In the Rebels’ finale, Bridger jumped into hyperspace to an unknown location, with Tano and Mandalorian Sabine Wren setting off on a journey fueled by their determination to find him. This will not only be the character’s return to the franchise, but also his first live-action appearance. Now, Bridger’s appearance in the series has been confirmed, with the role officially cast. Related: Complete Timeline Of All Star Wars TV Shows For months, it was speculated that Rebels‘ Jedi hero Bridger may appear in the show, given his depiction in a mural at the end of the Ahsoka footage shown during the Mando+ panel at the Star Wars Celebration. With this news, several Rebels characters have been confirmed to feature in the show. This is partly due to the animated series’ co-creator and co-producer Dave Filoni also developing the new live-action series. A good "double milk stout," though, for sure.While details about the show are largely under wraps, Ahsoka will likely be a sequel-like series, following the events of Star Wars Rebels. I absolutely love having their beer at the source, but even the same beers brought home pale in comparison. BBCo just feels like a general "let down brewery" when it comes to their packaged stuff, though, for whatever reason. Honestly, though, this doesn't stand up to some of the more flavorful stouts I've had recently. I guess if I try to find it, "waffle cone" could be considered some part of the flavor here. A bit drier and less sweet than I thought it would be. Some slight dark fruit, with marshmallow and vanilla toward the finish. I don't get that intense decadent and diabetic thing, which I'm kinda thankful for if I'm being honest. Is it salted caramel? Not really, honestly. Upfront I get a lot of roasty grains, chocolate, toffee, and caramel. I don't get much of the salted caramel in the nose, but perhaps that will happen on the palate? I just had a salted caramel imperial stout from another brewery a couple weeks ago, and it blew my mind, but it was also incredibly on-the-nose (and didn't feature all these other things), so the balance is what I'm looking for here. The waffle cone element is surprisingly well-done. Coffee ice cream and vanilla plus a nice helping of dark chocolate show up once it gets to cellar temp. Okay, this has to really get out of "fridge temp" to be remotely quality, it seems. After it warms, I'm starting to get the waffle cone aspect quite readily, which is good (and saving the beer from failure immediately). it's slightly metallic, I guess, with an uncanny plastic-y note that I just can't appreciate. The nose is immediately turning me off a bit. Good legs but not much in the way of lace honestly, and the surface is mostly clear despite some small wisps of foam. It starts with an immense, seemingly vantablack liquid pouring directly into my glass with aplomb, while a smallish yet menacingly-colored head of medium brown builds up atop the depths. The pour here is kind of the stereotypical "scary stout" pour of 2018/2019. Let's hope this over-the-top dessert stout isn't victim to the same oddness. I'm not sure what it is, but especially their stouts tend to feel muted and less-impressive in cans than when you get "the real thing" at the brewery. I've generally felt that their beer doesn't come across as well when packaged and distributed. I've really enjoyed drinking BBCo's stuff at their taproom, but honestly.
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