De Berry's Treasure
Beau's All Natural Brewing Company


- From:
- Beau's All Natural Brewing Company
- Ontario, Canada
- Style:
- Fruited Sour Ale
- ABV:
- 4.5%
- Score:
- +2 ratings needed
- Avg:
- 3.49 | pDev: 13.75%
- Ratings:
- | reviews: 1
- Status:
- Inactive
- Rated:
- Jan 25, 2020
- Added:
- May 30, 2018
- Wants:
- 0
- Gots:
- 2
No description / notes.
Recent ratings and reviews.
Ratings by GoHabsGo:
Rated by GoHabsGo from Canada (ON)
3.25/5 rDev -6.9%
look: 3.25 | smell: 3.25 | taste: 3.25 | feel: 3.25 | overall: 3.25
Jan 25, 2020
3.25/5 rDev -6.9%
look: 3.25 | smell: 3.25 | taste: 3.25 | feel: 3.25 | overall: 3.25
Jan 25, 2020
More User Ratings:
Rated by eberesford from Canada (ON)
3.52/5 rDev +0.9%
look: 3.75 | smell: 3.5 | taste: 3.5 | feel: 3.5 | overall: 3.5
3.52/5 rDev +0.9%
look: 3.75 | smell: 3.5 | taste: 3.5 | feel: 3.5 | overall: 3.5
Lovely balance of fruit and and the typical salty sour of the gose. Colour slightly pinkish pale amber.
Aug 30, 2018Reviewed by thehyperduck from Canada (ON)
3.35/5 rDev -4%
look: 3.75 | smell: 3 | taste: 3.25 | feel: 4 | overall: 3.5
3.35/5 rDev -4%
look: 3.75 | smell: 3 | taste: 3.25 | feel: 4 | overall: 3.5
600 mL bottle from the LCBO; dated Jun 11 2018 and served well chilled.
Pours a translucent pinkish-apricot colour, along the lines of watermelon juice. One centimetre of loose, bubbly white head is produced atop, then proceeds to fall apart within two minutes' time; a frothy collar of bubbles sticks around afterwards, paired with a scant coat of lace. Smells quite vegetal, earthy, and a bit dirty... I'm getting an almost mushroom-like odour, punctuated by faint hints of raspberry and rhubarb. I was expecting a much fruitier aroma based on its appearance, so the oddness of the bouquet kind of threw me for a loop.
There's a lot going on here, and not all of it is complementary, so the first few sips left my taste buds a bit, um, disoriented. There some grainy malts and gritty, crackery wheat buried within the profile, but the rhubarb is what carries things along, remaining dominant through to the tail end of the sip. Suggestions of apricot and black plum come through, with hints of raspberry, blackberry and earthy pine resin finally surfacing at the finish, lasting on into a moderately fruity-sweet, weakly salty aftertaste. Slightly tannic quality, which I must assume is related to the black raspberry. Light-medium in body, with spritzy carbonation that sprightly tickles the surface of the palate, giving a bit of prickliness to this brew's generally smooth mouthfeel.
Final Grade: 3.35, a B-. De Berry's Treasure is a strange one - more of a fruit beer than a gose, with the sea salt playing a rather minor role overall (in comparison to the rhubarb and, to a lesser extent, the raspberry), and virtually no sourness whatsoever. I don't entirely dislike this beer, but its disparate flavours do not come together as cohesively as I'd hoped - I don't know if it's the hops and the rhubarb or what, but some aspects of the profile simply seem to clash in an unappealing way. I polished off my glass pretty easily, but I don't think this is something I'd buy again, or recommend.
Aug 17, 2018Pours a translucent pinkish-apricot colour, along the lines of watermelon juice. One centimetre of loose, bubbly white head is produced atop, then proceeds to fall apart within two minutes' time; a frothy collar of bubbles sticks around afterwards, paired with a scant coat of lace. Smells quite vegetal, earthy, and a bit dirty... I'm getting an almost mushroom-like odour, punctuated by faint hints of raspberry and rhubarb. I was expecting a much fruitier aroma based on its appearance, so the oddness of the bouquet kind of threw me for a loop.
There's a lot going on here, and not all of it is complementary, so the first few sips left my taste buds a bit, um, disoriented. There some grainy malts and gritty, crackery wheat buried within the profile, but the rhubarb is what carries things along, remaining dominant through to the tail end of the sip. Suggestions of apricot and black plum come through, with hints of raspberry, blackberry and earthy pine resin finally surfacing at the finish, lasting on into a moderately fruity-sweet, weakly salty aftertaste. Slightly tannic quality, which I must assume is related to the black raspberry. Light-medium in body, with spritzy carbonation that sprightly tickles the surface of the palate, giving a bit of prickliness to this brew's generally smooth mouthfeel.
Final Grade: 3.35, a B-. De Berry's Treasure is a strange one - more of a fruit beer than a gose, with the sea salt playing a rather minor role overall (in comparison to the rhubarb and, to a lesser extent, the raspberry), and virtually no sourness whatsoever. I don't entirely dislike this beer, but its disparate flavours do not come together as cohesively as I'd hoped - I don't know if it's the hops and the rhubarb or what, but some aspects of the profile simply seem to clash in an unappealing way. I polished off my glass pretty easily, but I don't think this is something I'd buy again, or recommend.
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