tadalafil sublingual tablet 20mg
Another month, and Phillips brings us another couple seasonal releases, and I’m happy because one of those is their next Twisted Oak Stillage release. To recap, Phillips decided to create a series of barrel-aged beers with no names. First was a Scotch Ale that was all about the oak and not so much about the scotch, and now we have a Red Ale. If the first was anything to go on, this one should be good.
Twisted Oak Stillage Red Ale takes normal barrel ageing and adds a twist. This isn’t aged in old wine barrels, or even old whiskey barrels, but rather old rum barrels. Notably, the identity of the rum that was in the barrels previously is not revealed, but the mere fact it was in a barrel at all rules out the lower end mixer varieties.
Tasting notes:
Twisted Oak Stillage Red Ale
Enough speculation, though, is it any damned good? Yes, yes it is. First off, this is a very pleasant red ale. Even though 6.8% strays a bit into Imperial territory, it’s not a harsh or off balance product. Throw on the barrel aging and we get something more complex, and unique.
NOSE Sweet caramel/toffee backed by rum. The rum isn’t over-powering, though. A hint of oak rounds it out.
APPEARANCE Translucent brown with a hint of deep reds; thin white lingering head. A pretty beer for sure.
TASTE The caramel/toffee is definitely first, with the rum perceived more as a faint alcohol burn. The oak is a bit harsh (providing a rough tannic bitterness), but not unpleasant.
SHOULD I BUY IT? Definitely.
Double Dragon Imperial Red Ale
With Twisted Oak comes this year’s Double Dragon Imperial Red, practically begging for the side by side comparison. Yup, they both have “red” in their names, and that’s about where the similarities end. At 8.2% Double Dragon rules out even being brewed from the same recipe as Twisted Oak, and it shows.
NOSE Thin malt, some cereal, bittering hops.
APPEARANCE Deep Auburn; persistent cream head.
TASTE Highly boozey. Decent malt with some roast character. The bittering hops are evenly applied, but in the end it’s struck through with that Phillips metallicness that ruins so many of their beers.
SHOULD I BUY IT? Nope. Buy Twisted Oak instead. Phillips has just managed to cannibalize their own sales.
Coles notes:
Brewery | Phillips | |
From | Victoria | |
Name | Twisted Oak Red Ale | Double Dragon |
Style | Red Ale | Imperial Red Ale |
SOA Now | Bronze | n/a |
SOA Potential | n/a; table beer | |
Drink | Now | Don’t |
Pirate friendly? | Yaaaar! | Avast! |
Availability | Most LRSs | |
Cost | $7.00+ per 650ml bomber | |
Similar Beers (you can buy) | None. It’s pretty unique. | Lighthouse Siren… if you can find it |
Chuck says | Moar please. | Less please. |

Please continue to screw around with barrels.
cialis pharmacy online canada
So, you’re in Bolivia; after quickly confirming that you haven’t (yet) been kidnapped and held for ransom, you decide that, since you’re here, you might as well check out the local craft brewing scene. First, you take a few minutes to review the myriad poor decisions in your life that led you to conclude that a beer tour of South America was a grand idea. Once you’re done, though, you can take some solace in the fact that it really isn’t as bad as you might think.
And that’s my summary. Honestly, “not as bad as you’d think” is a perfectly valid take-away for this whole post. If you’re in a hurry, just stop reading here and you’ll have about the same knowledge as the poor bored schmuck who just kept on readin’ to the end.

This attitude works for things other than beer. Seriously, did anyone actually watch this movie?
Before going into detail about Bolivian beer, some background is in order. The South American palate is a thing of wonder. In particular, these people love their foodstuffs sweet, perhaps even more so than Americans. Virtually everything that can be stuffed in your food hole is spiked with sugar to broaden its appeal. Here are some examples of things I actually encountered in South America to drive home this point:
- A 6oz cappoccino, which already had sugar in it and whipped cream on top, was served with not one, not two, but three large sugar packets
- Major brands of pop (Coke, etc) are sweeter than their sickly sweet North American counter-parts
- Said major brands of pop are sold in 3 litre bottles, which themselves are bundled together into triplets, making for 9 litres of diabetes sauce in one convenient package. One of the three bottles is always Orange Crush
- The most popular local beer style is known to us as “Caribbean Lager”; these insipid pale lagers have extra sugar added after fermentation to eliminate any lingering hops bitterness
- The local soda makers, though, cater even further to the mighty gods of tooth decay, producing a drink that is so viscous with sugar that it pours noticeably slower (eg Inca Cola)
- Bread, of all things, is sweetened. I mean, why?
- Normal mustard is sweetened to the point of being indistinguishable from honey mustard
- Many grocery store items contained both sugar AND artificial sweetener on the ingredients labels
- A stout was described as “incredibly bitter–almost undrinkable–like all true stouts.” It was the maltiest, sweetest stout I have ever consumed
Wait… a stout? In South America? Sure it was effectively molasses in a glass, but damned if it wasn’t an actual stout brewed with actual ale yeast, pouring black with a tan head. I almost forgot where I was.

But then I saw the quality craftmanship of the building’s electrical wiring outside, and it all came back to me.
That’s the thing about Bolivia. Unlike most latin countries on this side of the Atlantic, cerveza doesn’t just come in one flavour produced by one brewery. Bolivians are fiercely loyal to their towns, to the point that each individual city has its own regional brewery. Locals proudly tell you that their local brewery produces the best beer in Bolivia and that all the others are crap. The fact that all these beers are nearly indistinguishable macro shit somehow has escaped everyone’s attention (and often they’re produced by AB-InBev anyway, so the jokes’ on the locals).
Even so, there are a few gems scattered throughout. Here is my Big List of Bolivian Beers. Each of these breweries typically produces a couple lagers, a bock, and a black version. Don’t let the names fool you, the Bocks are really just lagers with a shit tonne of sugar dumped in. The “Blacks” are the same, only with some kind of chemically-derived molasses-substitute crammed into the bottle.
Regionally produced Macros (aka skip)
Huari – AB-InBev, La Paz
Paceña – AB-InBev, La Paz
Taquiña AB-InBev, Cochabamba
Sureña – Semi-independent, Sucre
Potosina – Semi-independent, Potosi
Interesting or curious beers (doesn’t mean good)
Saya – Brewed by an American hostel near La Paz, these beers solidly rank as “significantly better than the local dreck, but still awful”; it’s hard to find, but if you see it jump on it
Judas – An imperial pilsener with shocking (for Bolivia) balance. Drinkable, but only decent by comparison to the other offerings. Brewed in La Paz, it loses some of its appeal (and carbonation) when consumed at lower altitudes.
Reineke Fuchs – A quasi german brew pub with two La Paz locations. A few options are available, but all are much sweeter than their German progenitors, even if less so than typical Bolivian beer (resulting in the above warning about stout on the menu)
El Inca – Produces a few variants, but one of which is Authentica. It’s a deliberately under-attenuated malty ale, so sickly sweet that I doubt I could finish it even on a dare
Lipeña – Here we go. This beer qualifies as “good” and I don’t just mean “good for Bolivia.” Brewed entirely with quinoa instead of barley, the result is reminiscent of a cloudy witbier with a unique grain flavour. Oh, did I mention it’s freaking bottle conditioned? Hands down the best beer in Bolivia.
Ted’s Cervezaria – I only saw the briefest mentions of this beer, as anyone that had it on their menu was curiously out. Rumour has it they make a decent red ale (Roja)
So there you have it: the official Barley Mowat guide to yet another Latin American country’s beer. I think I should start a write-in campaign to convince Sharon to go to Belgium next year…
GIB CDA Is Coming
I’m back! Did you miss me? I’m working on a couple pieces relating to my recent journey through South America. One is about the growing craft beerscene in Bolivia, which most of you will be stunned to know exists at all. The second is a wine-centric piece on Chile. Sure it’s not the focus of my blog, but I have a soapbox and I’m going to use it. Look for those two streams of consciousness to appear in the next few weeks.
In the meantime, Granville Island Brewing has gone and done something interesting: They’re releasing a Cascadian Dark Ale. Chris from LoveGoodBeer wrote decent summary a few days ago, and even includes a picture of the label. You can read his summary here.
Last fall, when Steamworks was all “no Cascadia for you” they rather explicitly singled out Granville Island and tried to make the whole issue into a David v Goliath story. The feint didn’t quite work, but all that is in the past as Steamworks has rather generously conceded that anyone can use Cascadian Dark Ale as a descriptor without license.
So, now the first brewery to drop a major CDA release into the market since all this kerfuffle is none other than Granville Island, the brewery whose previous CDA Steamworks cites as the spark behind the whole of Cascadia-gate. That sound you heard was every pair of eyes in BC Craft Brewing focusing on the corner of Water and Cordova, waiting to see how Steamworks reacts.
If SW holds true to their story, they should be fine with this new release from GIB. Heck, GIB even made a concession to Steamworks here by giving a name to their previously-nameless special release, even if “Cloak and Dagger” is a bit tongue-in-cheek. The goal here is to be able to absolutely, 100% point to a name on the bottle and a totally separate style descriptor.
Personally, I think Steamworks will do the classy thing here and let this one slide. GIB has met them half way, afterall.