Mart (211), Montréal, Quebec, Canada Jun 2, 2007 Couleur brune-rougâtre foncée, claire, mousse timide, laissant un lacet. Arôme chocolat, torréfié. Goût très torréfié, bonne amertume tranchante, finale longue de café. Corps moyen, effervescence un peu forte. Correcte. piscator34 (905), Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada Nov 1, 2006 Sampled at Winnipeg Brew Bombers homebrew club meeting. Red/caramel brown in colour. Aromas of milk chocolatem roasted malts, a bit of weak coffee and caramel candy. Definite chocolate malt flavor, along with some earthy hops, and LOTS of chalk. Mouth puckering dry chalky finish. Not great. presario (2397), Calgary, Alberta, Canada Oct 11, 2006 Bottle from MartinT via Poperinge. Light head. Dark brown colour. Dry malty aroma. Thin body. Weird smokey light malt flavour. A woody bitterness. Like a weak Old Ale with a bit of chocolate. aracauna (2238), Georgia, USA Oct 9, 2006 I’m not a big fan of this one. It pours a nice dark brown with a nice head. The aroma has a nice nuttiness and a touch of roast and a bit of hoppiness in the back. However, the flavor has a harsh bitterness and astringency that really harms the flavor of what could have been a tasty brown ale. ClarkVV (3547), Allston, Massachusetts, USA Aug 30, 2006 2006 bottle shared with Olivier on 8/25/06. Very dark, deep, almost stout-like appearance for a brown ale. Ruby-chestnut and dark auburn hues cut the inky brown tones, however. Old-ivory colored head is small, but dense and recedes slowly to cover/ring, providing light, blotchy lacing. Low to medium clarity. Both nuttiness and creaminess are heavy in the nose. Walnut paste, mixed with brown sugar and sweet vanilla cream. Quite luxurious and cut, on the finish, with some light lactic suggestions, bit of vinousness (prunes, berries). Definitely a great balance of tartness and sweet malts, without any boring astringency, or overattenuation leading to acrid brown malts and grainy, lean notes. Currants and raisins continue on, hand-in-hand with brown sugar, while a soft, dusty yeast begins to creep in with warming. Bold and malty flavors shows wonderful extraction and provides a most fluid, creamy, and soft mouthfeel. Low carbonation helps concentrate the malts, but the tartness, some lactic notes, plenty of dark, boisterous berries and hop bitterness all combine to dry out the finish. It ends significantly more dry than it begins, but the texture is never compromised, nor is it ever "dry", which helps control the toasty/roasty/bitter malt notes. Attenuation is not taken down too far, which is a major problem of many brown ales. Moderate yeastiness on the end is soft and characterful. No doubt the hop flavor has greatly dissipated over the past months, but it is still a unique and well-done brown ale.
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