Cambridge Brewing Company American Three Threads

American Three Threads

 

Cambridge Brewing Company in Cambridge, Massachusetts, United States 🇺🇸

  Strong Ale - American Special Out of Production
Score
7.12
ABV: 7.0% IBU: - Ticks: 1
It is our own blend of a roasty, oak-aged brown ale, our six-months-in-wood Cerise Cassée sour ale, and a splash of Red God I.P.A. At once caramel-smooth, with notes of chocolate and roasted malts, but offering a kiss of hop flavor and bitterness, and a slight but noticeable hint of cherries leading into a tart finish. Each barrel (keg, not butt) was blended by hand to save our ears from Huey's cussin' (We love you, Hugh!), so as would be the case historically, expect a little variation from pint to pint. Heck, we might even let our bartenders play around with this a bit on their own. Look out. . .
 

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8.4
Appearance - 10 | Aroma - 8 | Flavor - 8 | Texture - 8 | Overall - 8.5

I think I’ve had about 15-20 tulips of this stuff so far this summer. Perfect appearance, dark mahogany brown with deep chestnut-ruby highlights, big stickyish medium-tan head is well-retained and there is plenty of spotty lacing about. Aroma of fruity, bitter hops (from the Red God) with that sticky sweet, black cherry-like fruitiness from the sour ale and a delicious earthy, semi-bitter chocolate and molasses note from the bourbon barrel porter. The flavor is similar to the aroma, with light hops acidity throughout and a big moderately tart, moderately sweet cherry flavor that dosent fade, to me, so much as does your palate get used to the flavor (actually I guess that’s the same as fading). Then you really start to notice the bourbon, only it’s very well-done and sort of mixes in with the chocolate and caramel. It’s got the hops bitterness for the hophead in your family, the barrel aging for the, um, barrelaginghead in your family, and the sweet, sticky caramel and toffee with roasted bitterness for the stout/porter lover. Though the cerise cassee was nowhere near as tart as I would have liked it to be and the cherries were a little bit too sweet and sticky, it works better here, with the sweetness being offset better by the other elements. The mouthfeel is divine, with tiny bubbles tingling your mouth everywhere. Silky, milk-chocolatey texture, with some oiliness from the cherries and hops. The porter really emerges as it warms, and you always get a kick of lightly tart cherries on the end. Awesome job, Will is a masterful blender. I wish this beer would get more exposure, it’s odd that no one really talks about this beer here in Boston. Oh well, I’m content to just keep sippin it. (Wish they wouldnt serve it so cold to start, though). Acid and dry yeastiness really bulid on the palate, but I seem to be able to drink 3 or so of these at a time without really being bothered. Sort of a palate killer though, I wouldnt go reviewing another beer after this one. Severely unfiltered, feels grainy at times, and that, I think, is why I like it the most.

Tried on 12 Aug 2005 at 16:58