Belleflower Brewing Company The Widow

The Widow

 

Belleflower Brewing Company in Portland, Maine, United States ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ

Collab with: Messorem Bracitorium
  IPA - Imperial New England / Hazy Special
Score
7.39
ABV: 8.5% IBU: - Ticks: 2
Hazy Double IPA dry hopped with Ella, El Dorado, and Riwaka. Crack the can and youโ€™re hit with mango, cantaloupe, and lush tropical fruit. First sip brings strawberry, tropical fruit, and cotton candy grapes ๐Ÿ“๐Ÿฅญ๐Ÿ‡.
The Widow is the Queen of Swords. Forged through loss, fiercely independent, sharp, and fully self realized. Her power comes from surviving
 

Sign up to add a tick or review

Join Us


     Show


8.4/10 โ€” Appearance 7 Aroma 8.5 Flavor 9 Texture 9 Overall 8
16 oz can from The City, Sanford, ME. Strong aroma of tangerine, lime, and white grape. Geez wow the fruit pops in this bad boy. Flavor has a mango / tangerine combo up front with a soft bready malt backbone. What I love most is the long lingering white grape in the finish. Soft bitterness to balance the fruit. Awesome!
Tried from Can on 06 May 2026 at 21:17

8.5/10 โ€” Appearance 9 Aroma 8.5 Flavor 8.5 Texture 8 Overall 8.5
Undated can (ca. early March 2026), drunk 4/26/26. Compliments of CLW. Thanks, Chris!
Poured this one a little colder than usual so the aroma is a bit muted, but I'm getting some really round, tropical notes with white wine, tangelo, lychee and kumquat. Really soft, but quite aromatic with seemingly pillowy malts showing dainty honey-like notes. No resin, alcohol, weird yeast, excess sugar, etc...
Damn that's nice! When Belleflower is on, they are ON and Messorem is almost always on with their NEIPAs. This one has the pillowy-soft malt of Messorem and the all-around polished execution of them, with Belleflower's above-average bitterness for the style. Juicy with a plethora of white wine and tropical fruit notes. Both breweries usually exhibit a lot of maltiness, as they do here, so it can get a bit burly and rich at times, but the flavors are exquisite and the the slightly higher bitterness makes it that much more drinkable.
Tried from Can on 26 Apr 2026 at 20:09