People Power
Timber Ales


- From:
- Timber Ales
- New York, United States
- Style:
- Hazy IPA
- ABV:
- 7%
- Score:
- +4 ratings needed
- Avg:
- 4.05 | pDev: 6.17%
- Ratings:
- | reviews: 2
- Status:
- Active
- Rated:
- Dec 13, 2021
- Added:
- Aug 29, 2020
- Wants:
- 0
- Gots:
- 0
People Power is an IPA dry-hopped with a combination of Citra and Galaxy hops. This beer was brewed to support the People Power Beer initiative started by our friends at Threes Brewing in collaboration with the ACLU.
Recent ratings and reviews.
Rated by hankwilliam88 from Massachusetts
4.24/5 rDev +4.7%
look: 5 | smell: 4 | taste: 4.5 | feel: 3.75 | overall: 4
4.24/5 rDev +4.7%
look: 5 | smell: 4 | taste: 4.5 | feel: 3.75 | overall: 4
Liked the taste! For sure a strong taste, after bite is apparent, but not bad.
Dec 13, 2021Reviewed by metter98 from New York
3.96/5 rDev -2.2%
look: 3.75 | smell: 4 | taste: 4 | feel: 3.75 | overall: 4
3.96/5 rDev -2.2%
look: 3.75 | smell: 4 | taste: 4 | feel: 3.75 | overall: 4
A: The beer is very hazy to cloudy whitish yellow in color. It poured with a quarter finger high white head that left some specks of bubbles on the surface and lots of lacing down the sides of the glass.
S: Moderate aromas of gooseberries and lychee fruit are present in the nose.
T: The taste follows the smell and is mostly dominated by flavors of gooseberries along with notes of lime and hints of lychee. Only a faint amount of bitterness is perceptible.
M: It feels medium-bodied and very juicy on the palate with a moderate amount of carbonation.
O: This New England-style IPA has strong aromas and flavors of the Citra hops, particularly those of gooseberries.
Serving type: can
Sep 15, 2020S: Moderate aromas of gooseberries and lychee fruit are present in the nose.
T: The taste follows the smell and is mostly dominated by flavors of gooseberries along with notes of lime and hints of lychee. Only a faint amount of bitterness is perceptible.
M: It feels medium-bodied and very juicy on the palate with a moderate amount of carbonation.
O: This New England-style IPA has strong aromas and flavors of the Citra hops, particularly those of gooseberries.
Serving type: can
Reviewed by beergoot from Colorado
3.76/5 rDev -7.2%
look: 4.5 | smell: 3.5 | taste: 3.75 | feel: 4 | overall: 3.75
3.76/5 rDev -7.2%
look: 4.5 | smell: 3.5 | taste: 3.75 | feel: 4 | overall: 3.75
Revisited 11/03/20
Original ratings: 4.5 3.5 3.75 3.5 3.75
The look remains very impressive. The smell is more muted and less prominent. The taste has rounded out quite a bit with hardly any boozy notes what so ever; more balanced but less flavorful. The mouthfeel has more of a quiet juiciness and sweetness to it; the dryness factor is far, far in the background, to the point of being nearly unnoticeable.
So the beer has matured and blended well in some respects. It has lost it's boozy, dry qualities yet also has sacrificed a lot of fresh fruitiness and citrus qualities. In fact, it seems rather bland. So, a slight uptick for the mouthfeel since it lost some of the burning alcohol presence, yet nothing else really changes (taking into consideration the age of the beer).
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Milky, soft yellow body; thick and billowy white head, creamy; patches and legs of sticky foam cling to the glass. Strong herbal and citrus pith aroma; just a bare hint of lemon. Tart and bitter taste initially; biscuit and oat grain flavors; herb bowl resin; bare presence of mango; boozy. Heavy body; silky and smooth; alcohol heat cutting through the residual sugar body; rather dry at the finish.
This beer delivers the usual alcohol-intense, dry-hopped murky IPA experience. Perhaps a tad boozy and lacking any fresh fruit notes, but seems to fit the style profile for an amped-up hazy IPA.
Sep 15, 2020Original ratings: 4.5 3.5 3.75 3.5 3.75
The look remains very impressive. The smell is more muted and less prominent. The taste has rounded out quite a bit with hardly any boozy notes what so ever; more balanced but less flavorful. The mouthfeel has more of a quiet juiciness and sweetness to it; the dryness factor is far, far in the background, to the point of being nearly unnoticeable.
So the beer has matured and blended well in some respects. It has lost it's boozy, dry qualities yet also has sacrificed a lot of fresh fruitiness and citrus qualities. In fact, it seems rather bland. So, a slight uptick for the mouthfeel since it lost some of the burning alcohol presence, yet nothing else really changes (taking into consideration the age of the beer).
-----------------------
Milky, soft yellow body; thick and billowy white head, creamy; patches and legs of sticky foam cling to the glass. Strong herbal and citrus pith aroma; just a bare hint of lemon. Tart and bitter taste initially; biscuit and oat grain flavors; herb bowl resin; bare presence of mango; boozy. Heavy body; silky and smooth; alcohol heat cutting through the residual sugar body; rather dry at the finish.
This beer delivers the usual alcohol-intense, dry-hopped murky IPA experience. Perhaps a tad boozy and lacking any fresh fruit notes, but seems to fit the style profile for an amped-up hazy IPA.
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