Dayliner Golden Ale
Siding 14 Brewing Company


- From:
- Siding 14 Brewing Company
- Alberta, Canada
- Style:
- American Blonde Ale
- ABV:
- 4.9%
- Score:
- +4 ratings needed
- Avg:
- 3.53 | pDev: 0.28%
- Ratings:
- | reviews: 1
- Status:
- Inactive
- Rated:
- Jul 08, 2018
- Added:
- Jul 16, 2017
- Wants:
- 0
- Gots:
- 1
No description / notes.
Recent ratings and reviews.
Reviewed by biboergosum from Canada (AB)
3.54/5 rDev +0.3%
look: 3.75 | smell: 3.5 | taste: 3.5 | feel: 3.75 | overall: 3.5
3.54/5 rDev +0.3%
look: 3.75 | smell: 3.5 | taste: 3.5 | feel: 3.75 | overall: 3.5
355ml can - a session ale of sorts, with a small sense or implication of day-drinking, if I'm not mistaken.
This beer pours a clear, bright medium golden yellow colour, with a teeming tower of puffy, loosely foamy, and chunky off-white head, which leaves a bit of thin splattered and sudsy lace around the glass as it quickly sinks out of sight.
It smells of bready and doughy pale malt, a bit of cereal wheatiness, some mild pome fruity notes, and very tame earthy, weedy, and floral green hop bitters. The taste is gritty and grainy pale malt, wet breakfast cereal, some muddled apple-esque fruitiness, a touch of wayward son yeast, and more understated leafy, piney, and grassy verdant hoppiness.
The carbonation is peppy in its palate-probing frothiness, the body a decent middleweight, and mostly smooth, just a wee hint of hop astringency unexpectedly making a minor fuss here. It finishes off-dry, the mixed graininess and indistinct hops wanly playing us out.
Overall, this is a light ale, nothing particularly standing out, just a simple imbiber, with enough bitterness to keep things in check. It's well-made, but I don't think that I would really want another, unless I was someplace where the options were otherwise limited.
Jul 17, 2017This beer pours a clear, bright medium golden yellow colour, with a teeming tower of puffy, loosely foamy, and chunky off-white head, which leaves a bit of thin splattered and sudsy lace around the glass as it quickly sinks out of sight.
It smells of bready and doughy pale malt, a bit of cereal wheatiness, some mild pome fruity notes, and very tame earthy, weedy, and floral green hop bitters. The taste is gritty and grainy pale malt, wet breakfast cereal, some muddled apple-esque fruitiness, a touch of wayward son yeast, and more understated leafy, piney, and grassy verdant hoppiness.
The carbonation is peppy in its palate-probing frothiness, the body a decent middleweight, and mostly smooth, just a wee hint of hop astringency unexpectedly making a minor fuss here. It finishes off-dry, the mixed graininess and indistinct hops wanly playing us out.
Overall, this is a light ale, nothing particularly standing out, just a simple imbiber, with enough bitterness to keep things in check. It's well-made, but I don't think that I would really want another, unless I was someplace where the options were otherwise limited.
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