Breweries "Visited"

Showing posts with label SweetWater. Show all posts
Showing posts with label SweetWater. Show all posts

Monday, June 10, 2013

Day 548: Sweetwater Low Ryeder

Yeah, this photo pretty much sums up my evenings.

Today's beer is the Low Ryeder IPA from SweetWater Brewing Company -- a rye IPA. Per SweetWater's description, it is: "A flame throwin’ Rye IPA ignited by a 25% shot of rye malt and capped by a booty hoppin’ blast of Mt Hood and Centennial hops that makes this IPA bounce!"

It poured a deep golden color ale with a slight haze and a medium white head. There was a bit of sticky lacing left behind. It has an orange and hop aroma and the flavor falls in line with that. Lots of citrus (orange) hops. It's a bit bready. And there's a little sweetness hanging around.

Beer stats
Style: Rye IPA
ABV: 6.2%
IBUs: 45
Rating: Good

Sunday, May 26, 2013

What Time Should I Come Over

Day #533 LowRYEder IPA / SweetWater Brewing Company, Atlanta, GA
Previously from this brewery: I sampled the Festive Ale and made Sweetchuck references

Happy Sunday and middle day of the three day holiday weekend to you all!  Went out and got some exercise in, now spending this glorious, sunny afternoon inside staring at the screen of my laptop.  Curiously, no one has invited me to a Memorial Day cookout yet.  Is that because no one is having a cookout this weekend, because my friends all suck, or because.... I didn't get invited to a cookout this weekend?  Has to be one of the first two, right?  Couldn't be the third, not that I'd want to even go to your stupid BBQ anyway.  Jerks.

Well, I'll have my own party, and start it off with a LowRYEder IPA from SweetWater Brewing in Atlanta.  SweetWater hasn't managed to make it's way to Pennsylvania yet, but I have a friend with family down south who shared a bottle as a gift.  When you pour this one, you see a light copper color and a barely there head.  There are aromas of orange and pine, and when you take a sip you find notes of earthy pine, citrus, and a very prominent rye spiciness and warmth.  Some good bitterness on the finish, and at 6.25% ABV this is eminently drinkable.  You know, like maybe at a cookout at your house this weekend, or something.
All... my... friends, drink the LowRYEder
This brewery just hit their 16th anniversary.  Let me go ahead and take a moment to wish a very happy anniversary!!

Thing to Think About Today:
Sometimes the jokes write themselves.  I mean, there's no way I can use anything but this song here, right?

Wednesday, May 23, 2012

SweetWater, Sweetchuck, Sweet Music

Beer #165 Festive Ale / SweetWater Brewing Company, Atlanta, GA

One of the luxuries we treat ourselves to is a cleaning service.  Oddly, our cleaning ladies rearrange everything in our house when they work.  The furniture tends to stay where it was, but everything else (picture frames, dog beds, decorations, candles, kitchen items) are always in a new spot when we get home.  Do they do it to prove they cleaned and picked things up to do it, or do they do it because our feng shui is crazy out of whack?

Next up in the series of beers and breweries is the Festive Ale from SweetWater Brewing out of Atlanta.  Festive ale, as in winter and Christmas?  Yeah, that festive ale.  SweetWater only distributes to limited cities in the southeast, and we acquired this through a gift from someone who got it from someone in North Carolina.  I think that's the chain of custody; I didn't ask many questions.  However, December in Georgia is probably about the same temperature as May in Pennsylvania, so it works.  It pours a black color in the glass, with a thin off white head.  Your nose picks up malt and dark fruit aromas, and the taste gives you roasted malt, spices (cinnamon?), and some coffee bitterness.  Those who know me I'm not wild about beers that verge into coffee/burnt/roasted flavors, but this one is okay in my book.  Probably better enjoyed in actual winter, but we'll worry about that come next December.

It's a picture of a fish on the label. My phone SUCKS.

This brewery has a fun story behind it - two roommates at the University of Colorado fall in love with craft beer, start working jobs in the industry to get experience, and after a few years end up opening up shop in the ATL.  Doors open in 1997, and they've managed to carve out a niche for themselves ever since.


Thing to Think About Today:
As much as I wanted to play on the brewery name and make a Sweetchuck joke - Sweetchuck was the hilariously nerdy cop in the Police Academy series - it didn't seem to fit.  So, on to some music about Georgia.  Oddly, the state of Georgia finds itself into the titles of way more songs than it probably warrants.  Let's go with one of the best, and let Gladys Knight and the Pips bring us home on the Midnight Train to Georgia: