Lansdown West Coast IPA
Bath Ales
5.0% ABV Bottled
I think it’s apt that I break my silence with a review of the latest offering from the mighty Bath Ales - freshly bottled from their new Hare Brewery in Warmley, Bristol. Having had some major expansion, the brewery seems to be kicking things up a notch, declared by their new presentation and beers added to their already formidable stable. I’m keen to get my lips around Sulis, their English Lager. However, today, I’m reviewing their West Coast IPA: Landsdown.
It’s definitely tipping a cap to the now prolific US tradition of highly-hopped, citrus inflected IPA brewing but there is still the essence of England running through its amber-gold body.
To sniff, Lansdown carries the expected almost grapefruit floral aromatics and this is coupled with zest, hops (but of course) and a hint of basil from the US style. After a while, though, the fields of England come rolling in with barley that seems to perfume the glass along with honey-scented sweetness which seemed to also hang around my tongue long after tasting.
The sip is nowhere near as bitter as I expected; it still is bitter but crisp rather than anything too acrid or like the fistful of rocket punched into your buds that some American IPAs can smash you about with. This delivers a dry yet quenching freshness with caramel notes spiraled by the pine of hops and exhalted with echoes of barley malt.
I’m drinking this on a hot day in May with sunshine blasting my pale, English face and this seems to be exactly how this beer is best enjoyed. The more I drink it, the more I start to taste the hops giving way to the aroma and reminiscence of goldening mown grass. It’s very drinkable. It’s making me look forward to summer. I hope this is a statement of their intent at Bath Ales: it's a very bold, delicious one!
Ale and Beer are a wonderful thing: a luxury in fact. They have captivated my taste buds for years and I am now at a point where I have a stable of very firm favourites. However, along the way, I have stumbled upon some real scoundrels. Money doesn't grow in hop fields and so to help save you coin and bother, I have created this blog so that the keen drinker can make an informed choice before backing their boozy beauty. Follow me on Twitter: @FullFlagon
Showing posts with label IPA. Show all posts
Showing posts with label IPA. Show all posts
Saturday, 19 May 2018
Friday, 5 August 2016
Tribute: a masterclass in balance.
Name:Tribute.
Brewery: St.Austell, Cornwall.
ABV: 4.2% (bottle).
Style: Pale Ale
Season: Summer/Autumn
Brewery: St.Austell, Cornwall.
ABV: 4.2% (bottle).
Style: Pale Ale
Season: Summer/Autumn
Availability: Available in most good supermarkets.
What I paid: £1.79 (Waitrose).
Try if you like: Bitters, pale ales, Sharps Doombar and Atlantic, Sierra Nevada Pale Ale.
When I read the words 'Pale Ale' I generally have reservations: my pallet doesn't seem to agree with many (Brewdog Punk for example just hop-blasts me to oblivion!) and the current trend for American IPA's are, in my opinion, overcrowding pumps, cans and bottles with their 'craft' hop barrage. So why did I approach a Pale Ale from St.Austell? Hype. Talk. People seem to have a lot of love for this beer. That and St.Austell's recent aquisition of my beloved Bath Ales made me very curious.
This beer is a masterclass in balance.
It pours out the most caramel I think I've ever seen a beer: it looks like a shade of golden syrup! On the nose, you'd think it was going to be incredibly fizzy as the hops and zest (what some describe as 'grapefruit') waft nose-ward. However, this is not a gassy number: it's delicately carbonated and not too heavy at all: you could almost session this Cornish beauty.
Surprise came with Tribute when it delivered more than I could ever have hoped for in flavour. It's nose outlines its Pale Ale credentials but in delivery, you get so much more than that: a demerrera sweetness and malty unctuousness is delicately wrapped and woven in and out of hop zest: the drop does a waltz on your tongue in waves - the front hits sweet from the Maris Otter and Cornish Gold malts; at the half-way, you're kissed with the refreshing and zesty cushion of floral hops and then the wave crashes with a biscuity, caramel toffeeness that leaves you with the echoing sea-spray of a light bitter finish. It leaves you wanting more. It takes Pale Ale expectations and delivers an incredibly well rounded bitter finish. All of this expert balance means you could snuggle up with one of these on a cold Autumn evening or crack one open overlooking the lapping ocean on that rarest of occasions a hot summers day (in Britain at least). Pale ale fans have enough of their bitterness and citrus edge to indulge their penchant for the more refreshing end of the spectrum yet those that enjoy a Best Bitter will also find joy at the bottom of this bottle.
I made reference to Doombar and Atlantic from their neighbours Sharps - imagine them crossed if you can and you're not far off Tribute. Imagine Sierra Nevada with a more caramel edge. I hate to draw comparisons because really this beer deserves singular recognition. Cornwall is a place dear to my heart and they, as a County, cannot help but produce some of the best beer Britain has to offer. Tribute is a fitting tribute to my favourite county in Britain: Cornwall can be very proud of this little lovely and indeed, St.Austell have brewed an absolute champion here.
I love this beer.
Thank you St.Austell!
Labels:
ale,
ale review,
beer,
beer review,
Cornwall,
IPA,
Pale Ale,
St.Austell.
Saturday, 28 May 2016
Hop House 13
Guinness have been bringing forth a new array of beverages of late (such as the West Indies and Dublin Porters) and the latest offering from the Irish Empire is a lager: Hop House 13. I love lagers as any who have read this blog will know and I'm always keen to find one with flavour and balance to make it both the perfect summer-quaffer for those warmer evenings and a tasty beer that doesn't just achieve both being wet and cold. I have tried this in two forms: bottled and draught and there is a difference and these differences bring a delightful dimension - proving further how bottle and pump can vary.
As a bottle, this beer sails ever so close to the coastlines of American IPA's but fear not, it doesn't follow the current trend for being over-hopped and unpalatably bitter. There is a real tendency for many new nectars to follow in the American style and when I first opened a bottle of this golden brew, I feared the worst as I sipped before smelling: bitterness was at the front along with the almost mossy grassiness something like a Pale Ale would thrust forwards. However, the finish was malty and sweet. This hooked me back. The next sip I took came before the almost peachy-floral nose wafted into my foolish nostrils - a striking aroma the likes of which I haven't seen since Badger's Golden Glory. Served cold, this was a lager with a difference and one that nearly bailed me out but a malty surge at the end won me over.
In draught however, this is closer to a Czech Pilsner something akin to Pilsner Urquell in that the body is smoothly carbonated, the front is sweet and malty but the finish is bitter and lingering with a final smack of the field of richly toasted summer crop. I expected the peachy flowers but none of it came (no matter how hard I sniffed!) and it would seem that this quality is reserved for the bottle.
With either presentation, I really enjoyed this beer and what with the weather improving, I can see it becoming a staple at BBQ's and pub-garden catch-ups. A delicious drop and one that I urge you to try in any way that you can get it!
As a bottle, this beer sails ever so close to the coastlines of American IPA's but fear not, it doesn't follow the current trend for being over-hopped and unpalatably bitter. There is a real tendency for many new nectars to follow in the American style and when I first opened a bottle of this golden brew, I feared the worst as I sipped before smelling: bitterness was at the front along with the almost mossy grassiness something like a Pale Ale would thrust forwards. However, the finish was malty and sweet. This hooked me back. The next sip I took came before the almost peachy-floral nose wafted into my foolish nostrils - a striking aroma the likes of which I haven't seen since Badger's Golden Glory. Served cold, this was a lager with a difference and one that nearly bailed me out but a malty surge at the end won me over.
In draught however, this is closer to a Czech Pilsner something akin to Pilsner Urquell in that the body is smoothly carbonated, the front is sweet and malty but the finish is bitter and lingering with a final smack of the field of richly toasted summer crop. I expected the peachy flowers but none of it came (no matter how hard I sniffed!) and it would seem that this quality is reserved for the bottle.
With either presentation, I really enjoyed this beer and what with the weather improving, I can see it becoming a staple at BBQ's and pub-garden catch-ups. A delicious drop and one that I urge you to try in any way that you can get it!
Try if you like: Sierra Nevada Pale Ale, Pilsner Urquell.

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