Stone Brewing Old Guardian Barley Wine (1998 - 2003)

Old Guardian Barley Wine (1998 - 2003)

 

Stone Brewing in Escondido, California, United States 🇺🇸

  Barley Wine - Barley Rotating Out of Production
Score
7.98
ABV: 9.9% IBU: - Ticks: 22
A beautiful bold barley wine. Massive malt and hop notes. Silver Medal winner at the 2000 Great American Beer Festival in the Barley Wine category. Gold Medal winner at the 2002 World Beer Championships in the Barley Wine Category. Look for it in the first quarter of each new year. Can be cellared or enjoyed upon its release.

Admin Note: These first few years used the original recipe that was released in 1998 through 2003. For the 2004 vintage and later please use the other entry reflecting the recipe change.
 

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8.1/10 Appearance 8 Aroma 8 Flavor 8 Texture 8 Overall 8.5
22 fl oz bottle, 2002, at Stone Bistro, thanks to WeeHeavySD. Pours hazy orange with a fully gone head. Dense caramel malty aroma, slight oxidised. Smooth fruity flavour of malt and caramel. Smooth caramel into the finish. Holding up fantasticly despite the vague oxidised notes in the aroma.
Tried from Bottle on 07 Aug 2008 at 15:01

7.5/10 Appearance 8 Aroma 7 Flavor 7 Texture 8 Overall 8
(Bottle, thanks Marsiblursi!) Winter 03 version. Shady copper color, small tan head. Sweet, hoppy, chocolate and grainy scent. Also apples, yogurt and acidic. Strong raissin and grains taste. Smooth mouthfeel, low bitterness. Coconut scent also in the back. Alcohol taste lingers a bit.
Tried from Bottle on 01 Jul 2007 at 07:49

8.6/10 Appearance 8 Aroma 8 Flavor 9 Texture 10 Overall 8.5
Rating #900; 2003 bomber from Footbalm; Thanks Eric! Hazy rusty red with a tiny straw-colored head; Nose of caramel, dark fruit, with small hop and breadiness notes; flavor of dark fruit with a touch of spice and caramel with anice heavy body and touches of hops and alcohol in the finish! Smoothest barleywine I’ve ever had!!!
Tried on 05 Feb 2007 at 21:05

8.2/10 Appearance 8 Aroma 7 Flavor 8 Texture 10 Overall 9
12/02/06 Walk the Line Barleywine Festival, Dunedin, FL. 2001 vintage. The beer was an orange-ish color with an off white foam head. The aroma was light and consisted of pine hops and a light sweet maltiness. The flavor was really smooth. No sense of the ABV at all. The taste whisks you into a slippery slope of sweet caramel malts and slight dark fruitiness. What was once a sharp pine hop bitterness has mellowed to allow the sweeter pine hop flavor to come on out. Very nice. I wish I had the fore thought to let a couple of these ’01 bombers age. I just drank as I bought ’em.
Tried on 07 Dec 2006 at 21:13

7.6/10 Appearance 6 Aroma 8 Flavor 7 Texture 8 Overall 8.5
Thanks to kp for adding this to the 12 hours of beer at his cellar party as part of an Old Guardian vertical. After 3 years in the bottle this pours with little to no head over a hazy orange/amber body. Complex rich aroma. Lots of dark caramel and dried fruits such as you’d find in an English style barleywine, but the strong hops of an American barleywine are all still here in this and haven’t begun to fade in the least. Very smooth, nice supporting bitterness balanced with lots of sweet malt. This one won’t ever go bad if cellared properly, it will just thin out over time.
Tried from Bottle on 04 Jul 2006 at 09:38

7.9/10 Appearance 8 Aroma 7 Flavor 8 Texture 8 Overall 8.5
2003 bomber, cellared at cellar temp, from Footbalm, shared with OldGrowth on 4/6/06
Bottle opens with a large burst of CO2 being released. Encouraging. It pours with an absolute mountain of creamy, corn-mixed-with-white colored head that is well-retained and leaves behind plenty of lacing. Light sediment in the bottom and a ruddy-amber colored body with gentle effervescence notable, growing hazier towards the bottom of the bottle, but only marginally so. Pretty striking appearance for a filtered beer (even though it is bottle conditioned).
Aroma is a thick, English butter toffee-meets-caramel-and-munich malt sweetness. Strong, but with a remaining hop bitterness, that is reserved yet does provide relief. Dried pine resin, hard, dry leafy notes and some drying earthiness all provide balance to the sweetness up front. Deep apricots and fiery peaches (overripe peaches soaked in grand marnier perhaps) combine to put the finishing touches on a surprisingly strong, vibrant and moderately complex aroma. The nutty, lightly salty, English butter toffee really adds that extra oomph that gives it a little more appeal than just your usual straight up cara-munich plus hops and alcohol note that you get from the usual American barleywine.
The flavor is as equally well-malted as the nose suggests. Rich, sticky, warm caramel notes run hand-in-hand with light munich sourness, while hop bitterness adds a zestiness and perhaps some lightly dry orange rinds. Almost a spicy vanilla and tart orange fruitiness as well, which complements the full maltiness with similar flavors, but also balances it, not allowing it to cloy on the end. Ample, tight carbonation aids in the clearing of the palate at the end, but enough toffee and caramel texture are left behind to provide a satisfyingly rich aftertaste. Nuttiness is strong, perhaps a bit too much so, with growing munich malt heaviness/breadiness. But it never builds up too much, coming off as just a richly malted barleywine, ultimately. Furthermore, the boisterous, semi-acidic fruit and spice flavors really save the day, in regards to balance. And it’s hard to not appreciate that. What’s truly incredible is the almost complete lack of oxidation. Perhaps only about 5% or maybe less of the flavor is oxidation. That’s impressive for a filtered beer. Smooth, creamy, sticky on end, texture. Moderately warming on end as well, but without any sharp or overly apparent alcohol flavor.
Tried from Bottle on 11 Apr 2006 at 10:18

8.5/10 Appearance 8 Aroma 9 Flavor 8 Texture 10 Overall 8
Bottle Pours a clear deep mahogany with a modest but lasting sandy colored head. Lots of heavy lacing that slowly recedes down the sides of the snifter. Wonderfully sweet caramel and orange aromas. Flavor is a warming woody sweet maltiness. Citrusy brown sugar and a bit of the ABV comes through. Feel is extremely smooth and just slides down with each sip. Letting this warm up a touch enhances this some. Aftertaste is a sharp bit and the alcohol comes through some more. That warming feeling as it goes down is more like brandy than beer. All I can say is I am glad there are ramping up down there is San Diego.
Tried from Bottle on 03 Jul 2005 at 23:02

7.9/10 Appearance 8 Aroma 7 Flavor 9 Texture 8 Overall 7.5
Bottled. Reddish brown. Restrained aroma of malt and grapefruit. Soft and intensely malty with huge hopbitterness setting in early and dominating the finish.
Tried from Bottle on 05 Jun 2003 at 01:52

9/10 Appearance 8 Aroma 8 Flavor 10 Texture 10 Overall 9
Dark amber with red shine. White-yellow head, relatively stable. Nose gives alcohol, some chalk, dark ripe fruit, some ripe banana too. Gorgeous balance between noble hops and rich malts, alcohol, ripe fruit, dried fruit, Darjeeling tea, Armenian brandy,… WOW! THIS is what I call balance. This beer is an open invitation to start applying for a Green Card. I ought to take some 10-year old Framboise as antidote…
Tried on 27 Apr 2003 at 00:23

8.4/10 Appearance 8 Aroma 9 Flavor 8 Texture 8 Overall 8.5
Winter 2003 Release: This is a top-notch Barley Wine. Pours a ruddy dark orange color with a medium light beige head. Aroma is really nice, with sweet malt and a lot of caramel. Less alcohol in the aroma than in most Barley Wines I recall trying. Rich flavors of malt, caramel and hops that come out of nowhere. Finish is nice and tangy. One of the best Barley Wines out there.
Tried on 22 Apr 2003 at 15:11