New Tranq City
Lost Nation Brewing


- From:
- Lost Nation Brewing
- Vermont, United States
- Style:
- Imperial IPA
- ABV:
- 8%
- Score:
- +2 ratings needed
- Avg:
- 3.97 | pDev: 4.03%
- Ratings:
- | reviews: 3
- Status:
- Inactive
- Rated:
- Aug 19, 2020
- Added:
- Aug 16, 2019
- Wants:
- 0
- Gots:
- 0
All Cryo All Day. Mosaic, Cascade And Equanot
Recent ratings and reviews.
Reviewed by bobv from Vermont
4.29/5 rDev +8.1%
look: 4.25 | smell: 4.5 | taste: 4.25 | feel: 4 | overall: 4.25
4.29/5 rDev +8.1%
look: 4.25 | smell: 4.5 | taste: 4.25 | feel: 4 | overall: 4.25
16 oz. can.
No date.
Collaboration with Maine's Bunker Brewing.
Moderate pour yields a one inch white head over a hazy golden body with some lacing. Nose of tropical fruit, citrus, and pine. Taste follows nose somewhat, but with the pine coming forward and the fruit taking a back seat. Finish is mostly pine and slight citrus pith. Almost like a Sierra Nevada Double Pale Ale, if there was such a thing. Nice feel and overall, a West Coast-y style DIPA (sort of) from New England. I recommend it, if you can find it. Cheers!!!
Apr 28, 2020No date.
Collaboration with Maine's Bunker Brewing.
Moderate pour yields a one inch white head over a hazy golden body with some lacing. Nose of tropical fruit, citrus, and pine. Taste follows nose somewhat, but with the pine coming forward and the fruit taking a back seat. Finish is mostly pine and slight citrus pith. Almost like a Sierra Nevada Double Pale Ale, if there was such a thing. Nice feel and overall, a West Coast-y style DIPA (sort of) from New England. I recommend it, if you can find it. Cheers!!!
Reviewed by GreesyFizeek from New York
4.06/5 rDev +2.3%
look: 3.75 | smell: 4 | taste: 4 | feel: 4.25 | overall: 4.25
4.06/5 rDev +2.3%
look: 3.75 | smell: 4 | taste: 4 | feel: 4.25 | overall: 4.25
On tap at Lost Nation Brewing in Morrisville, VT.
This one pours a clear light orange color, with a small head, and lots of lacing.
This smells like piney and resinous hops, cedar shavings, lemon, orange, and grapefruit.
This is firmly very old school, like basically all of Lost Nation's hoppy beers. It's got a great and clean bitterness, some cedar and tons of pine, along with grapefruit rind, orange zest, and general other citrus.
This is light bodied, and very clean, with a lingering bitterness on the back end here.
I can definitely respect that Lost Nation hasn't completely been taken over by the latest IPA trends. This is a nice old school bruiser, and I can appreciate that.
Sep 16, 2019This one pours a clear light orange color, with a small head, and lots of lacing.
This smells like piney and resinous hops, cedar shavings, lemon, orange, and grapefruit.
This is firmly very old school, like basically all of Lost Nation's hoppy beers. It's got a great and clean bitterness, some cedar and tons of pine, along with grapefruit rind, orange zest, and general other citrus.
This is light bodied, and very clean, with a lingering bitterness on the back end here.
I can definitely respect that Lost Nation hasn't completely been taken over by the latest IPA trends. This is a nice old school bruiser, and I can appreciate that.
Reviewed by Lone_Freighter from Vermont
3.99/5 rDev +0.5%
look: 3.75 | smell: 4 | taste: 4 | feel: 4 | overall: 4
3.99/5 rDev +0.5%
look: 3.75 | smell: 4 | taste: 4 | feel: 4 | overall: 4
Stamp at bottom rim reads '07/23/19.'
This was poured into a tulip.
The appearance had a semi-bright golden yellow hue with a quickly dissipating small semi-foamy head. Some concave lace, wispy, light.
The aroma had some danky garlic/onion shavings rolling on into candied peachy to apricot fleshy character. Light peach skin notes show some tartness but that is super light. Some grassy hops mesh in under for balance.
The flavor balances fairly nice between the peachy/apeico-like hop tones. Barely any aftertaste, just a touch of grassy to dry peach skin semi-sweet character.
The mouthfeel was about medium bodied with a fair sipping quality about it. Enough dryness invades to cause me to not gulp this. Adequate carbonation for an American DIPA (some harshness). Some hop bitter harshness in the finish.
Overall, before the style 'New England IPA' came out we had American IPA's and American DIPA's, though we still have them, looking at this beer tells me the regular American DIPA is still alive and well and not going away any time soon.
Aug 16, 2019This was poured into a tulip.
The appearance had a semi-bright golden yellow hue with a quickly dissipating small semi-foamy head. Some concave lace, wispy, light.
The aroma had some danky garlic/onion shavings rolling on into candied peachy to apricot fleshy character. Light peach skin notes show some tartness but that is super light. Some grassy hops mesh in under for balance.
The flavor balances fairly nice between the peachy/apeico-like hop tones. Barely any aftertaste, just a touch of grassy to dry peach skin semi-sweet character.
The mouthfeel was about medium bodied with a fair sipping quality about it. Enough dryness invades to cause me to not gulp this. Adequate carbonation for an American DIPA (some harshness). Some hop bitter harshness in the finish.
Overall, before the style 'New England IPA' came out we had American IPA's and American DIPA's, though we still have them, looking at this beer tells me the regular American DIPA is still alive and well and not going away any time soon.
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