Death by Pumpkin
Elbeck Brews


- From:
- Elbeck Brews
- Alberta, Canada
- Style:
- Pumpkin Beer
- ABV:
- 6%
- Score:
- +9 ratings needed
- Avg:
- 3.76 | pDev: 0%
- Ratings:
- | reviews: 1
- Status:
- Inactive
- Rated:
- Oct 19, 2017
- Added:
- Oct 15, 2017
- Wants:
- 0
- Gots:
- 0
No description / notes.
Recent ratings and reviews.
Reviewed by biboergosum from Canada (AB)
3.76/5 rDev 0%
look: 4 | smell: 3.5 | taste: 3.75 | feel: 3.75 | overall: 4
3.76/5 rDev 0%
look: 4 | smell: 3.5 | taste: 3.75 | feel: 3.75 | overall: 4
650ml bottle - brewed at Boiling Oar in Calgary, and named the same as the pumpkin brew made by Hog's Head five years or so ago.
This beer pours a clear, medium orange-brick amber colour, with three fingers of puffy, loosely foamy, and bubbly beige head, which leaves some cannonball splash aftermath lace around the glass as it slowly and surely sinks away.
It smells of pungent spice - clove, nutmeg, ginger, and metallic cinnamon - roasted pumpkin, bready and grainy caramel malt, and some leafy, weedy, and rather floral green hop bitters. The taste is grainy and crackery caramel malt, vegetal pumpkin, more zingy spice (nutmeg, dried ginger and clove most prominent), and further musty, herbal, and gently perfumed floral verdant hoppiness.
The carbonation is adequate in its palate-assuring frothiness, the body a decent middleweight, and generally smooth, just a suggestion of spice intransigence perhaps gumming up the works a bit here. It finishes off-dry, but not by much - hops, gourd, and spice seeing to that.
Overall, while this has all the hallmarks for a well-made pumpkin brew, it's not really all that akin to 'pumpkin pie in a bottle', as it is too spiced and not nearly sweet enough. As simply a beer, however, it works, and is pleasant as an accompaniment to some piquant leftover pizza (would that it were turkey).
Oct 19, 2017This beer pours a clear, medium orange-brick amber colour, with three fingers of puffy, loosely foamy, and bubbly beige head, which leaves some cannonball splash aftermath lace around the glass as it slowly and surely sinks away.
It smells of pungent spice - clove, nutmeg, ginger, and metallic cinnamon - roasted pumpkin, bready and grainy caramel malt, and some leafy, weedy, and rather floral green hop bitters. The taste is grainy and crackery caramel malt, vegetal pumpkin, more zingy spice (nutmeg, dried ginger and clove most prominent), and further musty, herbal, and gently perfumed floral verdant hoppiness.
The carbonation is adequate in its palate-assuring frothiness, the body a decent middleweight, and generally smooth, just a suggestion of spice intransigence perhaps gumming up the works a bit here. It finishes off-dry, but not by much - hops, gourd, and spice seeing to that.
Overall, while this has all the hallmarks for a well-made pumpkin brew, it's not really all that akin to 'pumpkin pie in a bottle', as it is too spiced and not nearly sweet enough. As simply a beer, however, it works, and is pleasant as an accompaniment to some piquant leftover pizza (would that it were turkey).
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