harrisoni (7113), Ashford, Kent, England
| 4.6 | Aroma | Appearance | Flavor | Palate | Overall | | 10/10 | 4/5 | 9/10 | 4/5 | 19/20 | Apr 1, 2008 Cask handpull at Folkestone Spoons. OK, so I was looking forward to this beer almost more than any other. Even the thought of it brought me out in a big smile. A 7% DIPA brewed in Kent at Sheps, a brewery I sometimes much deride. Stone Ruination is one of my favourite beers too so anything like that would be great. Then I got 2 pints of it and took it upstairs to the gallery of this converted former church (fitting really). The aroma is simply a 10. The dry hopped hop, the simcoes screaming through and then this toffee malt. (2 hours later). The beauty of cask conditioned beer. Earlier it was great on nose, sweetish toffee caramel in mouth, a touch thin even and fantastic hoppy finish. But just something missing. Now the condition is perfect. Still a 10/10 for a leafy dry hopped aroma. Like rubbing a fresh hop flower between your fingers. Some hop resin. But the mouthfeel has got better, creamier, fuller. Still distinct caramel, but wider, fuller mouthfeel to when I first had it. Finish has lasting, oh man, lasting green, simcoe, dry hop flavour. Didn’t know it was going to be on, no idea, just the discovery, the worry about distribution, how much was made, would only specific Spoons get it. I went home after the first 4 pints and then did an 80 minute round trip to come back and have it again just in case I didn’t have it again or in this good a condition. I’ve never had a beer brewed in the UK like it. At no time did the alcohol come through until the next morning when I felt like death. Not as cold or as hard as some US IPAs I’ve had. Funny, I tried it 2 days later in London and couldn’t finish the1/3 pint when I had it through a sparkler (Radox), but I had it later and it was still stunning, but not as good as that first time, but still one of the best UK brewed beers I’ve had.
madmitch76 (1145), , Essex, England
| 4.1 | Aroma | Appearance | Flavor | Palate | Overall | | 9/10 | 4/5 | 8/10 | 4/5 | 16/20 | Oct 21, 2009 3rd April 2008
Fruity aroamtic hops. Bitter but refreshingly so, doesn’t overwhelm with it’s hoppiness! Ethereal (1727), London, Greater London, England
| 4.2 | Aroma | Appearance | Flavor | Palate | Overall | | 8/10 | 4/5 | 8/10 | 5/5 | 17/20 | Jun 15, 2008 Cask at the JDW near Old Street,4th April 2008. Due to my tardiness in typing up this rate, I may well be the last person to rate it. Orangey amber in colour with very little carbonation. There are fruit notes in the nose and on the tongue but of course what you really feel are the HOPS. My notes include the phrase "hopped to ****" and oh my god it works. The finish is seemingly endless and as the previous ratings attest, this beer has turned heads. I wonder what JDW will conjure for next year’s fest. Until then, Stone - I salute you! haddonsman (1234), Derby, Derbyshire, England
| 4.2 | Aroma | Appearance | Flavor | Palate | Overall | | 8/10 | 4/5 | 9/10 | 4/5 | 17/20 | May 8, 2008 Cask, various Spoons across the Midlands. Let’s get the beer porn bit out the way first; vicious hop nose, viscous sap mouthfeel, gold body gilded with a pillowy head, a melange of fruit borne unto the palate by ranks of cherubim and serpahim.... a great beer? Yes. At less than two quid a pint. Fantastic. A style that challenges British brewers to come up with something more imaginative than yet another festival mix? Possibly. A one-off experience that GB Ratebeerians are already getting dewy-eyed about? Probably. A beer that I’m glad to have hammered (session drinking round here is a hard knock life)? Certainly. leaparsons (4930), Leicester, Leicestershire, England
| 4.4 | Aroma | Appearance | Flavor | Palate | Overall | | 9/10 | 4/5 | 9/10 | 4/5 | 18/20 | Apr 26, 2008 Cask, The Last Plantagenet and two other JDWs. Golden with an off-white head, quite viscous. Aromas are lots of apricot and sweet grapefruit with woody notes. Spicy and peppery with pine. Almost like an aftershave. Flavours are fruity with melon, apricot and citrus. Bitter green pine with woody notes. Slightly herbal with oranges. Grapefruit with bitterness on the finish. Addictive and very good. bobinlondon (859), Harrow, Greater London, England
| 4.8 | Aroma | Appearance | Flavor | Palate | Overall | | 10/10 | 5/5 | 9/10 | 5/5 | 19/20 | Apr 20, 2008 Updated: Mar 7, 2009Handpulled cask at several JDW pubs durng their international beer fest. I was very excited to read about this beer in Spoon’s festival program and fortunately didn’t have long to wait until it appeared at my office local. It looked great, orange with an off-white head. The aroma was as strong and apertising as any beer I’ve ever encountered, the smell of huge quantities of hops hitting me long before I raised the glass to my nose The taste was was an absolute explosion of flavours. The most complex hop characture I’ve ever experienced but balanced by the juicest malts. The resinous hop oils present made this powerful brew slip down far too easily so my lunch break pint didn’t last long. The flavours remained with me four hours later when I clocked off from work and I headed sraight back to the pub for more. Alas, they had understandably sold out. Over the next two weeks I visited a couple of dozen or more Spoons pubs by bike, bus, car or train in search of this wonderful beer and was lucky enough to find it four more times. I tried it with/ without sparkler, fresh barrel / last pint out of barrel, sipping and making it last or a 5 pint quaffing session where it just got better and better until I could barely speak and was ordered out of the pub by my wife! It was never anything short of delicious and was without doubt the best british brewed beer I have ever sampled. Hats off to JDW for making this happen and PLEASE commission some more for your next festival. Ughsmash (4265), Waukesha, Wisconsin, USA
| 4.3 | Aroma | Appearance | Flavor | Palate | Overall | | 9/10 | 4/5 | 9/10 | 3/5 | 18/20 | Apr 16, 2008 Thank you to a great friend from across the pond for getting me a hand-bottle of this! Poured crystal-clear, lighter orangey-golden with some loose bubbles sticking around for head.. lovely color to it. The flavor picked up juicy grapefruit and pears from the Simcoe (I’m a mega-sucker for Simcoe) with layers of soft caramel, pine, and sweet grapefruit meat.. I smelled this for about 15 minutes before I thought to drink some. The flavor retained the juiciness with sweet pear juice and grapefruit meat.. caramel provided more substance and texture than flavor.. bitterness was moderate-high, again with the juicy fruits and pine.. the finish was long-ish and a great memory of this drink! Roughly medium-bodied on the palate with very low carbonation.. gave it a bit of a slick feel.. again a long, succulent finish. I’m stoked that this survived the journey so well! Awesome beer! chimplechamp (470), Oslo, Norway
| 3.9 | Aroma | Appearance | Flavor | Palate | Overall | | 8/10 | 4/5 | 8/10 | 2/5 | 17/20 | Apr 14, 2008 cask at weatherspoons by george square, pours hazy golden yellow, pure white head smells hoppy, and distinctly american. citrus earth malt. taste is slightly almost watered down. brown sugar, barn almost wheat taste. great hop character very balanced. some length on the finish. vegetal. i canna believe it was only 1.69 this shit would have cost me $6 in the states. JonMoore (1562), Loughborough, Leicestershire, England
| 4.7 | Aroma | Appearance | Flavor | Palate | Overall | | 9/10 | 5/5 | 9/10 | 5/5 | 19/20 | Apr 12, 2008 Cask at Moon and Bell Wetherspoons, Loughborough. A superb IPA. I was shocked at how good this was. Crystal clear, superb body, dry, hoppy. By far the best beer I’ve had in a Wetherspoons - and one of the best casks I’ve had anywhere.
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