Portland's Favorite IPA
The Oregon Hophouse has recently been running a little experiment. They invited patrons to try a flight of twelve IPAs and vote on their favorites. In a certain sense, the free market functions as a way of determining patrons' favorite beers, too. But in that case, people may be influenced by price, ad campaigns, the image of a brewery, peer pressure, or proximity. Here it was just twelve unmarked beers and the palates of the tasters. The flight contained:
Interesting side-note. In an email, the Hophouse's Kirsten Seitz added this bit of detail: "Breakside was in fourth/fifth place until the third week, when both locations saw a drastic increase in votes for Breakside. It even earned the most votes during a week at each location in total votes, but it still wasn't enough to surpass Pallet Jack's monthly totals. It was incredibly interesting to witness the change, and the staff felt certain that it was a new batch of Breakside." I offer that without a lot of commentary--though I'd love it if someone from Breakside would care to weigh in with theories.
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*Does this prove Pallet Jack is definitively Portland's fave IPA? No. It was not a scientific study and there are any number of variables that were not controlled for. But it was a blind tasting, and so I'd be leery to dismiss it outright, either.
- Barley Brown’s Pallet Jack
- Boneyard RPM
- Breakside IPA
- Crux Outcast
- Double Mountain Hop Lava
- Fort George Vortex
- Gigantic IPA
- Goodlife Descender
- Hop Valley Alphadelic
- Laurelwood Workhorse
- Migration Luscious Lupulin
- Ninkasi Total Domination
Barley Brown Pallet Jack: 160 (18.5%)*I'm interested in this experiment because I think it tracks the momentary preferences of Oregonians. Boneyard has definitely been the most recent example of the Oregon palate, with its thick body and saturated late-addition flavors and aromas. Pallet Jack is lighter and sharper and more dank--to me it seems a bit more Californian. (A characterization I suspect would make a good Baker Citian cringe.) Breakside is a more classic interpretation, with tons of citrus and a hint of pine. So does this suggest a move away from the Boneyard mode to something a little more universal? Probably that's going too far--Boneyard did hang in at a respectable third. But still, it's at least suggestive.
Breakside IPA:132 (15.2%)
Boneyard RPM: 123 (14.2%)
Interesting side-note. In an email, the Hophouse's Kirsten Seitz added this bit of detail: "Breakside was in fourth/fifth place until the third week, when both locations saw a drastic increase in votes for Breakside. It even earned the most votes during a week at each location in total votes, but it still wasn't enough to surpass Pallet Jack's monthly totals. It was incredibly interesting to witness the change, and the staff felt certain that it was a new batch of Breakside." I offer that without a lot of commentary--though I'd love it if someone from Breakside would care to weigh in with theories.
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*Does this prove Pallet Jack is definitively Portland's fave IPA? No. It was not a scientific study and there are any number of variables that were not controlled for. But it was a blind tasting, and so I'd be leery to dismiss it outright, either.