When you name a beer “Perfect Porter”, you’ve certainly
set a high expectation with your customer, one that may not be easy to meet.
If there is one man who can meet such a claim, however, and have little
trouble in doing so, it’s Bert Grant. If you look up the word eccentric in
the dictionary, you’re liable to see Mr. Grant’s picture as a definition, no
doubt sporting the kilt he is notorious for wearing at his brewpub in
Yakima, Washington.
Bert Grant may be eccentric and famous for thumbing his nose at the strict
constructionists of the beer world, but he has earned that right by opening
America’s first brewpub back in 1982 and brewing great beer ever since that
day. He’s a firm believer in the notion that the brewer should have the
ultimate say in how his beers are made, and I concur wholeheartedly.
Back in 1995 Grant sold his brewery, but insisted on creative input. Today
at the age of 72 he’s still very active in the promotion of his beers and
they certainly have not suffered for the transition. You can take Bert out
of the brewery, but you can’t take the brewery out of Bert. In reality, you
can’t get him out of the brewery for long either, as he’s well known for
popping in to the brewpub and sharing a pint with a patron or two.
Grant’s Perfect Porter is a smoked porter. The beer uses peat-smoked malt as
an ingredient, one much more common to American Scotch Ales than it is to
porter. This gives the beer a unique flavor and a character all it’s own.
The smoke is much more subtle than in Alaskan Smoked Porter, another
very famous smoked porter that has a phenolic character not found in Grant’s
Perfect Porter. It works nicely with the roasty notes here.

Grant’s Perfect Porter pours to a deep black color with light head formation
and a smoky, chocolatey nose. The palate is bold and roasty and packed with
notes of prune, chocolate pudding, smoked peat, espresso, plum pudding, and
licorice. The finish has a wonderful roasty bitterness to it that lingers
nicely on the tongue. This is a wonderfully complex beer that I enjoy very
much.
I’m enjoying this beer as a nightcap this evening, but I can imagine it
going wonderfully with chocolate pudding, cake, or perhaps a chewy fudge
brownie. Whatever you drink Perfect Porter with, raise a glass in toast to
Bert Grant, a true pioneer in the American craft beer movement.
And remember, try a new beer today, and drink outside the box.
*Pricing data accurate at time of review or latest update. For
reference only, based on actual price paid by reviewer.
(B)=Bottled
(D)=Draft
(G)=Growler