The Rub
Blind Enthusiasm Brewing Company

- From:
- Blind Enthusiasm Brewing Company
- Alberta, Canada
- Style:
- Fruit and Field Beer
- ABV:
- 4%
- Score:
- +9 ratings needed
- Avg:
- 3.54 | pDev: 0%
- Ratings:
- | reviews: 1
- Status:
- Inactive
- Rated:
- Oct 06, 2018
- Added:
- Oct 06, 2018
- Wants:
- 0
- Gots:
- 0
No description / notes.
Recent ratings and reviews.
Reviewed by biboergosum from Canada (AB)
3.54/5 rDev 0%
look: 3.75 | smell: 3.5 | taste: 3.5 | feel: 3.75 | overall: 3.5
3.54/5 rDev 0%
look: 3.75 | smell: 3.5 | taste: 3.5 | feel: 3.75 | overall: 3.5
250ml glass at Biera. It has been a while, wet under the collar barkeep!
This beer appears a hazy, pale golden yellow colour, with one fat-ass finger of puffy, loosely foamy, and bubbly bone-white head, which leaves some random webbed lace around the glass as it quickly blows off.
It smells of bready and crackery cereal malt, some muddled earthy spiciness, dirt, subtle yeasty notes, and very tame leafy, herbal, and floral noble hop bitters. The taste is gritty and grainy pale malt, faint vegetal essences, ever more ephemeral generic spice notes, some bland yeastiness, plain domestic pome fruit, and more understated earthy, musty, and dead floral hoppiness.
The carbonation is average in its palate-satisfying frothiness, the body a decent medium weight, and generally smooth, with nothing really getting in the way of a swell enough time here. It finishes trending dry, the yeast and fading vegetable character working the lingering scene.
Overall - I was strangely worried that there would be an overabundance of rhubarb in this offering (don't ask me why), but it seems that I was mistaken. This is simply an innocuous Belgian-style ale, and little more. I suppose that I'm still waiting for the tug.
Oct 06, 2018This beer appears a hazy, pale golden yellow colour, with one fat-ass finger of puffy, loosely foamy, and bubbly bone-white head, which leaves some random webbed lace around the glass as it quickly blows off.
It smells of bready and crackery cereal malt, some muddled earthy spiciness, dirt, subtle yeasty notes, and very tame leafy, herbal, and floral noble hop bitters. The taste is gritty and grainy pale malt, faint vegetal essences, ever more ephemeral generic spice notes, some bland yeastiness, plain domestic pome fruit, and more understated earthy, musty, and dead floral hoppiness.
The carbonation is average in its palate-satisfying frothiness, the body a decent medium weight, and generally smooth, with nothing really getting in the way of a swell enough time here. It finishes trending dry, the yeast and fading vegetable character working the lingering scene.
Overall - I was strangely worried that there would be an overabundance of rhubarb in this offering (don't ask me why), but it seems that I was mistaken. This is simply an innocuous Belgian-style ale, and little more. I suppose that I'm still waiting for the tug.
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