Thursday, July 28, 2011

Zevia Ginger Root Beer

I have been checking this root beer out for quite some time. It is practically in every grocery store I visit, but the price on this baby is out of this world. I think the cost is over $6 for a 4 pack or a 6 pack. While I guess that is only about $1 a can, I normally don't like to pay that much for a canned root beer, and especially a canned root beer that looks like it's going to taste gross. I was lucky to find an individual can at Whole Foods the other day - so one and done baby!


Enough about cost . . . what makes this brew so unique is that it is a diet soda without actually being diet. It has no artificial sweetners and yet has zero calories!! Zevia uses a combination of stevia and Erythritol to sweeten the beverage. The interesting part is that even though there are no artificial sweetners - it still tastes a little like a diet beverage. Don't ask me how they do it - it just does.
But with that being said - I would drink this on occassion instead of a regular diet root beer. Hey - it is all natural, no calories, no cancer causing diet ingredients (well . . . at this moment stevia has not been shown to cause cancer, but give it a few years and I'm sure it will be labeled as a carcinogen), and the taste is okay. This isn't going to win any awards, but I'm sure it will be followed by a host of organic, all-natural type people who love this ginger flavored brew.

As far as the professor goes . . .I'm still undecided - my first couple of sips weren't too goodbut by the middle of the can it got pretty good. But now as I'm finishing the last couple of sips I think it is giving me a headache.

I give this brew a C -

Saturday, July 9, 2011

Hannaford Diet Root Beer

Get excited now folks - this is your opportunity to read about a store-brand diet root beer! I did this review alone, as I really don't like to expose the little professors to diet sodas. Although, for the most part this is all I drink - so my diet taste buds are actually quite refined.

When poured the brew it had a pretty impressive root beer color and a pretty impressive head. But when I sipped this beer it went downhill pretty quick. Smack, slam, wake-up - this is one of the nastiest diet flavors that has ever been attached to a root beer.

Pretty bad stuff - but sadly I will drink the rest of the 2 liter bottle. No reason to let a bottle of aspartame go to waste.

I give this brew a . . . F

Friday, July 1, 2011

IBC Root Beer

Back at it again after a long absence . . . I already have an aversion to IBC Root Beer, because it tries to pass itself off as a hand-crafted micro-brewed root beer but it is nothing more than a Barq's, A&W, or Mug in a bottle. But be that as it may, it is really not all that bad (cough, cough).

Let's start with the downside - It has high-fructose corn syrup and a lot of it - 43g. And it has a pretty standard taste - nothing is really gonna blow your socks off. Good, but not spectacular. My little professors thought differently though. Professors # 2 & 3 said this was the best root beer they ever had (although I think they say this every time they taste a brew). Professor # 2 also said that this root beer was quite frizzy - kinda like when your foot falls asleep frizzy! I'm assuming she means that this root beer had a good amount of carbonation in it :) The picture show Professor # 2 holding a bottle of IBC.

IBC had a real nice head and it had a nice licorice/anise smell to it. I thought it was quite creamy, but it also finished with a good bite. And the packaging is great - a very very cool bottle! All in all - I must admit - IBC is really not all that bad. It is fun to be reviewing some brews again

I give this brew a . . . C +

Wednesday, April 28, 2010

Polar Classics Premium Root Beer

On a recent trip to Virginia I stopped in a Jewish market and I asked for some kosher root beer - they sort of looked at me like I had two heads.
But at a regular supermarket I did find some kosher root beer - Polar classics Premium Root Beer. I won't say much about this root beer, but I really liked the look of the bottle and the packaging. The flavor profile of this brew is actually pretty simple, but really good. The pure cane sugar, licorice and/or anise really shines. That's about all I have to say about that . . .
I give this brew a B +

Wednesday, April 21, 2010

Doumar's Root Beer


Doumar's is located in Norfolk, VA and it's claim to fame is not the root beer, but rather it's ice cream cones. Abe Doumar was the first to create the cone itself - he first sold it at the 1904 St. Louis Exposition. Doumar's still makes their own cones today and they are still made on the same machine that Abe Doumar created! My whole family had ice cream cones and they tasted pretty fantastic.
I also tried their root beer which is a unique root beer although I don't think they make it at their store. They put too much ice in the cup, but the ice was chopped into small bits and my daughter (little professor # 2) loved the slushy root beer effect. The root beer was a little syrupy with heavy licorice and wintergreen flavors shining through. This root beer should probably not be rated too high, but because of the cool atmosphere and neat ice-cream cone experience, I have a lot of happy endorphins flowing through my brains so . . .
I give this root beer a B -

Thursday, March 25, 2010

Diet Barq's

Printed in big bold letters is the phrase "artificially flavored". It almost seems like they are proud of it - whatever . . .

I tend to drink a lot more of diet soda than regular ones - so here it goes!

Every sip of this brew (I don't know if it should even be called a brew) gets worse and worse. This actually doesn't even taste like a root beer - it is sort of fruity with maybe a little bit of a cherry taste. The carbonation, smell, head, and color don't really even seem to matter - because it doesn't seem like a root beer to me.

As far as the "dietness" of the taste goes - I have had a lot worse. I don't sense a lot of the artificial sugar taste - although it does have a bite and I guess part of that could be related to the aspartame. Oh well . . .

I give this brew an F

Thursday, March 18, 2010

Deerfield Trading Company

Old Fashioned Root Beer

Deerfield Trading Company Root Beer is packaged exclusively for Walgreens. But when I checked out walgreens.com, there was not mention of the root beer or the company. There were some other Deerfield products - but it was called "Deerfield Farms" and I suspect that it is a different company.

Anyway - it is pretty neat that Walgreens would have a gourmet root beer in addition to their generic brand. I was expecting a half decent brew - given that they would take the time and effort to make a root beer with no "high fructose corn syrup" and that they would bottle this instead of plopping it in a can or plastic bottle. Unfortunately, I was "big-time" disappointed!!

I've read some half-decent reviews of the brew on other web-sites, but I didn't find anything half-decent at all. This root beer had virtually no head with a light root beer color. The brew tasted very watery and it was extremely light on taste. One of my family members commented that it didn't really even taste like a root beer at all. There was a bite at the end of each swallow of beer, but it didn't make up for the overall lack of root beerness in this concoction.

I give this brew a F+