It's Wit
Bridge Brewing Company


- From:
- Bridge Brewing Company
- British Columbia, Canada
- Style:
- Witbier
- ABV:
- 4.8%
- Score:
- +9 ratings needed
- Avg:
- 3.78 | pDev: 0%
- Ratings:
- | reviews: 1
- Status:
- Inactive
- Rated:
- May 13, 2018
- Added:
- May 06, 2018
- Wants:
- 0
- Gots:
- 0
No description / notes.
Recent ratings and reviews.
Reviewed by biboergosum from Canada (AB)
3.78/5 rDev 0%
look: 3.75 | smell: 3.75 | taste: 3.75 | feel: 4 | overall: 3.75
3.78/5 rDev 0%
look: 3.75 | smell: 3.75 | taste: 3.75 | feel: 4 | overall: 3.75
650ml bottle - the wit in It's Wit seems to be lacking it.
This beer pours a hazy, pale golden straw colour, with a teeming tower of puffy, finely foamy, and mildly bubbly bone-white head, which leaves some decent scary old-growth forest entrance lace around the glass as it very lazily sinks out of sight.
It smells of bready and doughy cereal malt, some musty yeastiness, muddled domestic citrus rind, an indistinct earthy spiciness, and some plain weedy, herbal, and musky floral hop bitters. The taste is gritty and bready wheat malt, a lesser barley graininess, sort of sugary orange and red grapefruit citrus peel, ethereal coriander spice, some weak generic yeast, and more understated leafy, musty, and floral noble hoppiness.
The carbonation is quite laid-back in its wan-seeming frothiness, the body a so-so medium weight, and mostly smooth, with nothing really making a fuss at this particular juncture. It finishes off-dry, the mixed malt and faded fruitiness the lingering order of the day.
Overall - this is a pretty straight-forward version of the style, no punches pulled in providing an old-school experience, as such. Worth checking out, for those reasons, and probably more, but alas, I have no more time, as my BBQ is not-so-subtly whispering the promise of juicy burgers which which to send off the rest of this bomber.
May 13, 2018This beer pours a hazy, pale golden straw colour, with a teeming tower of puffy, finely foamy, and mildly bubbly bone-white head, which leaves some decent scary old-growth forest entrance lace around the glass as it very lazily sinks out of sight.
It smells of bready and doughy cereal malt, some musty yeastiness, muddled domestic citrus rind, an indistinct earthy spiciness, and some plain weedy, herbal, and musky floral hop bitters. The taste is gritty and bready wheat malt, a lesser barley graininess, sort of sugary orange and red grapefruit citrus peel, ethereal coriander spice, some weak generic yeast, and more understated leafy, musty, and floral noble hoppiness.
The carbonation is quite laid-back in its wan-seeming frothiness, the body a so-so medium weight, and mostly smooth, with nothing really making a fuss at this particular juncture. It finishes off-dry, the mixed malt and faded fruitiness the lingering order of the day.
Overall - this is a pretty straight-forward version of the style, no punches pulled in providing an old-school experience, as such. Worth checking out, for those reasons, and probably more, but alas, I have no more time, as my BBQ is not-so-subtly whispering the promise of juicy burgers which which to send off the rest of this bomber.
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