Up From the Cellar – The Stoic from Deschutes

cellar

Deschutes Brewery is in the Up From the Cellar spotlight this month and we first cut through the wax on the bottle of The Stoic.  Now this bottle had a “Best By” date of August 2012.  So we are a year and half past their expert opinion.  Which I trust because they deal with this beer more than I do.  That doesn’t bode well for the taste on this beer though.

Thankfully, my Ratebeer review of the beer comes from around the time that I bought this bottle.  So now I can compare what I thought then to now with a little more accuracy.

From 2011: This is a big and smooth beer. Slightly viscous. Big raisin and prune type flavors intermingle with just a touch of oak in the background. A by the fireplace beer.

20140422-121947.jpgOh the wax seal on a bottle.  How I am fearful of and challenged by you.  I actually was able to gain a foothold for the opener to pry off the cap without having to hack off too much wax which was an accomplishment.  As I cleaned up, a gentle cork sized bubbling very slowly foamed up the neck.  I would have had to wait another 30 minutes probably for anything to actually gush out.

This version had pomegranate added and 16.5% was aged in oak wine barrels and another 16.5% was aged in oak rye whiskey barrels. Why that very precise amount, I don’t know.  Maybe they tasted 17% and said that was too much.

The pomegranate is potent in this. Sticky and sweet. In both aroma and taste. Still has some bubbles to it which helps alleviate that minor flaw. There is a minor undercurrent of tannic wine notes but it is below the surface for sure. It doesn’t taste boozy at all though. Which I thought it would be from the whiskey barrel.  The more it warms up in the glass, the more prune type of notes rise up.  But they never reclaim the top spot from the pomegranate.

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THE VERDICT – I guess we learned today that pomegranate doesn’t drop out of aged beers.  Good to know!  Both of the barrel aged portions must have though which robbed this beer from being balanced.  I mentioned viscous in my initial review and that is still here too.  It is quite silky in the mouthfeel. It is less a “fireplace” beer now and much more of an after dinner sweet drink in the vein of a sherry.  I would have to label this experiment as not working.  I should have took the labels word for it.

Be Stoic about it

I have an Abyss in my cellar and this new offering might need to take the spot next to it.

“The newest beer in Deschutes Brewery’s coveted Reserve Series, The Stoic’s journey from Belgian-style Tripel to American Quad is a remarkable one. A simple German Pilsner malt bill and a low-key profile of Hallartau, Czech Saaz, and Northern Brewer hops equip you for the more distinctive aromas and flavors that lay ahead. Ingredients like Belgian candy sugar, beet and date sugars, and pomegranate molasses impart a clean, tangy sweetness. Pinot Noir and rye whiskey barrel-aging suggest notes of spice, citrus, pepper, vanilla, and toasted caramel like offerings to the gods. Unraveling the intricacies of The Stoic is evidence of a life bravely done.”