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Old Savannah Pale Ale

Old Savannah Pale Ale

Rated 2.920 by BeerPals
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Brewed by Old Savannah Brewing Company

Savannah, GA, United States

Style:  English Pale Ale

? % Alcohol by Volume

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Fine Marris Otter malt from Thomas Fawcett & Sons, UK provides the backbone to this classic English beer. (They still use traditional floor maltings. We also brew with mild crystal malt and a hint of pale chocolate malt - all from the heart of England. We have a combination of hearty American hops for the bittering component and delicate East Kent Goldings and Fuggles for the aroma and balance. Our Savannah Pale ale has an original gravity of 1045, is dark amber in color and delicious.

ID: 20906 Last updated 2 weeks ago Added to database 18 years ago

Key Stats

11
percentile

0

Drunk

2

Reviews

0

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Statistics

Overall Rank49197
Overall Percentile11.4
Style Rank405 of 455
Style Percentile11
Lowest Score2.6
Highest Score3.0
Average Score2.800
Weighted Score2.920
Standard Deviation0.000

Rating Distribution

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Beer vs Style

2 Member Reviews

Recent | Card View | Table View
  • ARACAUNA 2100 reviews
    rated 3.0 18 years ago

    Aroma: 6 | Appearance: 6 | Mouthfeel: 6 | Flavor: 6 | Overall: 6

    The Ghost is one of the better blonde ales I’ve ever had, but this one is a little less impressive. Pours an amber body. There’s a bit of apple in the aroam. Virtually no hops. The

  • STALEYIV 1405 reviews
    rated 2.6 18 years ago

    Aroma: 6 | Appearance: 5 | Mouthfeel: 5 | Flavor: 5 | Overall: 5

    The aroma is nice with some maltiness coming through but not much in the way of hoppy bitter which is interesting. The appearance is a nice red amber to bronze in color when held to the light with a head on top that is small and quickly diminishes to a light, off-white lacing that adheres to the glass. The mouthfeel is light-bodied with some decent malty complexity with some pretty nice balance with a palate that is wet-like which is interesting considering the style. The flavor is malty with some sweetness as well as some slight caramelly overtones with an aftertaste that is wet-like and slightly bready with a finish that is malty as well as wet-like and also muddled. Overall, no way in hell this is a American pale ale like some in Georgia are marketing it and it is much more in the way of a subdued English pale ale because I detected no hoppy bitter profile whatsoever and I would venture to say this is an amber ale; all signs point in that direction. Nonetheless, this brewer has potential and this brew would be a nice session beer; decent stuff here.

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