Yazoo/Calfkiller "The Beacon"
Posted: Sat Nov 09, 2013 9:58 pm
What is it?
It's made with "...some German oak smoked wheat malt, local TN honey, and some in-house Calfkiller-roasted coffee. It's fermented with Calfkiller's house ale yeast and unfiltered..."
Based on that description you would expect a darker beer. Well, you would be wrong - as was I. This poured a light straw color, I'm guessing due to heavy wheat presence. The head on this beer was the thickest, creamiest head I have ever seen on a beer. Period. The beer was carbed up like a hef so it sustained that head, too. After 10 minutes in the glass I finally decided to quit waiting for it to die and take a few sips. After that I dropped a bottle cap on the top just to see how long it would stay. I got tired of waiting and finally took it off.
Again, this is well after 10 minutes in the glass:
The aroma on this one was interesting. While the head was super thick, it trapped the coffee notes and you would have thought this was a porter if blindfolded. Once the head thinned a bit (much, much later) the yeast aroma broke through - Belgian, but not overpowering like some can be to me. There was a sweet something as well - not sure if the honey came through or I just imagined it but try to conjure up a spoonful of honey plus a little sumthin' sumthin from the yeast.
I took a quick video to show head and carb level another 5 minutes or so after removing the bottle cap from the picture above.
The taste starts clean, almost pilsner-like to me, then gets a little sweet, then a little spicy and finishes clean. Wait! After it clears your palette it leaves a coffee aftertaste. Not coffee-like, or roasted malt, but actual coffee. WTH!?!? That's awesome - and confusing.
This beer was absolutely unique. It doesn't smell or taste the way it looks. It's crazy, but crazy-good. My buddy and I split the bomber and just kept sipping while looking at each other like this -->
The ingredients don't seem to make sense and yet they work together very well. We enjoyed the bottle while scratching our heads and saying, "How the hell did they do that?"
Well played Yazoo. Well played Calfkiller.
Thanks Swen!
It's made with "...some German oak smoked wheat malt, local TN honey, and some in-house Calfkiller-roasted coffee. It's fermented with Calfkiller's house ale yeast and unfiltered..."
Based on that description you would expect a darker beer. Well, you would be wrong - as was I. This poured a light straw color, I'm guessing due to heavy wheat presence. The head on this beer was the thickest, creamiest head I have ever seen on a beer. Period. The beer was carbed up like a hef so it sustained that head, too. After 10 minutes in the glass I finally decided to quit waiting for it to die and take a few sips. After that I dropped a bottle cap on the top just to see how long it would stay. I got tired of waiting and finally took it off.
Again, this is well after 10 minutes in the glass:
The aroma on this one was interesting. While the head was super thick, it trapped the coffee notes and you would have thought this was a porter if blindfolded. Once the head thinned a bit (much, much later) the yeast aroma broke through - Belgian, but not overpowering like some can be to me. There was a sweet something as well - not sure if the honey came through or I just imagined it but try to conjure up a spoonful of honey plus a little sumthin' sumthin from the yeast.
I took a quick video to show head and carb level another 5 minutes or so after removing the bottle cap from the picture above.
The taste starts clean, almost pilsner-like to me, then gets a little sweet, then a little spicy and finishes clean. Wait! After it clears your palette it leaves a coffee aftertaste. Not coffee-like, or roasted malt, but actual coffee. WTH!?!? That's awesome - and confusing.
This beer was absolutely unique. It doesn't smell or taste the way it looks. It's crazy, but crazy-good. My buddy and I split the bomber and just kept sipping while looking at each other like this -->
The ingredients don't seem to make sense and yet they work together very well. We enjoyed the bottle while scratching our heads and saying, "How the hell did they do that?"
Well played Yazoo. Well played Calfkiller.
Thanks Swen!