Full Review

Deep Brewing Co.

Deep Brewing Co.
Spear Pressure British Style Golden Ale

Category: English Style Pale Ale

Date Tasted:
Country: USA
Alcohol: 4.5%
93 Points
Gold Medal
Exceptional

Deep Brewing Co.
Spear Pressure British Style Golden Ale

Category: English Style Pale Ale

Date Tasted:
Country: USA
Alcohol: 4.5%
Medium golden amber color. Fruity aromas and flavors of apple cidre, spiced apple sauce, honey, and bread pudding with a velvety, vibrant, spritzy, dryish medium body and an intriguing, medium-length finish imparting notes of apple fritter, caramel and baking spices, bread pudding, and sweet basil and garden herbs. Tons of apple notes make for an extremely drinkable pub Ale; a friendly English Ale if ever there were one.

Tasting Info

Beer Glass Style: Rich & Full
Aroma Aroma: apple cidre, spiced apple sauce, honey, and bread pudding
Taste Flavor: Same as aromas with notes of apple fritter, caramel and baking spices, bread pudding, and sweet basil and garden herbs
Bitterness Bitterness: Medium
Enjoy Enjoy: on its own
Recipes Pairing: Souvlaki, Fish & Chips, Asiago
Bottom Line Bottom Line: Tons of apple notes make for an extremely drinkable pub Ale; a friendly English Ale if ever there were one.

The Producer

Deep Brewing Company

The Producer
2524 Cathay Ct.
Tallahassee, FL
USA
1 850-567-0295

English Style Pale Ale

Beer Glass Nonic Pint Amber.jpg
Serve in a Nonic Pint Glass
English-style pale ales are pale gold to amber in color and range in alcohol from 4-6%. These beers are characterized by the flavors and aromas of nutty and biscuity English malts, floral and earthy English hops and the notes of fruitiness and faint butterscotch of English yeast. Water also plays a key role in the overall character of these beers. Great examples of this style are brewed with harder water resembling that of Burton-Upon-Trent, lending these beers an impression of dryness in the finish and rounded hop bitterness.

Pale ales originated in England over 300 years ago with the advent of new technology making pale barely malt a possibility. In the 19th century, ales that were pale in color were often referred to as pale ale or bitter interchangeably. Today, there is a distinction between these styles, albeit a very fine distinction with some arguing that “bitter” refers to the style dispensed as draft and “pale ale” to the style when bottled. Noteworthy examples of this style include: Fuller’s London Pride Pale Ale, Sam Smith’s Organic Pale Ale and Marston’s Pedigree English Pale Ale.