Victory Sunrise Weissbier
- Product Reviewed: Victory Sunrise Weissbier
- Brewed By: Victory Brewing Company; Downingtown, PA
- Style: Bavarian Weizen
- Form Reviewed: Draft at Brewpub, August 10 1996
- Original Posted to Usenet: October 2, 1996
Initial Impressions:
The summer was quite interesting, what with my spouse moving across
the country to go to graduate school and all. However, this Big Life Change
afforded at least one side-benefit: an excuse to take yet another roadtrip
across the continent. Of course, I sampled many beers and visited many
brewpubs, beer bars, and breweries. Several beers stood out, and there were
several surprises (some positive, some negative). However, the brewery that
I most wanted to visit was the new Victory Brewing Company, in Pennsylvania.
My expectations were piqued by discussions with Jim Busch, who
is involved in the brewery (as one of the principles involved, plus occasional
pilot brewer). Jim made the basic mission of the brewery plain. Victory
seeks to specialize primarily in German lagers, and they take this fairly
seriously. Unlike most microbreweries in the US, Victory places a strong
emphasis on replicating the ingredients and brewing procedure of the beers
that they seek to replicate.
To achieve this, a decoction brewery was built, and German ingredients
serve as the base for most of their beers. (This creates an interesting
new approach to American IPA with their Hop Devil; I plan to dedicate a review
solely to that). All beers on tap the day I visited the pub, save for the
IPA, were decocted at least once. This ultimately makes a big difference.
The irony of my visit to Victory is that I had gone in expecting
to be blown away by the Dortmunder, Marzen, IPA, and Bock. Jim had sent me
out several samples as I was preparing an article for publication, and I
was very impressed with the lot. However, it would ultimately end up being
this bavarian weizen that dazzled me.
The beer in my glass was totally cloudy, pale, complete with a
big rocky head as one would expect from a good example of this style.
Nose:
The nose was a combination of wheaty maltiness with clove and banana
notes being more than evident.
Flavor:
The first thing I noticed was a chunky maltiness -- the sort of
maltiness that only a decocted weizen can offer. This chunky malty wheaty
flavor slid into a marriage of the requisite banana and clove notes. I found
the banana to have a slight edge on the clove, but this made for a good
balance between the ester and the phenol. This beer was very gassy -- again
as it ought to be.
Final Analysis:
About three weeks prior to my visit to Victory, I had the opportunity
to revisit Tabernash Weiss, one of the first
true Bavarian weizen
beers brewed brewed by a craft brewer in the U.S., at the 1996 Oregon
Brewers Festival. When I
originally reviewed it to
this forum over two years ago, I was blown away, and awarded it a five-star
rating. Since then, Tabernash has moved away from imported malts in favor
of domestic varieties, and has never decocted this beer as originally planned.
I found the sample in July of 1996 to have slipped in contrast to my notes on
the beer from 1994. While the past couple of years have seen many new
interpretations of the Bavarian weizen style brewed in the US, few reached
the level that Tabernash had in 1994 (although most were excellent beers).
The Victory weissbier, frankly, sets a new standard for me in domestically
brewed Bavarian weizens. Not only is it a better beer than Tabernash today,
but I have the temerity to argue that it is better than Tabernash was
two years ago. Unfortunately, the Victory offering is a seasonal product
(and certainly not available in my home stomping grounds -- as it
ought not be).
Rating: *****
(5-star scale)
Copyright 1996 by David Brockington, all rights reserved.
Seattle, USA
Comments? Fire off some email:
dbrock@u.washington.edu
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