Monday, 27 October 2008

Sierra Nevada Bigfoot 2007

Although I said I'd be concentrating on the German beer tastings, I had a couple of bottles of other stuff that came with me from Ireland. One was a 2007 bottle of Sierra Nevada Bigfoot.
This was given to me by Declan of the Bull and Castle, my favourite bar in Dublin, on the night they hosted a bit of a farewell tasting session before I moved to Germany. Since then, it has sat forgotten in my cellar, alongside another rather special bottle given to me by Mr BeerNut which I will open in the next month - because it says so on the best before label.
But back to the Bigfoot. This poured a beautiful ruby-tinged deep amber with a tight tan head. The vapours (it's more than aroma!) are of sweet, sweet toffee, plum jam, blackcurrent, chocolate and vanilla. Lots of vanilla. It's velvety, rich, thick and sweet. As well as the dark fruity flavours and lovely vanilla, there are hints of licorice, and something that reminds me of rosemary. There's a tingly bitterness that creeps up slowly. It gets a little solventy as it warms up, but this doesn't detract from the warming, sippable enjoyment. I've always understood the Bigfoots (Bigfeet?) to be intensely hoppy, so I can only assume that this has aged really nicely to produce the rounded and complex flavours I got out of it.
I would have liked to compare this to some notes of it in a younger state, but regardless, I wish I had another bottle! In fact, on the strength if this I am planning to make an American-style Barley Wine and see if I can resist my urges by maturing it for a year before I open a bottle. We'll see...

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

Bigfoot is a great American barleywine for aging! I've got a couple '07s I've been hanging onto, and last year around the holidays, a local bar had the '02 on tap. Absolutely delicious, especially when that initial hoppiness dies down a bit and the complexity comes out.

Barry M said...

This was certainly delicious, I can't imagine what an '02 would be like! And on tap?

I just can't find this kind of stuff in Germany, so if I want to lay some down for a bit I'm going to have to bring some back from my next trip to Ireland or see if they have any accross the border in the Netherlands or Belgium. Or make my own :D

Thomas said...

I've had a young bottle or two over the years and it is indeed intensely bitter. I would like to try a aged bottle to see how it mellows.