Vitals:
Name: Hazed and Infused
Style: American Pale Ale (dry-hopped)
IBU: ??
ABV: 4.85%
Gravity: 12.5 Plato
Purchased at: Trixie's Liquor
Descriptions:
Appearance: Pours a hazy/translucent amber/brown in color, which is darker than I expected it to be. You get about 1.5 fingers of foamy head, which is off-white in color. Decent retention, but the lacing is great on this beer. You get a respectable cap after the head is gone, but nothing extremely memorable.
Smell: Piney hops pair with citrusy fruits here (grapefruit, to venture a guess). There is some sweet maltiness in the background, giving it the smell of a very balanced beer.
Taste: Okay, so to give a quick preface to this taste review I want to give an idea of what dry-hopped, as this beer is strongly advertised to be, actually is. So typically when you get your wort (the concoction that has a lot of sugars from the grains and adjuncts that the yeast will consume to produce alcohol) you also do a hop boil usually. Boiling the hops for longer periods of time will cause more alpha acids and hop oils to be released into the beer. This will result in the bitterness that you get and some of the hoppy taste and flavor. However, hops that are added very LATE in the boil, or after the boil (as they are in dry-hopping), typically are used to add flavor and aroma without the bitterness of the hop oils.
Having gotten THAT out of the way, you get a mostly sweet, almost caramel, malt flavor up front. The hops are VERY muted in this beer and borderline on being completely weak. You get some citrus and piney hops toward the end of the taste with grapefruit and maybe lemon/orange. This beer is not nearly as balanced as it smells and I prefer my beers to err on the hoppy side rather than the malty side. Oh well, can't win 'em all.
Mouthfeel: Pretty darn thin here on the mouthfeel, this is a VERY light APA. The carbonation is also low, which gives you a good, pleasant drinkability. Based on the ABV and mouthfeel you could drink this beer all day if you felt so inclined.
Overall Grade: C
Comments: This beer is what its grade indicates - very average. This honestly tastes like someone had a malty lager and then dry hopped it slightly to try to pass it off as an APA. Dry hopping, as I said, has a lot to do with the aroma, which explains why it smelled balanced but wasn't at all. This is a very forgettable beer, but it's definitely within the realm of possibilities for being a sessionable beer. Keep looking - you can do better than this.
Cheers,
Hurls
No comments:
Post a Comment