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Shorts Imperial Black Cherry Porter 3.64 85

Shorts Imperial Black Cherry Porter

Percentile
94
overall

bottled
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unknown

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RatingsAverageScoreABVStyle PctlServe in
853.7/5.03.64/5.08.75%60.2Snifter
Commercial Description:
Robust imperial porter fermented with 780lbs of Michigan sweet black cherries. <br /><br /> I’ve been brewing this beer every summer since 2004, so it’s essentially the odd beer in the series. We bottled it as a ’safety’ beer in case I couldn’t finish the rest of the series in time. Every year when the sweet black cherries are ripe and falling off the trees we go fill up our giant tub full of cherries. Every year I have processed the cherries differently. The first time I attempted to mash them up by stomping on hem with my bare feet. After lots and lots of mashing and frozen purple toes, I went to a blender. One pitcher at a time for 500 pounds they were chopped and tossed into the fermenter. The following year I tried pressing them with an apple press with struggled results. On this particular batch I bought pitted cherries and went back to the blend, one pitcher at a time until all 500 lbs. were blended and poured into the fermenter. Northern Michigan is a leading cherry produced in the United States primarily with the tart cherry production. Its sweet cherry production ranks in the top four with the Grand Traverse region producing 80% of the production at 50 million pounds. Cherries contain anthocyanins which are strong anti-oxidants that reduce pain and inflammations. Cherries also contain melatonin which is great for strengthening the immune system. They are rich in vitamin C and potassium which is good for your skin and for a healthy heart. Sweet cherries date back to pre-historic Asia. They have been enjoyed for centuries by Roman conquerers, Greek citizens and Chinese noblemen. Pliny the Elder tells us they arrived in Italy around 74 B.C. They made their way to Britain and across the ocean a few hundred years later. The Black Cherry Porter Recipe was our very first "imperial" strength beer ever brewed at SBC. I remember nearly overflowing the mash tun with malt until it crested the top of the man way doors, and staying with it all night long because the thick heavy mash made the process extremely slow. This beer was important to include in the series because it’s a good example of the ridiculous amount of work we put into the imperial series. We try to keep our ingredients fresh and local, putting the power of the smallness back into the hardworking Northern Michigander. This is one example of a luscious American porter touched with a subtle essence of Northern Michigan sweet black cherries.
 Most Recent Top Raters Highest Ratings Who's Rated This?  
 otakuden (518), Vero Beach, Florida, USA
3.2 Aroma Appearance Flavor Palate Overall
8/104/56/103/511/20
Aug 6, 2009  
She appears before me sporting proud colors of black pitch while light tries to break through with very little success. Thick, she coats the sides of my glass, clinging much like the tears of a fine, well aged single malt would. This is obviously a portend of heavy, mouth-coating quaffing to come. But before I sup, I must snuff, and as I bury my nose deep in her bounty, black cherries still reeking of the earth she was born in overwhelms almost all other senses. Dry wood, earth, and dried black cherry pits receive a flurry of dry, powdered chocolate bark. Interesting. As I mull over the debate within my olfactory senses, I raise my glass and dive deep once more, this time into her liquid bounty. Thin, much thinner than I was expecting considering how black she poured and how well she clings stubbornly to the sides of my glass. Faint touches of chocolate, cherry juice, and dried, brittle, bitter cherry pits. There is an overall subtle sense of staleness, of a cherry chocolate bar long past its lifespan, sitting forlorn and lonesome on some dusty convenience store shelf. Her finish is dry and rank with turned black cherries and dry, dusty pits. Not very pleasing at all; a huge surprise considering her nose. Thankfully, the pour I gave myself was not very large; we couldn’t part ways any sooner.

To go back to my introductory rambles, this is where many a beer drinker would be divided. As a less than stellar, dare I say bad, brew, has imperializing and experimenting with beers gone far? Were imperial stouts never meant to be mixed with black cherries and other assorted natural ingredients? Why not, I say. Sure, the Imperial Black Cherry Stout from Shorts Brewing was not very balanced and tasty, but it could have been. There was no way for me to know without tasting and trying which is half the fun. Brewing horizons are only as near or as far as we make them, and the journey isn’t always going to be met with success. Should Short’s ever attempt a better balanced version of this brew, of course I’d try it again. It very well could be brewing nirvana descended unto my glass and my lips.


 nbutler11 (771), Phoenix, Arizona, USA
4.2 Aroma Appearance Flavor Palate Overall
10/104/57/104/517/20
Jul 22, 2009  
On tap at the brewery. Pours a charcoal color with a trim tan head of foam. Smells of sweet black cherries, toasted malt, and powdered cocoa -- amazing. Tastes a step down in complexity, unfortunately, almost like the water content is too high. There’s malt, but it’s not dense. Fine for a porter, but just shy of its potential. Great stuff, regardless.


 lb4lb (2011), Austin, Texas, USA
2.3 Aroma Appearance Flavor Palate Overall
5/103/54/103/58/20
Jul 18, 2009  
Bottle from Charles. Thanks dude! Pours black, smell is metallic and roasty with some dry cherry and taste is dry, metallic and roasted malt with cherry. Not good.


 punkrkr27 (650), Berkley, Michigan, USA
3.2 Aroma Appearance Flavor Palate Overall
5/104/56/104/513/20
Jun 29, 2009  
Black pour with a small tan head. Tannic, vegetal cherry aroma with hints of roast malt and bakers chocolate. The flavor was more of the same with a touch of coffee. The body was full and creamy with a soft carbonation. This just seemed like it had a very flat character overall and wasn’t terribly interesting.


 SpudClampDawg (1027), Jasper, Indiana, USA
3 Aroma Appearance Flavor Palate Overall
6/103/56/102/513/20
May 30, 2009  
750ml bottle: This one seems to be on the downward slope. Deep black pour with a soft head that fades. A strong aroma of cherry and chocolate, though the cherries become slightly medicinal and winey. The body is thinner than expected - and doesn’t support the fruit. The carbonation is also just a bit spritzy, detracting from the attempted blend of acidic fruit and malt. An interesting combo that I wish the brewery would stop selling.


 ThomasE (5178), Copenhagen, Denmark
3.6 Aroma Appearance Flavor Palate Overall
7/104/57/104/514/20
May 12, 2009  
Black colour with a small brown head. Light roasted and fruity aroma with notes of earth and coffee. Roasted, dry earthy flavor with fruity notes.


 GAManiac (1197), Atlanta, Georgia, USA
3.7 Aroma Appearance Flavor Palate Overall
8/104/57/103/515/20
May 10, 2009  
750mL bottle #558, courtesy of rlcnmeyer, poured into a snifter. This one pours dark, dark brown out of the bottle and settles in completely black in the glass. The head is big and tan and hangs onto the glass on the way down leaving spotty lacing. I’d swear the head has hints of pink in it, but I could be crazy. The nose is outstanding. It has the standard roasted dark malt backbone with some coffee, cocoa and licorice. The sweetness of the cherries is there but very subtle and doesn’t disrupt the big porter character as much as it accentuates it. The taste brings out a little more of the cherries. It has an initial tart cherry sweetness that immediately gives way to the roasted malts and coffee. The finish is interesting and has a bit of dry roasted character but with a definite tart cherry presence. The mouthfeel is medium bodied with good carbonation and an interesting mix of roasted character with sweetness and a slight dryness mixed together. Another interesting and excellent take on a style by Shorts. The cherries add just the right amount and tartness and sweetness without becoming the centerpiece of the solid porter underneath. Very nice.


 jcr (1190), Jasper, Indiana, USA
3.7 Aroma Appearance Flavor Palate Overall
8/103/58/103/515/20
May 10, 2009  
750ml. Dark brown body, almost black. The head is frothy and tan, but disappears quickly. Inviting aroma of roasted malts just bordering on burnt, chocolate and husky grain. Less dominating, but there is black cherry. The flavor is moderately to heavily sweet and lightly bitter and lightly acidic. The finish turns moderately bitter and moderately sweet. Medium body with a watery texture and moderate carbonation. Tastes of slightly burnt malts compliment the not-so-overwhelming cherry flavor. Shorts beers, if nothing else, are creative and interesting. Nice blend of flavors.



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