Polka King!

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Another local,, well semi local beer. Door County Brewing‘s 5.3% Polka King English Porter. I have have this many times, at many venues or events before, but never really reviewing, And it’s been a while now,, so here we go.

Pours Black. No other way to describe it.  Thick shiney head that sticks around. Cannot see much for clarity or bubbles, the blackness sucks the light from it’s surroundings.

Very light on aromas. Slightest ever chocolate. Slighty grainy. Faint roast, but not much of any hop or yeast. But that thicker head may be blocking alot. So will check back after a few sips.

Taste is that dark roast right up front,, but turns to hop taste quickly after. Not hop bittering so much as hop taste. And those hops are doing the brit kind of taste. Not your citrusy American style. 

Back to that wonderful roast though. Wow! This is what the beer world is missing nowadays. Not a chocolate bomb, just good old roasty black malt. Firm, I guess you would call it, but not over the top. 

Now the body here has decent carbonation that plays with the bittering perfectly. I can feel it bitting my tongue, but It does not come across as bitter. A good body that has a silky feel to it. There is substance to it, but very crushable.. This is not a one and done.

Oh the more this warms up the better this is getting. This beer is roast and hop taste. The aromas are now starting to stand out more as well.  I do not know what I would add to make this any better than it is. 

I am thinking to my self that I cannot describe it as good as it really is because  I just wanna drink and enjoy it.

Feels like this beer has stepped out of the portal of craft beer drinkers past. About as good of an old school, no bull shit Porter that ever was. You do not find beers like this any more. 

This nails everything I like, and everything I ever wanted in a roasty beer. 

4.5/5 from me,, and I’m going to grab another one.

Titletown Dark Helmet

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Been a long time since I have had me a Titletown Dark Helmet. The local Schwartzbier offering. This used to be one of my favorite beers by Titletown Brewing. Is it the same beer that it was after a couple of years,, and new ownerships? Let’s see.

I’m actually having this one at what they are calling “The Depot” a pub type resteraunt that is where the original Titletown brewing was located, but since moved on to bigger spaces… Just across the parking lot.

Dark Helmet was poured for me into a regular shaker pint with a very nice ligh tan thick head that really stays through the entire drink.

The beer seems somewhat colder than normal, but still get a good whiff of chocolate and sweetness.. along with just the faintest of grain. Nothing harsh or out of place.

And as the name implies, it is dark,, but would not call this black. Deep dark mahogany with nice reddish highlights and clear as a bell where you can get a glimpse.

Yes this does taste as good as I remember. Light, somewhat grainy with background chocolate and a smooth roasty note. Very balanced between the light sweetness and the hidden bitterness to keep it in check. And with that easy bittering comes a softer layer of hop flavor thats is there if you look for it especially the more it warms..

With a much lighter body than it looks like it should have, it still has substance and its spot on carbonation really fills it out..

So a Schwarztbier is basically a dark Pilsner. This version does take a few liberties with that description and does a few things of its own,, but is still a dark, easy going, light drinking that really surprises the non-dark beer crowd.

As said before, Dark Helmet has always been a great beer, but somehow fell off my radar during thier business shuffling. But I amd glad to see that it is just as good as I remember.

If you get to Titletown Brewing, Or the Depot for that matter, don’t pass on this one. If you are in distribution range, it out there in cans.

I as always.. am giving this a 4/5. Enjoy

Copperstate Preach!

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So I looked at a social media post this morning, and I seen that one of the local breweries just happens to have 5 (five) Stouts on tap. It has been quite along time since I have been to Copperstate Brewing, but 5 stouts on tap,, that will bring me out.

I was surprised to see that they really did have 8 stouts up on tap. 3 new ones. I have had the Gary imp stout (which has garnered one of my very few 5/5) and their Swift Stout, which I am not a fan of.

So we decided on Preach! A 11.5 bourbon barreled Imperial stout. And it does look pretty nice the small glass.

It did at first pour with a nice looking tan head, that disappeared almost as the second it was set in front of me. But that is the nature of these big beers and the bourbon barreled ones.

Definitely black. No other word for it. But it looks dead flat after the head leaves. It’s too dark to see if there are any carbonation bubbles. 

For an imperial Stout,, they are serving this pretty damn cold. But again, keeping seperate temps for each beer just isnt feasible.  But I think being this cold is the reason that I am getting almost nothing in aroma other than a slog of sweetness,, a bit of chocolate and just the slightest bit of raisin. (That sweetness all upfront scares me a bit. But we will see later)

Nothing for roast or anything like that. Maybe just the slightest bit of barrel.. but I wouldn’t necessarily call it bourbon.  If you told me this was a rum barrel aged I would believe that. 

But nothing for hops, yeast or anything else.

In the taste though,, things start to open up a little. Big raisin right off the bat. And that’s always a good thing for me in an imperial. Next thing that hits me is that sweetness,, fairly heavy sweetness, but for now the cold temp is keeping it manageable

About now I should be getting blasted by some roast. Some roasted barley or maybe Black pat.. but sadly, not much. Chocolate notes though (just notes). This is after all being billed as an imperial Stout. It should be stouty somewhere in its profile.

As it it warming up a little, I’m starting to get a bit of hop taste along with an alcohol warming that just started to peak out. But staying with that warming, it also has the remnants of jet fuel. There is a considerable difference between alcohol warmth, and fusel alcohol. Another 3-4 months might do this beer good.  But then again,, another 3-4 months and what little character this beer does have might drop out and leave us with just that syrupy sweetness

That body is just this side of thick. It’s heavy for sure. But we got lucky here on two fronts. The carbonation is keeping a tad lighter feeling,, plus it pushes the bittering at bit which is doing its best at keeping that sweetness at bay. 

I’m really struggling to see why they decided to call this a stout. The imperial part I can see. It’s a 11.5% sweet syrupy dessert beer. But just because its black does not mean its a stout. We need to dark roast,,, somewhere. Its fine if you wanna run the sweet side of a stout,, but make sure its a stout first. This is just a high alc desert beer.

As I mention this to my server they are convinced that I have no idea what a stout is supposed to be! 

Ok.  This is one of those beers that are hard to give a score to.  I sorta like it for what it is, and at $11 a short pour I feel obligated to like something about it. But it’s no damn stout. And thats why I here. Put some roast in there, mash a bit lower, and let it age a year longer and this might be a decent Stout.

The way it sits, I’m just gonna go with a 2.5/5

On a side note, I had a legitimate question about this beer. Since this supposedly was a bourbon barrel aged beer, I asked if they also had the original beer on tap that wasn’t bourbon barreled.

The reaction and answer I got was somewhat confusing… Why would anyone care about what the original beer was? This beer was specifically made for barrels And they are not going to waste time trying to serve a sub par product no one wants. They never heard of any one wanting to compare an original beer with the bourbon barreled one. 

Maybe I’ll wait another year to go back and try those other two stouts.

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