The Phoenix Network:
About | Advertise
 
Hot Plate  |  On The Cheap  |  Restaurant Reviews  |  Sipping

Lagunitas IPA Maximus

Feed your habit
By MIKE MILIARD  |  August 22, 2007
insideLagunitas-5

“Caution,” warn the happy, hoppy sadists at Lagunitas Brewery in Petaluma, California. “May remove enamel from teeth.” Even as the son of a dental hygienist, that’s a risk I’m willing to take for IPA Maximus. Anything for a lupulin fix like that.

Hello, my name is Mike, and I am a hophead. In decades past, such a declaration might have gotten me locked up for being an incurable reprobate. But happily, the term has lost currency as slang for a twitchy drug addict. Instead, hopheads regularly proclaim their proclivity for Fuggles and Hersbrucker and Hallertau, for Cascade and Centennial and Chinook. And we often gather in public places — beer bars, brewing festivals, and such — to indulge our habit.

Lagunitas claims the IPA Maximus is “homicidally hoppy.” I’m still alive. But weighing in at a whopping 72 IBUs — those are International Bitterness Units, the technical limit for which is around the 100 mark — the Maximus doesn’t mess around.

But far more than just being brutally, bracingly bitter — a good thing, in case you’re wondering — Maximus is delicious. It pours a refulgent golden with the deep chlorophyll aroma of leafy greens. The head billows tenaciously, clinging to the side of the glass as the drink disappears. And it may well disappear quickly, as you tuck into its thick, almost chewy consistency, luxuriating in the sharp astringency of those pungent, piney, flowery, and citrus-y hops.

At 7.5 percent alcohol by volume, it’s the perfect potency for the waning summer swelter. (Other similarly hoppy beers could have ABVs in excess of 10 percent, and might leave you a bit logy.) The people of Lagunitas have the right idea: “At the height of the heat in the heart of the summer, we felt the only cure was a raging mouthful of fresh hops and malt.” More of the former than the latter, please.

Available for $4.99 for a 22-ounce bottle at Bauer Wine & Spirits, 330 Newbury Street, in Boston. Call 617.262.0363.

  • Share:
  • RSS feed Rss
  • Email this article to a friend Email
  • Print this article Print
Comments
Lagunitas IPA Maximus
OMG!!! I just purchased my first bottle of Lagunitas Maximus, after having stared at the frigerated cabinet of the local dive that passes off as a liquor store. As a homebrewer, i was looking for a way to steal some low-level yeast from the bottom of one of those bottles, but alas, they said i'd have to buy one of them if i wanted to open it. If you can' judge a book by its cover, then how can you even begin to judge a beer bottle by its label? But i wasn't looking at the labels, just as ( i am told ) girls aren't looking for handsome faces in a bar, just the bulge in the back right-hand back pocket, or maybe the front and center, either way, i lose out. You see, i'm a hop-head. And any bulge left over in my back right-hand pocket goes to, well, homebrew ingredients and larger volume equipment. And any bulge in my front and center pocket goes to, well, it's hardly discernable after years of luplin and hops, so what's the point? Anyway, I was on a mission, ya see, a mission to glean a novel strain of yeast, and labels were of a minor significance. But alas, floating in the bottom of one bottle was the tell-tail evidence of a bottle-conditioned beer. Eurika! Yeast! I had been looking at all the bottoms, and the check-out lady didn't have much of one, but this bottle did. I dared to look up at the label, which was more than i dared to do with the check-out lady. I only made it up so far as her beard andhad to abort the mission. Back to the bottle, Lagunitas Maximus. Never heard of it before. So what? It had yeast, and it was an IPA ale, so i bought it. Back home, and as a homebrewer i was tempted to just pour out the contents and get to the real action in the lower level. I have lived by my own maximum, "a bad homebrew is multiple time better than any premium bottled beer." I have yet to be proved wrong, that is, until today. On a long hunch, I decided to humor the bottle and the label and take a deep swig. After sucking down only one swallow, I may have to go back and buy what's left on the shelf. More yeast cells increased chances of populating my next 10 galon wort. And after just one at 7.5% Alcohol and 70 some IBU's, well, maybe I ought to take a second look at that check out lady as well. Besides, I think she deliberately undercharged me for the bottle. If you havent't had one of these, you are definitely missing out, and if you have more than one of these, you will definitely be missing out on bulges in both your back right-hand pocket, the center front, and most others, but i dare say you won't care any more. I am very optimistic about my next attempt at an IPA in my little homebrewery.
By miklskon on 05/25/2008 at 3:45:02

Today's Event Picks
ARTICLES BY MIKE MILIARD
Share this entry with Delicious

 See all articles by: MIKE MILIARD

MOST POPULAR
RSS Feed of for the most popular articles
 Most Viewed   Most Emailed 



Featured Articles in Features:
Saturday, November 22, 2008  |  Sign In  |  Register
 
thePhoenix.com:
Phoenix Media/Communications Group:
TODAY'S FEATURED ADVERTISERS
Copyright © 2008 The Phoenix Media/Communications Group