(Late) Midweek Swig: The Shed Brewery Nosedive | Bite Club

Friday, February 14, 2014

(Late) Midweek Swig: The Shed Brewery Nosedive

Posted By on Fri, Feb 14, 2014 at 2:38 PM

On the food desk, we've been busy planning the newest edition of our annual dining guide, 7Nights, as well as plotting events for a smashing Vermont Restaurant Week. Hence, this late-week edition of the Midweek Swig — I finally got to the "swig" last night.

This week: the Shed Brewery Nosedive, a "robust vanilla porter" (according to the brewery)

Cost: $4.99 for a 22-ounce bottle at Richmond Market & Beverage

Strength: 6.75 percent abv.

The pour: a rich, opaque, cocoa brown with a thumb-width, creamy head that evaporates to a thin lace. It smells like dark-chocolate mocha with a fistful of coffee grounds thrown in, and it appears almost syrupy.

The taste: Though there's barely any bitterness, this tastes bright for a porter — an electric porter? The espresso and cacao flavors are spiked with a noticeable vein of vanilla that somehow doesn't feel integrated, as if it's floating on top. The beer has a subtle cola-like quality, both in texture and taste, as if it were a blend of Coke, Guinness and Rookie's Root Beer, sans sugar.

Drink it with: a snowy night, a chocolate ganache tart, or both.

Backstory: The Shed Brewery (which is housed at Middlebury's Otter Creek Brewing) announced this porter last month as a limited, Vermont-only release. It gains some of its flavor from aging with Madagascar vanilla beans. The folks at Richmond Beverage had only received it a day or so earlier.

Verdict: I wouldn't necessarily call this "robust" — rather, it's sprightly, as if a porter was ambling down the street in bright-yellow rain boots. Still, it's also toasty, malty and don't-think-too-hard-about-it delicious.

Midweek Swig tackles a new liquid release (almost) each week. If you have suggestions for something to sample, send them to [email protected].

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Corin Hirsch

Corin Hirsch was a Seven Days food writer 2011 through 2016. She was also a dining critic and drinks columnist at Newsday from 2017 to 2022, and contributes to The Guardian, Wine Enthusiast and other publications. She’s spoken often on colonial era drinking and is the author of Forgotten Drinks of Colonial New...