open their doors until late December (at least it was still 2013). I’d been following their updates and so was curious to finally check them out, as well as another brand new brewery. It was a cold but dry bike ride that day, but fun to squeeze two more breweries into 2013. Now I just have to squeeze both posts into 2014. Anyway, they had four beers on tap at the time, three of which were quite cloudy, but I liked them all. Figured it wouldn’t be long until my next visit, but it me took about eight months to return for some reason. Laziness on my part, most likely. The cloudiness was gone, and they had a new logo (no more front and center Space Needle because legal stuff – my original logo pint glass is now a collector’s item, I guess), and some of the recipes had been tweaked. I’ll only be including my notes on the latest iterations of the beers of theirs I’ve tried because that’s what I’ve decided I’ll do. Seems kind of silly to have “IPA 12/2013” and “IPA 8/2014” but maybe that’s just me. Maybe it would actually be useful. You never know what’s useful until you need it, or something. Okay, I’ll stop rambling now.

Bad Jimmy's taster flight

Bad Jimmy’s taster flight — Seattle, WA

    Rob’s Picks

  • Cascadian Dark Ale – 7.5% – Roasty aroma and flavor, with a citrus edge. Fairly light on the tongue. Good mix of citrus, dark chocolate and coffee bitterness on the finish.
  • IPA – 8.8% – Tropical fruit aroma and flavor. Good caramel malt backbone.
  • Red IPA – 7.2% – Biscuit and caramel malt start to citrus, herbal hop finish.
  • Amber – 7.6% – Pretty strong for an amber, which is nice (for me). Caramel, with herbal hops and light earthy and floral notes. Some biscuit and breadiness, as well. Finish has some bitterness.
  • Habañero Amber – 6.8% – Brief caramel malt start before habañero heat takes over. Some smokiness and underlying breadiness. You gotta like the heat, though.
  • Red – 6.9% – Caramel malt, light on the tongue, with a sweet and tart citrus profile. Not the usual red, which is nice. Light breadiness, too, and light underlying bitterness.
    The Rest

  • Strawberry Mango Hef – 6.6% – Bready with light strawberry and mango notes. Not as interesting as it sounds, but the fruit flavors do become more prominent as it warms.
  • Pale – 6.3% – Nice mix of malts. Caramel, bready, biscuit, honey. Light herbal hops. Pretty mellow.
  • Cocoa Vanilla Porter – 7.5% – Dark chocolate, light coffee flavors. Pronounced dark chocolate bitterness. Light underlying vanilla and slight alcohol edge. A touch watery, though.

I visited Bad Jimmy’s a third time soon after the second time, and have been meaning to stop by again because they keep putting interesting sounding beers on tap. That’s part of why it’s taken me so long to write this post. But yeah, 2014 is rapidly coming to an end, and I really want to get this and one more written before that happens. I don’t want to be writing about breweries I visited in 2013 when it’s 2015. Jeez.

Stoup Brewing

The Ballard breweries just keep coming. Will nothing stop them?! I can only hope that no, nothing will. For about two months Stoup Brewing was the newest Ballard brewery, but then another one opened. You’d think I’d move from Capitol Hill to Ballard in order to keep up with all the beer happenings there. It’s tempting, but it’s probably better for my health being a bike ride away. Anyway, the Stoup folks are pretty nice. Some scientist types and a fully-certified Cicerone. Since my first visit, I’ve been by a couple more times to gather enough experimental data before writing up my findings and conclusions.

Stoup Laboraties

Little beakers of beer at Stoup Brewing — Seattle, WA

    Rob’s Picks

  • mk Special Bitter – 4.8% – Bitter start to biscuit and caramel, then changes to bready finish with some citrus. Interesting.
  • Citra IPA – 5.9% – Tropical fruit aroma and flavor. Big, juicy fruit flavors to a lingering finish.
  • T2R Haymaker TIPA – 10.5% – Made for the Hop Mob Triple IPA Road Show. Fairly light in color. Boozy, piney aroma and flavor with a bready finish.
  • Weissbier – 5% – Bavarian Hefeweizen. Spicy banana/clove aroma. Great balance of banana/clove and spicy flavors, with subtle bitterness and good bready finish.
  • IPA – 7.5% – Good amount of citrus and floral hop flavor with caramel and biscuit malt balance. Nice lingering flavors and a medium amount of bitterness that blends back in fairly well.
  • NW Red – 5.5% – Biscuit malt aroma and flavor with light balancing floral hops. Smooth but with a bit of a bitter bite at the end.
  • Porter – 6.5% – Coffee and dark chocolate aroma and flavor. Pretty complex malts. Bit of spiciness on the tongue and very subtle floral hops. Fairly dry finish. A big but subtle beer.
    The Rest

  • Bike Rye’d Saison – 6.7% – Collaboration with Flying Bike Coop. Light, some funk, dry rye spiciness, bit of lemon, and subtle egginess. Some bitterness on finish.
  • ISA – 5% – Citrus and floral aroma. More floral than citrus flavor, though. Light malt. Fair amount of lingering bitterness and a slight lemon zing at the end.

So yes, the data indicates that Stoup is a good addition to the Ballard brewery scene. Ongoing data collection will need to happen, however, to corroborate my findings. Will update as necessary.

Seattle Cider Company

Wait, why am I writing about a cider company? This blog is called BreweryTreks, not CideryTreks. Am I turning my back on my principles? Does anybody care? The answers to these pressing questions are: because, maybe, and I doubt it. Anyway, the guy who owns Two Beers Brewing started Seattle Cider Company, so there’s the beer connection if that matters to you. Washington doesn’t allow breweries to make cider — hence, Two Beers and Seattle Cider are separate companies with separate facilities, although they are right next to each other. So it gets a separate post, to keep things all legal. The Two Beers taproom, The Woods, has all the Seattle Cider offerings on tap, conveniently enough. When I rolled in last October to try a guest fresh hop beer they had on tap and found out it had just blown, I thought, why not try the cider flight? Have to say, I quite liked the idea of drinking little tasting goblets of cider while watching the Seahawks game.

Seattle Cider flight

Cider flight at The Woods, combined taproom for Two Beers Brewing and Seattle Cider Company for your drinking convenience — Seattle, WA

    Rob’s Picks

  • Semi-Sweet – 6.5% – Smooth. Nice apple flavor and just enough sweetness.
  • Pumpkin Spice – 6.5% – Big cinnamon and nutmeg flavors that give way to apple. Pumpkin apple pie? Again, just enough sweetness. Not much pumpkin, but that’s okay.
  • Gin Botanical – 6.5% – Juniper flavor, not too big, but quite present throughout. Some floral, too. Goes well with the apple and balances the sweetness nicely.
  • Dry-Hopped Semi-Sweet – 6.5% – Very smooth. Good apple flavor with very complementary underlying floral hop flavor.
    The Rest

  • PNW Berry – 6.9% – Made with raspberries, blueberries, and blackberries, along with the usual apples. Berry aroma. Berry flavors mix well with the apple and give a nice tartness. Bit of alcohol edge, and there’s some sweetness that builds up. Body kind of watery. Would prefer bigger flavors.
  • Dry – 6.5% – Slightly tart. Light apple flavor. Some wateriness.

In case anyone is worried this blog will turn into a cider love fest, I’ll make you this promise: I will not write about cider for the next 20 blog posts. (Yes, I’m that far behind on breweries that I can actually keep that promise.)

Seapine Brewing

I was holding off on writing up my Seapine Brewing post because the owner/brewer Drew was still tweaking his recipes the first two times I visited. On the third visit, he said he’ll probably never stop experimenting with them, so I’ll just have to post this with the caveat that the beers may not taste the same as when I took my notes. The differences will be left as exercises for the reader.

Anyway, Seapine’s an interesting place. It’s a little off the beaten path, between the 1st Ave axis of Epic Ales, Schooner Exact, and Two Beers, and the Georgetown/Airport Way group of Machine House, Georgetown Brewing, and Emerald City. On 4th Ave, just south of the West Seattle Bridge, it’s definitely worth a visit — the tasting room’s been getting progressively nicer each time I drop by, and now that he has a juicer, it’s tempting to spend my free summer weekends down there drinking fresh-squeezed radlers. That’s making me thirsty just thinking about it.

Seapine taster tray

Seapine Brewing taster tray — Seattle, WA

    Rob’s Picks

  • La Fantasma Blonde – 5% – Crisp start then breadiness, floral and some grapefruit hops, bitterness. Good lingering flavors.
  • Seapine IPA – 6.7% – Big juicy citrus, grapefruit and light floral hops. Bit of sweetness, too. Medium caramel maltiness, light breadiness on finish, and a touch of lingering bitterness.
  • Super “C” French Saison – 6% – Smooth, some bubblegum sweetness, some honey, light funk, subtle coriander.
  • Sea Witch Milk Stout – 6.2% – Big chocolate/coffee aroma and flavor. Creamy and smooth, with a good sweet edge, underlying roastiness, and decent bitterness.
  • Radler – Fresh-squeezed grapefruit juice mixed with La Fantasma. Great grapefruit tang + interesting underlying Blonde complement = awesome summer beverage. You can see the juicer in the picture above.
  • Black Ale – 4.8% – Roasty malt aroma. Smooth roastiness and somewhat sharp citrusy hop flavor that gives it a nice zing. Light and a bit spicy on the tongue, with a lingering maltiness.
  • High Pockety – 7% – A bit of an experiment. Was supposed to be an IPA, but he didn’t have enough hops that day. So I guess it’s an imperial pale ale, maybe? Whatever its style, it was really good. Nice hop profile and somewhat sharp malty aspect. Very drinkable.
    The Rest

  • PNW Pale Ale – 5.5% – Third time I’ve tried this, and they’ve all been significantly different. The most recent batch was crisp, fairly sweet with a touch of bubblegum, and fairly bitter. Light floral and herbal hops, light caramel malt. Fairly complex. First two were pretty different (pine and citrus, then floral and citrus), and I quite liked both of those. The next batch (which was in the fermenter) had a different recipe, so there’s always a chance this’ll move to the Pick list next time I visit…

That brings up a good point: What to do with different versions of the “same” beer? Use version numbers? Create a new “Obsoleted” list? Add more and more tasting notes to the same entry? I think I will just put off that decision until after my next visit. Have to say, though, I do like the somewhat sinister “Obsoleted” list name. Feel free to comment below.

Oh, the pictures from my first time there weren’t very good, but I took one I was pretty happy with the next time. I was all set to use that as the main picture in this post, but then I took a more traditional taster tray pic on the third visit. It was a hard call on which one to use, so I’m including both. I will do my best not to take more pictures and further confuse the issue…

shiny happy beer

The picture I was going to use before I took the one with the taster tray. I love everything about the glass in this, although I wish I got less of the table top.

Rooftop Brew

My previous post was on Washington’s largest brewery. This is on one of its smallest, Rooftop Brew Company. They are about as far north in the Queen Anne neighborhood as you can get – not quite along the South Ship Canal Trail, but on the other side of Nickerson St, behind the 7-11, in a rather small garage – and the Ship Canal separates them quite effectively from the Ballard and Fremont brewery scene. That bit of distance has given them a good little neighborhood brewery feel. You know, every neighborhood should have its own microbrewery or two (or in Ballard’s case, ten), especially one as cool and friendly as Rooftop. I really like their logo glass/public health workaround system – buy their glass and, as long as you keep bringing it in with you, all beers are $1 off. Otherwise it’s full price in a compostable plastic cup. You save a bit on their beer, and they don’t have to install an expensive glassware sanitizer system. Not sure this will make sense if and when they expand their facilities, but in the meantime it’s pretty awesome.

ceiling view at Rooftop

Rooftop Brew Company — Seattle, WA

    Rob’s Picks

  • Belgian Wit – 4% – Crisp, light and spicy, with a bit of clove (less so banana). The coriander and orange peel are not overpowering, which is good. Bready finish.
  • Dry-Hopped Wheat Ale – 4.5% – Big citrus and piney aroma. Flavor not as big but at a really nice level. Light and smooth.
  • Makeda Coffee Porter – 4.7% – Made with cold-press Makeda coffee. Great coffee aroma. You need to like coffee to like this beer. Fairly dry, with subtle dark chocolate flavor and an underlying bitterness.
  • IPA – 6.5% – Big citrus and piney aroma and flavor. Good caramel maltiness. Really solid.
  • Hoppin Honey Braggot – 9.5% – Sweet citrusy aroma. Floral and citrus hop flavors balanced nicely by honey and caramel sweetness. Good lingering flavors, though sweetness does build up a bit. Doesn’t taste like it’s almost 10%.
  • ESB – Floral and some citrus hop with caramel and biscuit malt. Subtle underlying bubblegum sweetness. Smooth. Nice mix of flavors.
    The Rest

  • Imperial Porter – 10% – Strong, sweet, alcohol and coffee aroma. More sweet, alcohol flavor than coffee/chocolate. Bit of Kahlua edge. Hint of dryness. Still a work in progress.
  • Steamer – 5.2% – California Common-like pale ale. Floral aroma and flavor. Caramel and biscuit malt. Pretty smooth. Light lingering bitterness.

Oh yeah, you’d think that with a name like Rooftop, they’d have a roof deck, but no, they’re just in a little garage. Start small and dream big, right?

Standard Brewing

The one benefit to being behind on my blog is I get to visit new local breweries multiple times, allowing me to sample a decent selection of their beers, before I finally get around to writing up their posts. Take Standard Brewing, for instance, the first brewery in Seattle’s Central District neighborhood. I visited them four times in 2013 and now have a respectable amount of tasting notes for a solid post. Then again, they just recently tapped a couple new beers that I want to try, but if I did that it would postpone this post even longer. It’s a careful balancing act, this beer-blogging. Anyway. Standard is very much a nano-brewery, utilizing pretty much every nook and cranny of a funky corner of a small building. In addition to the usual array of beers (well, usual for Seattle, I suppose), they also make a couple low-alcohol regional/folk brews.

Standard Brewing

Standard Brewing: from kettle to glass — Seattle, WA

    Rob’s Picks

  • Bee’s Wine – 2% – Ginger honey goodness. Really, really refreshing.
  • Pale Ale – 6.1% – Tropical fruit aroma and flavor. Bit of floral hops, too. Good malty base with caramel on the finish, as well as some bitterness.
  • Rye IPA – 6.5% – Good “frothy” mouthfeel. Malty with citrus and tropical fruit hop flavors. Subtle rye undertones. Solid but not big.
  • Imperial IPA #1 – 9% – Floral aroma and flavor. Fairly strong maltiness with bit of a biscuity finish. Good bitterness.
  • CDA – 9.5% – Roasty malt aroma. Great roasty flavor and underlying bitterness. Light but interesting lingering flavors.
  • Wheated Red – 6.1% – Bready and caramel maltiness. Light, but with a touch of chewiness. Subtle spicy hoppiness, and even more subtle floral. Really drinkable.
  • Tepache – 3% – Sugar-based, pineapple fermented beverage popular in Mexico. Sweet but not overly so. Has a bit of a balancing alcohol edge to the flavor even though it’s only 3%. Cinnamon and clove, too, for extra flavors to think about. Awesome post-bike ride drink.
  • Beet Ale Juice – 5.5% – Made by a guest brewer, with mosaic, willamette and amarillo hops, as well as beets. Great citrus and piney aroma and flavors. Beet earthiness is an interesting mix that, despite my initial wariness, worked quite well. Pretty light on the tongue, too.
    The Rest

  • Saison – 7% – Made with Dupont yeast and grapefruit peel. Fairly strong banana/clove and citrus/grapefruit flavors. Complementary floral hop flavor, as well. Somewhat bitter finish.
  • West Coast IPA – 7.3% – Citrus aroma. Some citrus flavor, some bitterness, big malt backbone. Hint of sugary sweetness in lingering finish.
  • Imperial IPA #2 – 8.6% – Grapefruit citrus aroma and flavor, with a bit of pine. Some biscuit and caramel malt backbone. Big bitter finish that blended back in pretty well, but a bit too bitter for me.

It’ll be interesting to see how Standard grows. They’ve already taken over the space above them and turned a parking spot in the small lot into a year-round beer garden/patio. I’ll just have to keep visiting to find out, I suppose.

Spinnaker Bay

Breweries keep opening here in Seattle, and they’re starting to spread into neighborhoods other than Ballard and Sodo/Georgetown. Spinnaker Bay Brewing, the first brewery to open in the Hillman City neighborhood (and, I think, all of Rainier Valley), is also notable for being woman-owned and operated. They’re in a cool old brick building and somehow acquired and installed a nearly century-old wooden bar from Chicago. So yeah, great atmosphere. I’ve visited twice – the first was a short ride to check out three new breweries, and the second was around the south end of Lake Washington, with Spinnaker Bay as a convenient pit stop towards the end. No kitchen, but there’s always a food truck.

full pint sample at Spinnaker Bay

Fancy old bar with fancy new beer at Spinnaker Bay Brewing — Seattle, WA

    Rob’s Picks

  • High Heel Imperial IPA – 8.1% – Solid herbal hop and malt flavor mix. Almost tea-like tannin aspect towards the finish, along with slight sweetness. Fairly subtle but strong.
  • Fraid Knot Pale Ale – 6.1% – Smooth and relatively light on the tongue. Light floral hoppiness and bigger malt flavors – mostly caramel but other interesting maltiness going on, too.
  • Even Keel Scottish – 8.1% – Spicy, sharp caramel aroma  and flavor. Hint of smokiness. Big flavors but great balance. Spiciness has almost a prickly character to it. Good intense take on a Scottish Ale.
  • Don’t Panic! Porter – 6.7% – Coffee/chocolate aroma and flavor. Dry, with roasty malt flavor, as well, and a bit of an alcohol edge.
    The Rest

  • Sarah B – 8.1% – Bourbon barrel-aged IPA. Unfiltered amber color. Floral aroma and fairly strong flavor. Light bourbon barrel influence. Smooth, with good malt backbone and a touch of lingering bitterness. Well-made, but too floral for me.

Would be nice if a few more breweries opened in the Rainier Valley neighborhoods to lure me down to the south end of Lake Washington more often on my little bike rides. Probably just a matter of time. Considering my backlog of brewery visits to blog about, though (now up to 23, after a long, busy weekend in the SF Bay Area), I should spend some quality time catching up on posts before that happens.

Populuxe

The other half of the big Ballard brewery opening weekend extravaganza was Populuxe Brewing. They’re keeping it on the small side, with a smaller building and a smaller system than Peddler. As far as I know, though, they were the first brewery in these parts to feature cornhole — trendsetters, those Populuxe folk. I have since seen it at a couple other places, including Peddler, and a set just showed up at my own day job. It’s the new thing! Anyway, Populuxe has been making lots of different beers, and there’s always something new on tap from week to week. I’ve only visited twice so far, but there’s been a friendly, laid-back vibe both times, even when it’s crowded. There’s usually a food truck in the adjoining lot (in addition to the cornhole) or across the street, so it’s a good place to go if you’re not in a hurry.

Populuxe tasting room

Took a while to capture a moment of calm at the Populuxe tap handles on their opening night — Seattle, WA

    Rob’s Picks

  • Peppercorn Saison – 7.3% – Light funk aroma. Good, well-balanced mix of flavors – sweetness (more caramel, less bubble gum), funk, subtle pepper. Slight bitter zing on the finish. Very drinkable saison.
  • Precipitation Plum Porter – 6% – Coffee/chocolate as well as plum aroma. Good coffee, chocolate, plum flavor balance. Plum is light but a great complement. Dry finish. Really quite nice.
  • Euro Blonde – 4.8% – Crisp, not very bready. Hazelnut, subtle hint of honey. Good biscuity maltiness to bitter finish.
  • Populuxe IPA – 5.5% – Sharp passion fruit and resiny hop aroma. Strong hop flavors with well-balanced underlying biscuity maltiness. Good bitterness, too.
  • Burke-Gilman Bitter – 5.2% – Biscuity maltiness with herbal hop flavor. Lingering bitterness, but smooth and crisp. Very drinkable.
  • Cinderblock CDA – 5.8% – Grapefruit/piney hop and roasty malt aromas and flavors. Fairly light on the tongue. Big flavors but balanced. Great bitter citrus and piney edge but very little lingering bitterness.
  • Beer Snob Brown – 5.1% – Very roasty. Complex malt character – roasty, coffee, biscuity, touch of caramel. Fairly dry finish.
    The Rest

  • Mild – 3.5% – Light chocolate/coffee/earthy aroma. Surprisingly carbonated. Coffee flavors, but in a weird way too clean, and with a slight metallic hint.

With so many breweries opening up in Ballard, I’ve noticed that my bike rides to the area have shifted to be more about sampling the new beers available rather than being a stop on a longer ride. Maybe I need to adjust the riding plans to end up in Ballard rather than heading there first. Will need to take this into consideration, perhaps over a beer.

Peddler Brewing

When I first heard about the bike-centric Peddler Brewing, it sounded like a perfect fit for me, what with my apparent obsession with biking to breweries and all. I even pre-ordered a logo pint glass by kicking in a few bucks to their Kickstarter campaign. The two Peddlers, Dave and Haley, took over the old Maritime Pacific space and made it their own with an indoor hanging bike rack and workstation, sidewalk patio, and an awesome concrete bar with embedded bike parts. Interestingly, they and neighboring brewery Populuxe (more on them in an upcoming post) officially opened on the same day — I wasn’t sure how that would pan out, but the local media deemed it newsworthy, using it as a lead-in to stories on the burgeoning Ballard brewing scene. Both places were packed all weekend.

Peddler sampler

Peddler Brewing samplers (couldn’t think of a clever bike pun, sorry). They have since upgraded the logo sign hanging above the taps. — Seattle, WA

    Rob’s Picks

  • Kolsch – 4.9% – Light banana/clove aroma. B/C flavor lighter the aroma, with herbal and floral hoppiness, light breadiness, a bit of sweetness, and some bitterness on the finish.
  • Caramel ESB – 5.4% – Light and not too sweet. Caramel comes in middle to finish. Very subtle floral hoppiness. Great balance and somewhat restrained.
  • Tangerine Wheat – 5.5% – Tangerine aroma. The flavor goes well with the wheat. Some tanginess, some breadiness, good mouthfeel. Nice tangerine finish.
  • IPA – 5% – Muted hoppiness. Subtle flavor mix: grapefruit, floral, lemon, malty backbone. Lightly bitter.
  • Snow Beer’d – 7.9% – Caramel aroma and flavor. Good carbonation. Bit of alcohol edge on the finish. Nice balance.
  • Patio Pale – 5.1% – Floral aroma. Nice light floral and herbal hop flavors. Fairly complex maltiness to balance — biscuit, toast, caramel. Really drinkable.
  • Stage 22 Stout – 5% – Strong coffee/chocolate aroma. Light, with coffee/chocolate flavors and a bit of a spicy mouthfeel. Bit of dark chocolate bitterness on the finish.
    The Rest

  • On Your Left IPA – 6.4% – Quite bitter. Masks the other flavors, unfortunately. Some floral hop flavor and maybe some herbal, too, and some sort of maltiness.
  • Rye-P-A – 5% – Floral aroma. Floral and herbal hoppiness. Caramel maltiness. Rye is subtle but there if you look for it. Lingering floral flavor.
  • Coffee Saison – 7% – Banana/clove aroma and flavor, with some coriander that goes well with it. Little bit of bitterness on the finish and maybe some very subtle coffee flavor there, as well, but I wouldn’t have noticed it if not for the name.
  • Pale Ale – 4.8% – First batch on their production system. Pretty bready, light on the hops, and a touch of lemon.
  • Belgian Spice – 7% – Banana/clove aroma and flavor. Ginger flavor, too. Fairly light and bubbly, but a touch watery.

Now that the local media have done the Ballard brewery story, I wonder how that’ll affect the openings for the two to three new breweries planning to open there this year. Might be just a matter of time before we start seeing “Not another Ballard brewery!” headlines.

Bluebird Microcreamery and Brewery

I’d heard good things about Bluebird but hadn’t gotten around to checking them out (ice cream doesn’t always agree with me, unfortunately). But then they added a 3 bbl brewing system to their Greenwood store and became Bluebird Microcreamery and Brewery (their web site currently redirects to facebook) so I had to visit. First time was during a chilly January bike ride; subsequent times were on much more pleasant walks to their Capitol Hill location. Much to my surprise they had two vegan ice cream selections made from coconut milk that were, in fact, amazingly good (Coconut Mint Chip and Horchata). Why did I wait so long to visit? They brew their own sodas, as well, but their root beer has been sold out more often than not. When I dropped by earlier today, their Snickerdoodle was also out, but at least I was able to try their Cream soda. And slurp down a cup of the Coconut Mint Chip.

beer and ice cream at Bluebird -- nuff said

Mmm: beer and ice cream at Bluebird Microcreamery and Brewery — Seattle, WA

    Rob’s Picks

  • Groundskeeper’s Scottish Ale – 4.1% – Not the flat kind of Scottish Ale – very carbonated. Bready, with caramel sweetness, and a touch of dryness on the finish.
  • Theo Chocolate Milk Stout – 5.1% – Dark chocolate aroma and flavor. Heavy, silky mouthfeel. Good dark chocolate bitterness.
  • Cream Soda – Light, smooth, and not overly sweet. Nice butterscotch flavor.
    The Rest

  • Gaison – 7.4% – Saison brewed for Pride 2013. Sweet bubble gum aroma. Fairly sweet (touch of honey), with coriander and light bubble gum flavors. Sort of has a tropical fruitiness to it. Lingering bitter finish.
  • Zythos Pale Ale – 5.2% – Crisp, with fairly strong floral hop flavor. Pretty bitter. Maltiness eclipsed by the hops and bitterness.
  • Caffe Vita Coffee Porter – 5.5% – Good coffee aroma and flavor. Pretty light on the tongue, and a touch dry. Okay, but not too interesting.

One of these days I’ll get lucky and find their root beer on tap. I’ll just have to keep visiting, and eating their ice cream, and drinking the occasional beer.

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