Showing posts with label Sierra Nevada. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sierra Nevada. Show all posts

5 great beers that deserved a repeat visit

Tuesday, August 30, 2011
The one problem with writing about beer is that I’m always looking for new beers to try, because it gives me something to write about. So if there’s one beer which I know is good, and another which I’ve not tried but I think might be good, I’m much more likely to go for the latter.

One of the things I love most about beer is the fact there’s always something new to try, but it doesn’t negate the point that there are loads of beers which I know are good, but which I never talk about because they aren’t new.

So today I want to talk about a few beers which aren’t new, but which I’ve drank loads of times, sound exciting? Well it should, because the reason I’ve drank them loads of times is because they are damn good beers. They deserve a repeat visit and every time I’ve had them again I’ve thought “why don’t I drink this beer more often?”

BrewDog Zeitgeist (Black Lager) 4.9%

Zeitgeist hasn’t gained anywhere near as much attention as some of BrewDog’s other beers, possibly because it isn’t as extreme as the likes of Black Tokyo Horizon or as (rightly) popular as the ever approachable new Punk. But it’s still an absolute belter.

Its got a big roasted malt flavour yet a lot of the characteristics of a good lager - nice light to medium body, slightly sweet, refreshing and massively drinkable. Even if the weather’s red hot this dark beer hits the spot.

Drink it straight from the fridge if you want a refreshing yet tasty beer, or let it warm up a little to coax out a more complicatedly roasted chocolate flavour.


Sierra Nevada Celebration (Fresh Hop Ale) 6.8%

They really should change the label of this beer. Calling it ‘Celebration’ and putting a picture of a snow covered cabin on the front screams out ‘Christmas’ more than a holly decorated mince pie - even though the beer inside doesn’t taste in the slightest bit Christmassy.

In fact this is a really well balanced beer with a complex yet satisfying combination of hops and malt; you get grapefruit, green tea, orange pith, and even a touch of herbal mint from the dry hopped American C bombs, alongside fruity, hardcandy sweetness and an underlying crisp toffee from the malt.

It’s just a great beer, any time of year.

Titanic Stout (Stout, duh) 4.5%

Titanic Stout was one of the first British bottled beers that really blew me away. It just doesn’t taste like it came out of a bottle - with a really big, mouth filling cask ale texture and absolutely bags of flavour. I’ve had this on cask and it’s almost identical to the bottle conditioned version, which is no mean feat.

It’s got everything you want from a stout, with a smokiness that’s just softened enough by flavours of chocolate and filter coffee, but remains charred and dry throughout with a really crisp bitter finish. It’s just a stunning stout, and at 4.5% punches well above its weight.

Drink this one at cask ale temperature (not straight from the fridge) and you’ll get a lot more out of it too.

Brooklyn Lager (Vienna/Amber Lager) 5%

I bought a pint of Brooklyn Lager at the weekend to compare it to Thornbridge’s new Kill Your Darlings Vienna Lager, and do you know what? Brooklyn is still the best Vienna Lager I’ve tasted to date. Kill Your Darlings and Flying Dog Old Scratch both came close to knocking it off the top spot, but didn’t quite make it.

It’s just brilliant every time I have it. As an introduction to American Craft Beer I’d say Brooklyn Lager and Sierra Nevada Pale Ale are two of the best places to start - but even if you’ve been drinking good beer for years, their worth returning to. Classics for a reason.

Goose Island IPA (India Pale Ale) 5.9%

Goose Island IPA is the perfect example of a beer which I drink all the time but have never written about, because it’s been around for so long. It’s a stunning American IPA even by modern standards, despite the fact it’s been around for over 20 years and is in fact brewed as an “English Style IPA”.

Having recently been taken over by AB-InBev, and now being stocked in Tesco’s, this is a beer that is becoming extremely easy to get a hold of, which in my opinion can only be a good thing.

It’s got big flavours of bitter grapefruit and that classic American IPA citrus/pine needle flavour, yet the underpinning of sweet malt makes it pretty balanced and drinkable. Another one that can stand up to being drunk straight from the fridge, it’s a great beer to coax your macro-lager drinking mates on to good beer.

Drink me fresh: Sierra Nevada Southern Hemisphere Harvest (Fresh Hop Ale)

Wednesday, August 10, 2011
The problem with buying hoppy beers from America is that we tend to get them once their fresh, vibrant hop flavour has slightly diminished. With a big hoppy beer such as an American IPA you’ll still get that intense, piney, resinous hop flavour, but the floral green hop flavour of a freshly bottled beer is gone - i.e. the top notes are missing.

However an American beer I drank recently seemed to have 'it' in spades - Very fresh tasting with a real vibrancy of hop flavour which belied the miles it had travelled. The beer in question is Sierra Nevada’s Southern Hemisphere Harvest Fresh Hop Ale.

According to Sierra Nevada, this beer is the first beer by an American brewer to feature solely fresh-picked southern hemisphere hops - Pacific Hallertau, New Zealand Motueka and New Zealand Southern Cross. The brewery even went to the trouble of flying the hops from New Zealand to California in order to capture that super-fresh hop flavour:

“This ale marks our journey to the only place on the planet where fresh hops are harvested in our spring, the Southern Hemisphere. Our task was daunting - we needed to get the hops picked, dried, flown halfway across the world and into our brew kettle in a little over a week's time. The result is a North-by-South fusion of fresh New Zealand hops blended with the finest North American malts. Its robust hop character presents an intriguing floral-citrus aroma leading to layers of fresh-hop spiciness.”

So it’s definitely a beer that’s racked up some air miles, but it’s all been over a pretty short space of time and I made a point of buying this pretty much as soon as it was available, storing it in the fridge to preserve the hops that had been so carefully handled thus far, and drinking it young.

Personally, I think the effort was worthwhile.

Southern Hemisphere pours a bright blood orange with soft carbonation and a bubbly, tight white head. There’s a touch of oily hop haze in the glass but apart from that it’s pin bright and clear – a great looking beer.

The smell is super fresh; like sticking your nose in a bag of whole hops. You get a really fantastic fresh, green, citrusy hop aroma and the flavour is lightly sweet with bready caramel before a massively floral flavour of very dry, fresh pine needle hops takes over alongside and a slight hint of orange sherbet. The finish is dry and spicy with lots of different hop character to pick up on including predominant flavours of citrus, spiced orange and pine resin.

Despite an ABV of 6.7% and a massive amount of hops this is no American IPA - It’s fresher tasting than that and it doesn’t have that AIPA bitterness or chewy malt body. It's closer to a sort of American pale ale really, but that lovely fresh hop character just lifts the whole thing and because there’s dryness but not lots of bitterness it is hugely drinkable and moreish.

I quaffed the bottle in no time at all, a really great beer.