The is Brewed by Speakeasy Ales and Lagers and take you pick of a style that is : Specialty Grain or Amber Ale and they are in San Francisco, California USA
Scarlett Red Rye Ale captivates with an act that ranges from sweet hop highs to spicy rye tones. Sacrlett hits the notes that will set your heart on fire.
330ml bottle that is 5.5% ABV and 38 IBU on the scale, 165 calories a serve, and this is 1.43 standard drink units in NZ.
The Hops in this are – Columbus, Cascade, Chinook
I'm always open though. To be honest it was the "Limited Release" that got my attention.
Stand by....
Healthy aroma from opening.
Lots of carbonation and a goodly amount of warm caramel initially, decent length that finishes grassy rough but not disastrously so.
38 IBU's is quite bitter and this is apparent in this, as there is nothing to balance this. There is, as I noted a really nice warm caramel malt that runs over this.
But it's really not a 'full' beer or one that leaves you with a nice mouthfeel, it's just an Amber beer that is what it is.
The pdubyah-o-meter rates this as 7 a of its things from the thing. As much as you'd like to reach a giddy height or be the best thing since sliced bread it ends up as a solid beer of little outstanding merit or notes that lift it beyond that
The double dip review
- Am I enjoying it? It's ok, but not spectacular.
- Would I have another? I think I'll pass for something different
- Would I share with a friend on a porch and set the world to rights? Not on this occasion.
Wouldn't be beer without music would it, and so I was listening to Beth Hart & Joe Bonamassa – Live In Amsterdam . This the track "Close to my Fire"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cVRbajsztig
SPECIALTY GRAIN
Beer made with a speciality grain, most typically rye, but also common are rice, sorghum, millet, corn, buckwheat, oats and spelt. As this is a catch-all category, alcohol levels, bitterness, and color vary.
AMBER ALE
A style without definition, amber ales range from bland, vaguelly caramelly beers to products with a fairly healthy malt and hop balance. Often the differentiation between a quality amber and an American Pale is that the amber might have more dark malt character, or a less assertive hop rate
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