Beer of the Weekend #494: Bad Axe

The beer tonight is Bad Axe, brewed by the Big Wood Brewery of White Bear Lake, Minnesota (“Go Bears!”).


Serving type: 16-ounce can. Codes are printed on the bottom of the can but there is no discernable freshness date.

Appearance: Poured into a pint glass. The color is hazy, bright amber. Two fingers of dense, eggshell-colored head settled slowly.

Smell: Lots of citrus upfront. A blend of grapefruit and tangerine is most prominent, but underneath is a little mango and a gritty hoppiness, which is reminiscent of Tang at first. As the beer warms, a scent of caramel emerges and a faint, pine-like sappiness lingers at the tail of each whiff. The alcohol is completely masked.

Taste: Very sharp but the flavors seem to be at an arm’s length away at first. They close in quickly, though, and settle over the taste buds. Gritty and bitter tangerine/grapefruit citrus is backed by bready malts that offer a little caramel counterbalance. The alcohol, though very noticeable at first, gradually fades into the background and allows pineapple, mango, and pine to takes its place.

Drinkability: This is a tasty and bold brew that offers an excellent flavor experience. It makes for an ideal sipping IPA.

Fun facts about Bad Axe:

-Style: Imperial IPA.

-Price: Unlike my can of Jackpine Savage, my can of Bad Axe still had its price sticker: $3.49/can at Zipp’s Liquors on E Franklin Avenue in Minneapolis, Minnesota.

-Alcohol content: 9.8 percent ABV.

-IBU: 76.

-Nerdiness from the Big Wood website:

2013 Rochester Craft Beer Expo winner for Best Beer! This one might take a few trees down without trying. It's the one all the lady axes think they can change. He might be a tough guy in the flannel shirt who tears of bottle caps with his teeth, but don't worry he's easy to get along with. Brewed with a mix of Columbus and Centennial hops, it pours pale amber and goes down surprisingly easy. Well, maybe not so surprising, considering it's from Big Wood Brewery.

-According to the Big Wood website, kegs of Bad Axe were first released in March and were followed by cans in April.

-Bad Axe is part of Big Wood’s “Randomly Brewed Beer” line-up. The only other “RBB” is Forest Fire, an imperial smoked rye that was released in kegs this month.

-What is the difference between “ax” and “axe”? “Ax” has become the common spelling in American-English and “axe” is British-English. Bad Axe is totally un-American, guys.


The Quiet Man’s grade: B+.

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