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We have a trivia question in order to register to prevent bots. If you have any issues with answering, contact us at cass@bartowel.com for help.
Introducing Light Mode! If you would like a Bar Towel social experience that isn't the traditional blue, you can now select Light Mode. Go to the User Control Panel and then Board Preferences, and select "Day Drinking" (Light Mode) from the My Board Style drop-down menu. You can always switch back to "Night Drinking" (Dark Mode). Enjoy!
Robert Simpson's COnfederation Ale
- SteelbackGuy
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Robert Simpson's COnfederation Ale
Well, what's everyone waiting for?
Go out and get some.
It's really refreshing, and has a very unique honey sort of meadish quality that was very suprising.
Suprised there hasn't been any hype on here about it.
Go out and get some.
It's really refreshing, and has a very unique honey sort of meadish quality that was very suprising.
Suprised there hasn't been any hype on here about it.
If you`re reading this, there`s a 15% chance you`ve got a significant drinking problem. Get it fixed, get recovered!
Had some a month ago and had some chatter here and no response ...guess no one tried it. It's a true cream ale.SteelbackGuy wrote:Well, what's everyone waiting for?
Go out and get some.
It's really refreshing, and has a very unique honey sort of meadish quality that was very suprising.
Suprised there hasn't been any hype on here about it.
Aventinus rules!
- SteelbackGuy
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- Jon Walker
- Seasoned Drinker
- Posts: 1899
- Joined: Fri Jul 27, 2001 8:00 pm
- Location: Wherever you go there you are
- SteelbackGuy
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Jon Walker wrote:It's a reasonable beer but certainly not something that deserves "hype" on this forum as Steelbackguy suggests.
Well I really enjoyed it, and that's what this fourm is all about....
Letting eachother know what we think about different bers.
I'm no expert, but I know I really ejoyed it, so it deserves "hype" in my opinion.
If you`re reading this, there`s a 15% chance you`ve got a significant drinking problem. Get it fixed, get recovered!
Actually the Beer Store site does have that option, just not immediately noticeable. Go select the Store Locator and punch in your postal code. Several stores get listed near you. Click on a store. Scroll down to the bottom of the page and click the Brands at this Store Click Here link.GregClow wrote:Does anyone know which Beer Store locations in central Toronto are carrying this beer? The Beer Store website doesn't have a "see stores that stock this product" option like the LCBO site.
A real search would be better of course.
EDIT: The Summerhill Beer Store has that beer listed.
lister
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Pootz, you must have missed this part of the brewer's description of the beer:pootz wrote:I See RB has it mis classified as a "golden ale".....not likely.SteelbackGuy wrote:Yes it's very tasty.
A very promising start for one of Ontario's newest micro-breweries.
"We take our time gently crafting Conferation Ale in our waterfront brewery using good old-fashioned care and the finest ingredients: seven select grains of malted barley, specialty hops, premium yeast, and the purest water from our natural spring. Our long-aged rich golden ale pours with a thich rocky croawn revealing a subtle hint of malty sweetness and an elegant hop finish."
I was just going on the brewer's description of the process Josh. I talked to a sales/production guy briefly when I was trying to find where I could buy some. What he described to me was a cream ale process.....which is all malt wort, ale yeast pitched at lager fermenting temperatures then a long second stage lagering at cool temps. It is an ale (top fermented, ale hopped) done in the lager process. That fits one of the guides for a cream ale ( aside from post fermentation blending or yeast blending). When the roads clear in the spring I intend to do a bike run to the brewery for a tour to see for myself.Josh Oakes wrote:Pootz, you must have missed this part of the brewer's description of the beer:pootz wrote:I See RB has it mis classified as a "golden ale".....not likely.SteelbackGuy wrote:Yes it's very tasty.
A very promising start for one of Ontario's newest micro-breweries.
"We take our time gently crafting Conferation Ale in our waterfront brewery using good old-fashioned care and the finest ingredients: seven select grains of malted barley, specialty hops, premium yeast, and the purest water from our natural spring. Our long-aged rich golden ale pours with a thich rocky croawn revealing a subtle hint of malty sweetness and an elegant hop finish."
Second, the production manager assured me that there was nothing but barley malt in their wort , no adjuncts, this would preclude it from addition to the golden ale category as per this style description standard from RB:
At any rate it could be either if you went by BJCP standards...and this is really semantics....I just enjoy their product for what it is...which is well made, mellow, flavorful and drinkable...a good standard quaff.There are a few different types of blond ale. The first is the traditional “Canadian Ale”, an adjunct-laden, macrobrewed, top-fermented equivalent of the American Standard
Josh, it would not surprise me at all if the marketing end of this business were a little lacking in beer nomenclature. Looking at the spastic marketing dialogue and gimmicks on the packaging, it's apparent the Marketing people do not talk to the brewing people.

Aventinus rules!
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- Bar Fly
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I bought this today and think it is very good, it has a complex (relatively) malt taste with a firm fresh hop background. The beer is faintly cloudy in the glass, and I have no issue with that. It has a soft mouth feel, too. The carbonation is there but not aggressive. I am sure it is even better on draught but the bottling was done well, there are no off-flavours. The packaging reminds me of, and I am sure was intended generally to evoke, the big brewery bottles of the era just before the stubbies came in. The neck flashes and rest of the package evoke that image for me. Early 60's retro style, you might say, which is cool. Excellent effort and I wish them well with it.
Gary
Gary