Fellowship Ale
Woodstock Inn Brewery in North Woodstock, New Hampshire, United States 🇺🇸
IPA Regular Out of Production|
Score
6.54
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Fellowship Ale, an Indian Pale Ale, is brewed and bottled by the Woodstock Inn Brewery for the Lincoln-Woodstock Rotary Club based in Lincoln-Woodstock, NH. A portion of the funds raised in 2013-14 will be donated to support the worldwide eradication of polio through Rotary International’s partnership with the Global Polio Eradication Initiative. Find detailed information on this project and the Lincoln-Woodstock Rotary Club’s local community service efforts at these websites. polioeradication.org, rotary.org., lincolnwoodstockrotary.org.
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6.5/10
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Appearance 8
Aroma 7
Flavor 6
Texture 6
Overall 6
22oz bottle-tight offwhite-slightly hazy gold. A-citrus/pine bite, some lt malt. T-citrus/pine bite, some lt malt, some spice/peach @back end.
Tried
from Bottle
on 11 Nov 2013
at 19:55
6.8/10
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Appearance 6
Aroma 7
Flavor 7
Texture 6
Overall 7
Bottle, poured a yellow-copper color with a small off-white head. Aroma was light earthy notes, malts. Flavor was light malts, some light hop notes.
Tried
from Bottle
on 30 Jun 2013
at 17:12
6.3/10
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Appearance 6
Aroma 7
Flavor 6
Texture 6
Overall 6
Bottle courtesy of BeerandBlues2, thanks! Hazy golden amber color, small white head. Aroma of grass, straw, lemon. Taste is light lemon.
Tried
from Bottle
on 30 Jun 2013
at 17:03
6.1/10
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Appearance 8
Aroma 6
Flavor 5
Texture 6
Overall 6.5
Pours a lightly hazy medium copper color with a huge bubbly white head that persists forever leaving a modest amount of lace on the way down. Aromas of butterscotch and toffee with hints of caramel and light earthy spicy hops. Twinges of mineral water and hints of sulfur round out the nose. Sweet malty caramel with lots of toffee and butterscotch flavor are front and center with a lightly citric and earthy hop flavor to provide bits of balance. Medium body with a moderate level of carbonation and a sweet slick mouthfeel. English style IPA with all the faults that come from ringwood yeast. I don’t know why I continue to buy beer from this brewery, I guess I’m hoping that they have learned what a diacytyl rest is.
Tried
on 12 May 2013
at 17:19