Monday, June 26, 2017

Populuxe Brewing

Populuxe Brewing  25Jun2017

On the hottest day of the year, so far, I decided to walk the 1.4 miles down to Populuxe Brewing. I went as early as I could (they open at 1 pm on Sunday) and stuck to the shade. I was still pretty sweaty when I got there, so the re-hydration and electrolyte replenishment were welcome.

Populuxe - just as blue as ever
Populuxe is located in the Ballard Brewery District (no, it’s not official) a neighborhood that can’t decide if it is industrial or residential. The brewery is in what looks to be a re-purposed house between a couple of warehouses. Populuxe is currently expanding into one of the adjacent warehouses with the construction currently in progress at the time of this writing. 


The front entrance pops you into the tiny tasting room 

The taproom viewed from just inside the front door
with the bar to the right of the door and the tap list chalked on the wall behind the bar. 

The tap list behind the bar

To the right as you walk past the bar is additional indoor seating and the large outdoor seating area, which is very pleasant on a dry day.

The outdoor seating area. To the left rear near the truck, port-a-potty and caution tape is the construction area

Tasters of four ounces are available with no limit as well as pints and growlers. I ordered 4 tasters and adjourned to an indoor table that was nonetheless well lit with sunshine. So intense was the light that in the space it took me to taste, take notes, and finish, the Citra Red became slightly light struck.

l to r Burke-Gilman Bitter, Beer Snob Brown, Saison, and Citra Red
Tasting Notes:

Beer Snob Brown (5.1%, 28IBU): Clear brown. Roast malt aroma. Dry and malty with a little residual sweetness and late bitterness. Full body. Bitter-sweet finish with roast.

Saison (7.0%): Hazy yellow gold. Citrus and phenolic aroma. Sweet malt and the flavors match the aromas. The citrus is a pleasant mild lemon and the beer is full bodied and dry. Very slight bitter finish.

Burke-Gilman Bitter (4.9%, 35 IBU): Hazy orange-gold. Esters and English hop aromas. Malt and bitterness are balanced and the hop flavor is characteristically English. Sweet malt and a slight fruitiness. Bitter finish. 

Citra Red (5.5%, 65 IBU): Clear dark red. Fruity hops and bready malt aromas mixed with a little onion. Bitter with full bodied malt presence. Bitter finish. The bitterness is not as intense as 65 IBU would indicate.

This place has been around long enough and had enough success that they can expand. I have always enjoyed the funky little tasting room and the out-of-the-way setting of the neighborhood. The outdoor seating is popular as well. The greeting when you come in is friendly and helpful with a handful of regulars often seated at the bar engaged in good beer related conversation. The beer here as in other small breweries in Seattle has been steadily improving, and I have long enjoyed the brewer’s English style beers. He often has a mild or a bitter on tap and they are usually top notch. Today I enjoyed the Beer Snob Brown and the Burke-Gilman Bitter the most.

As I commenced my walk home I noted that the temperature had started to climb. Feeling the need to keep rested and rehydrated, plus needing some stamps in my WABL passport, I planned some stops along the way. I stopped first at Stoup 

Stoup - not that crowded

to refresh my palate and my memory about the German Pils (5.1%, 40 IBU). 

German Pils - brilliantly clear

It’s a clear yellow gold with a combined noble hop, sulfury yeast, and bready malt aroma. The flavor is crisp malt with some residual sweetness and firm noble hop bitterness. The finish is sweet-bitter. Quite crushable on a hot day.

Refreshed, I sauntered on to Reuben’s 

Reuben's - also not that crowded

where the Altbier (5.1%, 36 IBU) looked attractive. 

Altbier - a pretty beer
The beer is a clear red brown with a roast malt aroma with a hint of sulfur. The initial flavor is noble hop bitterness with full bodied sweet roasted malt right behind. The hop flavor is slightly spicy and though I asked, I could not find out what hops were used.


Thoroughly rehydrated and rested I finished walking (with the mad dogs and Englishmen) to my home to hide from the heat.

Saturday, June 17, 2017

Hellbent Brewing Company

Hellbent Brewing Company  16Jun2017

I find myself on another ride on the brewery bus, the 40 to Northgate. At the Northgate Transit Center I picked up the 41 to Lake City, which travels in the vicinity of Hellbent Brewing Company.

Transit Center with entertaining landscaping.
Hellbent is only blocks away from Elliott Bay Brewing but has a completely different vibe. 

Great setting for the brewery. The surrounding shrubbery obscures the signs and building from the road.
Hellbent is beer only and 21+, while Elliott Bay has a restaurant. Hellbent owns its building, a renovated former office space on Lake City Way near the Fred Meyer. You enter off the street or off the patio if approaching from the parking lot. 

Back patio.
The food trucks sit by the patio. The bar is visible from both entrances and a digital display hosts the beer list. 
The bar as seen from the front entrance. Beer list and brew kit are visible.

The digitally displayed beer list.
The printed beer list is also available at the bar. The brew kit is visible through glass behind the bar. The greeting is friendly from behind the bar.


A well-used beer list.
Flights of 4 four ounce tasters are available as well as pints and growlers. I studied the beer list and settled on four with the intention of ordering a pint of something else later.

Flight of tasters l to r: Warm Fuzzies, Northwest Pilsner, DANG! Citra IPA, Mystic Lamb Lavender Saison.


Bonus pint of Vienna Lager.

Tasting Notes:

Warm Fuzzies (9.5%, ~25IBU): Cloudy orange. Fruity aroma (peach) and some fruity hop. Sweet and slightly sour, with some bite. Late slight bitterness. Sweet sour finish.

Northwest Pilsner (5.6%, 35 IBU): Slightly hazy yellow gold. Northwest hop citrus aroma. Dry, soft malt followed by bitter hop flavors. Hop flavors are noble hops with just a touch of Northwest dank. Bitter finish.

DANG! Citra IPA (7.1%, 60 IBU): Hazy gold. Dankish (complex fruit, pine, and funk) hop aroma. Sweet malt, bitterness with fruity, piney hop flavor. Bitter-sweet finish.

Mystic Lamb Lavender Saison (4.9%, 22 IBU): Slightly hazy yellow gold. Lemony lavender and saison aromas. Lavender, malt, and late bitter flavors. The lavender is almost overpowering. Flowery finish.

Vienna Lager (5.5%, 28 IBU): Clear red amber. Malt aroma with slight hop funk. Sweet cracker malt, noble hop flavor, and late bitterness all in pleasant combination. Bitter finish. My pick of today's group.

My drinking companion. The dog hangs out on this rug. I just happened to be at the end of the bar.


The people at Hellbent have transformed a mundane office and restaurant space into an open and airy venue for beer appreciation and they are serving beers that can be appreciated. The beers were all well-made, even if the lavender saison was overpowered by flowers and the NW Pilsner tasted odd with NW hop flavors. The brewery just celebrated its second anniversary and will continue to improve and perfect their beers in time. Meanwhile the experiments are well worth trying. The clientele are mostly drawn from the neighborhood and the atmosphere in the taproom, at least on this Friday, is open and friendly. Two people struck up conversations with me as I sat at the bar sipping and taking notes. The friendly nature in the taproom flows from the community involvement of Hellbent and their desire to get to know the neighborhood.

Hellbent just expanded their hours to commence serving at noon with a deal on pints at lunch time, $3 when you purchase a lunch from the truck of the day.


My ride home could not have been better. The 41 to Northgate appeared within minutes after I hit the bus stop and the transfer at the Transit Center went off flawlessly. All my walking to and fro netted about 100 calories off the damage done by all the beer and the food truck lunch I consumed.

Monday, June 12, 2017

Perihelion Brewery

Perihelion Brewery  11Jun2017

I hopped on the D-Line bus headed for the bus tunnel downtown and picked up the Link Light Rail headed south. I arrived at the Beacon Hill stop and rode the elevator to street level. Perihelion sits on 16th S, and I found it after making a couple of wrong turns. If I had just headed across Beacon from the light rail stop, I would have been right there.

Perihelion is in a nice residential setting with a few trees around.
Perihelion sits about a block off of Beacon, which puts it smack in the middle of a residential area, a very inviting setting. The outdoor seating area was in full use this day as the sun was out and the temperature was moderate but felt warm in the direct sunlight. I had to wind around the outside table area to get inside then walk to the front of the taproom to find the bar.

You have to run the gauntlet of outdoor seating to get inside.
The beer list is chalked up above the taps and clearly lists the beers and their ABV while no bitterness indicators are given.

Beer list and food offerings are above the bar and the open kitchen area is to the left in this picture.

Tasters (5 ounce), pints and growler fills are available. I studied the beer list and ordered eight tasters and then retired to a tall stool at a counter to sip, note, read, and study the neighborhood.

l to r Apogee Dark Belgian Strong, Daedalus Rye Saison, Singularity Stout, Mango Sour, and The Milky Way IPA. Sensing a galactic theme?

l to r Summer Kolsch, Matrix Maibock, and Icarus Saison.
Tasting Notes:

Summer Kolsch (6.3%): Slightly hazy gold. Bready malt aroma with slight noble hop. Sturdy bitterness and rich malt with a full body but pleasantly dry. Bitter finish. Odd flavor like some of the saison yeast snuck into the mix.

Matrix Maibock (5.5%): Clear red copper. Faint malt aroma. Sweet malt with a little roast and assertive (not aggressive) bitter flavors. Crisp dry malt. Bitter sweet finish.

Mango Sour (5.4%): Slightly hazy orange. Fruity mango aroma. Sweet and sour mango. No detectable bitterness. Quick finish with some lingering sourness.

Singularity Stout (5.9%): Opaque black with no highlights. Roast malt and coffee aroma. Roast malt (burnt), sweet malt, and bitter hop flavors. Full body. Sweet bitter finish.

Icarus Saison (7.9%): Clear gold. Perfumed aroma with peppery phenols. Medicinal and Band-Aid like phenols, bitter hop, sweet malt. Very full body. Bitter finish.

Daedalus Rye Saison (8.1%): Clear red copper. Malty phenolic aroma. Band-Aid like phenols (like the Icarus), sweet malt, some bitterness (less than Icarus). Bitter finish.

Apogee Dark Belgian Strong (9.2): Dark brown with red highlights. Fruity plum and malt aroma is very inviting. Sweet and fruity plum and cherry. Late, slight bitterness. Full body. Sweet finish and more late bitterness.





The Milky Way IPA (5.6%): Murky red orange. Piney and citrus hop aroma. Sweet malt and hop (piney and fruity) flavors, medium bitterness. Sweet bitter finish. Some minerality.

Perihelion is in a very pleasant area in a residential neighborhood, which should make it a natural local watering hole. A constant stream of pedestrians passes heading to or from errands on Beacon and trekking to the Red Apple Market. The greeting at the bar is neighborly and friendly. It’s still a new brewery and some of the beers need work, which makes the selections hit or miss. I would order second pints of the Apogee, if I didn’t have to drive, and the IPA. I didn’t try any of the food, so I have no opinion there. I didn’t finish the two saisons and the Kolsch had an odd un-Kolsch-like flavor.


My walk back to the light rail stop was much more direct than my walk to the brewery. Line of sight dead reckoning is something I can do. Light rail to the D-Line and back home to stagger around the kitchen making dinner.

Sunday, June 11, 2017

Cloudburst Brewing

Cloudburst Brewing  09Jun2017

A little threatening weather this day as some thundershowers were in the prediction. No rain fell during my trip, but the clouds were spectacular. No cloudburst while visiting Cloudburst. I hopped the D-Line to downtown and made a short walk to Western and Lenora.

Not much here to stand out from the surrounding buildings. Easy to walk right past.

Cloudburst sits in a warehouse-like building near the Public Market with a garage door opening to lead you into the inky shadows. 

The ramp into the inky shadows. Come on in.

Tables face the opening on what was formerly the ramp into the warehouse. To the back is the bar on the right and a view of the brew kit on the left. The beer list is above the bar and is clearly marked. 


The bar with the minimal beer list posted above. More detailed beer descriptions are available at the bar.

Clipboards with the beer list and descriptions are available at the bar. Cloudburst offers 10-ounce schooners, 16-ounce pints, and growler fills  – no flights or smaller tasters. I ordered four schooners from the beer list figuring that I should be able to survive 40 oz. of beer and still get home on the bus without bursting.

l to r Nut Burst Tropical Lager, Happy Little Clouds Dry Hop Pils, High End Portfolio IPA, Refracted Light IPA.

I wound up with two lagers and two IPAs, but I would have liked to taste the other offerings, which were varied.

Tasting Notes:

Nut Burst Tropical Lager (5.3%, 30 IBU): Clear gold. Fruity hop aroma. Bitterness first then earthy malt. Dry with pronounced hop flavor. Somehow the New Zealand and Australian hops were rendered to taste like Yakima hops. Quick bitter finish. A collaboration with Chuckanut Brewing.

Happy Little Clouds Dry Hop Pils (5.1%, 32 IBU): Clear pale gold. German hop aroma with a perfume note. Taste is rich biscuit malt dry followed by bitterness from which the hop flavor pops. Bitter sweet finish with lingering hops and malt. As fine a pils as I have had in the city. And, yes, it’s a Bob Ross reference.

High End Portfolio IPA (7.2%, 55 IBU): Hazy red-gold. Fruity and citrus hop aroma. Sweet and juicy, then bitter hop on the tongue and hop flavor of fruit and citrus. Bitter finish and lingering bitterness.

Refracted Light IPA (7.4%, 58 IBU): Hazy red gold. Earthy and fruity hop aroma. Flavors follow on from sweet malt, juicy hops, bitter hop on the tongue, and finally earthy, fruity hop flavors. Sweet and lingering bitter woody finish.

I drank up my IPAs saving the Happy Little Clouds Pils for last. Even though my taste was probably dulled by the hoppy beers, the Pils was still full of malt and hop flavors. It’s not a wimpy beer at all. I didn’t finish the Nut Burst. The warehouse setting feels homey and the greeting from behind the bar is Seattle friendly, polite and restrained. The taproom was full of Canadians, since the Blue Jays are in town to play the Mariners. In other words the crowd was very pleasant and polite. Cloudburst has been in business since January of 2016 and has really dialed in their brewing process. All the beers I tried were well made even if some of the flavors were not to my liking.


The ride home on the bus was without incident and I was able to stagger into the kitchen to prepare dinner.