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Shorts Anniversary Ale 2006/2007 Part One

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bottled
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RatingsAverageScoreSeasonalABVStyle PctlServe in
493.83/5.03.71/5.0Special11.5%79.7Snifter, Trappist glass
Commercial Description:
Actually this one is our second Double IPA, brewed to celebrate the survival of our second year in business. It was brewed on March 7th 2005. I remember it being what I call a ¾ high gravity batch. A ¾ batch is simply using the first three quarters of the wort extracted from the mash. This was the bulk of the beer recipe. We used four different malts at a weight of our regular IPA (the Huma) for our base and boiled the wort for two hours, instead of one hour (to further strengthen the recipe by evaporation). Throughout the boil, we added two different high alpha hop varieties, and lots of them. It was only appropriate to hop the hell out of this beer. Hoppy beers are our trademark. The original gravity stuck around 20.8 plato and finished around 3.4 plato, resulting in a beer in the high 8% ABV range. Hop bitterness was calculated at 240.72 IBU’s. This beer still exists and is apart of our growing vintage beer collection. Anniversary Ale 2006 My first real example of being “crazy” really coming into play. The Start of this 4 part beer was initiated on March 20th 2006. This is hard to follow so stay with me. It began as a triple brewed, triple hopped, and triple boiled Imperial IPA. What I was trying to achieve was a super high gravity full batch of beer. Since my mash tun could not accommodate the amount of grain required to get the original gravity I wanted, I used multiple mashes. These mashes start at regular brew weight, 450 lbs. I take the first half of the most concentrated runnings and save them in a holding tank. The gravity of the final (last of the first runnings) stops at 8 plato. The final runnings of the first half (8 plato and less) gets saved in a different tank. So we have just split the worts from the first mash. This is done a second time, with the exact same mash ingredients. The first half (down to 8 plato) is saved with the first half of the first mash. And the second half of the second mash is saved with the last half of the first mash. So now we have 2 tanks full of wort. One is super high gravity and the other is low gravity. The low gravity batch of wort is transferred into the kettle to heat for a third mash. Yes, the third mash was made with all wort, resulting in a super high gravity 3rd mash runnings. Ultimately, we ended filling the kettle full of super high gravity wort. This was the bulk of the Anniversary Ale 2006. The reason I say it was a four part is because the fourth part I tried to push with the left over worts I had from the final runnings of the third mash (The mash which was mashed in with wort and not water). This was foiled however due to the lag time the wort sat idle. So we scrapped the 4th mash due to potential infection. So now we have a kettle full of super high gravity wort. I boiled that basterd for over three hours, and put a total of 62# of high alpha hops. I put a stand pipe in the kettle to accommodate all the hop trub for knock out. It was about a foot too short. The K.O. was a bitch because the entire hop kept clogging the heat exchanger. This resulted in poor aeration of the wort, resulting in a struggled fermentation. However after a struggled 2 month fermentation the beer turned out amazing. Most of it is being aged in bourbon barrels. There is one control ½ barrel. The public will see this released on our 3rd birthday party. April 28th 2007. This beer was scheduled to be released on our 2006 anniversary, but it was not done in time. So I brewed the Anniversary Ale Part Duex.

 Most Recent Top Raters Highest Ratings Who's Rated This?  
 AleDrinker (1090), Sunnyvale, California, USA
4.9 Aroma Appearance Flavor Palate Overall
9/105/510/105/520/20
Oct 16, 2007  
Whoa, this beer is off the charts full of flavor. Huge hops, huge malts, huge alcohol, huge bitterness and a huge bourbon flavor to finish it off. Ridiculously flavor and complex, ridiculously good.


 jimbowood (953), Athens, Georgia, USA
4.6 Aroma Appearance Flavor Palate Overall
10/105/58/105/518/20
Jul 25, 2008  
bottle. Holy crap! Bourbon aging is awesome. Like bourbon co. Stout in the barrel aging. Excellent American strong ale.


amorphiss (34), Santa Cruz, California, USA
4.4 Aroma Appearance Flavor Palate Overall
9/104/510/105/516/20
Jun 19, 2007  
12 oz bottle from the brewery courtesy of Tetrik. Dark copper colored and essentially still. This has an aroma full of bourbon, sweetness, hops, and alcohol. I can tell this is going to be intense... Acidic flavor from the hops as soon as it touches the mouth, leading to sugary sweetness, then to bourbony alcohol, and finishing with an awesome bitterness on the way down the throat. Extremely long aftertaste and very warming. Am I drinking beer? Mouthfeel was surprisingly smooth for something so high gravity. This was really well done for something so outrageous. In my opinion, this is quite a bit nicer than DFH 120 min.


 daknole (2940), Plantation, Florida, USA
4.3 Aroma Appearance Flavor Palate Overall
8/104/59/104/518/20
Nov 13, 2009  
YESSSSSS! Damn this is delicious. Longest beer description ever. Cloudy brownish pour. Aroma is loaded with bourbon, vanilla, sweet fruit and some light hops. Flavor is sweet and rich with bourbon and vanilla all over the place. Delicios. Really awesome.


 GAManiac (1164), Atlanta, Georgia, USA
4.3 Aroma Appearance Flavor Palate Overall
9/104/58/104/518/20
Nov 20, 2008  
12oz bottle courtesy of the overly generous hoppymeal poured into a snifter. ABV reads 15.0%. Pours a deep, clear reddish brown with a small, short-lived cream head that recedes to a ring very quickly leaving only a trace of lacing. The aroma is spectacular. There is a subdued citrus hop presence that I imagine was more dominant when fresh. More dominant now is the huge sweet caramel malt base with toffee, vanilla and dark fruits all over the place. The bourbon makes its presence felt as well but in a perfectly balanced way. The taste is almost as good as the aroma with the sweetness of the caramel malts overtaking the initial hop kick of the first sip. There are raisins and toffee in the middle before giving way to the utterly massive bourbon presence that leaves a burn through the finish. The mouthfeel is sticky and syrupy with little carbonation and with some serious alcohol burn. This is one big ass beer with a whole lot going on. Personally, I loved it and could sip one of these every night, with an emphasis on the sipping. Big thanks to Derek for the opportunity to try this beauty.


 darkguardian (506), Florida, USA
4.2 Aroma Appearance Flavor Palate Overall
9/104/510/104/515/20
Oct 16, 2009  
12oz bottle thanks to Kevin. Man this is a crazy crazy beer. Huge malt backbone on this with tons of caramel, bourbon, brown sugar. It smells somewhat like an english barleywine but you do get a hint of resin and pine on the very backend of the nose. The flavor is rich and very full bodied. And also somewhat hot (but not overly considering the abv). Rich chewy caramel, brown sugar and toasted grain with tons of rich hop flavor. Substantial bitterness but it has a hard time fighting through the malt sweetness and comes out very balanced. This is one of the best "triple" IPA’s I’ve seen. Really really well crafted.


 brewandbbq (269), Manchester, New Hampshire, USA
4.2 Aroma Appearance Flavor Palate Overall
9/103/59/103/518/20
Jan 16, 2009  
2007 Anniversary brew Pours sparkling clear ruby red, with a half inch head of off-white. A few errant dots of lacework remain after the humble foam cap dissolved. Aromatics are brash, boozy, and intense. Black pepper-studded earthy wood gets quickly smothered by boozy whiskey, sweet malt, and alcohol-spiked grapefruit. Some additional citrus tries to step forward, but the bourbon is dominant, and almost nostril clearing. A hint of vanilla and cedar trails behind. Thick and chewy body, with a syrupy, sticky mouthfeel. Sweet malt, bourbon, and juicy citrus lead off the pallet. A building blaze of whiskey fusels steps up and towers over resinous hopping and firm bitterness. Only after a good duration does the whisky start to fade, and some earthy wood makes it’s presense known. Hints of Schezuan peppercorns, grapefruit pith, and vanilla swim in the lingering sweet malt and bourbon fumes. Finishes with lingering boozy heat, a cedar-like earthiness, and juicy malt. This is a big, bad, barleyine. It should be called "no bones about it". This is the beer that would beat up on Angels Share, Arctic Devil, and Fred from The Wood in the sandbox. Very nice, a good follow-up to Black Albert.


 awaisanen (1279), Irvine, California, USA
4.2 Aroma Appearance Flavor Palate Overall
9/104/58/104/517/20
May 5, 2008  
From a 12oz Bottle. Mostly transparent, honey amber pour with a thin finger of tight bubbled, creamy beige head. Slow, plodding legs lace the sides of the glass. Huge oak nose, full of vanilla, bourbon, and spicy wood. Clearly alcoholic, but not harsh, and warms the nostrils in a soothing way. Rich, malty layers of chewy caramel, toffee, and honey glazed brittle come through, along with some raisins and smokey pear. Exquisite nose with layer upon layer of malt and barrel complexity, along with a little age. Full bodied, creamy carbonated mouthfeel with a thick, sticky body. Obviously, the body of a beer this big is going to be quite heavy, but the finish is surprisingly clean and not cloying. Lots of caramel bourbon, toffee, and vanilla up front on the palate, along with some green raisin fruits. Sweet up front, but smooth and complex, developing more of the raisin malt flavors mid-palate. Toward the finish, a resiny hop bitterness begins to grow, bringing forth flavors of pine and grapefruit. This works remarkably well in an otherwise oak-forward, rich malty dessert treat, as it dries up the sugars briskly, leaving behind a "dry" herbal smack. Definitely on of the least cloying and offensive ABV bombs out there, as it drinks dangerously well. Thanks for sharing, Ryan!



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