Elysian Brewing

I’ve been going to the Elysian for years, but haven’t gotten around to doing an “official” taster visit. My friends Greg and Alice were in town from Switzerland (they took me to three Swiss breweries and recommended a fourth when I was there earlier this year), and Greg called me from the Elysian. So I grabbed my little notebook and headed over. It was early September, luckily enough — none of the various Elysian pumpkin beers were ready yet. Phew! Some people love the pumpkin beers. I’m not one of them…

Update! October 31, 2011: I’ve been back to the Elysian twice since this post and have tried two small batch wet hop beers. Yum and double yum! The last time I went they had four (!) different pumpkin beers on tap. Yikes. I love Halloween, but this is just too scary for me. 7/21/12: I’ve been going to the monthly releases of the 12 Beers of the Apocalypse at the various Elysians and quietly updating this post with new beers.  Figured I should say something about it.  Release parties have been pretty crowded but fun, and the beers have all been interesting.  By year’s end (or the Apocalypse, whichever comes first), this will be a very long post.

Elysian Brewing

Elysian Brewing taster sword — Seattle, WA

    Rob’s Picks

  • Torrent Pale Beet Bock – 7% – Seventh Beer of the Apocalypse.  Great red color.  Good mix of sweetness and bitterness — beet flavor goes really well with the rest.  I’m not usually a beet fan, but I guess there’s always an exception.  Don’t taste the dirt flavor of beets but maybe here it becomes “terroir” or something.  Nice lingering beety bitterness.
  • Shiny Object IPA – 6.5% – Sharp citrus aroma.  Nice blend of hop flavors, with a healthy dose of bitterness and grapefruit.  Crisp for what looks like an unfiltered beer.  Subtle sweetness, too.  Shiny, shiny!
  • The Dread Oak-aged Imperial Stout – 9.6% – Awesome aroma of whisky and chocolate.  Thick and creamy with strong whiskey and chocolate flavors.  Yum!
  • Wasteland Elderflower Saison – 6.8% – Sixth Beer of the Apocalypse.  Strong fruity and flowery flavors, but not too sweet — there’s a bit of tartness to it.  Underlying banana/clove and slight alcohol edge.  Pretty cool mix of flavors.
  • Washington Grange Farmhouse Ale – 7.4% – 2012 National Homebrewers Conference commemorative beer.  Pretty similar to Wasteland, but $1 less for a full pint.  Slightly heavier and a little sweeter than Wasteland, with a touch of caramel maltiness.  Mint is pretty subtle but there if you look for it.  All Washington ingredients.
  • Ruin Rosemary Agave IPA – 7.5% – Fifth Beer of the Apocalypse.  Good subtle hoppy aroma, kinda citrusy.  Really smooth body, eases into bitter finish.  Couldn’t really taste the rosemary, lemon, or agave sweetness until it warmed up a little, then it got nice and complex.
  • Split Shot Espresso Milk Stout – 7.25% – Official beer of Seattle Beer Week 2012.  Good coffee aroma.  Great silky smooth coffee flavor that lingers nicely.  Not too heavy.  Subtle smokiness.  Awesome!
  • Ryezome – 6.2% – hoppy red ale – Floral aroma. Great solid ale with floral hoppiness mixed well with the rye. Awesome full body. Could drink this all day, or at least until I passed out.
  • Rapture Heather Ale – Second beer of the apocalypse. Good smooth ale. Very drinkable, but schooner only. Nice mix of maltiness and floral notes, slightly sweet. Lingering bitterness.
  • Trip XI – 8.5% – Farmhouse Ale – Strong rosemary and sage aroma. Bubbly herbal blast. Lingering rosemary and sage flavors, too. A really fun beer. Sour edge balances the herbs quite nicely.
  • Backstage Pale Ale – 5.8% – Great hoppy start. Subtle juniper notes to bready finish. Pretty light on the tongue, too.
  • Bifrost Winter Ale – 7.6% – Nice and light, with a strong bitter finish that lasts and lasts.
  • Bete Blanche – 6.9% – Pretty light on the tongue for a tripel. Good sweetness and alcohol balance. Very drinkable.
  • Nibiru Yerba Mate Tripel – 7.6% – The first of the Elysian’s “12 Beers of the Apocalypse” promotion — a groovy new beer every month of 2012. This is a decent tripel, with good caramel and alcohol flavors, plus a slight spiciness on the tongue, which I assume is from the tea-like yerba mate. Quite nice, and not at all over the top as I expected. Only drawback is the $5.75 price for a schooner. Goes well with the Veggie BBQ sandwich, too.
  • Trip X – 7.2% – “’72 Eldorado.” Single wet hop collaboration with New Belgium. Eldorado hops, hence the clever name. Subtle but strong hop aroma. Solid citrusy hoppiness. Great malty base. A big, beautiful beer. Viva la wet hop!
  • Kama Citra Wet Hop Ale – 6.7% – Good strong hop aroma. It’s like a hop party in my mouth, and everyone’s invited! Wow. Awesome! Amazingly tangy and citrusy hoppiness. Flavor lasts and lasts.
  • The Wise ESB – 5.9% – Slightly darker than The Immortal. Nice and crisp, good hoppy bite, fine malty balance.
  • The Immortal IPA – 6.3% – Not as overpowering as some northwest IPAs but good. Fairly light on the tongue with good citrusy hops. Hoppiness lingers a nice long time.
  • Avatar Jasmine IPA – 6.3% – Pleasant jasmine aroma and flavor — a floral taste I actually like. Goes well with the IPA hoppiness — mellows it out a little.
  • Mens Room Red – 5.6% – Pretty much the same color as The Wise. Great balance of bubbly crispness, nutty maltiness, and bitterness — any more of one of the three would push it over the edge.
  • Dragonstooth Stout – 7.45% – I’ve liked this one a long time but haven’t had it in a while. Strong coffee and alcohol flavors, hint of chocolate. Good and thick on the tongue. Yum!
  • Loser Pale Ale – 6.5% – A subtle Wise, sort of. Good bitterness, not overpowering, but lingering. Good subtle malty base — not too strong. Slightly citrusy. Very drinkable, if you like a little bitterness.
    The Rest

  • Prometheus IPA – Somewhat citrusy aroma.  Citrus hoppiness and fairly strong malty caramel flavor gives it a full body.  Touch of breadiness.  Lingering bitterness that keeps building up was a bit too much for me, but otherwise a well-made beer.
  • Beaker – Experimental pale ale.  Pretty light in color.  Bready and light with a lingering bitterness and breadiness.  Hint of lemon.  Nice little beer, but not too interesting.
  • Peste Chocolate Chili Ale – Fourth beer of the apocalypse. Slight chocolate aroma. Dark chocolate taste quickly followed by spicy chili blast. Heat lingers a long time. Otherwise pretty smooth, somewhat heavy but not too much so. There were other beers I wanted to try, but the spicy heat finished me for the night. Might be interesting to cook with.
  • Fallout Green Cardamom Pale Ale – 7.75% – Third beer of the apocalypse. Fun sweet cardamom aroma. Nice cardamom flavor that mixes well with the hops. Maybe a bit too light on the tongue — almost, but not quite, watery. Really smooth, though, and good hop bite. Bit better as it warms up, alcohol edge starts to come through. But at $6.75 a pint, I won’t be ordering any more.
  • Bete Noel – 8.2% – Very sweet, with a bit of a Belgian edge, but just a little too sweet for me. Wouldn’t be able to drink a whole pint.
  • Idiot Sauvin IPA – 6.3% – Big hops! Pretty floral, with lots of bitterness. Good malty base. A little too floral for me, though.
  • Ursa Minor Berliner Weisse – 3% – Interesting. Tart, cider-like/lemonade flavor. Lemonade flavor lingers quite a while. Good summer beverage, I suppose.
  • Trip IX – 6.3% – “Down Under IPA.” Golden color. Strong citrus aroma. Very citrusy taste. Not particularly crisp. Not quite watery, but close. The citrus flavor reminded me of grapefruit, which I’m not a big fan of.

Skagit River Brewery

I managed to combine a brewery visit with some mountaineering this summer.  Both before and after climbing Eldorado, a friend and I stopped by the Skagit River Brewery, and I was able to try all but one of their beers on tap. The skipped one, their lager, I’d had a week before at a restaurant in Bellingham. I didn’t take notes at the time, as you’ll no doubt notice from my brief review of it, but I didn’t find much there to take notes on, unfortunately. Ah well.

Skagit River Brewery

Skagit River taster paddle, with sunglasses — Mt Vernon, WA

    Rob’s Picks

  • Gose – 3.7% – Interesting mix of a beer. Malty, spicy crisp start with subtle salty balance. Nice light lingering saltiness. Bit of citrus aroma and flavor, too.
  • Skagit Brown Ale – 4.5% – Nice crisp roasted barley flavor and slight caramel sweetness. Pretty smooth.
  • Gospel IPA – 7.4% – Good strong hop attack. Initial floral hoppiness, then it diversifies. Good lingering taste. Nice light malty base. Strong floral/citrus aroma, too.
  • Farm to Market English Bitter – 5% – Really nice. Great malty/hoppy balance, and the flavor keeps you thinking, and drinking.
    The Rest

  • Highwater Porter – 5.2% – Dark color and quite bubbly. Good roasted barley and coffee flavors, but hoppy undertone is kinda floral, which is an odd mix.
  • Jenny’s Scottish Ale – 7.8% – Nice darker color like the brown and good malty flavor, but sweetness is like cough syrup.
  • DelRio Lager – Kind of blah, not very interesting.

7 Seas Brewing

Avast, me hearties! Pour me a pint o’ grog, and I’ll spin ye a harrowing tale about me ride to the 7 Seas Brewery, awash with rude parrots, blood-sucking beasties, and zombies! All true, I tell ye, all true. Arr!

The adventure begins in the exotic, southern port o’ Tacoma, where the booty map led us along the trail o’ dread pirate Scott Pierson, across the treach’rous Narrows, and into Gig Harbor, where the streets are so thick with scurvy dogs ye need a cutlass in one hand and a pistol in yer other, aye. At the 7 Seas taproom, the lovely wenches smartly quenched our thirsts, but soon twas overflowing with bilge rats, and so we set sail to Port Orchard. Along the way, a nasty critter or two landed on me arm and commenced a bloodthirsty frenzy of biting. Arr! We rolled our bikes onto the ferry to Bremerton and then onto the ferry back to Seattle. A pleasant voyage back, with several zombie beauties shuffling around on decks en route to the Red, White, and Dead Zombie Walk. Shiver me timbers!

7 Seas Brewing

7 Seas Brewery, with tasters — Gig Harbor, WA

    Rob’s Picks

  • Hop Prophet Fresh Hop Pale Ale 2012 – Great citrus/piney aroma. Piney and grapefruit hop flavors to a perfect malt counterbalance, with an underlying sweetness throughout — touch of caramel, touch of sugar. Subtle grassiness as it warms up. Awesome!
  • British Pale Ale – 5.4% – Crisp, smooth, good malt/hop balance, nice bubbliness.
  • Ballz Deep Double IPA – 8.4% – Upping the maltiness and hops, thicker on the tongue. A little sweeter, too, with a bit of a caramel flavor. Good lingering hoppiness. Darker in color than your usual IPA.
  • Rude Parrot IPA – 5.9% – seasonal – Strong citrus/piney flavors that linger a long time, but light on the tongue.
  • Cascadian Dark Ale – 7% – seasonal – Smooth, kinda porter-like but a touch thicker. Subtle smoky/coffee flavor. Slight alcohol flavor as it warms up.
    The Rest

  • Cutt’s New Amber – 6.2% – Pretty mellow. Fairly typical amber.

Well, I think I’m all ready for Talk Like a Pirate Day now.

Emerald City Beer Company

Although I still have yet to re-visit some older Seattle brewpubs for the blog, I went out recently to the fairly new Emerald City Beer Company with a couple friends at the start of a decent 40 mile bike ride. I had a coupon for their tap room that I needed to use before the end of July, and so it seemed like a fine little detour on the way to the bus to Tacoma, where the rest of the ride commenced.

Emerald City is still gearing up their tap room. For instance, they will eventually install a real tap system. And a big flat-screen tv. And have logo glasses. And have more than one beer available. To be fair, a new batch of their second beer, the Whiskey Lager, was almost done and would be pouring the next week. So I guess I’ll have to go back and check it out. Fortunately, the one beer on tap was quite good.

It’s an interesting niche they’re filling, the craft lager market. They have a dark lager in the works for the fall and then a honey pilsner for next spring. So yeah, they’re a good addition to the local microbrewery scene.

Update! I went back a couple weeks later and tried the Whiskey Lager. It’s an unfiltered lager and spends two months in an old Dry Fly Distillery barrel. Good stuff.  7/12/12: Finally made it back, and a lot has changed since the last visit.  They have the real tap system and the big flat-screen tv now, but still no logo glasses.  They expanded their floor space, and it’s holding several huge palettes of Dottie cans.  Pretty cool.  And of course, two more beers to try — yay!

Emerald City Beer

A date with Ivana and Betty at Emerald City Beer Company — Seattle, WA

    Rob’s Picks

  • Betty Black Lager – 4.8% – Roasty malt aroma.  Light but a bit creamy on the tongue.  Great mix of malt, coffee, and a bit of caramel flavors.
  • Ivana Pale Lager – 4.8% – Good little hoppy aroma.  Bright and crisp body.  Bready, slightly floral, with a bitter finish.  Pretty drinkable.
  • Dottie Seattle Lager – Nice amber color. Light maltiness, good hoppy bite. Not your usual lager. Quite good and drinkable.
  • Whiskey Lager – Whiskey aroma. Bit darker in color than Dottie. Nice whiskey flavor to start, goes well with the hoppiness, subtle malty finish. Very slight caramel sweetness. Really drinkable. Somewhat reminiscent of a tripel.

I upgraded the picture during the 7/12/12 visit.  I think I’ll keep this one around for a while.

Schooner EXACT

While enjoying a Zeitgeist mocha one rare sunny June afternoon, I decided to make the most of the sunshine and — gasp! — walk to Schooner EXACT. It was a healthy walk from Pioneer Square, but a nice change of pace, so to speak, from biking to the Georgetown neighborhood. At the moment there are still two other breweries in that area to visit, so the Georgetown bike rides aren’t over yet…

Soon after I bellied up to the tasting room bar, the blue skies went away, and it started drizzling. Good times in the tasting room, though: a climbing friend of mine happened to be there, and then the Hawaiians showed up. One of these days I’ll have to visit Hawaii and check out its burgeoning beer scene. In the meantime, the Schooner Exact brews are quite nice. By the time I left, the squall had passed, and things were drying up.

Update! May 4, 2011: I went to the Ale-Liance IPA release party at the Bicycle Alliance of Washington headquarters during Pioneer Square’s First Thursday Art Walk and enjoyed a couple of free pints.  Nice way to spend an evening, drinking beer and checking out artwork.

Schooner EXACT

Schooner EXACT taster set — Seattle, WA

    Rob’s Picks

  • Raspberry Wheat Sour Ale – Dark brown color.  Strong raspberry aroma and taste.  Not so bready, but very sour!  A really nice raspberry sour, with a fairly heavy body.  Aged 20 months.
  • Apricot Brown Sour Ale – Aroma not so strong.  Fruity flavor — sort of an apricot/berry mix — and very sour.  Lighter body and more mellow than the Raspberry Wheat.  Really good, with a great lingering finish.  Also aged 20 months.
  • Ale-Liance IPA – Citrusy aroma. Nice mellow citrus hoppiness and light maltiness/breadiness, with a bit of a bitter finish. Smooth and very drinkable.
  • Gateway Golden – Nice light amber color. Good hoppy flavor. Kind of a light, less-malty pale ale.
  • King St Brown – 5.5 – Good smoky coffee flavor, with hoppy undertone. Light but solid.
  • Profanity Hill Porter – A lot like the brown but less smoky, a little less coffee flavor. Not as “thick” I suppose. Good.
  • Regrade Pale Ale – 5.5 – Smooth. Maltiness balances out the hoppiness really well. Very drinkable.
  • 3 Grid IPA – 6.7 – Subtle hoppy aroma. Smooth, with a slight caramel flavor and lots of hoppiness. Very nice.
  • Brave Horse IPA – Very hoppy pale ale. Good maltiness, good hoppiness. Great hoppy aroma. Much better deal here than at the Brave Horse Tavern, and you can hear yourself think, which is nice.
    The Rest

  • Seamstress Union Raspberry Wheat – Peachy color. Raspberry aroma strong. Tart berry start, bready finish — odd combination. Very light.
  • Gallant Maiden Hefeweizen – 5.2 – Bavarian-style. Sweet, with clove and slight banana flavors. A touch watery. Good for a hot summer day in the sun.

This walking to breweries thing has some potential. The Elysian is really close to me, and Pike Place is a 20-25 minute walk downhill. So many more options with the bike, though.

Big Time Brewery

Winter’s over, and so are the short bike rides to local brewpubs. Instead, my friend and I hopped on a bus to South Everett and took a long bike ride to the otherwise local Big Time Brewery. Stayed mostly on bike trails, too — the Interurban to the North Creek to the Sammamish River to the Burke-Gilman. Hadn’t gone on a ride in a month, and so Big Time was a welcome end to the 30 mile ride.

Update! February 15, 2012: I tried Whiny the Complainer, their Pliny the Younger consolation brew, when I was at Naked City, and while I don’t usually include beers tried outside of the brewery or brewpub, I’ll make an exception here, because how can I not include a beer named Whiny the Complainer? May 12, 2013: A few more beers at other bars (including the 2013 Whiny release at Pine Box) as well as a visit or two to the brewpub.

Big Time Brewery

Sampler tray at the Big Time Brewery and Alehouse — Seattle, WA

    Rob’s Picks

  • Whiny the Complainer 2013 – 10.8% – Floral aroma at first, but with an alcohol component as it warms up. Floral hop flavor predominant, but plenty of herbal/spicy/bit-o-citrus hops going on, too. Good strong malt backbone and edgy caramel finish. Gets better as it warms up!
  • Lift Ticket Winter Ale – 7% – Dark hoppy amber. Spicy nose. Mix of caramel and herbal/spicy hop flavors. Crisp with a good bitter balance.
  • Dark Days Cascadia Dark Ale – 6.3% – Thick for a CDA, but its rich roasty maltiness and strong hop profile (five different hops) make it a luscious beer. Good bitter bite, too.
  • Makisupa Stout – 6% – Really creamy and smooth. Great chocolate flavor with a subtle touch of rye. (Flaked rye and oats in addition to a bunch of malts.) Nice undercurrent of alcohol flavor and bitterness.
  • Maine Thing Pale Ale – Solid maltiness with caramel notes and great hoppy balance.  Good lingering northwest pale ale finish ;)
  • Trombipulator Belgian Trippel – Good caramel/alcohol balance.  Coriander flavor, too.  Strong malty base.
  • Old Rip Oatmeal Stout – Good thick stout.  Strong coffee flavor, slight alcohol edge, somewhat dry finish.
  • Whiny the Complainer 2012 – 9.1% – Triple IPA. Good hoppy IPA. Piney and malty, with an unfiltered fullness. Nice spiciness on the tongue and subtle citrus/grapefruit flavor.
  • Prime Time Pale Ale – Good caramel flavor. Somewhat hoppy, but not particularly so. Smooth and very drinkable.
  • Coal Creek Porter – 4.5% – Nice! I like the smokiness. Coffee and chocolate flavors not overpowering — great balance. Yum!
  • Sunbreak Blonde – seasonal – 4.1% – Light and citrusy, not too bready. Great summer beer.
  • Big Dance Imperial Amber – seasonal – 8.1% – Strong taste with great caramel flavor. Dance party in your mouth!
  • Hop on Pop Imperial IPA – seasonal – Least floral of the three IPAs on tap. Smoothest, too. Really nice. A good full-bodied IPA.
  • Breakfast Cereal Killer Oatmeat Stout – seasonal – Mmm, so thick and creamy and smooth and chocolatey and coffee-y. A great meal.
    The Rest

  • Millennium Falconer Pale Ale – Citrus aroma.  Citrus/floral hoppy start, though it’s heavier on the floral side.  Good maltiness.  Bitter finish.
  • Atlas Amber – Big caramel flavor, but not too interesting to me. Fairly typical amber.
  • Bhagwan’s Best IPA – 5% – Very floral, good hop bite, but too floral for me.
  • Scarlet Fire IPA – seasonal – 6.4% – Not quite as floral as Bhagwan’s Best, more complexity to the flavor. Interesting.
  • Saison Grisette – seasonal – Very light, with a slight sour Belgian taste. Pretty good, but a little lacking in body for me.
  • Buck Mulligan’s Dublin Stout – seasonal – 4% – Nitro pour. Smooth and light, but a bit watery and slightly sour. A very, very different stout than Breakfast Cereal Killer, but not in a good way…

I made an effort to take a better picture this time. Hope you like it.

Harmon Brewing

Back in January a cousin of mine and his wife moved from Boston to Tacoma for all the obvious reasons, and I’d been meaning to meet up with them. Then one of his brothers came up to the Puget Sound area for a few weeks, and that seemed to be the tipping point for taking the long trek to T-Town. The initial plan was to hit the Harmon brewpub, but soon after we arrived, the evening’s entertainment, a fairly standard bar band, cranked up their amps and started playing, making conversation basically impossible. Kids these days, with their loud rock music! No wonder they’re all deaf! Anyway, the staff directed us to the Tap Room, another location in Harmon Brewing Company‘s burgeoning south sound beer empire, and away we went. Turned out to be a smaller place, but they didn’t do sampler trays, and as soon as we sat down, they cranked up the stereo. Those meddling kids! I shook my cane at the waitstaff, and they thankfully turned down the volume from 11 to something that allowed us to talk to each other. These kids, with their “smarty-phones,” they don’t talk to each other anymore, they just beep-beep-boop-boop on their sexting and the Twitters. I don’t understand it. At least they’re still drinking. So where was I? Oh yeah, the Tap Room didn’t do sampler trays, nor sell logo pint glasses. Crazy! Between the three of us who were drinking that evening, we were able to sample all ten of the beers they had on tap, mostly through periodic requests for tastes but also occasional pints. And then we found out Sundays at the Tap Room are half-off everything. Combined with two free pizzas because they managed to mess up the first order, and it was a very inexpensive night, indeed. Good times.

my worst beer picture

Not even Photoshop can save this awful picture — Tacoma, WA

    Rob’s Picks

  • Point Defiance IPA – 5.8% – Kind of mellow for an IPA but tasty and very drinkable. Not particularly crisp, but it’s smooth.
  • Mt. Takhoma Blonde – 3.8% – Lemony aroma, and slight lemon taste. Very light and drinkable, not too fizzy, not too bready. All around, pretty good.
  • Puget Sound Porter – 5.4% – Good solid porter. Slight chocolate flavor. No fancy vanilla stuff (see below). Pretty crisp, too.
  • Vanilla Porter – seasonal – Awesome aroma: chocolate/coffee/alcohol — very Kahlua-ish. Tastes pretty good, too. Has a lot going on — chocolate with a bitter edge. Noticed the vanilla more in the aroma than in the taste, actually. It’s a porter that makes you think, but not in a bad way.
  • Bourbon Oak Winter Warmer – seasonal – Really nice. Smooth, dark, not very heavy, doesn’t taste strong. Yum!
    The Rest

  • Pinnacle Peak Pale Ale – 4.2% – Strong floral hoppy bite at first, then mellows to nice breadiness. Pretty decent.
  • Brown’s Point ESB – 5.6% – Very smooth, not very hoppy, bit of breadiness. Their description says, “full-bodied amber.” I agree.
  • Banana Hammock Blonde – seasonal – Another f’n banana beer. Strong banana aroma, but banana flavor is not as strong as El Jefe, thankfully. Can actually get a light fizzy beer taste at the end. Still not my thing.
  • Cream Cicle Pale Ale – seasonal – Cream soda aroma. Orange taste comes through. Kind of odd. Not my thing, again.
  • T-Town Brown – seasonal – No Tacoma aroma, thank goodness. Basically smells and tastes like an alcoholic root beer. Another odd experiment.

I have no excuse for the terrible picture I ended up taking. It’s like I wasn’t even trying. Managed to tart it up a bit in Photoshop, but still, it’d probably be better to leave this post picture-less. Oh well.

Airways Brewing

A friend and I took advantage of some sunny weekend weather, as well as the 20 mph winds from the north, to bike south to Kent’s brewery, Airways Brewing Company. It was an awesome ride, cruising along at 20+ mph with no wind in our faces — the air felt quite still as we flew down the trails. The ride north up to Seatac wasn’t quite as enjoyable, unfortunately, struggling against the wind to keep up a 12 mph pace, but Link Light Rail handled the headwind the rest of way back to Seattle very well.

There was some good news and some bad news with the visit. Good news was they had logo glasses for sale. Bad news was they were out of two of their five year-round beers, the Starliner Stout and the Sky Hag IPA. Doh! I considered posting this entry and then updating after a re-visit, but I got lazy and just waited until their one year birthday party, figuring they’d have all the taps running, including some kind of small batch brew. But they were once again out of their stout, and were between small batches. Jeez. At least I got to cozy up with the Sky Hag. And partake of the free snack buffet. Mmm, free snacks…

three out of five samples each

Three out of five samplings (or six out of ten, perhaps) at Airways Brewing — Kent, WA

    Rob’s Picks

  • Jet City ESB – 5.5% – Good balance. Drinkable.
  • Sky Hag IPA – 7.8% – Light floral aroma. Nice and hoppy, smooth, with a sweet caramel taste. Yum.
    The Rest

  • T-Tail Blonde – 5% – Fizzy, nothing particularly remarkable, but crisp, with some breadiness.
  • First Class IPA – 5.6% – Decent hoppiness. A bit floral, but otherwise okay. A full-bodied IPA.
747 nose cone at the brewery

Airways Brewing is a much better name than Nose Cone Brewing — Kent, WA

I don’t think I’ll be heading down again just to try their stout, although they do seem to brew up small batches of beer fairly regularly (which run out very quickly, apparently). Oh well. They’ll be opening a brewpub in downtown Kent at some point this year, which is pretty cool. So, never say never, I suppose.

Georgetown Brewing

Darn tasty beer. That’s their motto, and they sure do live up to it. Manny’s has been my favorite pale ale for quite some time now. I’ve liked their other beers when I’ve had them, but I always seem to go back to the Manny’s.

I toured the original Georgetown Brewing location with a random group of folks a year and a half ago or so, and Manny mentioned that the next beer he wanted to make was an IPA, but the move to a larger building was delaying things. Now the move is all done, and the IPA is on tap, and it was a sunny day in Seattle — a perfect convergence for a bike ride to the brewery. Did a nice little 15 mile loop through downtown, down the Duwamish bike trail, across the 1st Ave bridge into Georgetown, then back north on the Sodo bike trail, through the International District, and up the hill along 12th.

Update! 4/26/2012: Showed up on the bike again, this time to try their new Black Lager. They also had a just-discovered cask of Lucille that had been aging for a year — it was wonderfully smooth, with a touch of sweetness. Yum!

Georgetown Brewing

Georgetown Brewing sampler glass and taps — Seattle, WA

    Rob’s Picks

  • Craigalicious Black Lager – 5% – Sweet malty and somewhat bocky aroma. Tasted almost like a bock, but not as sweet. Good dark malty taste, very crisp, dry, with a subtle caramel flavor. Really drinkable. Sort of like an easier porter.
  • Roger’s Pilsner – 4.9% or 5.2%, depending where look – Very refreshing. Tasty wheaty/bready flavor, with a subtle hoppiness, and just crisp and bubbly enough. Pleasant lingering aftertaste.
  • Manny’s Pale Ale – 5.3% – Still my favorite pale ale. Smooth maltiness, slight hop finish. Goes right down.
  • Chopper’s Red – 6.2% – Floral aroma, but not too floral in taste, which is nice. Good hop bite. Sort of a darker, more aggressive Manny’s.
  • Superchopp – small batch – Same color as Chopper’s, bit stronger aroma, immediate strong hop bite. Slight sweet edge to it, too, which I liked. Really nice. I wish they’d make this year-round.
  • Lucille IPA – 7.2% – Finally! I was looking forward to this one, but at the same time nervous that I might not like it. Anyway. Strong floral aroma. Great big blend of hoppiness, and fairly light and crisp. Basically, really really great. Lucille, you have won my heart!
  • Georgetown Porter – 6.8% – Used to be called 9 Lb Hammer, but they changed the name after a “legal kerfuffle” with some east coast brewery. Ah well. Tastes as good as always, though. Chocolate aroma and flavor, with a good dryness. A fine porter, imho.
  • Lisa’s “The Sun Is Trying To Kill Me” Chocolate Stout – small batch nitro – maybe 8% – This one won’t be officially released until Feb 14th, but if you ask nicely they’ll give you a sample. Made with 15 pounds of Theo chocolate. Yum. Great Guinness pour, with all the little bubbles wiggling their way up to a rich head. Alcohol aroma. Creamy and smooth, but not thick. Alcohol and chocolate flavors, neither of which are overpowering. Extremely drinkable. Wish they’d make this year-round, too…

Wow. Two breweries in a row where I’ve loved everything they’ve had on tap. I missed out on their Donkey Deux (Belgian-style Dubbel) that they brewed up for Belgianfest, but they’ll be making it again. Also in the works is the Georgetown Braggot, a mead-style brew. Hmm. Sounds interesting, at least.

Mac & Jack’s

Enough with the short bike rides! I went and put about 40 miles on my bike with a friend, around the north end of Lake Washington to Redmond and the Mac & Jack’s brewery, then over to Kirkland where we hopped on a bus back to Seattle.

Most people think of just one beer when they think of Mac & Jack’s, their African Amber, but they actually have four year-round brews. We missed their fall seasonal, the Cascadian Dark Ale, unfortunately, and their spring, the C U Lator Barley Wine, won’t be ready for a few weeks, yet. D’oh! Supposedly they have a Pale Ale in the works for summer — seems like as good a reason as any to re-visit them.

Mac & Jack's

Crappy photo in the Mac & Jack’s taproom — Redmond, WA

    Rob’s Picks

  • Serengeti Wheat – Spicy, bready, and a bit hoppy. Nice. Refreshing, especially after a bike ride.
  • African Amber – The old standby. Good hoppy finish for an amber. Crisp, very drinkable. Guy working the taproom said it’s dry-hopped.
  • Two Tun IPA – Aroma and taste are both very floral. Slight spiciness tempers the floral-ness. Good hoppy bite.
  • Blackcat Porter – Nice dry taste and not too heavy. Slight coffee flavor. Good porter.

Should’ve done some other angle in the photo and had the taps in the background or something, but after 30 miles on the bike I wasn’t feeling too creative. Alas. But the guy working there was cool — he let us keep the taster pint glasses, instead of having to shell out $2 a pop. Score!

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