Vertical Questions

Discussion in 'Beer Talk' started by zeff80, May 31, 2019.

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  1. zeff80

    zeff80 Grand High Pooh-Bah (8,425) Feb 6, 2006 Missouri
    Pooh-Bah

    Do you open them all at the start and pour them all? Letting them warm up at the same rate...

    Or

    Do you go one at a time? If so, oldest to newest or vice versa?
     
  2. Spaten454

    Spaten454 Maven (1,496) Aug 23, 2012 Texas
    Society Trader

    It's up to you man
     
  3. zeff80

    zeff80 Grand High Pooh-Bah (8,425) Feb 6, 2006 Missouri
    Pooh-Bah

    Thanks.
     
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  4. Sound_Explorer

    Sound_Explorer Grand Pooh-Bah (3,044) Dec 29, 2013 Washington
    Pooh-Bah

    The couple of times I've done one I opened one at a time from newest to oldest. Kept them cold before opening. But whatever floats your particular boat, just my experience.
     
  5. zeff80

    zeff80 Grand High Pooh-Bah (8,425) Feb 6, 2006 Missouri
    Pooh-Bah

    Thank you. That's what I've done in the past. I was wanting to hear what others thought or have done.

    Cheers!
     
  6. Beer_Stan

    Beer_Stan Initiate (0) Mar 15, 2014 California
    Trader

    If you let them warm up at the same rate, you have to remember you aren't drinking them at the same rate. Each beer had would be warmer than the one before so you'd possibly lose out on experiencing that transition (if you're into tasting it at different temperature intervals between colder and warmer). Not a rule of thumb per se but I would pop the first while keeping the next few chilled and progressively open them up as we went along vs opening up the whole batch. (a lot of beers have gone flatter in the past due to being prematurely opened at various shares I've been to.) But as others have said ultimately its whatever you want to do with your vert that matters. No rules, no laws, your beer.
     
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  7. zid

    zid Grand Pooh-Bah (3,132) Feb 15, 2010 New York
    BA4LYFE Society Pooh-Bah Trader

    I open them all up and pour them at the same time (depending on the amount of beers)... and have them together blind. This highlights the contrast and removes some bias, thereby providing the potential for more discovery (which is a good part of the rational behind a vertical to begin with). Having said that, I rarely do verticals so feel free to ignore my comments.
     
  8. AdmiralOzone

    AdmiralOzone Grand Pooh-Bah (4,352) Jun 26, 2014 Minnesota
    Society Pooh-Bah Trader

    I prefer opening all at once and trying them side by side, but to each their own.
     
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  9. bbtkd

    bbtkd Grand High Pooh-Bah (7,790) Sep 20, 2015 South Dakota
    BA4LYFE Society Pooh-Bah Trader

    Depends on;
    • How many beers in the vert
    • How high the ABV is
    • How many ounces per bottle
    • Whether you are drinking alone or a group
    • Whether you plan to get wasted
    If I'm doing a mini-vert of two strong ones or three weak ones then all at once so you can compare them side-by-side at the same temperature. If you have more people, then can crack more at once. I don't care what order, just want to keep them straight. YMMV.
     
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  10. tobelerone

    tobelerone Grand Pooh-Bah (4,220) Dec 1, 2010 New Jersey
    Pooh-Bah Trader

    Haven’t done many but the few I have done have been shared by a small group (2-4 total drinkers) and we opened them all at the same time and went back and forth comparing in a loose sort of way. My sense memory isn’t that great, especially after getting a little buzzed, and (oh not taking the whole endeavor terribly seriously), so it was useful to have, for instance, four 4 oz bourbon county pours of various vintages to sip on and compare, with all of them warming and opening up collectively.
     
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  11. drtth

    drtth Initiate (0) Nov 25, 2007 Pennsylvania
    In Memoriam

    Here's an example of a tasting some friends and I once had.

    Some years ago Weyerbacher made and bottled the Old Heathen Stout. They also barrel aged it in Bourbon barrels and called the result Heresy. (They still do Heresy but have discontinued Old Heathen.)

    I set up a tasting with a few friends. We had the most recent three years of Old Heathen and the same three most recent years of Heresy. We started with the most recently bottled of Old Heathen then the same year's bottling of Heresy. There was no discussion while sampling but people took notes for the discussion later. We then moved on to the next year and did a repeat. The same with the third year. Between each beer we took a break for some spring water and unsalted crackers. (Other things are not palate cleansers but palate changers, especially salt.)

    It was very helpful at learning to sort out the effects of the barrel aging on the base beer. It was also very helpful at sorting out the effects of bottle aging.

    One of the things that the six people involved pretty much all agreed upon was that time in bottle softened and integrated the flavors so that the flavor profile seemed more complex with age.
     
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