BrewDog: Never Mind the Anabolics
July 28 2012
Maxwell Arndt
Written By Maxwell Arndt - July 28 2012
April 03 2012
Brett Bartley
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Written By Brett Bartley - April 03 2012
Toripuru, Japanese for “liquid soul slaughterer”, is a beer crafted by the Herkimer, a German brewpub in the Lyn-Lake neighborhood of Minneapolis. It follows the craft beer microtrend of “bigger is better” that has yielded extreme beers like Sam Adams Utopias (27%), BrewDog Sink the Bismarck (41%), and Brouwerij ‘t Koelschip Start the Future (60%). Are these beers actually enjoyable, or is this just a ploy to attract attention for the breweries and brands that brew them?
How it actually works
A handful of these gargantuan beers do not use the traditional brewing method to achieve such high levels of alcohol. In many cases they brew as high of ABV beer as they can then freeze the final product and allow all of the alcohol to drain out of the solution, greatly increasing (sometimes doubling or tripling) the ABV of the final product.
Is it really beer?
Technically, yes. Although the alcohol is boosted by using non-traditional brewing methods, the base product is indeed a high-gravity beer. The alcohol for this “base beer” is obtained by fermenting higher-than-normal amounts of sugars that are extracted during the “mashing” of the beer brewing process.
Is it worth trying?
Big beers are big beers. If you like them, you’ll keep trying them. If you don’t, you won’t. This particular beer might be slightly different than its most recent boozy predecessor, but ultimately it will taste nothing like beer. Rather, it will taste like some combination of wheat wine, cordial, and hard alcohol. In short, if you like gimmicks, flavors of the week, or want a novelty gift for that beer geek in your life, then yes it’s probably worth it. If you’re in search of good craft beer, however, this might not be the best place to start.
Oh and, Toripuru is actually Japanese for “triple”. Gotcha.
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