Short's Brewing Company Bloody Beer

Bloody Beer

 

Short's Brewing Company in Elk Rapids, Michigan, United States 🇺🇸

  Spiced / Herbed / Vegetable / Honey - Spiced Rotating
Score
6.18
ABV: 7.8% IBU: 47 Ticks: 27
Beer Brewed with Roma Tomatoes and with Black Peppercorns, Celery Seed, Horseradish, and Dill Our reverse engineered Bloody Mary: umami-filled, herbaceous goodness in a glass

Short’s loves to embrace weirdness, and it doesn’t get any weirder than this. In this case, we reverse-engineered a Bloody Mary by adding Roma tomatoes (peeled, grated, and blended) a whole buncha horseradish, black peppercorns, dill, and celery seed into the wort. Then it rests its weary bones until it’s perfectly seasoned and ready for brunch. This beer’s been around since 2007 when it made its global debut in the Imperial Beer Series, and its legend has filled the glasses of many and the minds of even more. It’s like a weird hug from us, and who doesn’t want that?

Bloody Beer was beer number 8 of 13 from our 2007 Imperial Beer Series Originally brewed on 3/22/07, Bloody Beer was the 290 batch of beer ever brewed at Short'sIt was hand bottled almost 2 months later, over a two day stretch on 5/16 and 5/17/2007, yielding 864 individual 750ml bottles. The yeast used to make Bloody Beer is a California Lager yeast. This yeast is only used to make two other beers at Short's. The pub staple, Village Reserve, and the highly regarded, but infrequently seen, Pistachio Creme Ale. Since opening our production facility, Bloody Beer has been featured as a 12oz limited specialty bottle release 3 times.Bloody Beer was originally described as "Specialty beer fermented with Roma tomatoes, horseradish, dill, celery seed and tellicherry peppercorns", although today's batches use black peppercorns over the tellicherry variety. Each gallon of Bloody beer has approximately 2 grams of dill and horseradish, 4 grams of celery seed and black pepper, and 1.5lbs of Roma tomatoes!! The 2007 Imperial version had a whopping 8.5% ABV, today's batches have been dialed back slightly, but are still an impressive 7.5% ABV Set to hit stores early next week, initial consensus from the few that have had a sneak preview proclaim that this is the best 12oz bottle version yet and the closest recreation of the famous Imperial batch from over 5 years ago.Bloody Beer is one of two original Imperial beers that has been awarded medals at global beer competitions, by getting a Silver at the 2009 GABF for Experimental Beer. (Black Licorice was the other, taking a Bronze at the 2012 World Beer Cup) Below is Joe Short's thoughts about how Bloody Beer came to be:One of the coolest things about beer is its adaptability to foreign ingredients. I am simply enamored with the result of this effort. I have always enjoyed a little American lager in my Sunday afternoon bloody Mary recipe. I have heard of great results from home brewed tomato ales, and I am familiar with using pepper in beer, so making a bloody Mary out of beer sounded fun and delicious. I chose the California lager yeast because it produces great results in our Village Reserve, which just so happens to be a beer perfect for putting in a bloody Mary. Although I have never used fresh dill or horseradish in beer, I thought it was a simple enough application to get the results I wanted by throwing them in and letting the beer absorb them much like making a tea or spicing solution. I chose to go with Roma tomatoes because of their cooking and flavor quality. We used 300 lbs. of the giant red berry in this beer (nearly 2 lbs. per gallon). Tomatoes are rich in calcium, potassium, vitamin A and C. Tomatoes are also a good source of lypocene which is an anti oxidant and powerful inhibitor of cancers and heart disease and is said to be good for your eyes. It's no wonder the Bloddy Mary has been the infamous hangover cure with all the benefits it possesses from the spices; pepper, dill, celery seed and horseradish have rich ancient histories for health benefits fro pain relief, indigestion, colic, fever, stomach ache and inhibitors of food pathogens. The Bloody Mary is said to have been invented by Fernand Petiot in New York in the 1920's. He mixed equal portions of vodka and tomato juice together and with the evolution of a little Worcestershire, cayenne pepper and lemon and American classic was born. The name is disputed to have come from the actual Queen "Bloody" Mary herself. while in power during the mid 1500's she wanted to convert England back to Roman Catholicism by force and executed hundreds of Protestant leaders. However the name actually came to be, I find it useful for the creation of the "Bloody Beer" and the story to go with it. This beer will go great with most anything, especially a big piece of garlic toast, eggs, with host sauce and locally smoked bacon. I encourage you to enjoy it with good company at a BBQ, baptism, brunch, wedding, funeral, political gathering, birthday party, retirement party, polka festival, ballet, or at home in your recliner next to the fire place with the Wall Street Journal.
 

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4
Appearance - 6 | Aroma - 5.5 | Flavor - 3 | Texture - 3 | Overall - 3

Can from Livonia Liquor. Pours a clear copper with a finger of off-white head that dissipates. Celery seed all over the nose floral pepper aromas and biscuit malt. Celery seed is the the loudest on the palate as well with some horseraddish spiciness next to peppercorn and dill on the finish. Boozy with a slightly sweet note underneath but lingering spice from the peppercorns and horseraddish.

Tried from Can on 22 Feb 2024 at 02:25


7.6
Appearance - 8 | Aroma - 7 | Flavor - 8 | Texture - 8 | Overall - 7.5

bottle. this was a total surprise beer to me. figured it would be kind of gross - was actually really freaking good.

Tried from Bottle on 01 Jan 2019 at 21:20


3.4
Appearance - 4 | Aroma - 4 | Flavor - 2 | Texture - 6 | Overall - 2.5

Bottle. Pours hazy amber with a tiny white head that dissipates quickly with little lacing. Aroma is tomatoes(!), grass, squash, very vegetal. Flavor is the same, somewhat spicy - the horseradish I guess, vegetal. Not so bad initially, but the aftertaste is very unsettling, bitter, metallic and unpleasant. Medium body. Not my thing.

Tried from Bottle on 06 Sep 2013 at 12:58


7
Appearance - 6 | Aroma - 7 | Flavor - 7 | Texture - 8 | Overall - 7

12 ounce bottle into pint glass, bottled on 9/19/2012. Pours slightly hazy orange copper color with a 1 finger foamy off white head with good retention, that reduces to a thin lace. Slight spotty lacing clings to the glass. Aromas of tomato, tomato skins, black peppercorn, celery seed, celery stalks, dill, horseradish, and herbal earthiness. Nice and extremely interesting aromas with good strength and balance; all of the spices mentioned on the bottle definitely show up. Taste of roma tomato, black peppercorn, dill, horseradish, celery, celery seed, herbal, grass, light hot sauce, and earthy spiciness. No bitterness on the finish; with lingering notes of roma tomatoes, black peppercorn, dill, horseradish, celery seed, grass, herbal, slight hot sauce, and earthy spiciness on the finish for a good bit. Nice and interesting flavors that are robust and well balanced; with zero cloying flavors after the finish. Light-medium cabonation and medium bodied; with a fairly slick and creamy mouthfeel that is good. Alcohol is very well hidden with only a slight warming noticed after the finish. Overall this is a very solid experimental spiced beer. Very unique and interesting; nicely balanced and smooth. I have never had a Bloody Mary before, so I cant comment on that note; but I would still say that they did a good job of what they were after. Fairly enjoyable stuff for me.

Tried from Bottle on 09 Jan 2013 at 19:32


5.1
Appearance - 4 | Aroma - 8 | Flavor - 4 | Texture - 4 | Overall - 4.5

Split a bottle; pours light brown/amber with a distinct cloud hanging in it. Intense tomato and celery aroma. Peppery up front with a subtle, smooth tomato flavor lingering on the palate. I could see pairing this with a salad or other vegetable dish, but not drinking more than one in a session.

Tried from Bottle from Horrocks Farm Market on 06 Nov 2012 at 14:27


6.4
Appearance - 6 | Aroma - 7 | Flavor - 6 | Texture - 6 | Overall - 6.5

Sample at GABF 10/13/2012, thanks to Bluemeow76 for assistance with note-taking. Murky reddish-orange color with a thin white head and spotty lacing. Aroma of tomatoes and spice. Medium body with a vegetal character and flavors of tomato, earth and spice. The finish is spicy tomato. Interesting but not something I would revisit.

Tried on 26 Oct 2012 at 21:33


4.1
Appearance - 6 | Aroma - 5 | Flavor - 2 | Texture - 6 | Overall - 3.5

Bottle. Fresh tomatoes and pimento aroma, reminds me quite a bit of green olive brine. Cloudy amber with a small ivory head. Vegetal malt flavor, with a an odd tannic spiciness, almost oaky. I’m a big fan of Bloody Mary, and this is just plain wrong, in my opinion. Now I’ve got to go make myself a Bloody Mary just on principle.

Tried from Bottle on 21 Sep 2012 at 16:35


6

Tried on 12 Oct 2011 at 21:05


7.6
Appearance - 8 | Aroma - 8 | Flavor - 8 | Texture - 6 | Overall - 7.5

Sampled on draft at GTMW 2011. Pours a slightly hazy copper color with a large creamy tan head. Good head retention and lacing. Aroma of tomatoes and pepper. The taste is tomatoes, pale malts and a peppery finish. Medium bodied. Not my thing, but pretty good.

Tried from Draft on 14 Aug 2011 at 18:12


8
Appearance - 8 | Aroma - 8 | Flavor - 8 | Texture - 8 | Overall - 8

12th June 2009
Cloudy amber beer. Crisp palate. Instant spicy hit from the pepper and more so from the horse radish and celery. From the mid through to the finish the tomatoes come through. They are rich and not sharp or acidic. Warming afterglow of spice. A remarkable and unique beer. Well balanced in it’s unusual ingredients. Joe Short is a genius!

Tried on 05 Jun 2011 at 10:33