spinner

Charles Wells Bombardier Satanic Mills

Charles Wells Bombardier Satanic Mills

Rated 3.300 by BeerPals
No Image Available

Brewed by Wells and Company Limited / Charles Wells Limited

Bedford, United Kingdom

Style:  Porter

5% Alcohol by Volume

Availability of this beer is unknown


Sign Up to Participate:



The inspiration for the names of the ales was drawn for William Blake's Jerusalem, arguably England's unofficial anthem. The third member of the Bombardier range offers the drinker another unique taste experience. Darkly different but packing a punch and bursting with English passion, Satanic Mills is a dark seductress. "Richly-roasted 'Chocolate' malt, the finest English hops and our very own natural mineral water, produces a seductively dark ale with coffee and blackberry aromas, a finely balanced depth of flavour, surprisingly smooth palate and a nostalgically smoky finish."

ID: 31682 Last updated 1 month ago Added to database 16 years ago

Key Stats

80
percentile

0

Drunk

1

Review

0

Likes

0 Member Photos

No photos yet. Show us yours!

Sign up to share your photos

Beeributes

Most noted beer attributes

None to date - be the first! Beeributes help BeerPal predict what beers you'll love.

Sign up to participate

Statistics

Overall Rank11345
Overall Percentile79.8
Style Rank429 of 1475
Style Percentile70.9
Lowest Score4.2
Highest Score4.2
Average Score4.200
Weighted Score3.300
Standard Deviation0.000

Rating Distribution

Not enough reviews for this chart

Beer vs Style

1 Member Reviews

Recent | Card View | Table View
  • GGRUMET 311 reviews
    rated 4.2 15 years ago

    Aroma: 9 | Appearance: 8 | Mouthfeel: 8 | Flavor: 9 | Overall: 8

    20 oz bottle into a British pint glass pours a dark black with a sticky dark brown head that caps well and has great retention. The aroma is earthy and woody, very inviting. The taste is a malt bomb with smoky undertones giving way to oak chips, roasted cashews, and dark chocolate. The finish is incredibly smooth to accompany the thin mouthfeel. This is a fantastic representation of a porter. A friend from the UK brought this across the pond for me.

Discuss This Beer