Start 14-Day Trial Subscription

*No credit card required

David Sapsis's picture

Judge's Review: 94 Rating - Rye Whiskey Barrel Aged Imperial Brown Ale by pFriem Family Brewers

October, 2021

Rye Whiskey Barrel Aged Imperial Brown Ale

Rye Whiskey Barrel Aged Imperial Brown Ale

Rye Whiskey Barrel Aged Imperial Brown Ale, pFriem Family Brewers
Description 

Aged in rye whiskey barrels for a year, our Imperial Brown Ale pours a black walnut hue, bursting with rich notes of brandied cherry, toffee and a kiss of char. It’s ideal for sharing fireside stories under a starry, western sky.

Beverage Profile
ABV: 
12.3%
IBUs: 
45
Served at: 
45º - 50º F
Malts: 
Simpsons- Marris Otter-Finest, Golden Promise, Crystal Dark, DRC, Brown Malt, Chocolate, Roasted Barley, Golden Naked Oats
Hops: 
Warrior, Chinook, Cascade

 

 


The rating and full judge's review for this product is available only to premium subscribers.

Login / Subscribe

Not yet a subscriber? Visit the store now.
Options start for only $9.95!


Judges Rating: 
94
Aroma: 
22 / 24
Appearance: 
5 / 6
Flavor: 
37 / 40
Mouthfeel: 
10 / 10
Overall Impression: 
19 / 20

Rye Whiskey Barrel Aged Imperial Brown Ale by pFriem Family Brewers was judged under BJCP category 33 B, Specialty Wood-Aged Beer, with the underling style being a high-gravity brown ale. 

The beer is served at 50oF in a large snifter after a hearty pour, exhibiting a very dark brown color with nice ruby-mahogany tones, and holding a half-inch thick layer of creamy khaki-colored foam with good stand.  

The nose is malty and caramel-sweet in the front, with a nice nuttiness and somewhat pronounced oaky-whiskey-peppery note that complements the fruitiness coming through from the ferment. The barrel character has a distinct rye note of spicy-pepper, and it works as a nice complement to the perceived sweetness. As the beer warms further and under swirling, I get some roasty-burnt notes mingling with appreciable booziness.  

The beer's flavor starts rich and malty with a surprisingly short-lived roasty and fleetingly strong bitter note, before the emergent whisky barrel elements of vanilla, dark-dried fruit, spice (!), and alcohol take over the mid-palate. The rye character is very strong. Caramel, walnut and prune flavors surface in the late mouthfeel with a well balanced and full-bodied character. The finish is off-dry with whiskey heat and a nice lingering bitterness. The beer's moderate carbonation and distinct lasting bitterness seems to keep the beer from being decidedly sweet. Profile-wise, the sweetness curve shows a log decay, while the bimodal bitter/spice/heat with very long tail sits over this, producing a really neat succession of flavors.

While the early flavor has some stout-like elements of roasty-charred character, and the beer's malt-balanced brown ale pedigree seems a little hard to find, this is a (very) dark and stoutish ale of super strong character with an amazing barrel expression of rye whisky. I, myself, love rye whisky -- more so than bourbon actually (sacrilege to some, I know), but people be warned, this beer has a lot of rye whisky character interleaved into a caramel, dark fruit/nut alcohol bomb. As is, the beer works fine as a superlative finisher/digestif, but would also help to make a slice of good fruited cheesecake disappear. This is a pretty unique and delicious beer, and I salute the brewers.