Trade Winds Tripel Beer Review: A DG Speaks Sip
That day, I was not chasing perfection in a glass. I was paying attention. On October 11, 2019, Trade Winds Tripel by The Bruery gave me one more reason to keep documenting the flavors that follow me through travel, meals, airports, bars, breweries, and ordinary afternoons.
I tried it at one of those little travel-and-life pauses that somehow stayed with me. That matters because beer never exists in a vacuum for me. The table, the weather, the company, the travel fatigue, and even the food nearby all shape the way a glass lands. That is why I keep coming back to my complicated love-hate relationship with beer as a thread through my travels.
Trade Winds Tripel beer review
Trade Winds Tripel is a Belgian Tripel from The Bruery. My Untappd note stayed quiet, so I had to lean into the memory, the style, and the setting.. That one line says a lot because I tend to notice balance first. I like beer that gives me flavor without turning every sip into a fight.
I did not leave a number rating, but the memory still earned its place in my beer notes. When I enjoy a beer, I usually notice how it moves between sweet, bitter, crisp, creamy, fruity, malty, or hoppy. This one gave me another small clue about what my palate loves and what it rejects.
What the moment taught me
This tasting reminded me that beer can be both simple and cultural. A glass can point toward a city, a brewing tradition, a local gathering place, or a travel memory that deserves more than a quick rating. I write about food and drink because those moments often explain a place better than a brochure ever could.
That is also why I connect these reviews to broader stories, including why food matters so much on DG Speaks and my complicated love-hate relationship with beer. The flavor matters, of course. However, the story around the glass gives the review its heartbeat.
Would I drink it again?
I would try it again in the right setting, although it may not be one of my forever favorites. My beer journey has never been about pretending to love everything. It has always been about tasting honestly, remembering the context, and letting each glass tell me something about my own preferences.
