Friday, 25 December 2015

Craft Beer Advent Calendar Dec 21-24

Here we are at Christmas Day, it has been a long build up with a mystery beer each day of December.

While you wind down after what I hope is a long day of celebrating I want to share the final four beers with you.




Moo Brew has a weird bottle shape
December 21
Moo Brew Hefeweizen

One more Tasmanian brew came out of the brown paper bag. Moo Brew has always been good in its unique shaped bottle. I’ve never tried the Hefeweizen before, obviously German in design. It is a wheat beer which unlike the German wheat beer from earlier in the month this one is intriguingly bright and enjoyable. Its taste is hard to lock down as it is one I’m not very familiar with.

Good time of the year for sunburn
December 22
Eight Degrees Brewing Sunburnt Irish Red Ale

Australian and New Zealand hops are paired together to make this impressive craft brew (based in Ireland). As the name suggests it is a red ale. I don’t think I’ve had Irish beer before (Guinness is in a different group entirely) but if they taste like this one I will continue to drink them.

Panhead have redeemed themselves
December 23
Panhead Supercharger APA

In case you were wondering what APA stood for, I’m certain that it means American Pale Ale (a spin off from Indian Pale Ale). Panhead is a New Zealand product and I sampled one of their products already in this advent calendar. Luckily this time around this beer meets my satisfaction, I have nothing bad to say about this one.

This is actually Italian
December 24
Brewfist Spaghetti Western

The final beer of the calendar. I didn’t know what to expect for the final but I had a slight desire to get some sort of Christmas beer. Regardless of that I wasn’t disappointed. The first Brewfist beer of the advent calendar, this one I’ve had before because of the bizarreness of its name. This imperial stout with chocolate notes hails from Italy and doesn’t disappoint.

I want to try this one day
That concludes Dave’s Beers of the World for 2015.

I would like to wish you and your family a Merry Christmas and a happy and safe New Year.

Thank you for your support as I have turned this casual blog into an ongoing thing with over a thousand views.

I plan to keep things interesting and exciting in the new year, so stay tuned.

Cheers


Dave

Monday, 21 December 2015

Craft Beer Advent Calendar Dec 16-20

Christmas is coming!
Christmas time is getting close now.

The tree is up, presents are wrapped and people are already starting to celebrate.

The advent calendar is almost over… I’m starting to wish that it wasn’t going to end. Maybe there could be an all year round calendar… my liver won’t like that.

What was revealed?

Cool Gargoyle
December 16
Stone IPA

This is from the same brewery that brought us Arrogant Bastard. Not as rude and strong, this IPA from San Diego is big on flavour and alcohol with 6.9%. It has a sticker on the bottle saying “Rate Beer 97/100”. It turns out Ratebeer.com is a big thing in the craft beer world, for people to give it such a high rating should be enough to convince you that it’s good.

Funny name and label
December 17
Feral Karma Citra

This is an odd beer, first odd by the image of rabbits fornicating on the label, secondly by the description of the contents inside. “A high proportion of dark malt combined with resinous new world hops and results in a beer with chocolate overtones in the flavour and then showcases the tropical fruit character of the hop variety Citra.” What they do over in WA works though as this was a very nice drink.

An amazing beer!
December 18
Edge Brewing Project Cool Hops Australian Lager

When I drank this I didn’t realise how special it is. Rated best pale lager beer in the world 2014 by Ratebeer.com, this is an amazing Australian beer which I was proud to be able to drink. From Victoria




Pull the pin and... drink?
December 19
Rogue American Amber Ale

After two days of Australian beer I unwrapped this beauty – the last of the cans in the advent calendar. The can is styled to look like a hand grenade which I think is pretty creative. This beer has won several awards and is dedicated to American Servicemen and women.



the label is orange
December 20
Jopen Hoppenbier

For the first Dutch beer of the advent Calendar I had no idea what to expect, this was a fine beer and I shall have to try more Dutch beers in the future.







There are four days to go on the advent calendar so Christmas must be just around the corner.

See you soon for the final four.

Cheers


Dave

Tuesday, 15 December 2015

Craft Beer Advent Calendar Dec 11-15

How Santa gets through Xmas.
The unwrapping continues with five more mystery beers to reveal.

If you read the last update you would have seen my lowered excitement about the project with some not so great beers coming out of the brown paper bags. 


This is an experiment and strange things are likely to come out.

Are you ready for five more?

I’ve stepped up the presentation and made a Christmas diorama to display the fine brewing products.

Another New Zealand Beer.
December 11
Tuatara ITI Little Big Hop Ale

Another New Zealand beer. Before I even open it I notice a very detailed design on the glass of the neck of the stubby, it is dimpled like the skin of a reptile with a line of bumps to indicate a spine. I’ve never seen detail on glass like this on any other company’s product, I have had a beer from this brewery before and like the nice touch. In addition to that the beer was very nice, a bit weak at 3.3% but it’s made from a combination of tasteful hops which make it worth the try.

This was interesting.
December 12
Royal Jamaican Alcoholic Ginger Beer

Wow, I did not see this coming, our first, actually my first Jamaican kind of anything alcohol related. It’s a beer of sorts so it does count. This is no ordinary ginger beer you may have tried before, this one has a kick in it, to really surprise you when you first taste it. This gets points for being unique and unexpected.


Another fine New York made product.
December 13
Brooklyn Brown Ale

December 1 saw Brooklyn Lager, this is another beer from the same New York brewery. Being a brown ale it was of course darker than the lager and is more suited for colder conditions. That said it was a nice experience and one I will have to come back and drink again – apparently is suited with red meat… Is there a steak cooking that I can smell?


An amazing Australian Beer.
December 14
Pirate Life Brewing IIPA

YES! For a canned beer it’s a tall can (all the cans so far have been tall ones) and it punches you in the face with an alcohol content of 8.8%, stronger than your standard beers but not going crazy like the Imperial Miso Porter from the last post at 11% - even I think that is bordering crazy. The name of the brewery Pirate Life (Australian, based in Adelaide) is creative and unique, the name IIPA is not a typo, it’s a double IPA (Indian Pale Ale) and I think it is one of the best tasting beers I’ve had in the advent calendar so far.

Another good beer.
December 15
Hawkers Saison

Keeping to Australia for two days in a row this is an unknown for me, its labelling is simple and when I think of a Hawker I think of a Hawthorn supporter (an AFL football team which has apparently won some premierships lately? I don’t know since they aren’t the team I follow – Go Bombers!). Hawker of course has another meaning here in Australia. The beer itself was a surprise, I haven’t tried many Saison’s before nor know much about them, I’ve now learned that Saison’s are typically higher in alcohol content these days and have fruity and spicy notes, made after a recipe from Belgium. Before I google searched Saison I was sure at sampling that there was a European feel to this beer.  At 5.6% percent its swinging a bit above the average beer strength.

To be naughty or nice for the holidays?
We have got through the first 15 days. Nine to go before Christmas and a new year of beer drinking to follow (assuming that my liver doesn’t give up before then)

Cheers

Dave


Saturday, 12 December 2015

Craft Beer Advent Calendar Dec 6-10

This is Part Two of my Craft Beer Advent Calendar to keep you up to date with the beers I’ve been drinking this month.

December 6
Mikkeller Pilsner-Style Beer


This was the first canned beer in the advent calendar, I prefer stubbies to cans to begin with. The label of this beer is quite peculiar, like some sort of art painting. The beer was pretty good, from Belgium.







December 7
Holgate Brewhouse Temptress


On the label it reads “… this luscious winter warmer infused with Dutch cocoa and whole vanilla beans…”. A good tasting beer – better suited to colder conditions. From Victoria, Australia.








December 8
Panhead Hopfenweisse


For the first New Zealand beer (and the second can) for the advent calendar I found this one difficult to drink. It was warm before I got through it. This beer is a Hopfenweisse, a wheat beer, hence why it was unusual for me.






December 9
Epic Pale Ale


Back to back New Zealand beers but luckily this one was a lot better to drink, more along the lines of a classic craft beer. I would recommend this for you to drink.









December 10
Tool Battle Royal Imperial Miso Porter


I like creative beer labels, at first impression I love the guns printed on this label as well as the Japanese fan. Even using ‘miso’ in the name (Japanese bean curd – used in various foods) I thought this would be a Japanese beer. The label says it is made in Spain on one part then says Denmark on another. At first taste I knew right away that this is crafty and that it was alcoholic (it says 11% on the label), I’m surprised that this is a beer because it was way too rich for anything I normally drink. It took longer than normal to drink this. I will have to do some research into this beer in the future to find out about the confusing label and the even more confusing taste.

I have to say that I wasn’t overall pleased with these beers, some were hard to drink while others were out of place for summer drinking. I'm not saying don't ever try these beers, if you want to become a beer master like me then you should try any beer you can get your hands on. 

The first lot were excellent though so I have faith that the next 14 days will produce some more great beers.

Cheers
Dave 
December 6-10

Saturday, 5 December 2015

Craft Beer Advent Calendar Dec 1-5

I'm excited about this!
Saint John Craft Beer have created a unique advent calendar in the lead up the Christmas 2015.








What I'm drinking this month.
Randomly selecting 24 beers from across the world, they were wrapped in brown paper bags and tied. 







I wonder what's inside?
I didn’t know what they were at the time of buying it and therein lies the excitement.

Following the numbers written on them I’ve opened and consumed the first of them.







Want to know what they are?

December 1

Brooklyn Lager:
I can’t recall if I’ve tried this before but it was a surprise for the beginning of the calendar. A true American craft beer that went down nicely.










December 2

Dainton Good Son Golden Ale:
Dainton is one of my new favourite Australian Craft Brewers, they brew a wide variety of brews in particular Samurye Lager (which I will cover sometime soon). This was a nice standard kind of craft beer. Their label design is pretty interesting too.





December 3

Morrison English Bitter:
Yes! It only took until day three to get a Tasmanian beer, and a Launceston made one at that! Morrison Brewery make amazing beer and I enjoyed drinking this one.









December 4

Van Dieman Giblin Imperial Pale Ale:
How awesome is this! Four days in and another Tasmanian Beer. Van Dieman Imperial Pale Ale got me thinking about the upcoming release of the new Star Wars movie, it had a very chocolately feel to it with a good after taste, it also packs a punch at 7.7%.





December 5

3 Ravens English Extra Special Bitter
Two dark tasting beers in a row. First time to try this one from mainland Australia, another good beer for the advent calendar.










That’s the first of the carton, I’ll drink a few more and let you know what the rest are.

The first five.

Cheers


David

Wednesday, 25 November 2015

Asahi Soukai

Soukai
There is something new from the land of the rising sun, Asahi in Japan has brought us something else to quench our thirst over summer (in Australia), Asahi Soukai.

Asahi is known by its flagship beer Asahi Super Dry, they have taken that concept and created a weaker low carb version.








Soukai, meaning ‘refreshing’ is a fresh, new take on beer drinking.



I bought a 6-pack to sample and was pleased with the product.

A re-enactment

Even though it is only 3.5% it still gives you a buzz while keeping you more level headed than most standard beers.

This looks like a good party!

This is what the website has to say about their product:
Asahi Soukai delivers a clean, smooth taste that embodies the sophisticated, Japanese way of life whilst still retaining that unmistakable refreshing, crisp Asahi Super Dry taste. Born of Asahi Super Dry, Asahi Soukai is an easy-to-drink, non-filling, sessionable beer, expertly brewed using quality Japanese brewing techniques. Asahi Soukai is light in colour and alcohol, with a body that has a clean, refreshing taste, with a slight bitter note that provides a balanced flavour, while its effervescent sparkle acts as a great thirst quencher.” http://www.asahipremiumbeverages.com/our-brands/asahi-soukai/

Pretty ordinary packaging

I’m a big fan of flashy, colourful labels, the plain white labelling of this product is a bit disappointing but then I think about where I lived in Hokkaido – it snowed there for about 5-6 months a year. With that in mind, white is a pretty normal colour for Japan.

If you are after something new and different to try then give this a go!

Cheers,


Dave 

Japanese Beer is elegant and sophisticated

Monday, 16 November 2015

Beers I Don't Like

Today's Topic
I’ve been going on and on about beers I like/ love, now I want to talk about ones I suggest to avoid.

I’m possibly going to annoy some people who read this – this is written based on my own opinions and experiences, unfortunately not every beer that exists I think is drinkable.




To avoid directly naming and shaming I will give you an explanation of the type of beer and why I don’t like it, while use memes to hopefully get a laugh out of you.

That must be some bad beer then?

Japan unfortunately had several bad beer experiences for me, I think the main issue is that Japanese brewers like to try new things and make their product more appealing, in my opinion they have broken rules when it comes to making beer.

Tomato Beer: I love tomatoes, I love beer, so why don’t they work so well together? I have bought a can of tomato beer and upon taking a mouthful I spat it out and threw the rest away. It had to have been one of the worst things I’ve ever tasted. I don’t like tomato juice and that was again proven at a Japanese bar where the bartender made me a beer and tomato juice cocktail, no lie there was vomit afterwards.

I think this has something to do with him drinking his urine?

Happoshu: This is a Japanese word for ‘fake beer’ in order to continue high sales in a cost increasing industry many Japanese brewers have turned to making this beer tasting product, the worst part is that it’s watered down and crap is added. The result is a very cheap product that is bad for you, they sell for about $1 a can and can mean a cheap all you can drink at karaoke, but after many times of drinking this my body has made me pay for it. If you drink in Japan I recommend paying for the better quality beers such as Sapporo Draught, Asahi Super Dry and Kirin Ichiban.

Be a good friend!

Non-Alcoholic Beer: Japan has a zero BAC level for driving, so if you go out and want to have beer then this is the best thing for you – I have friends who enjoy drinking it. But for me I have tried several varieties and they taste somewhat like beer but I could never finish any of them – they ended up down the sink.

I feel bad for bashing Japan but I couldn’t leave those experiences out, there are some other shocking beers to follow (To be continued)…

I've never tried hand sanitiser...

Apple Beer: There is a new beer out made with an apple twist. I was able to drink a sample of it but I couldn’t drink another one. I just don’t think that it’s a good combination, they should go separately (beer and cider).

$6 for 6-pack = bad! $20 for 6-pack = should be okay!
I think what I can sum up from here is that cheap and often experimental beer can quite possibly leave you with a bad experience. People have different tastes and will like some things and others not so much. But in my opinion you should spend the extra $$$ and get good quality beer that will leave you with a good buzz and hopefully not much of a hangover the next day.

Here are a few for you to think about, if I run into any more bad beer I will update this list.

Cheers

Dave


Tuesday, 10 November 2015

Fat Yak Pale Ale

Fat Yak Pale Ale
This is a fantastic craft beer that is proudly Australia and strangely has nothing to do with a fat yak.

One of the brews of out Matilda Bay in Western Australia, this is widely available across Australia in stubbie or on tap.






This is what the breweries website has to say about it “We wanted to create and easy drinking craft beer in the traditional North American pale ale style that has proved so popular with discerning beer drinkers – so we did, and then named it after a hairy Mongolian cow thing.” https://www.matildabay.com.au/fat-yak

Also available on tap
Along with the clear crafty flavour in the beer I noted some fruit elements, melon and passionfruit I learned after some research.
At 4.7% it is a pretty standard strength beer, but it is easy to drink though so I often find myself getting inebriated quicker than normal when drinking this beer.



I can never stop at just one!


If you actually want to eat food rather than just drink a lot of Fat Yak’s the website also claims that it goes well with almost any food – except for Yak which apparently doesn’t taste very nice.




For those of you that are more into cider, Matilda Bay make a ‘Dirty Granny’ cider, I’ll leave it up to you to find out how dirty it really is though!

Matilda Bay also makes Dirty Granny Cider

Typical with craft beer type drinks it is a little bit more expensive to buy but these days I will go for quality over quantity, as I have matured in my beer drinking habits and would rather enjoy what I’m drinking rather than go for that all night buzz.

As always Dave’s Beers of the World promotes responsible consumption of alcohol.

Has your favourite beer been featured yet? If not let Dave know and he will give it a road test.

Cheers,


Dave