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Showing posts with label Granville Island Brewing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Granville Island Brewing. Show all posts

Thursday, January 3, 2013

False Creek Raspberry Ale - Granville Island Brewing (Canada - BC - Vancouver) 4.5%


False Creek Raspberry Ale - Granville Island Brewing (Canada - BC - Vancouver) 4.5%

Cloudy pink with amber hints in a glass with a frothy quick-fading white head. Tart and sweet raspberry jam aroma but with some nice malty tones in the background. Very tart raspberry flavour with sweet notes, some citrus hints and an appetizing aftertaste. The malt flavour is underwhelming or more accurately overwhelmed by the fruit, so this is a mainly raspberry ale. False Creek Raspberry Ale would mix well in a beertail (aka a beer-cocktail) and would pair well with summer fare from salad to BBQ to sorbet.

A good fruit flavoured beer, if you aren't into flavoured beers: move right along, nothing to see here.

Wednesday, December 26, 2012

Kitsilano Maple Cream Ale - Granville Island Brewing (Canada - BC - Vancouver) 5.0%


Kitsilano Maple Cream Ale - Granville Island Brewing (Canada - BC - Vancouver) 5.0%

A brown tinted amber in a glass, a lot like maple syrup actually. A sweet maple aroma; roasty with just a hint of smoke. A mild maple taste but also some musty dry hops, wood tones and a bit of roast. A umami and sugary finish. The aftertaste is delectably maple sugar but, in my opinion, Kitsilano Maple Cream Ale just misses the mark by having too much hops in the taste and not enough maple.

Thursday, December 6, 2012

Lions Winter Ale - Granville Island Brewing (Canada - British Columbia - Vancouver) 5.5%

Lions Winter Ale - Granville Island Brewing (Canada - British Columbia - Vancouver) 5.5%


A brownish, reddish amber in a glass. Lots of vanilla, wood tones (oak?), and a touch of molasses in the aroma; maybe a hint of chocolate. Vanilla and quite a bit of something milk chocolatey to the taste. After the frist few sips the chocolate (milk, not dark chocolate) aspect of the aroma really came out. Lots of "chewy" malt flavours in there, enough it would seem, to support a high ABV but at the same time it's nice to have a winter ale that has a sessional alcohol content. The wood tones from the aroma can also be found in the taste but they're actually a blend of the subtle hops character (that balances the malt nicely by the way) and the vanilla which I associate with a bourbon or whiskey even as it plays so nicely in Lions Winter Ale. Suggested food pairs on the back ("sweeter full-flavoured foods and cream-based sauces") look promising. Maybe it's the Rocky Mountains on the label but I think it'd go great with fondue as an apres-aki. This is a really nice beer and a splendid Winter beer. Not that they have a real winter in Vancouver but I guess thye do at altitude in the mountains.