Tuesday, March 30, 2010

The Session # 38 OR Beer Blogging Fridays





The Session # 38

Sweetwater Tavern’s barrel-aged Desert Imperial Stout is a beer I have recently tasted that deserves a place on a pedestal. Better yet it deserves a cool, dark place in your cellar. With a dry finish, this stout has a flavor profile more complex than most $30 bottles of wine. This stout is to the Imperial style what Rodenbach is to Flanders sour. While the stout is fairly demanding on your tastes buds, I think this beer is an outlier in the cask aged category. This stout stands out primarily because it has an incredibly layered flavor profile and is complex without cloying: I was pleased to taste flavors completely distinct without any hints of whiskey or wine. Second, because it had been aged for several years, I didn’t feel that it needed further aging. This is an amazing beer at over two years old. I wonder if the yeast used is a vigorous strain…it’s nearly as dry as a Sauvignon Blanc!

I should let the reader know that I sampled the stout at the Brickskeller’s Annual “Strong Ale Tasting Extravaganzee.” Nick Funnell, Sweetwater Tavern brewmaster, was brought on stage in addition to Sweet Water Tavern’s two other brewmasters on February 23, 2010.

Any non beer geek shouldn’t be put off by the fact that a black beer has a khaki-colored head. Indeed, this is nothing uncommon in the world of beer. However, amongst beer style-purists, a stout has a white head, only porter features the darker off-white head. Is it remarkable for a stout to have an off white head?… Not necessarily. Is it remarkable that this one does? Absolutley!

Unfortunately, this beer is only available on draft, so you will never be able to sample the beer I had the privilege of tasting on February 23, 2010.

Of course, Nick Funnel is a brilliant brewmaster. However, there are still many “brewmasters” with GABF Silvers whose libations I DO NOT quaff. For more of Nick, check him out at the National Geographic Society’s May 5th event. Tickets can be purchased here.