Spirited Brewery # 1 – Fermentery Form

This month I am going to highlight breweries in towns rich in distilled history as well as breweries, we start in Pennsylvania where Rye is king at Fermentery Form.

Slo Mo 2020 – “blended from 2 year old barrels from our Solera, and aged on cherry and blackberry purée. It tastes of bright, lush cherries, with just a touch of blackberry jam, finishing light and refreshing.”

Carménère – “a blend of 5 barrels that refermented on whole Carménère wine grapes for around 3 months. The resulting beer has a beautiful purple color, a lovely barrel aroma, and drinks like a wonderful marriage of the grape and the selected beer.”

Vieux Selection – “culmination of 3 years of careful beer preservation and maturation in oak barrels. We’ve been inspired to do much of what we do, but the tradition of Belgian Lambic. Our favorite being Geuze, the blend of 1, 2 and 3 year old barrel aged beers. While our process differs from traditional Lambic in significant ways, the inspiration still comes through in the bottle. This beer has complex layers of flavor that come from the careful selection of barrels to blend. The aroma is earthy, minerally and spicy, the taste is a balance of tart fruits, woody resinous sweetness, and pithy bitterness. While being one of the most complex beers we have ever made, it’s still easy to drink.”

Review – Thomas Jefferson’s Tavern Ale from Yards Brewing

Part of a “revolutionary” series that includes a Tavern porter for Geo. Washington and a Tavern Spruce for Ben Franklin, Thom. Jefferson’s Tavern Ale is my first foray into beer from Yards in Philadelphia.

tj1

Pours a bright red and orange with lots of bubbles pulling upward. Aroma is wort-ish and bready. Tastes a bit green and undercooked. Because it’s a historical beer. I can’t claim with certainty that it is under done. Some baking bread notes but otherwise not tasting good to me.  Though as it warms it gets more of a maple taste that is more palatable to me.

I hope this was a random mis-fire or an old beer.

Beer Right Now!

I am not in Philadelphia or New York. But if I was, I would be intrigued by this beer delivery service. Beer Right Now pretty much tells you what they do right up front.

And by the logo, you can tell that they are not totally craft driven. I took a spin on some Philadelphia choices and most were fairly bad. Though there was a glimmer of hope in the form of Yards, Troegs and Yuengling. Maybe as this rolls out more craft beers will pop up because otherwise they will be ignoring a large chunk of the audience that really likes to spend money on beer.