"If the mega-breweries won't make pear beer, we will!" cried Dan Carey to the lead brewer above the din of the Spotted Cow bottling line, and the assistant brewers darted forward to the brew kettle.
And so they did. Pear 21 came out in August.
From my admittedly very limited view of the Wisconsin beer
scene, Pear 21 seems to have been a flop. I did not see much attention given to
it unlike its fruity predecessor, Lots o' Peach 21. I found that beer to be
cloyingly sweet and had high hopes that Pear 21 wouldn't be a fructosian punch to the pancreas when I bought a 4-pack of it.
New Glarus is being a bit cagey about the exact nature of
Pear 21. Their website merely says that it tastes like pear and offers the noncommittal "Inspired by Berliner Weisse styles of brewing". It's not that New
Glarus needs to brew according to strict style guidelines or within the bounds
prescribed by tradition, it's that I'd like to have more of an idea of what the
beer is like beyond the fruit in the name. Oh well.
The aroma was absolutely wonderful – it was indeed lots o' pear.
The only other scent I caught was a hint of citrus.
Don't be overly sweet! Don't Be Overly Sweet! DON'T BE OVERLY SWEET!
I took a sip and found that it tasted a lot like it smelled:
positively pomaceous! But it was very sweet. The beer didn't feel particularly treacly on my tongue yet it tasted rather syrupy. All
of the tartness that I had expected from the Berliner Weisse reference on the label was buried underneath the sweetness just like the bass on …And Justice For All. You could discern it but only if you swished the beer around in your mouth and really, really concentrated. As with the aroma, there was a faint citrus flavor in the
background. On the finish the fruity sweetness lost some of its power and its retreat meant that a tad of sourness was able to peek through.
Like its peach predecessor, this stuff tasted like a Libby
nectar to me. It was just too sweet, too syrupy. On the plus side, the pear flavor
was simply delicious. It genuinely tasted like fresh pear. I am curious to know
how this beer became so sweet. Was it really that full of malty sugars? Was sweetened
pear juice added? Either it needs to have the sweetness lessened greatly or the
fizz and tartness boosted by orders of magnitude.
What do you do with such a cloying beer? Maybe cut it with
some club soda? I can definitely see braising pork with it.
Junk food pairing: Pair your Pear 21 with something to cut through
the sweetness like salt & vinegar pork rinds.
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