Innerbloom
Five Barrel Brewing


- From:
- Five Barrel Brewing
- Australia
- Style:
- Fruited Sour Ale
- ABV:
- Not listed
- Score:
- +9 ratings needed
- Avg:
- 3.03 | pDev: 0%
- Ratings:
- | reviews: 1
- Status:
- Active
- Rated:
- Oct 05, 2024
- Added:
- Oct 05, 2024
- Wants:
- 0
- Gots:
- 0
No description / notes.
Recent ratings and reviews.
Reviewed by AzfromOz from Australia
3.03/5 rDev 0%
look: 3.5 | smell: 3 | taste: 3 | feel: 3 | overall: 3
3.03/5 rDev 0%
look: 3.5 | smell: 3 | taste: 3 | feel: 3 | overall: 3
Purchased at the Tomakin IGA in January 2024 and drunk in September of that year.
L: The beer is rose gold in colour, with no head to speak of and lots of active carbonation swirling up the glass. It looks like a lemon lime and bitters!
S: The smell is vinous and cidery, with blueberries and fermenting hay. For a pastry sour, there's really not much going on in the aroma stakes.
T: The taste is subdued, which, per the nose, is lacking for a pastry sour. A grassy, thin finish follows blueberries and a sharp, tangy tartness. A touch of vanilla sweetness also comes in last and hides behind the tartness but is present.
M: Carbonation is low to medium with minimal bite on the swallow. As with the nose and taste, the body is not what I expect from a pastry sour, being relatively thin and finishing a little watery.
O: I wasn't the biggest fan of this one. For mine, it missed most of the things that I associate with a pastry sour - big, thick flavours, a creamy and thick body and nose that whacks me in the face with whatever ingredient is being highlighted by the beer.
Cheers!
#603
Oct 05, 2024L: The beer is rose gold in colour, with no head to speak of and lots of active carbonation swirling up the glass. It looks like a lemon lime and bitters!
S: The smell is vinous and cidery, with blueberries and fermenting hay. For a pastry sour, there's really not much going on in the aroma stakes.
T: The taste is subdued, which, per the nose, is lacking for a pastry sour. A grassy, thin finish follows blueberries and a sharp, tangy tartness. A touch of vanilla sweetness also comes in last and hides behind the tartness but is present.
M: Carbonation is low to medium with minimal bite on the swallow. As with the nose and taste, the body is not what I expect from a pastry sour, being relatively thin and finishing a little watery.
O: I wasn't the biggest fan of this one. For mine, it missed most of the things that I associate with a pastry sour - big, thick flavours, a creamy and thick body and nose that whacks me in the face with whatever ingredient is being highlighted by the beer.
Cheers!
#603
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