Review Date 8/15/2008
Try?
Re-buy?
Here it is
August, and I’m actually just finishing up the last of my 2008 Longshot
beers. If you don’t already know, Boston Beer Company (the makers of Samuel
Adams beers) offers its fans a chance to have their own homebrew recipe
brewed up and sold in stores all across America. And while I’m still
drinking this year’s batch, they're busy getting ready for 2009, announcing
four finalists: a traditional German style Bock, a somewhat less traditional
Espresso Stout, a classic German Pilsner, and an English Brown Ale. For my
part, I’m rooting for the Bock and the Espresso Stout, but your mileage may
vary.
Anyway, I hope that whatever beers end up triumphant and appear in next
year’s sampler, they’re as good as the Longshot Weizenbock that I’m
sipping tonight. Homebrewer Rodney Kibzey gets the credit for the recipe for
this one (and his face on every bottle as his reward). This is, in my
estimation, one of the best Longshot beers to come around the pike, ever.
Kudos once again to Boston beer for giving homebrewers a chance to have
their beer showcased, and for giving the rest of us an opportunity to enjoy
them.
If you’ve never tasted a weizenbock before, you’re in for a treat. These
German-style wheat beers combine chewy barley malt flavor with tart wheat
character and spicy clove notes from the yeast employed. And like the bock
style from which they borrow, they’re also stronger than most. Rodney’s
Longshot Weizenbock has an alcohol content of 7.2% alcohol by volume, about
half again as strong as most beers.
Longshot Weizenbock pours to a wonderfully murky red color with a
thick rocky head formation and a spicy nose of clove and banana. Weizenbocks
usually have a bigger, firmer body than most wheat beers do, and this one is
no exception. The tart wheat comes through nicely, but there’s plenty of
chocolate, too, some spicy clove, and plenty of banana and apple fruit.
Fresh bread and chewy caramel come through, too. The finish is slightly
sweet, with a little alcohol warmth and a lot of malt richness.
I really enjoyed this beer when the 2008 Longshot six-pack was released, but
I also just popped a bottle dug from the depths of my DBR with about six
months of age on it. If anything, I think it’s gotten a little meatier, with
a rich and luscious mouthfeel that really satisfies. A shame this one isn’t
available anymore, other than perhaps the odd Longshot six-pack left hanging
around, And even then you’d have to buy three bottles of
Longshot Grape Pale Ale with it, that likely have not held up so well.
Boston Beer, if you’re listening, Samuel Adams Weizenbock would be a great
addition to your lineup……
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