Leieritz Brewing Company (Three Daughters) Reviews




Clarkdvm
3.3
Three Daughters Hard Times Stout Ale
Looks and smells great but mediocre taste. It is an oatmeal stout no doubt but just doesn’t stand out
Saturday, December 21, 2013

madmitch76
2.7
Three Daughters Hard Times Stout Ale
23rd May 2011
Opaque black beer, tiny off white head. Light airy palate. Semi dry. Minerals. Light touch of dark malt. Some lactose sweetness. Semi dry finish. All a bit standard and watery.

Sunday, January 6, 2013

RobertDale
2.9
Three Daughters Double Header American Bock Ale
22 ounce bottle. Pours a hazy amber with a large white head. Aroma of fruit, malt, caramel, and toffee. Taste is dark fruit, citrus, malt, caramel, and toffee. Alcohol at the finish. Decent.
Thursday, September 13, 2012

ads135
0.5
Three Daughters Double Header American Bock Ale
I’m not the biggest fan of Bocks and I’m certainly not a style purist, but this still seems off.Caramel and some brown sugar present. Rich and creamy, with a strangely heavy amount of citrus hops.
Sunday, July 29, 2012

cubs
2
Three Daughters Independence Hefeweizen
Bottle @ home. I’m always excited to try new local wheat beers, especially German Hefeweizens. Cloudy, yellow orange appearance with a bubbly, white head. Fairly spicy, citrusy, yeasty, wheat malty aroma. Sour wheat, citrusy, tangy, yeasty flavor. This must be infected... I wonder how long it was on the shelf.
Wednesday, October 26, 2011

notalush
2
Three Daughters Hard Times Stout Ale
I decided I was going to jump on this grenade, since no one else on the site seemed willing to do so - bottle - very fizzy pour, looking like cola - head dissipates completely within a few seconds - first whiffs in the nose are acidic, malt vinegar - shit...infected - some rich chocolate malt hiding underneath, but the acidity makes it hard to appreciate what is obviously the intended character of the beer underneath - the flavor begins with the acidic, vinegar-like character the nose displayed, although it is not as prominent as in the nose - behind that follows rich cocoa, moderate roast, a bit of nuttiness - a shame really, as it seems like the non-infected beer would be quite good (a couple points for the beer I think it could be) - lingering sourness in the finish - if you are a new brewery that gets most of your exposure to the public through your bottled product, you had better make damn sure that your shit doesn’t get infected - now I have a whole six pack of this crap to deal with - inexcusable.
Thursday, July 14, 2011

cubs
3.2
Three Daughters Double Header American Bock Ale
Bottle @ home. Bock ale?! WTF? I guess lush caught this too. Very lively, carbonated, white head with a yellow golden body. Quite sweet malty, lightly citrusy ale nose with some bitterness. Sweet pale malty, bock-like flavor with citrus notes that is an ale. Interesting beer and I am pleasantly surprised. I am still not sure this should be classified as a Dunkler Bock or even a Bock.
Sunday, May 15, 2011

Camons
3.3
Three Daughters Double Header American Bock Ale
Bottle @ Hotelroom, Denver. Opens with a loud " POOFF " and a geyser out of the bottle;( Pours hazy golden with a bbig, but fast dismishing white head. Aroma of Caramel, toffee and sweet fruit, citruss. Taste is sweet caramel, sweet bread, toffee, abricot, some lemon / citrussnotes. Mmedium body, soft lively carbonation. 100411
Sunday, April 10, 2011

Ratman197
3.1
Three Daughters Double Header American Bock Ale
Bomber poured a hazy golden amber with a lasting offwhite head. Aromas of bread, carmel, light earthiness and a hint of fruittiness. Palate was medium bodied and smooth Flavors of bread, light carmel and a hint of citrus with a smooth finish.
Saturday, November 27, 2010

Atom
3.3
Three Daughters Double Header American Bock Ale
Bomber pours hazy copper/orange with large fluffy white head. Aroma is pear, apricot, raisin, spice, and toffee. Taste is similar to aroma starts very fruity into spice with a bitter dry toffee and nutty finish, taste is very sweet all the way through. For as sweet as this is I’d like to see a little more malt all the way through, otherwise a decent beer.
Saturday, November 6, 2010

drjay44
3.1
Three Daughters Double Header American Bock Ale
22 oz. bottle. Pours a large, fluffy white head, over a slightly cloudy amber, (SRM 7) body.....nose is doughy, fruity with light plum, slight raisin, toffee/ caramel....taste is sweet malts (toffee/caramel, brown sugar) to start, then plum, raisin, finishing with a sharp and harsh bitterness, which lingers.....mouth feel is light to medium, hot alcohol arrives at the finish, carbonation after the initial burst is low. The bitterness and alcohol heat of the finish are off putting, and are the flaws in an otherwise nice beer. BJCP 6/3/12/4/6
Sunday, July 18, 2010

notalush
3.4
Three Daughters Double Header American Bock Ale
Bomber - American bock...ale? - all style designation aside, this is an interesting brew - pours a hazy medium reddish brown - lively body that kicks up a substantial, lasting head - the aroma is all you would expect of a bock - lightly doughy - notes of caramel, toffee, raisin, date, a light bit of spice - a touch of earthiness - full carbonation, creamy mouthfeel - starts with sweet notes of caramelized sugars and date, a bit of fig - gets drier and fairly spicy through the middle - arriving late is some bitterness and alcohol spiciness that slightly derails the experience - lingering dry bitterness and caramel - turn down the bitterness and mask that alcohol in the finish, and you’ll have a killer bock "ale" here - for now, though, it is still decent.
Wednesday, June 30, 2010

notalush
3.5
Three Daughters Independence Hefeweizen
Draft at Atomic Cowboy aka Fat Sully’s Pizza aka Denver Biscuit Company - a pretty solid American-made hefe - cloudy dark burnt orange pour - semi-dry, with a fair amount of wheaty tang, strong clove phenols, light banana, and a fairly pronounced peppery quality throughout - falls apart a little in the finish, getting a bit watery and sweet, with light cereal grain flavors - otherwise a good first beer from a new brewery.
Wednesday, June 30, 2010