De Dochter van de Korenaar Embrasse Peated Oak Aged (Whiskey-Cask)

Embrasse Peated Oak Aged (Whiskey-Cask)

 

De Dochter van de Korenaar in Baarle-Hertog, Antwerp, Belgium 🇧🇪

  Belgian Style - Strong Ale Special Out of Production
Score
7.50
ABV: 9.0% IBU: 46 Ticks: 95
Wrapped bottle, striped red paper with sticker "Peated whiskey cask" on the lower right end of the "logo" .
An 9% ABV beer in which the fermented sugars were all obtained from malt (20 degrees Plato).
A generous dose of hops and a long maturation time makes this beer best of the best.
This beer is bottle conditioned and will go through taste evolution during many years.
Selected by the brewer from his best peated whisky casks. Matured for a quarter of a year.
Winner of the Zythos Beer Festival (ZBF) consumer prize 2011.
 

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7.8/10 Appearance 8 Aroma 8 Flavor 8 Texture 6 Overall 8
Bottle. Deep dark brown color. Malt, roast, caramel, peat and tar in the aroma. Oak. Malty sweet, caramelly roasty flavor with hints of peat. Oaky. Quite drinkable.Earlier Rating: 3/18/2012 Total Score: 3.8Bottle. dark brown color. Hints of cream, caramel and clearly noticeable peat in the aroma. Malty sweet, caramelly flavor with carefully dosed peat. Full bodied, complex. tasty and delicious.
Tried from Bottle on 26 Aug 2019 at 12:04

8/10
Imported from untappd on 02-05-2020
Tried from Bottle on 16 Mar 2019 at 20:17

6.1/10 Appearance 6 Aroma 6 Flavor 6 Texture 6 Overall 6.5
Zwart bier met weinig schuim. Smaak is warm en krachtig met overduidelijk iets van rook en turf, pruimen en een verre whiskey smaak. Wat mij betreft veel te overheersende rook smaak, of ik uit een asbak aan het drinken ben. Jammer.
Tried from Bottle on 25 Dec 2018 at 13:51


8.1/10 Appearance 10 Aroma 7 Flavor 9 Texture 8 Overall 7.5
Voici un beau raté de maturation en fut de la part de DDVK. Autant la version non peated était réussie et mettait bien en valeur l'Embrasse, autant cette version en fût de whisky ne respecte absolument pas l'Embrasse et les arômes de fut de whisky étouffent complètement les autres ce qui lui fait perdre en complexité. Celle-ci en reste tout à fait appréciable, et les arômes de fût de whisky sont agréables et chaud, mais c'est moins subtil et moins raffiné. Les arômes de café, chocolat et de fruits étant largement en retrait. Déception donc.
Tried on 05 Aug 2018 at 12:52

7.9/10 Appearance 8 Aroma 9 Flavor 7 Texture 8 Overall 7.5
Bottle. Color: Black, light brown head. Aroma: Heavy peated, hints of caramel and roasted malt. Taste: Medium sweet roasted malt, hints of caramel, pretty strong peated notes and smoke hints, hints of hay, grass, dark red fruit. Slightly boozy and peaty finish which fade out pretty fast, unfortunately. Medium to over medium body, under average carbonation. Nice, but a little bit disappointing, mostly because of the lacking body and short finish, I think.
Tried from Bottle on 15 Jun 2018 at 20:31

7.2/10 Appearance 8 Aroma 8 Flavor 7 Texture 6 Overall 7
8-4-7-4-14
On tap @ Bergen Craft Beer Fest. Pours dark maroon, with an enormous creamy, mocha head. Aroma is peat barrels and roasted malts with bread and toffee. Full body, with soft carbonation. Flavour is roasted malts with bread, toffee and wood, as well as peat and heather.
Tried from Draft on 06 May 2018 at 16:28

6.1/10 Appearance 8 Aroma 6 Flavor 6 Texture 6 Overall 5.5
05.05.2018, tap @ Bergen Craft Beer Festival:
Nice slightly fizzy-creamy mediumlasting head. Aroma is mild peated, oak, peat, grass, minerals, fresh wood, bark, minerals, burnt toast, old rope, hints of unripe banana. Taste is mild peated, bark, peat, oak, hay, grass, minerals, old rope, ashes, soil, toast, paper. Medium bitterness, slightly watery and dry peated mouthfeel. Fair enough.
Tried from Draft on 05 May 2018 at 19:02

6.6/10 Appearance 8 Aroma 7 Flavor 6 Texture 6 Overall 6.5
Bottle at Fiere Margriet, Leuven. Dark ruby amber with a lasting off-white head. Aroma of peat smoke and caramel. Sweet malty and roasted flavour with overwhelming peat.
Tried from Bottle on 25 Apr 2018 at 20:21

7.9/10 Appearance 6 Aroma 8 Flavor 9 Texture 6 Overall 8.5
One of several barrel aged Embrasse variations (hard to tell apart sometimes), bottle from Geers. Moussy, irregularly shaped, pale yellowish beige, opening but otherwise stable, irregularly lacing head, hazy chestnut brown robe with ruddy bronze hue. Aroma of strong peated whisky and damp peat (iodine) indeed, but not so strong that it blocks the features of the basic beer, hinting at caramel candy, dried figs, dry earth, blackcurrant, brown bread crust, plum, baked banana, some vague coffee powder and tea hints. Sweetish onset but in a very noble, restrained way (like the basic beer), lots of dried prunes, fig and baked banana slice impressions, estery but well-contained, light sourish touch, softish carbo, supple and full mouthfeel. Caramel-, pecan nut- and brown bread-like malt body, thick and rounded, lightly bitterish toasted edges; leafy herbal hop bitterishness in the finish accentuating the toastiness, lingering ‘clean’ breadiness, retronasal peaty whisky as expected but not too overpowering, dried plum-like remainders and a soothing afterglow of whisky-ish alcohol, which refrains from become too obtrusive. This is classy, technically correctly executed, noble and tasteful: one of the best Dochters I had so far. They to me are still the masters in adding peated flavours to their beers without going over the top.
Earlier Rating: 11/19/2016 Total Score: 3.8
The most common of these ’peated versions’ of Embrasse, without sticker, but with a hangtag that mentions "aged on Islay Whisky barrels for several months", so I assume it is this one. Bottle from Fontana in Sint-Niklaas. Very slow gushing, but nothing dramatic. Creamy, dense, pale yellowish beige head, stable on the edges with islands of foam in the middle, quickly reduced to a thin, tan veil; initially clear, deep burgundy coloured beer with warm ruby red hue, hazy with sediment. Strongly iodine-like and smoked peat jumps to the nose instantly, but in this case it - fortunately - fails to cover up all the rest: it is a pungent but thin layer on top of a series of more attractive impressions, including caramel, brown bread dough, fig, raisin, dry earth, ruby port, blackcurrant, moldy walnut shells, candi sugar, Liège pear syrup, very vague hints of tea, dried banana, ginger, apple peel. Fruity, rounded onset, brown sugar sweetness which - in combination with the esters - establishes an effect of candied dates and raisins, hints of pear and blue plum too, with an undercurrent of blackcurrant- and elderberry-like sourishness balancing out the sweetness; medium, finely tingling carbonation, ’full’ but smooth and lightly oily mouthfeel. Caramelly and nutty malt core, matching well with the ongoing brown sugary sweet aspect, but shifting to a softly toasted bitterness in the end, as is the case with the regular version, making it very close to a Scotch (if rather unintentionally). The finish is altogether dry - though the malt and sugar sweetness clearly pushes through - with sharpish wood tannins (and oaky taste), a spicy hop accent and, after all this, a strong and heating glow of indeed very whisky- but also somewhat port-like alcohol, while at the same time, the sharp and strong peat returns and oversees the final act of this interesting play, but that dark berry-like sourishness lingers even after the peat has faded, probably accentuated by the barrel ageing. Scotch ale, because that is loosely what this is, aged on Scottish whisky barrels: seemingly a match made in heaven, but frankly the Ardbeg version I had a couple of years ago, was not a great success for me: peaty whiskies are a finished and refined product as such, but when beer is aged on their barrels, their finesse is blurred completely and only the strongest flavor and aroma aspects survive - most notably the peat effect, with a very strong and sharp iodine-like character. I am still struggling with this peaty thing in beer (not so much in whisky) and in the Ardbeg version, I could hardly taste anything else. If you insist on making a ’peated beer’, though, I think this one does it right: though very pronounced, both the peat and the sharp alcohol effect of the whisky as such remain tolerable and leave just enough room for the basic beer to show its malty, toasted, sweet and fruity character. Still a tad on the strong side for me in terms of peat, but a whole lot better than the Ardbeg version, to my personal taste at least. Enjoyed it, and I can see this age beautifully with some years of cellaring, when the sharper edges become smoothened.
Tried from Bottle on 09 Apr 2018 at 13:25