1001 Beers

Tasting, Reviewing, and Discussing Beers from the book: 1001 Beers You Must Taste Before You Die

Allagash Tripel Reserve

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Beer No: 56
Page No: 312
Category: Blond

Today (or maybe it was yesterday), the House of Representatives passed a Beer Resolution!  Saluting "the goals and ideals of American Craft Beer Week," the American Craft Beer Resolution passed the House and is now officially recognized - whatever that means.  Personally, I think they have bigger issues to deal with, but a quick vote on beer is never a bad thing I guess.  So I hope everyone is enjoying their American Craft Beer Week.  I know I am.

Back to the beer, the Allagash Tripel Reserve is made following the standards of a classic Belgian-style tripel without any special ingredients.  According to 1001 Beers, brewmaster Rob Tod says what makes this tripel special lies in the yeast.  Using primary fermentation and a secondary fermentation with bottle conditioning, it's the yeast that gives this tripel its special flavors.  Unfortunately, I just wasn't a fan.  I felt the herbs and spices brought out by the yeast was just too overpowering and completely overwhelmed the classic tripel flavors that should have been present.

My review, cross-posted at RateBeer.com:

Allagash Tripel Reserve from Allagash Brewing Company

Aroma: 8/10
Appearance: 3/5
Taste: 6/10
Palate: 3/5
Overall: 12/20

Rating 3.2 / 5.0

Had from bottle from BevMo. Batch No. 144. Pours a hazy golden yellow with large, thick head. Aroma is sweet and spicy - fruity and yeasty with lots of herbs and spices. Taste is overwhelmed by spices. Also very sweet with sugar and herbs at the finish. A dry, astringent aftertaste lingered. I had higher hopes, but thought the spices completely took this beer over and were way too pronounced.

Green Flash Le Freak

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Beer No: 10/1001
Page No: 420
Category: Blond

I'd like to say it's been another long week and I'm glad the weekend is here, but, well, it's been busy, but the week hasn't been all that strenuous.  It started out with the slightest of colds on Monday, it lingered 'til Tuesday around noon, Wednesday I watched Clash of the Titans (1981), Thursday was Clash of the Titans (2010), and then Friday was preparation for brewing, and a trip to the wonderful Bruery.  At the Bruery this weekend, they have their amazing Humulus back on tap - a heavily hopped beer, it finishes with the perfect amount of bitterness and just gives you a quick jolt when you take that first sip.  Along with Humulus on tap, they also had it dry hopped on cask three ways - Citra, Centennial, and Simcoe - and all three ways - heavenly.

But as I ran around from task to task today, I never had time to get to my beer, so I took it along with me to the Bruery, and after tasting all four variations of Humulus, I poured the Green Flash Le Freak.  I had picked it up earlier in the day at O'Shea's where Scott and I needed to pick up our four different yeast strains for brew day tomorrow.  We'll be making a pale ale and then splitting it at the end and using two different strains of yeast - California Ale and London Ale.  We'll also be brewing a stout and we'll split that one at the end too, using a Cream Ale Yeast and the Burton Ale Yeast.  It should be a fun, yet busy day tomorrow.

Back to the Le Freak.  Billed as a blend between a "San Diego Style" IPA and a Belgian Tripel, this is most definitely a flavor profile I had never tried in the past.  The aromas are of sugars and citrus as the tripel definitely comes through there, but on the first sip, the IPA smacks you across the palate at the start and then finishes sweet with hints of sugar and spices.  The aftertaste is then slightly bitter again from the IPA, yet it warms you as you would expect a 9.2% ABV tripel to do.  It's a very complex beer, and definitely was an unexpected twist in the night.

1001 Beers describes brewmaster Chuck Silva's strange beer cross-breeding as such: "Le Freak begins with the same malt base as in Green Flash Imperial IPA, rather than the Tripel, and is jammed with hops from the American Northwest...For fermentation, Silva's house yeast, an American strain, combines with a Belgian strain to bring Le Freak forward, creating the fruit-and-spice character common in Belgian tripels."

However he does it, Le Freak definitely surprises you and then lulls you into a happy place as it mixes one of my favorite beer styles with the easy-drinking Tripel.  I haven't had too many beers from Green Flash, a quasi-local San Diego brewery, other than the more common Green Flash IPA, but I will definitely track down some of their more rare and experimental beers from here on out.

My review, cross-posted at RateBeer.com:

Green Flash Le Freak from Green Flash Brewing Co.

Aroma: 8/10
Appearance: 4/5
Flavor: 9/10
Palate: 4/5
Overall: 15/20

Rating: 4.0 / 5.0

Had from 750ml bottle picked up at O’Shea’s Brewing. Pours a deep golden/orange color with a nice head which dissipates slowly and leaves behind a good amount of lacing. The aromas are mostly the tripel - sugars, sweetness, candies, with just a hint of citrus and hops. The initial taste kicks your palate into high gear however, packing over 100 IBUs of bitterness as the IPA half of the beer bowls you over. Once the hops and bitterness subside, it finishes with a sweet, candy flavor and then leaves you feeling nice and warm inside afterward. The mix of an IPA and a Tripel was completely unexpected and a very nice surprise. I wasn’t quite sure how they would pull it off, but it all works very well together, a very nice, tasty beer.