Japanese Beer

  • I tried two different Japanese beers recently. Both I had never had before and both were excellent. The only problem I found with them is that they are 3-4 more expensive than domestic craft beers which I am sure will hurt their influx into the US market place. They are both American Pale Ale style beers.

    Baird Rising Sun Pale Ale

    The Rising Sun Pale Ale from Baird Beer in Numazu, Japan pours out a golden orange in color with some floating sediment and a one finger, foamy white head. On the nose aromas of pine, citrus, bread, caramel and grain. In the mouth this starts out tart then subdues a little with some sweetness coming in to play before the hops take over leaving a lovely bitterness. Flavors of orange, grapefruit, iced tea, caramel with some peppery spice. Light side of medium bodied. Good lacing. Well carbonated. Cream and oil in the mouthfeel. More hop on the finish with spice. A very nice pale ale but there is a draw back. At $4.99 per 12 ounce bottle that makes this a $30.00 6-pack of beer.

    Nikenjayamochi Kadoya Honten Isekadoya Pale Ale

    The Isekadoya Pale Ale from Nikenjayamochi Kadoya Honten Co. in Mie-ken Ise-shi, Japan pours out golden orange in color with some cloud and a large, frothy, off-white head that sticks around. On the nose aromas of orange, lemon, caramel and a little bready malt. In the mouth this is very well balanced with flavors of honey, caramel, citrus rind and a little pine. Medium bodied. Fantastic lacing. Moderate carbonation. Round mouthfeel that is very full and slightly creamy. Nice hops on the finish. An excellent Pale Ale but expensive at $6.99/500ml bottle.

    Baird Rising Sun Pale Ale

    Nikenjayamochi Kadoya Honten Isekadoya Pale Ale

5 comments
  • Mark Domnick
    Mark Domnick I like it. i just need to work on the proper camera settings so the white background is more white and less grey.
    July 30, 2009 - 1 likes this
  • Greg Barnett
    Greg Barnett well you can fix that in photoshop then upload, thats what I do, so you don't lose any detail. =)
    July 30, 2009
  • Mark Domnick
    Mark Domnick I do not use photoshop. I also want to get it right with the camera settings - f-stop, ISO, white balance combo.
    July 30, 2009
  • Greg Barnett
    Greg Barnett You can definitely do it, you just might lose some of your detail, email me these two originals and I'll show you what I mean :)
    July 31, 2009