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Thank you for sending, do you mind sharing your recipe‘twas me hohoho
Thank you for sending, do you mind sharing your recipe‘twas me hohoho
That was mine. Glad you liked it. Yours was one of the last bottles drawn from the keg. It's all gone now and I doubt I will be making it again as the grain bill was a mother-effer.Just got round to trying the first of my 2 secret santa beers - I had a couple of lunchtime whiskys on xmas so thought it wouldnt be fair to judge the beers afterwards!
Im a big fan of dark beers and never tried an oatmeal stout.
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Opened with a slight hiss, was worried that it was under carbed but poured very nicely and plenty of carb when drinking. Aroma was lovely - could smell the roastiness and very slight hop aroma in the background. Looked great with a decent head and very dark colour.
Taste - quite bitter, strong malty flavour and nice alcohol warmth at the end. The chocolate taste isnt very apparent but I think given time to age this will come through and smooth the beer out a bit.
Overall a very pleasant beer. Says kegged 11/Nov, I would say that in another 4-6 months this will be a fantastic beer. I find with stouts and porters the improvement with time is day and night and this beer is already very tasty, the bitterness is likely to decrease a bit with time and the chocolate come through to become a smoother more rounded beer. If you havent planned to age this I suggest keeping a few bottles back and trying them in 6-12 months, Im sure it will be amazing.
Thanks a lot for the beer, I really enjoyed it.
You're very welcome, I'm glad you enjoyed itEnglish pale ale
This beer poured perfectly clear, and a lovely golden colour with a small white fluffy head which quickly dispersed.
Aroma is earthy and very much like a lager, and much the same with the flavour, in a good way! I had a really hard time trying to describe the flavour of this beer. It’s very pleasant and refreshing, bittering is spot on, extremely clean, light and crisp something I could quaffe all night. Absolutely no off flavours that I can detect, which I find very difficult to do when making light beers.
It’s and expertly crafted beer.
Thanks Santa
Thanks for this kind review, glad you all liked it. Raspberries and no wheatMy second beer was ‘His old Red coat’ and was sampled by a committee of four family members. All four really enjoyed this beer which is an achievement in itself! Apologies for the lack of photo, but a light pink clear beer with a small head, perfectly carbonated. There was disagreement as to the fruit. I thought Raspberry, but my wife and sister in law thought Strawberry! Either way this was well attenuated crisp beer. I think a good portion of wheat in the grist, but the clarity suggests otherwise? It had been siting in the garage for a good period though. Well brewed and much enjoyed. Thanks
18 litre batch.I'll send / link you the recipe for the earlier version as it was undoubtedly better. In fact it won Feb (I think) forum comp, do the recipe might be in a thread somewhere. I spent more time on the candi syrup, taking it to a darker colour, and I think that this might have been a factor.
Glad you enjoyed the brew, thank you for the words, another great year of swaps.Well I have to say, I've done very well with my secret Santa beers this year. I'm drinking a Chinook Citra Pale Ale currently.
Reassuring pop upon opening the bottle (I do like swingtops) and poured with a lovely fluffy white head. Aroma of piney resin, citrus and tropical fruits - lovely. More citrus in the mouth with an assertive pithy grapefruit bitterness. Clean yeast and just enough maltiness to give some complexity to support the hops. Very well brewed santa!
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Cheers Dan, happy you enjoyed the brew, thank you, here's to another great year of swapsMy second is a tasty 5.9% chinook and citra pale.
Well carbed, clear with a nice light citrus aroma. Comes through more orangey in the flavour with some malty back up.
Very clean with decently assertive bitterness makes this very drinkable.
Another Xmas cracker, thanks santa!
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Nope, it wasn’t mine. Both of my beers have appeared in this thread already.Nobody's spoken up yet as the brewer of this one I received (small bottle with a red cap marked 'S')... @MickDundee was it one of yours?
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Glad you liked it Mick, that's one of mine.First up is the 6.2% Mild Ale. It’s definitely not what I expected - I’m pretty certain this is actually an English IPA and I suspect the brewer is having a laugh calling it a mild (although I’d kind of gathered that from the ABV)
Toddlers running around sipping a lovely mild comes to mindGlad you liked it Mick, that's one of mine.
Recipe from the Durden Park book. Rigden's of Faversham 1836. Actually quite a low ABV for a `mild' from the period. You just have to remember that what was called a mild in the 20th century isn't necesarily what was called a mild in previous times. Mild just meant it was intended to be drunk when quite young.
Thanks. I enjoyed it quite a lot, definitely more than if it was a modern mild. It was definitely my kind of English ale.Glad you liked it Mick, that's one of mine.
Recipe from the Durden Park book. Rigden's of Faversham 1836. Actually quite a low ABV for a `mild' from the period. You just have to remember that what was called a mild in the 20th century isn't necesarily what was called a mild in previous times. Mild just meant it was intended to be drunk when quite young.
Pint of mild for the childToddlers running around sipping a lovely mild comes to mind
This can't be the same beer that i tasted on the Thursday, just before you sent out the Santa swap addresses ha hah.This is the mystery beer that someone sent me, no idea what it is or who it's from but it's really interesting. It's surprisingly difficult to figure out even what style a beer is sometimes, but I'm guessing a red IPA? It's interesting because I was getting a lot of fruity, lemony (and interestingly strawberry) US hops on the nose but flavour wise there's an earthy hop flavour that's very English, along with the citrusy flavours. A nice biscuity malt flavour, maybe a touch of Munich in there, and a nice assertive bitterness in the finish. There's an interesting rustic quality to this, almost like you'd get from a farmhouse type beer but it's subtle, and I'm not sure where it's coming from.
Whatever it is it's really delicious so thanks to whoever sent this, and I'm really intrigued to see the recipe details :hat:
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