dnas2 (524), Yelverton, Devon., Devon, England Jul 17, 2007 (Gravity) No head. Very dark brown. Roasted scent with a hint of sugar. Some fizziness. Dry finish. In the mouth, it’s mainly smoke. Not unpleasant, but there’s little sign of the raspberries, just a slight sweetness after the smoke, revealing some cherry tartness. SilkTork (3941), Rochester, Kent, England May 29, 2007 Cambridge Fest. A mildly roasty and slightly milky stout. A pleasant drink, though there is no raspberry flavour, and - indeed - very little impact all round. Rather more full bodied and creamy than a mild. Slips down nicely, but leaves little impression. dmradus (224), Syracuse, New York, USA Apr 26, 2007 Cask at the Maltings, York. Deep black with ruby highlights in the light - beautiful. One finger, small-bubble brown creamy head. Aroma is a bit slight - roasted malt, slight sweetness, a bit of tartness from fruits. Taste is nice, and surprisingly so. Roasted notes mix with milk chocolate and a light, very nice fruit note that lightens things up. Not in-your-face raspberry by any means - this could be any berry, or dark fruit, perhaps. Slight hop presence, with a moderately bitter, roasted malt aftertaste. Flavors overall are subdued but meld well together. Oh, and just the slightest, nearly imperceptible band-aid off-taste to it - glad I got a pint when I did. Palate is creamy, very little carbonation but enough to tingle the tongue ever so slightly. A treat. woodgnome (12), England Apr 11, 2007 Cask at Cambridge Winter Beer Festival. Ruby,black beer. Roast flavours dominate, no detectable raspberries, but pleasant enough. chris_o (4409), London, Greater London, England Mar 7, 2007 Cask (handpump), Market Porter, Southwark, London, January 2007. Lets get one thing straight at the outset. I didn’t really pick up too much in the way of raspberry. Perhaps my nose was having a bad day. Elements of tart indeterminate fruit in the palate - yes. Raspberry - no. And, however, you look at it, I think that has to be regarded as a shortcoming in a beer with "Raspberry" in its name. Conversely, whilst this was predominantly dark brown in colour, there was a very noticeable red (dare I say raspberry?) tinge. There’s a good solid malt backbone - firm, if not heavily roasted and some bitterness propping up the finish. Certainly not a powerful stout and, no doubt, not intended to be. But, without a great depth of fruit, it ends up seeming just a little meek and slight. None of this is to suggest its a bad beer. I just think an extra punnet or twenty of raspberries would liven things up enormously.
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