All malt instead of some wheat, also some fresh hops.
[from the brewery] A completely original beer which, contrary to the other products of the Brewery, is not brewed with 35% of wheat. The Iris, which is only made with malt of the pale ale type (giving a more amber colour to the beer) conserves the typical flavour of the spontaneous fermentation, the complex aromas and the vinous taste.
The hopping is different too. Lambic is made with 100% dried hops, for the Iris we use 50% of dried... (show more)
Wonderful single-batch (unblended) sour ale. Only all-malt Cantillon beer, dry-hopped in the barrel. First had it in Brussels at the brewery.
WOW. Complex indeed - and very gueuze like. A full head, amber color, with a strong flowery aroma. Sour and bitter initially on the tongue followed by a wonderfully more pungent sour bitterness in the palate, with citrus, sour and sweet notes in both the finish and aftertaste (wonderfully complex, really!), a cutting acidity mixed magically with a mysterious and somewhat mystifying milky texture, light body, mild on the alcohol. Really a great one from a brewery I'm respecting more and more with each sample of their offerings. CHEERS!
Sour, cidery, crisp, complex, amazing lambic-style beer. This is what people should try to change their mindset in thinking that lambic means "fruit beer" - it doesn't. Unfortunately, no one will try it because it's obscenely overpriced and damn near impossible to find. I was priviledged to have this on tap.
Had it from what is probably the only cask of it in the states, at Capital Ale House in Glen Ellen (Richmond). The waiter said I was the first to order it in like 6 months. It was served in a champagne flute (why?) and had almost no carbonation. The acidity was nice, balanced, but the crowning achievement of this spontaneously fermented beauty is the funky stinky barnyardy character. This is as funky as the funkiest of burgundies. Very, very good, and I feel privileged to have been able to get it on draft.
not only have I tried it fresh...I tried it after it was baked on a shelf under lights...it was still good
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