My homebrew. Only done it once, and it was a complete success, imho. This is an Imperial Stout that is actually one of the best I've ever had. The pic you see here is one that I'm drinking now (that's the title of the thread, right?), as opposed to some of the pics below which were taken during my first tasting a couple of months ago. Perfectly balanced with creaminess, slight hopiness, coffee and chocolate notes, roasty...everything I'm looking for in an Imperial Stout. My pastor and friend from
Crossroads Church here in Chicago is also a pretty badass brewmeister, and he was my Mr. Miyagi for this and 2 other creations, which were 2 different Pale Ales (see below).
This is a pic of the inaugural pour of the Imperial Stout a few months ago at Pastor Mike's house. As you can see, we took the opportunity to do a little grillin too...
That day we also cracked open both Pale Ales. Each Pale Ale was brewed the same way, except that 2 different yeasts were used for the fermentation process. Both beers tasted different but awesome nonetheless. I'm still trying to figure out which one I liked more. The picture you see here shows some pretty awesome lacing from one of the ales (I forget which one) and some remaining sediment in each of the bottles. I was amazed when I tried the sediment. It tasted like a completely different beer than the Pale Ales themselves. The ales minus the sediment were moderately hoppy, piney as a opposed to straight bitter hoppiness [which I prefer], and all around crisp. The sediment, on the other hand was amazingly different; clovey, banana-y, much cloudier, kind of like a summer or wheat beer. Great contrast. I learned a lot, and can't wait to do it again. GO YEAST! It's truly a miraculous fungus.
Thanks for the lesson Pastor Mike! Can't wait to brew with you again.
"Skin that smoke wagon and see what happens..."
- Wyatt Earp, Tombstone