Terrestrial Magnetism
Annex Ale Project


- From:
- Annex Ale Project
- Alberta, Canada
- Style:
- Hazy IPA
- ABV:
- 6.7%
- Score:
- +8 ratings needed
- Avg:
- 3.98 | pDev: 0.5%
- Ratings:
- | reviews: 1
- Status:
- Retired
- Rated:
- Jun 25, 2019
- Added:
- Mar 10, 2019
- Wants:
- 0
- Gots:
- 0
No description / notes.
Recent ratings and reviews.
Reviewed by biboergosum from Canada (AB)
3.96/5 rDev -0.5%
look: 4.25 | smell: 3.75 | taste: 4 | feel: 4 | overall: 4
3.96/5 rDev -0.5%
look: 4.25 | smell: 3.75 | taste: 4 | feel: 4 | overall: 4
473ml can - this shit sold out at my favourite bottleshop in 3 hours on a Thursday afternoon last week. Props to my man Taylor for sharing a bit of his personal haul! Oh, and this is a collaboration with Lacombe's finest, Blindman Brewing.
This beer pours a slightly hazy, pale golden straw colour, with a teeming tower of puffy, loosely foamy, and bubbly off-white head, which leaves some stellar layered and webbed lace around the glass as it lazily sinks out of sight.
It smells of gritty and grainy cereal malt, some blood orange and lemon citrus rind, a further indistinct tropical fruitiness, wet saltine crackers, a bit of mildly funky yeast, and some earthy, musty, and resinous piney green hop bitters. The taste is bready and grainy pale malt, muddled domestic citrus peel, a faint estery yeastiness, some damp minerality, and more leafy, weedy, and dank piney hoppiness.
The carbonation is adequate in its palate-satiating frothiness, the body a decent medium weight, and generally smooth, with a wee airy creaminess inching in as things warm up a tad around here. It finishes off-dry, the malt and mixed frooty essences colluding in the lingering morass.
Overall - this is a pleasant enough version of the style, with the 'wild' component thankfully restrained. Easy to throw back, even with the extra 2-ish points of ABV, while I watch the snow banks slowly shrink outside as Spring finally gets its act together.
Mar 11, 2019This beer pours a slightly hazy, pale golden straw colour, with a teeming tower of puffy, loosely foamy, and bubbly off-white head, which leaves some stellar layered and webbed lace around the glass as it lazily sinks out of sight.
It smells of gritty and grainy cereal malt, some blood orange and lemon citrus rind, a further indistinct tropical fruitiness, wet saltine crackers, a bit of mildly funky yeast, and some earthy, musty, and resinous piney green hop bitters. The taste is bready and grainy pale malt, muddled domestic citrus peel, a faint estery yeastiness, some damp minerality, and more leafy, weedy, and dank piney hoppiness.
The carbonation is adequate in its palate-satiating frothiness, the body a decent medium weight, and generally smooth, with a wee airy creaminess inching in as things warm up a tad around here. It finishes off-dry, the malt and mixed frooty essences colluding in the lingering morass.
Overall - this is a pleasant enough version of the style, with the 'wild' component thankfully restrained. Easy to throw back, even with the extra 2-ish points of ABV, while I watch the snow banks slowly shrink outside as Spring finally gets its act together.
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