electric ray ipl

New Beer Blog Sierra Nevada Beer Camp Hoppy Lager (2015)


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In this beer blog, we are going to get into the new spring seasonal from Sierra Nevada Brewery.  Their Ruthless Rye takes a step asides as it enters the 4-Way IPA Sampler pack.  The beer that is being featured is their Beer Camp Hoppy Lager.  If you read my earlier beer blog posts on their beers, you know the history of this west coast craft brewery.  If you have not, please, read them to get to know this craft brewery legend.  Let us get into this Lager.

This Lager has a clear golden color with a constant white head. The aroma is really faded to non existed. The taste has a hoppy to slight and light malt notes. The aftertaste has a dry hop bitter finish. It is extremely drinkable beer.

Here is a description from the beer bottle:

This hop-heavy beer combines intense citrus and floral hop flavors with the clean, classic malt body of a hearty blonde lager for a crisp but aggressive take on the India Style Pale Lager.

Last summer we teamed up with San Diego’s Ballast Point for a hop-head twist on a crisp lager.  We remixed this encore which is loaded with whole-cone hops in the brew kettle and in our Hop Torpedo to deliver a bold aroma backed by smooth malt flavor

Here is a description from their website (www.sierranevada.com):

Beer Camp® Hoppy Lager

A hop-heavy twist on the classic blonde lager.

Beer Camp is the ultimate brewing experience. We bring beer fans into our brewery nearly every week to create their own beer with us—the more daring the better—and each spring we’ll highlight one of the small-batch standouts. Last year, Beer Camp worked overtime. Along with our fan brews, we made 12 additional beers with 12 exceptional breweries. Choosing one for an encore wasn’t easy. Ever drawn to hops, we decided to reimagine our hoppy lager collaboration with Ballast Point.

Bitter vs. Hoppy

There is a general misconception regarding the bitterness of beer versus how hoppy a beer tastes. A beer’s IBU number is based on a measurement of how much bitter hop acid is in the packaged beer. Hoppiness on the other hand, is a relative thing and can’t be put into numbers. If both bitterness and hoppiness come from adding hops to beer, how can bitterness and hoppiness be disconnected?
Bitterness comes from adding hops to the kettle. There, the boiling process causes a chemical change in the hops (isomerization) which allows the resinous acids to mix with the liquid without separating out. Adding hops to the kettle after the boiling has stopped or adding hops into the fermenter (such as in dry hopping or our hop torpedo process) allows hop oils to mix with the beer—the source of most of the hop flavor and aroma—without adding bitterness. A beer can be hoppy but not bitter, and vice versa, but looking only at IBU doesn’t give a good measure of the hop flavor in a finished beer.

Ale versus Lager

All beer is broken down into two camps: ale or lager. The principal difference is the variety of yeast. Ales use a yeast called Saccharomyces cerevisiae, referred to as “top fermenting” because of the frothy foam created during fermentation. Lagers use a yeast called Saccharomyces pastorianus, called “bottom fermenting” because of the slower, restrained fermentation process. Ales are fermented at warmer temperatures and generally produce more fruity and spicy aromas from the yeast. Lagers are fermented at cooler temperatures and produce cleaner, more reserved aromas, which let the malt and hops shine through.

Dry HopsWe work hard to get strong hop flavors into our beers and one of the ways we do that is through dry hopping. Dry hopping refers to the addition of whole-cone hops to the fermentation tanks. The addition of hops to cold beer allows the aromatic oils and resins to infuse the beer with flavor and aroma without adding any additional bitterness.

Here is a their website and twitter addresses:

Website:  www.sierranevada.com

Twitter:  @sierranevada

In the end, I knew going through the Beer Camp Sampler pack that this brew or one of those beers would become an everyday or seasonal brew from Sierra Nevada.  I enjoyed  that IPL.  I am happy that I can get it for the whole spring season now.  I love it. It is a very drinkable.  This beer has a nice balance from the hops but with a nice crisp and clean finish.  This beer is perfect for the hopheads in the world but it will get some lager heads looking and trying this brew.  They might like it. I highly recommend this beer.  Go get some!  Drink it!  Enjoy it!  Metal it!  \m/

Cheers!

Bill DJ Weiser

Email:  djweiser16@gmail.com

Twitter:  @djweiser

Instagram:  @djweiser13

New Beer Blog Sierra Nevada Beer Camp Ballast Point Electric Ray IPL


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In this special set of beer blogs, we are going to get into the first of twelve beers from Sierra Nevada’s Beer Camp sampler pack.   You will notice a theme throughout these beers.  The name of the beers and beer styles is taken from the partner craft breweries.   The first one that I picked is partner Ballast Point Brewery.  It is Electric Ray IPL.  Ballast Point Brewery was founded in 1996 by Jack and Yuseff.  It came from a home brewing supply shop that they opened in 1992.  The themes of this brewery is coming from the sea, water, or ocean.  They brew several different beer styles but they are known for their IPA’s like most West Coast craft breweries.  Let us get into this IPL.

It has a clear light copper color with a constant white head.  The aroma has floral to grapefruit notes.  The taste has a light carbonation grapefruit notes with a dry grapefruit finish for the aftertaste.   It is pretty drinkable beer.

Here is a description from the beer bottle:

This nautically named India Pale Lager combines intense cirtusy, floral American hops with the clean, classic malt body of a blonde lager.

As ever, San Diego’s Ballast Point looked the sea for inspiration.  A play on the fish’s scientific name – Torpedo California – Electric Ray pays homage to our Hop Torpedo, the source of much of this beer’s big flavor.  Its massive grapefruit and floral notes deliver a high-voltage hit of hop flavor.

Here is a description from their website (www.beercamp.sierranevada.com):

As ever, San Diego’s Ballast Point looked to the sea for the inspiration behind Electric Ray. A play on the fish’s scientific name—Torpedo californica—this beer pays homage to our mutual home state, as well as to our Hop Torpedo, the source of much of the big flavor in this high voltage, hop-forward Imperial Pale Lager.

Ballast Point brought their homebrewing dreams to the big leagues and started brewing professionally, but they never forgot their roots. They still run a successful homebrewing supply shop in San Diego. A love for hops and the ocean inspire incredible brewed and distilled offerings, and their one-of-a-kind labels boast some beautiful, and sometimes gnarly-lookin’, fish.

Here is their website and twitter addresses:

Website:  www.ballastpoint.com and www.sierranevada.com

Twitter:  @bpbrewing and @sierranevada

Closing, it is kind of fitting the fact that there would be IPL in this pack.  IPL is a growing beer style in the world of IPA’s.  I love the fact they named it after Electric Ray because of Ballast Point (BP).  BP using fishes and everything in the water to name their beers.  I really love the packaging  and how it explains the back story of the partner brewery.  I love how it explains their thoughts on why they picked this beer style.  Of course, being a Hophead, I had to pick one of the India Pale Ale or Lager.  I love the aroma and the taste profile that this beer offer.  This is one of the best beers in this pack.  I realize this is the first one I had in this pack that I am doing a write up but when I am finish this review up.  I will already had about half of this pack.  I recommend you getting a pack if you can find one.  Go get some!  Drink it!  Enjoy it!  Metal it!  \m/

Cheers!

Bill DJ Weiser

Email:  djweiser13@comcast.net

Twitter:  @djweiser

Instagram:  @djweiser13