SN Souther Hemisphere Harvest dating

Discussion in 'Beer Talk' started by flag8r, Jul 7, 2012.

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  1. flag8r

    flag8r Initiate (0) Nov 7, 2009 Florida

    Picked up some 2012 SN Southern Hemi. Havest tonight with a code of 2016218:xx on it. Anyone know how to read this? Is this produced one time or ongoing for a period? Thanks.
     
  2. FTowne

    FTowne Initiate (0) Jan 27, 2012 Missouri

    I believe that it's a one time release...could be wrong.
     
  3. superspak

    superspak Grand High Pooh-Bah (10,927) May 5, 2010 North Carolina
    Society Pooh-Bah Trader

    Sierra Nevada has always had Julian dating, so the first 4 numbers are what matter. 2016 = Jan 16th 2012

    What I always do for my reviews is type in "xxx day of the year" and the first result will be a wikipedia article with the exact date. Also when you buy it is easy to get a ballpark date by using 30's. So if I see a SN with 2120 then I know it was bottled end of April or so.
     
  4. FTowne

    FTowne Initiate (0) Jan 27, 2012 Missouri

    This pisses me right the fuck off. If you have the resources to stamp a date on bottles/cans why not just put a "bottled on" date on your product and be done with it?
     
    acevenom and DaveONan like this.
  5. tolar111

    tolar111 Grand Pooh-Bah (3,094) Aug 17, 2008 New York
    Society Pooh-Bah Trader

    Sierra Nevada recently switched from printing the date code on the label to putting it on the neck of the bottle. The code is still the same as what is printed in this PDF - http://www.sierranevada.com/images/bottlecode2011.pdf
    I also think you may be misreading the code, my bottle reads 2116213:27 indicating April 26, 2012 bottling line 2 at 1:27pm. Your code would indicate January 16, 2012. Given the limited release I don't think the product was being produced at that time.
     
  6. FTowne

    FTowne Initiate (0) Jan 27, 2012 Missouri

    Awesome. You have to have a secret decoder ring to find out when it was bottled!
     
  7. UCLABrewN84

    UCLABrewN84 Initiate (0) Mar 18, 2010 California

    I think it's a seasonal.
     
  8. tolar111

    tolar111 Grand Pooh-Bah (3,094) Aug 17, 2008 New York
    Society Pooh-Bah Trader

    While I agree with you in principle, I'm concerned with the current obsession, with up-to-the-minute freshness, i.e., the guy that picks through cases of Flower Power (and others) and has to split hairs over the various production dates. Inevitably you end up with perfectly good beer getting picked over and going stale. If I were a brewer, I'd hate that.
     
  9. EgadBananas

    EgadBananas Initiate (0) Mar 18, 2009 Louisiana

    Julian dating codes really aren't that hard to interpret once you know how they work. I'm no math whiz, but when I see a SN bottle whose first four numbers reads 2180, within a few seconds I know that it was bottled in June.

    I know it takes a bit more brain power, but look on the bright side: the added thinking can aide in the prevention of Alzheimer's. Hooray beer!
     
    Bitterbill likes this.
  10. FTowne

    FTowne Initiate (0) Jan 27, 2012 Missouri

    As a brewer wouldn't you also cringe at the thought of someone that is new to your product picking up a 6 month old IPA and hating it?
     
  11. EgadBananas

    EgadBananas Initiate (0) Mar 18, 2009 Louisiana

    Maybe, but I think you'd be surprised at the amount of consumers that drink IPA, but don't truly know what it's supposed to taste like anyway.
     
  12. raffels

    raffels Initiate (0) Dec 12, 2009 West Virginia

  13. FTowne

    FTowne Initiate (0) Jan 27, 2012 Missouri

    Good info, but I'd rather have the ability to pick up a beer and see a bottled on dated clearly marked on the product. Thank you Schlafly!
     
  14. 4balance

    4balance Initiate (0) Dec 11, 2011

    For the record: I freaking love Sierra Nevada!

    Also I never really check the dates, living in Oklahoma I know that it will be a couple of months old at best which I have to consider fresh! Still waiting on Southern Hemisphere to show up here.

    Just picked up a 4pk of Hoptimum dated: 209010511 and I'll be enjoying every moment of it! :grinning:
    I really need to move…Cheers ~
     
  15. flag8r

    flag8r Initiate (0) Nov 7, 2009 Florida

    SO thats why it tasted not so hoppy!
     
  16. Steimie

    Steimie Maven (1,428) Jan 7, 2012 Michigan

    Julian dating is pretty simple. All it requires is doing a little math in your head. Or maybe there's an app for that??
     
  17. andylipp

    andylipp Savant (1,063) Dec 8, 2006 Massachusetts

    Twelve packs of SN cans have the packaging date printed on them in the standard mm/dd/yy format.
     
  18. litheum94

    litheum94 Initiate (0) Dec 29, 2008 California

    You are correct that it just takes a little research to decode it, but I definitely see what FTowne is saying. When you have the capabilities to date stamp, why use a somewhat esoteric code? I'm sure most beer drinkers haven't even heard of Julian dating. It just makes more sense to use a code that would be easily read by 100% of the population as opposed to one that only 20% know (that's a completely made up number, BTW).
     
  19. slangtruth

    slangtruth Initiate (0) Jan 8, 2012 Kentucky

    I wouldn't pretend to speak for SN, but I consider the numbers on the bottle (with the production line, bottling time, etc.) to be essentially an internal code so they can make necessary adjustments, pull a bad batch or the result from a bottling line that gets screwed up or whatever. That it can be read by humans at all and that they choose to tell you how is a bonus. The 12 packs are all dated with a human readable number.
     
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