Compare Beers Zeta Hop - 18th Street Here Comes the Reaper - Amager / Trillium SigteBroad
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Buy Zeta Hop - 18th Street Here Comes the Reaper - Amager / Trillium SigteBroad

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Company:

Style:

American IPA
American IPA
American IPA
ABV:

6.7
6.3
6.8
IBU:

60
0
0
Malt:

Pilsen, Munich, Carahell
Hop:

Perle, Chinook, Amarillo, Citra
Mosaic, Chinook
Prices / Buy:

Comercial Description:

1.-

Hop

American IPA

Predomina la intensidad aromática y sabores característicos de los lúpulos utilizados. Poderosas notas cítricas, presencia de lima y retrogusto a pino y resina. A esta cerveza le acompaña una espuma abundante, fina y cremosa. Dry Hopping con lúpulos Citra y Amarillo: adición extra de lúpulo en frío, directamente en el fermentador.

2.-

Here Comes the Reaper

An IPA coming in at 6.2% brewed with mosaic and chinook hops giving it a citrus boost with a spicy edge!

3.-

SigteBroad

Once Amager Bryghus and Trillium Brewing Co. had decided to do a beer together, some investigative brewer research started on both sides of the Atlantic. Trillium main man Jean Claude Tetreault (JC) came across the name of an old Danish type of bread called “Sigtebrød”, and we decided to aim for a beer with mostly the same ingredients as in this old style of bread. However, we wouldn’t be Amager if we didn’t dig a little deeper into the matter. It appears that the word “sigte” – in English “to aim” - can be taken back to the Viking era, where a “Sigtebrød” would be baked very hard as a substitute for a traditional longbow in areas where wood was scarce or even absent. After the victorious battle the Viking could then toast their bread bow on a traditional Anglo Saxon toaster. Illustrations of this bread bow have been found in several places in Ireland and Scotland, but not until recently did the confused archaeologists realize, what exactly was going on. Several hundred years later, Danish settlers in Minnesota brought the old Viking bread with them, and it soon gained widespread popularity. Also the bakery girls of blonde, Danish descent selling the bread, became popular to an extreme degree, and local Minnesotans soon nicknamed them “sigte broads” for their good looks. In some areas the baker even had to arm his sigte broads with a traditional Danish long knife to dishearten the most intrusive young, male bread costumers. All very weird, but indeed very true.

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