Dirty Blonde
Blue Mountain Brewery

- From:
- Blue Mountain Brewery
- Virginia, United States
- Style:
- Belgian Tripel
- ABV:
- 10.7%
- Score:
- +7 ratings needed
- Avg:
- 3.68 | pDev: 7.07%
- Ratings:
- | reviews: 1
- Status:
- Retired
- Rated:
- Oct 13, 2012
- Added:
- Jun 17, 2010
- Wants:
- 1
- Gots:
- 0
No description / notes.
Recent ratings and reviews.
Reviewed by CrellMoset from Virginia
4.05/5 rDev +10.1%
look: 4 | smell: 4 | taste: 4 | feel: 4.5 | overall: 4
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, 2010Appearance: 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.
We love reviews (150 characters or more)! Check out: How to Review a Beer. You don't need to get fancy. Drop some thoughts on the beer's attributes (look, smell, taste, feel) plus your overall impression. Something that backs up your rating and helps others. Thanks!