Greenbush Brewing Company
Microbrewery
in Sawyer,
Michigan,
United States 🇺🇸
Associated Venue: Greenbush Brewing Company
Established in 2011
Contact
Description
Good ideas often start over beer. Always looking to take a good thing too far, we sat down over a beer (or two) and decided that beer itself was a good idea. Of course, not just some easy-drinking, institutional prole beer, but stuff like the beers we’d had at great bars. In short, we wanted beer with flavor. Complexity. Character. Intensity. Not words found in the mass-market lexicon.
So with a banjo burner, a bunch of industrial-sized kitchen pots and as many buckets as we could find, we jumped in feet first. Once a week, every week. Now, several years later and with a 15 barrel version of said banjo burner and kitchen pots for a brewhouse, we’re befuddling the beer judges and converting the masses. One pint at a time.
Our original brewing system has a long and sordid history befitting our line of beers. It centers on the second-to-last kettle ever built by noted coppersmith Fred Zaft, a handcrafted, solid copper 7-barrel brew kettle originally housed in a nineteenth century bar in San Francisco’s old Italian neighborhood. At one point, the bar had been totally restored to its past glory, replete with a “self-flushing spittoon” under the bar (yes, it was actually a urinal). Unfortunately, we were not able to get the self-flushing spittoon.
If you think our beers tend to cross various lineages, you’ll love tidbits like the fact that in 1951, our current building endured a freight train derailing and plowing into the building. We hope our beer can make that sort of impact on you.
So with a banjo burner, a bunch of industrial-sized kitchen pots and as many buckets as we could find, we jumped in feet first. Once a week, every week. Now, several years later and with a 15 barrel version of said banjo burner and kitchen pots for a brewhouse, we’re befuddling the beer judges and converting the masses. One pint at a time.
Our original brewing system has a long and sordid history befitting our line of beers. It centers on the second-to-last kettle ever built by noted coppersmith Fred Zaft, a handcrafted, solid copper 7-barrel brew kettle originally housed in a nineteenth century bar in San Francisco’s old Italian neighborhood. At one point, the bar had been totally restored to its past glory, replete with a “self-flushing spittoon” under the bar (yes, it was actually a urinal). Unfortunately, we were not able to get the self-flushing spittoon.
If you think our beers tend to cross various lineages, you’ll love tidbits like the fact that in 1951, our current building endured a freight train derailing and plowing into the building. We hope our beer can make that sort of impact on you.
6.8/10
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Appearance 8
Aroma 6
Flavor 7
Texture 8
Overall 6
Ah, Gretchen, thank you, sweetie.
This was poured into a snifter.
The appearance was a dark brown color really super close to black color. There was a light lacing going around the glass.
The smell had a really nice.sweet to roasty somewhat oaky and almost a light vanilla trying to come across in a really sort of way.
The taste was basically the same.
On the palate, this sat about a medium with a fairly good sessionability about it. The carbonation was there but wasn’t anything overbearing.
Overall, not a bad Imperial Stout, might have again.
This was poured into a snifter.
The appearance was a dark brown color really super close to black color. There was a light lacing going around the glass.
The smell had a really nice.sweet to roasty somewhat oaky and almost a light vanilla trying to come across in a really sort of way.
The taste was basically the same.
On the palate, this sat about a medium with a fairly good sessionability about it. The carbonation was there but wasn’t anything overbearing.
Overall, not a bad Imperial Stout, might have again.
Tried
on 03 Sep 2014
at 00:19
6.6/10
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Appearance 8
Aroma 6
Flavor 7
Texture 8
Overall 5.5
Thank you Gretchen for the bottle.
This was poured into a pint glass.
The appearance was a nice looking hazy orange color with a slim finger’s worth of foamy head.
The smell had a nice sweet blueberry thing going on and still allowed a fairly nice a slightly tartness to coincide.
The taste was sweet with the blueberries, but still brought in the the tartness that wasn’t overbearing.
On the palate, this was just an okay kind beer (weird cider perhaps) sharp carbonation sits sharp but not bland.
Overall. okay blueberry ale, bring your best if you’re coming to Alaska, we don’t mess around up here. I’d still have this again.
This was poured into a pint glass.
The appearance was a nice looking hazy orange color with a slim finger’s worth of foamy head.
The smell had a nice sweet blueberry thing going on and still allowed a fairly nice a slightly tartness to coincide.
The taste was sweet with the blueberries, but still brought in the the tartness that wasn’t overbearing.
On the palate, this was just an okay kind beer (weird cider perhaps) sharp carbonation sits sharp but not bland.
Overall. okay blueberry ale, bring your best if you’re coming to Alaska, we don’t mess around up here. I’d still have this again.
Tried
from Bottle
on 03 Sep 2014
at 00:07
4.4/10
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Appearance 6
Aroma 4
Flavor 5
Texture 4
Overall 3.5
bottle - This brew pours up a huge off-white head. It’s massively over-carbonated and smells like it. There’s also a trace of indistinct malt and some off smelling funk. Not good. The flavor is bitter but not in a good way. Medium bodied. Bandaid character. The ample hops taste okay and surprisingly at this point it’s not undrinkable, but it can’t overcome distasteful signs of infection.
Tried
from Bottle
on 17 Aug 2014
at 14:50
6.4/10
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Appearance 8
Aroma 7
Flavor 6
Texture 6
Overall 5.5
Draft. Bready orange malt and orange peel aroma. Hazy amber with moderate head. Sweet orange malt and strongly bitter metallic orange peel flavor. Rough.
Tried
from Draft
on 06 Aug 2014
at 16:43
7.3/10
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Appearance 8
Aroma 7
Flavor 7
Texture 8
Overall 7
Bottle. Orange caramel malt and grapefruit peel aroma. Amber with moderate head. Sweet orange-caramel malt and moderately bitter grapefruit and pine flavor. Nicely blended.
Tried
from Bottle
on 31 Jul 2014
at 17:53
7.8/10
—
Appearance 8
Aroma 8
Flavor 7
Texture 8
Overall 8
Location: Draft at Girl and the Goat, 7/5/14
Aroma: The nose is a nice mix of chocolate malts and pine/resiny hops
Appearance: It pours a dark brown color with a nice forth of tan/light brown head
Flavor: The taste is similar to the nose, nice balance, some sweetness, but leans bitter
Palate: The body is medium, it has a solid mouthfeel, smooth, with a decent dryness
Overall Impression: A very nice example of the style overall. I enjoyed this beer, and I also thought it held up well with the food at this excellent restaurant.
Aroma: The nose is a nice mix of chocolate malts and pine/resiny hops
Appearance: It pours a dark brown color with a nice forth of tan/light brown head
Flavor: The taste is similar to the nose, nice balance, some sweetness, but leans bitter
Palate: The body is medium, it has a solid mouthfeel, smooth, with a decent dryness
Overall Impression: A very nice example of the style overall. I enjoyed this beer, and I also thought it held up well with the food at this excellent restaurant.
Tried
from Draft
on 30 Jul 2014
at 18:49
7.8/10
—
Appearance 8
Aroma 7
Flavor 8
Texture 8
Overall 8
12 ounce bottle into tulip glass, bottled on 6/30/2014. Pours slightly hazy reddish copper color with a 2 finger dense and rocky off white head with great retention, that reduces to a nice cap that lingers. Nice foamy lacing clings on the glass. Aromas of grapefruit, tangerine, pineapple, lemon zest, orange peel, floral, grass, light pine, caramel, toffee, bread, and floral/grassy earthiness. Nice and pleasant aromas with good balance and complexity of citrus/tropical hops and moderate dark malt sweetness; with solid strength. Taste of big grapefruit, tangerine, pineapple, lemon zest, orange peel, floral, grass, pine, caramel, toffee, bread, and floral/grassy earthiness. Good amount of pine/citrus rind bitterness on the finish; with lingering notes of grapefruit, tangerine, pineapple, lemon zest, orange peel, floral, grass, pine, caramel, toffee, bread, and floral/grassy earthiness on the finish for a while. Very nice complexity and robustness of juicy citrus/tropical hop and moderate dark malt sweetness; with a great malt/bitterness balance and zero cloying flavors after the finish. Medium carbonation and body; with a smooth, crisp, sticky, and lightly slick mouthfeel that is nice. Alcohol is well hidden with only a slight warming present after the finish. Overall this is a very nice wheat IPA. All around good complexity, robustness, and balance of juicy citrus/tropical hops and moderate dark malt sweetness; and very smooth to sip on for the ABV. A very enjoyable offering.
Tried
from Bottle
on 24 Jul 2014
at 19:03
5.2/10
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Appearance 6
Aroma 6
Flavor 5
Texture 6
Overall 4
12oz bottle. Thick orange-gold body, big off-white head. Mild peach, melon in the aroma. Has a hint of overcarbonation, maybe inching into infection...something I’ve experienced with this breweries bottles before. Almost has a dry brett finish. Not outright bad, just not that impressive either. Chewy, messy, undefined malts. I have little tolerance for breweries who sell infected beers, and the overall reflects this.
Tried
from Bottle
on 17 Jul 2014
at 18:28
7.6/10
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Appearance 6
Aroma 8
Flavor 8
Texture 8
Overall 7.5
bottle - This brew has an aroma of citrus and resinous hops. The flavor is similar with the citrus and resin accented hops dominating the caramel malt. It’s intensely bitter with full bodied malt. It’s strong and very good though doesn’t quite jump out like some of the top beers in the style.
Tried
from Bottle
on 01 Jul 2014
at 20:21
5.5/10
—
Appearance 6
Aroma 6
Flavor 5
Texture 4
Overall 6
Bottle thanks to Russell. Pours a dark brown with beige head that diminishes quickly. The aroma is booze, vanilla, and oak. Slick mouthfeel with sweet roast, bourbon, and light rye. Decent.
Tried
from Bottle
on 22 Jun 2014
at 18:37