Outland
Zero Issue Brewing


- From:
- Zero Issue Brewing
- Alberta, Canada
- Style:
- Kölsch
- ABV:
- 4.6%
- Score:
- +8 ratings needed
- Avg:
- 3.36 | pDev: 12.8%
- Ratings:
- | reviews: 1
- Status:
- Retired
- Rated:
- Nov 21, 2018
- Added:
- Jun 11, 2018
- Wants:
- 0
- Gots:
- 0
No description / notes.
Recent ratings and reviews.
Reviewed by biboergosum from Canada (AB)
3.79/5 rDev +12.8%
look: 4 | smell: 3.75 | taste: 3.75 | feel: 4 | overall: 3.75
3.79/5 rDev +12.8%
look: 4 | smell: 3.75 | taste: 3.75 | feel: 4 | overall: 3.75
473ml can - with kind of a space western sort of label motif, like Firefly or something.
This beer pours a clear, bright medium golden yellow colour, with two fingers of puffy, loosely foamy, and mildly fizzy off-white head, which leaves a bit of low-lying streaky and filmy lace around the glass as it quickly dissipates.
It smells of gritty and grainy cereal malt, some apple and pear fruitiness, a damp minerality, some gently estery yeastiness, and plain leafy, weedy, and floral green hop bitters. The taste is grainy and crackery pale malt, muddled pome fruity notes, a tame stoney flintiness, still laid-back yeast, and more understated earthy, leafy, and musky floral hoppiness.
The carbonation is fairly active in its palate-stroking frothiness, the body a decent middleweight, and generally smooth, with nothing really getting in the way of a pleasant experience at this particular juncture. It finishes trending dry, the malt losing a bit of steam, as the other characters evaporate entirely.
Overall - this is a pretty representative version of the style, nice and crisp and eminently quaffable, especially at the session-friendly 4.6% ABV. Worth checking out, even if you need Google to verify the meaning behind the marketing imagery on this offering.
Jun 14, 2018This beer pours a clear, bright medium golden yellow colour, with two fingers of puffy, loosely foamy, and mildly fizzy off-white head, which leaves a bit of low-lying streaky and filmy lace around the glass as it quickly dissipates.
It smells of gritty and grainy cereal malt, some apple and pear fruitiness, a damp minerality, some gently estery yeastiness, and plain leafy, weedy, and floral green hop bitters. The taste is grainy and crackery pale malt, muddled pome fruity notes, a tame stoney flintiness, still laid-back yeast, and more understated earthy, leafy, and musky floral hoppiness.
The carbonation is fairly active in its palate-stroking frothiness, the body a decent middleweight, and generally smooth, with nothing really getting in the way of a pleasant experience at this particular juncture. It finishes trending dry, the malt losing a bit of steam, as the other characters evaporate entirely.
Overall - this is a pretty representative version of the style, nice and crisp and eminently quaffable, especially at the session-friendly 4.6% ABV. Worth checking out, even if you need Google to verify the meaning behind the marketing imagery on this offering.
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