I was kegging my Vienna lager and thought, I wonder how the BIIPA turned out?
The beer finished at 1.007. Then kept going, cold temperatures be damned, down to 1.005. So the French Saison yeast is not to be trifled with. My target was 6.5%ABV, I hit 6.7.
Here are my thoughts
There’s a bit of a grainy character in the taste. Not grainy as in a coarse or harsh taste, but somewhat malty(?) The nose is super subtle, I get just a hint of orange and when I say hint, I mean barely detectable.
The bitterness is spot on for this beer, exactly where I wanted it. I need to carbonate more fully to be sure, but I do like it.
The yeast aroma I think has been overwhelmed. I thought I was conservative with the dry hops, maybe not enough?
Flavor wise, I get the rye, there’s a bit of a grainy, spicy like finish. Not peppery or ‘hot’ mind you, just something in the background that makes you think ‘what is that?'
I passed it by my wife, who is... well... a Beer-o-phobe. :-/ That is to say, she does not drink beer, does not like beer but she is exceptional at finding beer pubs and breweries around the world. Anyway, the first thing she said was ‘grassy’, so I tried to press her for a description and she mentioned:
“it tastes kind of like those beer grain pretzels you made”.
I am thinking that is one of 2 things. 1) likely the rye shining through. 2) The Boadicea hops, which do have a bit of a grassy contribution - but these were dry hops... Mind you, I like it, but then I like brewing with rye. I may need to pass it by some neighbors for the neighbor beer test.
Mouthfeel is great, as I kind of expected. Once fully carb’d, the head retention on this will be awesome. The balance is good too. The bitterness isn’t over the top; ok hop heads are going to scoff at this one, at only 55 IBU, but it’s not hard to drink at all, even at 6.7%
The last thing I can offer is it has that ‘warm’ feeling like drinking a double IPA, but it’s nowhere near as heavy on the palette.
So all in all, I don’t think this will be on tap too long ;-)
The only ‘miss’ here for me is I wanted more of the funk from the yeast. You know... 1970’s funk, which was BAD! ( aka, good in today’s vernacular ).