Recents
Southern Tier - Pale Ale
Just picked up a mixer 12 pack from Southern Tier - this time it's a themed mixer, all "pale" somethingerothers. So far so meh. These are solid, and perfectly ok, but not special in any way. If these guys were in my home town, operated a good brewpub, and gave money to cyclist causes or something else I cared about, I would probably buy their stuff happily as my "base stock" beer. They have skills, but this is incredibly plain stuff. And sometimes plain is good - fresh off a lawnmower, or right after a 3 hour hike, this would taste incredible. Otherwise, it's an also-ran, and near the bottom of that list. B-
Southern Tier - 422 Pale Wheat Ale
See above. A little better for the wheat imo, but still not within shooting distance of Exciting. B
Long Trail - IPA
These guys ARE in my back yard, they DO run a nice brewpub (Woodstock VT), and they make my beloved Double Bag, so we never miss them when we ride up thattaway. This is their IPA and it's... you know, ok. This is an IPA your dad could probably drink. B
Oskar Blues - Old Chub
No stranger to my fridge, but it's been awhile and I don't know if I ever wrote it up. These days my take is this: solid if unspectacular canned scotch ale, high alcohol content, no pretensions, maybe a little too sweet for me (even for that style), and for christ's sake you lazy little man pour it in a glass, it's so much better that way. B+
21st Ammendment - Hop Crisis Imperial IPA

These guys aspire to bigger and better things, and they can their stuff, so I support them in spirit. Some of the results are great-ish, some are off the mark. I like this better than anything else of theirs I've had, and I would say "if you can find it, try it." I don't say that much. Chalk it up to my liking of imperial IPA's, my love of wood aging, and my soft spot for canned beers. Still, this is a complex, nuanced, balanced beer but with a lot of knobs set to 11. Also the can art was great. A
And from the motorcycle camping trip to Vermont last weekend...
Genesee - Cream Ale
I wanted tall cans for pack-out reasons, and besides Bud / Miller this was it. Neuro ain't picky and neither am I, so Genny it was... one six of this Cream Ale and one of "Beer." This was the better of the two. This is their High Life, with sweeter malt notes and less metallic rice flavor. I strongly suspect the presence of corn in this, and/or wheat. Something mellows it out and drags the flavor into a broader picture. For camping, it's great. Or maybe I guess for getting loaded in a parking lot and punching people or something, but it's not something I could see buying for home consumption. C+
Genessee - Beer
This can looks like something from a movie set, where they can't use real brands. For all my desire not to buy something miller-bud, I realized three swigs into this can that any difference is superficial at best. This was thin metallic swill just like the big guys. But it was frosty cold in that saddle bag full of ice, and we were 20 miles from the nearest power line or cell tower, and there was a field full of blackberries and raspberries and a campfire to get going. It didn't really matter. C-
Long Trail - Triple Bag

At the brewery, enjoying a pint of the bigger heavier version of the Double Bag. This one was just under 10% content, but still sweet and smooth going down. I should've gotten 2 lower gravity beers, but I reeeeeally wanted to try this one. I'd buy it again, for sure. Like a triple bock, or a souped-up altbier. It has that sweeter german malt taste, and this version also had about as many IBU's as a standard IPA to try and balance it out. B+