The Barley Whine

Beer debates, more civil than sober

Willoughby Brewing Hazy Days

July 27, 2015 by Steve Leave a Comment

Willoughby Brewing Hazy Days

Willoughby Nut Smasher Release
Glasses of Nut Smasher with Hazy Days in the background

Willoughby Brewing Company was founded in 1997 and has recently garnered modest national attention. Much of that buzz has come in praise of their excellent Peanut Butter Cup Porter, a beer that sounds like what it tastes like and World Beer Cup gold medal winner in 2014. But brewmaster Rick Seibt has proven he can do more than make Clevelanders try a porter not named Edmond. With tasty, hop-forward brews such as Moonshadow and Cosmic, both American IPAs, hop fans are not left out of the Willoughby deliciousness. With that thought in mind, word that Willoughby was offering the chance to buy a 4-pack of a hoppy wheat beer in addition to the Nutsmasher allotment, made attending the most recent release of their amp’d up Peanut Butter Cup Porter a must.

Willoughby Brewmaster

THE BEER

This is the first canned beer we have sampled from Willoughby. Cracking the tab brings white bubbles up and a hugely fragrant, tropical hop aroma with tangerines, pineapple and lemon. The beer looks slightly cloudy with a pale orange color and potent white head. After that huge aroma, the first sip is a surprise; there is less wheat flavor, and a sweetness from the malt and a hint of that hefeweizen banana. The mouthfeel is thicker than an IPA from the wheat, which is quite pleasant. Hazy Days finishes like it started, with a big floral and citrus hop explosion and any hint of wheat is quieted by the hops. Very much an American take on wheat ale, this is certainly the hoppiest wheat ale we have had the pleasure of tasting. While it may not be a spot on imitator of the style, this is a beer with high drinkability, and a killer brew to have a four pack of on a warm night.

TASTING NOTES

Willoughby Hazy Days

CONCLUSION

Summertime brings heat, and where we drink, humidity. There is no question you are going to need refreshment. While there was a time in recent history when US beer lovers struggled finding a rewarding canned beer appropriate for beaches or classical music under the stars, better days are upon us. While cans of Hazy Days were released at the June ’15 there is word that these soon will be seen at First Energy Stadium for Cleveland Browns games this year, and hopefully more readily available in local markets.

Drink this delicious hop blast as fresh as possible. The flavors will reward your impatience, but like summer, they wont last.

 

8.5/10

[schema type=”review” url=”http://phoenix-3.bitnamiapp.com/2015/07/27/Willoughby-Brewing-Hazy-Days” name=”Willoughby Brewing Hazy Days Beer Review” description=”Craft beer review of Willoughby Brewing Hazy Days” rev_name=”Willoughby Brewing Hazy Days ” author=”Steve” pubdate=”2015-07-10″ user_review=”8.5″ min_review=”0″ max_review=”10″ ]

 

Filed Under: Beer Reviews Tagged With: American Wheat, Wheat Beer, Willoughby Brewing

7th Annual Blues and Brews

August 17, 2011 by admin Leave a Comment

Akron’s 7th Annual Blues and Brews event at Lock 3 was held on a glorious August Saturday in the downtown of the Rubber City.

Akron Blues n Brews
Akron Blues n Brews

Big thanks go out to Don and company at The Art of the Brew (and random.org) for tossing us the free tickets and Christine Montague for all the great info. These events can be burdensome on the beer lover, and credit should also be given to everyone organizing this event.  Blues n Brews succeeded as a living clockworks of pouring volunteers and guzzling geeks, to near perfect efficiency. None of the lines (a la Brewzilla) appeared. Not only was it smartly designed but the planning brought in a boatload of local brewers and local food. Two dozen Ohio breweries were represented, surprising nearly everyone with the variety and quality of their output, and the music and Winking Lizard food were icing on the pint glass.

If you have never been to a beer festival the structure generally conforms to a template of 1. Sell two types of tickets, standard and a premium known as Brewer’s Circle 2. Have food and– especially for outdoor events– water readily available 3. Provide a small sampling glass and tickets for beer sampling. Blues n Brews stuck to this template, allowing the Brewer’s Circle folks in two hours early and giving them access to a list of limited release barrel aged beers. We went this route, and while a few stations took a bit to cool kegs and get tapping, had an inspiring Hop Jam from Willoughby Brewing moments after getting in: and it only picked up from there.

Enjoying a Jackie O's
Sampling in front of the Ohio Brewer's tent

Best beers we sampled:

  • Hoppin’ Frog – D.O.R.I.S the Destroyer Double Oatmeal Russian Imperial Stout: A thick bodied, soy-sauce free chocolate/espresso flavor bomb.
  • Willoughby Brewing Co. – Hop Jam Black Rye IPA: Less than two weeks old, the hops are hugely piney and spicy with great malts to balance.
  • The Elevator – Big Vic Imperial Mogabi: A HUGELY citrus and fruity wheat IPA. Had after some big beers this beer held up to the biggest and baddest; reminding us that Columbus has a lot to offer.
  • Weasel Boys – Bourbon Barrel Aged Anastasia Russian Imperial Stout: Zanesville, are you kidding me? Do they drink bourbon there? Who cares; this beer had sweetness, mocha roasted stout flavors, and reminded one of us of a certain rare B.O.R.I.S variety. Good show guys.
  • Jackie O’s – Dark Apparition: Guilty hearts, many Jackie O’s virgins, kept going back to sneak a second, despite the wealth of options surrounding. A dark RIS huge on chocolate and berries with a medium mouthfeel and no indication it was brewed at such a high gravity
  • Jackie O’s – Hogwash: The Athens Ohio brewer known for creativity takes his shot at breakfast sausage. A spicy brew with massive lavender, backed up with a smokiness. Very different, and very drinkable.
  • Cellar Rat’s – Ratzberry Plague Porter: Nothing like plague rats to make one questions the potability of the beverage being poured by a volunteer from a poorly marked firkin. Medieval pandemics aside, a fruit beer with even a pleasant name stands a thin chance of winning over sods awash in barrel ages stouts. But yet the Ratzberry Plague Porter holds its own as creamy porter with a succulent red fruit element that screams sessionable.
  • Thirsty Dog – Bourbon Barrel Aged 12 Dogs of Christmas: Lots of nutmeg and cinnamon spicyness, malty sweet, with vanilla and oak from the bourbon. The added complexity makes a pretty good beer that much nummier.
Rich and Steve at Blues n Brews
Beer sampling and stomach tanning

We also sampled other tasty beers, all of which ranked, at worst as “not bad”. There were still scores of beers more we would have loved to sample; it seemed the rows of appetizing craft beer went on for miles. Perfect weather, great food, and lovely people made for an awesome craft beer happening. If you love good beer and live within a few hours drive, make it here next year to this great event.

Filed Under: Events Tagged With: Akron, Beer Festival, Blues n Brews, Cellar Rats, High ABV, Hoppin' Frog, Jackie O's, The Elevator, Weasel Boys, Willoughby Brewing

Prior Ideas

AIPA AleSmith American Pale Ale APA Avery Bells Black Ops Bourbon Barrel Aged Brandy Barrel Aged Brooklyn Brown Ale Cigar City Cleveland Beer Week Coffee Dark Horse DIPA Dogfish Head Double IPA Fat Head's Firestone Walker Founder's Great Lakes Brewing Company High ABV Hoppin' Frog Imperial red Imperial Stout IPA Kölsch Lagunitas Lambic - Fruit Milk Stout Pumpkin Ale Russian Imperial Stout Russian River Samuel Adams Sour Ale Southern Tier Stone Stout Surly The Bruery Three Floyds Troegs Wild Ale Willoughby Brewing

Fellow Beer Bloggers

  • Don't Drink Beer
  • Hop Bunnies
  • Zythophile

Copyright © 2021 · Parallax Pro Theme on Log in