Dirty Blonde
Blue Mountain Brewery

Beer Geek Stats
From:
Blue Mountain Brewery
 
Virginia, United States
Style:
Belgian Tripel
ABV:
10.7%
Score:
+7 ratings needed
Avg:
3.68 | pDev: 7.07%
Ratings:
3 | reviews: 1
Status:
Retired
Rated:
Oct 13, 2012
Added:
Jun 17, 2010
Wants:
  1
Gots:
  0
No description / notes.
Recent ratings and reviews.
 
Rated: 3.5 by ncaudle from Virginia

Oct 13, 2012
 
Rated: 3.5 by Beerfoot20 from Virginia

May 06, 2012
Photo of CrellMoset
Reviewed by CrellMoset from Virginia

4.05/5  rDev +10.1%
look: 4 | smell: 4 | taste: 4 | feel: 4.5 | overall: 4
Dirty Blonde, which is Blue Mountain's traditional Mandolin krausened with live, fermenting Kolsch beer to naturally carbonate the beer. 10.7%, 37 IBUs.

Appearance: Comes a gorgeous hazy sunset orange gold, almost juice-like in its opacity, capped by half a finger of snow white head. The retention is slightly retarded at near-11%, but there's a nice surface dusting that stays throughout as the result of a fair amount of lively carbonation and a thick, clingy, but bubbly collar that creeps up the sides of the goblet as well. Lacing on the sides of the glass is a little glittery and runny, but certain strings and eruptions do stick around.

Aroma: Strong cloves and honey-dip dried fruits suggest candied pineapple and oranges, green spices, lemon notes, and huge, almost bitingly penetrating phenols. A little smoother, gentler, and more robust than the mouth. Call it a 4.0 and change.

Taste: Well-attenuated golden malts, crisp and dryly honey-like, complimented by sweet and dried tropical fruits. Pineapple, apricot, orange, and banana esters - all very dried and heavy on the palette - intermingle with the strongly spicy and phenolic yeast notes. Huge cloves and white pepper and a bit of musky, fiery spice effectively masks the alcohol bite.

Mouthfeel: A crisp, dry, moderate-bodied beer full of immaculately fine but lively carbonation, soft but assertive. No cloy or stick in this one - I assume the second fermentation has dried it out - even though its definitely not on the slick side. The crisp carbonation works well with the spicy phenols.

Drinkability: Right up there with the original Mandolin - itself a fabulous beer - and I'm not sure which one I like better. This one had a nice brightly crisp and assertive mouthfeel that I like a little better than the original Mandolin, I think, but I don't know if we'll ever see this one again! Thanks to BMB for pushing the envelope and integrating traditional and interesting old world techniques in to their brewing.
Jun 17, 2010