An Ankoù
Landlord.
No apologies for resurrecting this old thread rather than starting a new one.
I think many of you know my views on French beer: the stuff from up North- bière de garde- is lovely, some saisons are nice, but they're not exactly Best Bitter. The beer from Alsace, which you'd expect to be decent because of its German heritage is sweet gunk- Fischer Tradition being a tradition I'd rather not know about. Beer in my neck of the woods is nondescript to awful. Coreff in Finisterre, set up under the guidance of the late, great Peter Austin, produces some tolerable beer, but the session stuff (around 5%) is inconsistent and really nothing special. Lancelot produce some great strong styles in the Belgian tradition with their own twist, but again, not sessionable. Their blanche (Blanche Hermine) like all the French blanches I've tried so far, is to puke for. Then we've got small local breweries who produce names like "*************" and La Kekette (a play on a word which means "todger" or "willy") and the beer's about as good as the names. Then there's beer brewed with buckwheat or chestnuts!
RANT OVER. This is about NINKASI.
Ninkasi hail from near Lyon, which is not in Brittany. I quite haven't got to the bottom of what they are: it seems to be some sort of gastro-pub chain with a central brewery. Their beer is gorgeous: their "French IPA" is everything you would hope for from a first-class English IPA (not American). Only 5.4% abv and hopped with Mistral and Aramis. I don't know Mistral, but Aramis is classic English even if it's grown in the Alsace. Nectar of the gods! The second is their Pale Ale, hopped with Glacier (I think) and Mosaic. 4.5% and gorgeous in the American style- I think the malt bill is the same for both. So, having tried two, and having bought up the remaining 2 bottles of IPA, I'm on the search for more. I'm also on the search for Mistral hops and I reckon I can formulate a recipe from the info given on the bottle.
If Brittany Ferries ever get their oars out and people start coming here again, look out for Ninkasi. It's worth the nearly €6 a 75 cl litre bottle, I suppose that's about UK pub prices.
I think many of you know my views on French beer: the stuff from up North- bière de garde- is lovely, some saisons are nice, but they're not exactly Best Bitter. The beer from Alsace, which you'd expect to be decent because of its German heritage is sweet gunk- Fischer Tradition being a tradition I'd rather not know about. Beer in my neck of the woods is nondescript to awful. Coreff in Finisterre, set up under the guidance of the late, great Peter Austin, produces some tolerable beer, but the session stuff (around 5%) is inconsistent and really nothing special. Lancelot produce some great strong styles in the Belgian tradition with their own twist, but again, not sessionable. Their blanche (Blanche Hermine) like all the French blanches I've tried so far, is to puke for. Then we've got small local breweries who produce names like "*************" and La Kekette (a play on a word which means "todger" or "willy") and the beer's about as good as the names. Then there's beer brewed with buckwheat or chestnuts!
RANT OVER. This is about NINKASI.
Ninkasi hail from near Lyon, which is not in Brittany. I quite haven't got to the bottom of what they are: it seems to be some sort of gastro-pub chain with a central brewery. Their beer is gorgeous: their "French IPA" is everything you would hope for from a first-class English IPA (not American). Only 5.4% abv and hopped with Mistral and Aramis. I don't know Mistral, but Aramis is classic English even if it's grown in the Alsace. Nectar of the gods! The second is their Pale Ale, hopped with Glacier (I think) and Mosaic. 4.5% and gorgeous in the American style- I think the malt bill is the same for both. So, having tried two, and having bought up the remaining 2 bottles of IPA, I'm on the search for more. I'm also on the search for Mistral hops and I reckon I can formulate a recipe from the info given on the bottle.
If Brittany Ferries ever get their oars out and people start coming here again, look out for Ninkasi. It's worth the nearly €6 a 75 cl litre bottle, I suppose that's about UK pub prices.
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