A few weeks ago, I 
    got an e-mail from Boston Beer. I get them all the time, of course, and you 
    can too if you sign up for them on their website. They're a great way to 
    keep up with the latest and newest beers in the Samuel Adams line. This time 
    around, the company was announcing their Harvest Collection 12-pack 
    sampler, which includes two bottles each of Samuel Adams Dunkelweizen, 
    Boston Lager, Octoberfest, Cherry Wheat, Brown Ale, and Irish Red. 
    
    It was the Dunkelweizen, though, that really got me excited. You see, years 
    ago, Samuel Adams Brewed a Dark Wheat beer that I really loved a lot. 
    And of course, Dunkelweizen (which means dark wheat) is really the same 
    thing, and is in fact a German styled wheat beer brewed with dark malts. 
    Think hefeweizen with a bit of roasted malt thrown in. It's usually unfiltered, meaning yeast remains in suspension (that's the 
    case here), a fact that adds a bit to the flavor. 
    
    Boston Beer did a very nice job on it, and I missed it a great deal. Thus my 
    excitement when I saw it was coming back. But let's get right down to the 
    heart of the matter and see how it is today, shall we?
     
    Samuel Adams Dunkelweizen pours to a cloudy ruby brown color with a 
    thick, rocky head formation and a spicy clove and smoke nose. I pour most of 
    my bottle into a tapered German wheat beer glass, then swirl the last third 
    around in the bottle to rouse the yeast and add that in, too.  The dark 
    malts are readily apparent and add a delicate chocolate chip cookie 
    character, while the crisp wheat adds a decided tartness. 
    
    And then there's the spice. Pungent clove and nutmeg, fruity banana and 
    pear, black pepper and smoke. Samuel Adams Dunkelweizen is brewed with an 
    authentic Bavarin yeast strain and it shows: this one is pretty darned close 
    to some of the better imported German examples of the style. A couple 
    bottles of this one are worth the price of the entire twelve pack (though 
    the other beers are no slouches, either). 
    
    Sadly, I never took notes on bottled Dark Wheat in the nineties for 
    comparison purposes, though I can remember to this day drinking a few 
    bottles with my boss and a friend after closing up the liquor store where we 
    labored for the day. I can almost taste the smoke and clove flavors that 
    were so pronounced in that wonderful beer.
    
    Fortunately, I did jot down my thoughts when Dark Wheat mysteriously 
    appeared in 2000 on draft:
    
    I always regretted not taking tasting notes on this beer. It was highly 
    regarded among many beer enthusiasts, and I've always missed it. You will 
    imagine my sheer excitement then, when I walked into the Great Lost Bear, a 
    multi-tap beer bar in Portland Maine, and saw this beer listed on the draft 
    menu yesterday. Surely there was a mistake. I rubbed my eyes and re-read the 
    listing of wheat beers. It was still there, plain as day: Samuel Adams 
    Dark Wheat.
    
    I ordered a pint and hesitantly took a sip. Would this taste the same as 
    my tastebuds remembered it tasting? It did! Cloudy yellow-brown in color 
    with a generous head formation, Samuel Adams Dark Wheat has a spicy clove 
    nose with a hint of smoke. There's a cracker-like wheat body, a touch of 
    chocolate, heavy clove notes, banana, and a tart refreshing finish. Loaded 
    with hearty yeast character, this is a very authentic dunkelweizen. This was 
    a test batch from the brewery in Jamaica Plain with limited distribution, so 
    don't look for it in bottled just yet. Could this mean Dunkel Weizen is 
    returning however? We can only hope. 
    
    Apparently, it did mean as much, it just took about nine years for it to 
    happen. But hey, it was worth the wait. Go out and get some. You can thank 
    me later.
     
    
    
               Update: September 15, 2011: How lucky I was 
    when I sat down for a beer at my local Taco Mac tonight. I had ordered a mug 
    of Samuel Adams Octoberfest but the keg had just kicked. To replace, a fresh 
    keg of Samuel Adams Dunkelweizen was almost ready to be tapped. Of course I 
    ordered a mug, and this slightly dark malty, subtly smoky, and complex 
    tart ale packing notes of banana and clove was a real treat indeed. Not to 
    be missed if you catch it on draft.
Update: September 15, 2011: How lucky I was 
    when I sat down for a beer at my local Taco Mac tonight. I had ordered a mug 
    of Samuel Adams Octoberfest but the keg had just kicked. To replace, a fresh 
    keg of Samuel Adams Dunkelweizen was almost ready to be tapped. Of course I 
    ordered a mug, and this slightly dark malty, subtly smoky, and complex 
    tart ale packing notes of banana and clove was a real treat indeed. Not to 
    be missed if you catch it on draft.
 
    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