COUNTRY OF ORIGIN: USA
BREWERY: Goose Island Beer Company
STYLE: Pale Wheat Ale
ABV: 4.2%
PURCHASE: Six-pack of 12-oz. bottles, $11.99.
SERVING: 12-oz. bottle, poured into pint glass. Self-contained during dispensation from the bottle, regardless of pour speed. A standard 20-second pour yielded a standard one-inch head; a slower 30-second pour yielded half that. For kicks, I did a ten-second pour on beer #3: Still roughly an inch, maybe a tad less. Retention is laughable.
APPEARANCE: Gorgeous golden-orange color, hazy and translucent. Reflects light beautifully! Paper-white head. Lacing is nonexistent.
BOUQUET: A malted grain-citrus balance for the most part, likely rolled wheat meshed with freshly sliced oranges and lemons. Perhaps a touch of hops. Smells better than it tastes.
PALATE: Well, it's certainly easy on the tongue. Perhaps too easy; it doesn't assert itself. The overall body is fairly light with sneaky carbonation that can sharpen if you let it. A contained, citric sweetness starts things off, but for moment or two, there seems to be almost nothing; a mid-palate that is all but flavorless, like a standard light beer. The finish sees a return to something. A heightened citrus quality emerges, though the mouthfeel at this point is still generally seltzer-like. Coriander and orange zest characterize the aftertaste, which is by far the best part of the drinking experience here. This is a wheat beer, and though detectable in the aroma, it is virtually invisible in the taste.
MUSINGS AND METAPHORS: Blah.
The word that comes to mind, for me, is "Leinie-esque." Nothing personal against any Leinie fans here, but I always found their beers merely agreeable and nothing more. In other words, boring. Mundane. Trite. Banal. Ditto for this one. A wimpy representative of the pale wheat style, but a perfect example of an it'll-do beer. It will, just not much.
GRADE: D+
BREWERY: Goose Island Beer Company
STYLE: Pale Wheat Ale
ABV: 4.2%
PURCHASE: Six-pack of 12-oz. bottles, $11.99.
SERVING: 12-oz. bottle, poured into pint glass. Self-contained during dispensation from the bottle, regardless of pour speed. A standard 20-second pour yielded a standard one-inch head; a slower 30-second pour yielded half that. For kicks, I did a ten-second pour on beer #3: Still roughly an inch, maybe a tad less. Retention is laughable.
APPEARANCE: Gorgeous golden-orange color, hazy and translucent. Reflects light beautifully! Paper-white head. Lacing is nonexistent.
BOUQUET: A malted grain-citrus balance for the most part, likely rolled wheat meshed with freshly sliced oranges and lemons. Perhaps a touch of hops. Smells better than it tastes.
PALATE: Well, it's certainly easy on the tongue. Perhaps too easy; it doesn't assert itself. The overall body is fairly light with sneaky carbonation that can sharpen if you let it. A contained, citric sweetness starts things off, but for moment or two, there seems to be almost nothing; a mid-palate that is all but flavorless, like a standard light beer. The finish sees a return to something. A heightened citrus quality emerges, though the mouthfeel at this point is still generally seltzer-like. Coriander and orange zest characterize the aftertaste, which is by far the best part of the drinking experience here. This is a wheat beer, and though detectable in the aroma, it is virtually invisible in the taste.
MUSINGS AND METAPHORS: Blah.
The word that comes to mind, for me, is "Leinie-esque." Nothing personal against any Leinie fans here, but I always found their beers merely agreeable and nothing more. In other words, boring. Mundane. Trite. Banal. Ditto for this one. A wimpy representative of the pale wheat style, but a perfect example of an it'll-do beer. It will, just not much.
GRADE: D+
Perfect for my machine,
ReplyDeleteVery well balanced between malt and hops, with a pleasant citrus aroma boot. (See, this is what it's all about. No adjunct crap. You sniff this, visions of virginal fields of grain and hops dance in your head. The hills are alive, with the sound of--sorry.)
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