What kind of beer is Oskar Blues?
A crisp, gently hopped and crushable craft pilsner built with pilsner and honey malt, then hopped with Saaz and Aramis hops.
What kind of beer is Dale’s Pale Ale?
Dale’s Pale Ale is a 6.5 percent ABV American Pale Ale brewed with comet, cascade and centennial hops. Despite its classification as an APA, the beer is very much an IPA.
Who owns Oskar Blues beer?
Fireman Capital Partners
Oskar Blues Brewery
| Opened | 1997 |
| Annual production volume | 149,000 US beer barrels (175,000 hL) in 2014 |
| Owned by | Fireman Capital Partners |
| Website | www.oskarblues.com |
| Active beers |
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What Breweries does Oskar Blues own?
Oskar Blues is one in the family. Established in 2015, the collective includes brewery siblings Perrin Brewing, Cigar City Brewing, Squatters Craft Beers and Wasatch Brewery, Deep Ellum Brewing, and Three Weavers Brewing.
What happened to Dales Pale Ale?
Dale’s Pale Ale is all grown up. The pioneering American pale ale born in Lyons is getting a fresh new look for the first time in more than a decade as Oskar Blues Brewery overhauls its craft beer cans, packaging and logo. Don’t worry. Old Chub, the brewery’s Scotch ale, now dons a blue, green and red Scottish tartan.
Where is Dales beer made?
Oskar Blues launched our canning ops in 2002, brewing and hand-canning Dale’s Pale Ale in our funky Lyons, coloRADo, brewpub. America’s first craft-canned mountain pale ale is a hearty, critically acclaimed trailblazer that changed the way beer fiends perceive craft beer.
Can-O-bliss IPA Ratebeer?
Can-O-Bliss Tropical IPA, 7.2% ABV, is a juicy, sunset-hued rogue wave of tropical fruit flavors featuring clean, complex Mosaic, citrusy Azacca, fruity Galaxy, aromatic El Dorado and pungent Idaho 7 hops.
Is Pale Ale fizzy?
Pale Ale (Angler’s Reward). A beer brewed using predominantly pale malts, and hops with citrus notes. Usually between 4% to 5% abv. These beers also suit bottling/canning, although they should not be over carbonated and fizzy.
What is the difference between an ale and a pale ale?
Although both beers are top fermented, they are different because: 1. Ale is a more general term compared to pale ale, which is just one type of ale. Pale ale specifically uses a pale malt that gives its much paler beer color, compared to the darker color in regular malts, as in the case for standard ales.