The celebration of a birthday or anniversary is twofold. It
both recognizes and celebrates the past and at its best prepares the honorees
for the coming year.
My own birthday, which occurred in the middle of this month,
was such an event. Lots of food, beer, and a cigar or two was enjoyed, and when
all was consumed, the icing on the cake was a much coveted Nikon D40, a nice,
middle ground digital SLR camera that I have been wanting since the first few
blog posts of Intoxico, a project that is working toward its third year in the
making. Finally I have a tool to replace
the cell phone and point and click camera I have been working with, to offer a
better aesthetic experience for my readers. My family gave me the gift of a better
face to show the public, and for that I am very grateful.
This year my own birthday corresponded with the one year anniversary
of Deep Ellum Brewing Company, an obviously new comer to the burgeoning Dallas-Fort
Worth brewing scene. Joining the fray, this brewery has arguably brought a new
pedigree of ales to North Texas. As an
offering of support for this brewery on its first steps into a wide ocean of
craft beer in the state, this and the next post will explore four of their most
widely available selections.
Deep Ellum IPA
Being the he most anticipated offering from this brewery to
be sampled this weekend, their India Pale Ale decants into my pint glass as a
very slightly cloudy, burnt orange liquid. The controlled pour shows good
carbonation without worry of escaping the pint glass, and tiny CO2 bubbles climb
through the pumpkin colored beverage to a somewhat thin, white head.
The ale has a nice thick mouth feel that delivers one of the
most well balanced, superb examples of this style I have enjoyed in quite a
while. While the hop forwardness of the beer is not in question, it attacks the
palate with a warm, orange zest profile without obliterating taste buds with
bitterness. This beer is tame enough on the front end to really allow the
nuance of the Pacific Northwest hops to be explored. Only on the back end, carried on the back of
a dry finish, does a shot of clean bitterness and malt sweetness peak.
In this IPA Deep Ellum Brewing Company has produced a wonderful
beer, and probably easily rests in my top 5 contenders for the style.
Farmhouse Wit
The Deep Ellum Farmhouse Wit stared me down a few weeks ago
and dared me to buy it as I was collecting beer for the weekend convergence on
my mother’s house. My brother, the Belgian
drinker of my crew, obviously would enjoy the opportunity to imbibe the saison,
while I opened the window to be disappointed with a style of beer that usually
fails to excite my palate. Subject to his frequent generosity, I took a bullet
for the team and picked up this apparent farmhouse whit whose label indicated a
bit of rye in the mix.
Despite trying to maintain a slow and controlled pour, the
beer’s kinetic potential was released, and resulted in a good 5 inches of head.
Even as the head would dissipate, the cloudy, creamy, orange-yellow beer is a
host to a copious amount of carbonation that races to the heavenly froth atop
the beverage.
Aided by the pillow like head of the beer, the beverage has
an enjoyable, wet, creamy mouth feel that leaves a nice, not too sweet, and refreshingly
moist coating in the drinker’s mouth. This
provides an excellent vehicle to deliver a lemon profile accented by coriander,
generic spice, and funky yeast flavors consistent with the style of the beer.
In addition to being both complex and well balanced by malt
and hops, the brew maintains a somewhat mild presentation on the tongue, making
it drinkable even to this detractor of the style.
I hope I have whetted your appetite for these beers, as well
as the continuation of these reviews to come shortly.
Until the next keg is tapped, and the next pint poured,
happy drinking!
1 comment:
I like the label designs. (or maybe it's the camera)
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