Beer Talk

Black Cauldron Imperial Stout

Published May 2006, Volume 27, Number 2

Grand Teton
Jackson Hole, WY

Available: CO, ID, MT, WY

Imperial stouts were brewed with higher alcohol to better withstand the journey from breweries in England to the Russian Imperial Court, among other destinations. This strong imperial stout is named for Yellowstone’s Black Dragon Cauldron, in the Mud Volcano area, where hot water blasts through simmering black mud.

Alcohol (wt.): n/a
Alcohol (vol.): 7.5
Color: 50
Bitterness: 45
Original Gravity: 21 plato
Final gravity: n/a
Malts used: n/a
Hops used: n/a

  • Charles Finkel

    Beautiful deep cocoa: opaque, save a few beautiful reddish highlights. Long-lasting, handsome tan head hangs on, leaving lots of lace on the glass. Close your eyes and you smell a satisfying espresso, toasted pumpernickel bread and a piece of dry, high cacao chocolate. Round palate is solidly malty and delicious, chocked with spice and a complex, pleasantly bitter aftertaste. Drink as a digestif, after a meal.

  • Michael Jackson

    The mountains can do things to a man’s mind, and Wyoming can be a lonely place. A brewery with a mammary name, in a place called Jackson Hole, makes a beer called “Black Cauldron.” Sounds like a witch’s brew, but in a style closer to Catherine The Great. This Imperial stout has a good burnt barley aroma, and some espresso and cocoa. The body is more liqueur-ish (Bailey’s?). The palate reminds me of Sambuca, and the finish suggests cherry liqueur chocolates. Rather sweet and innocent, after all that innuendo.

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