Showing posts with label Harringtons Breweries. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Harringtons Breweries. Show all posts

Monday, June 1, 2015

Beer - #609 - Harrington's - The Forgotten

Got a really pleasant surprise package from the nice people at Harrington's Breweries, a bottle of a limited (I'd say one off) "The Forgotten"

Unique beer, unique music, unique numbers and that unique moment at a party.


As you can see from their youtube video it mentions in words that it's a Belgiam Tripel, but the brewer calls is Belgium Ale in the video. Who knows, I'm easily confused.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cCakefPpS5c

So a 500ml bottle of an 8.7% ABV beer, so that's 5.6 standard drink units of a beer that 261 calories a serve size.

Brewed by Harringtons Breweries (Christchurch) in the style of a  Abbey Tripel from the deep south as far away as Christchurch, New Zealand. Except that perhaps it's a  Belgian Ale.

What I do think is that this might be based on, or even some of, is their Belgium Tempest, which starts at a 7.2% ABV. I'm joining dots here that might not be able to be joined. I don't doubt they 'forgot' it, after all it's only a commercial amount of beer.

[caption id="attachment_11204" align="alignright" width="300"]Beard and Belgium Beer Beard and Belgium Beer[/caption]

A Belgium Tripel brewed in 2012 and set aside with the intention of ageing for one year...

Shakes & aftermath... Another year, rebuilding & relocating... Put aside and forgotten...

Until now.  Age has done us proud - this Monk's brew has softly matured spicy, slightly peppery, tones on a gentle sweet citrus orange malt layer.

So then what else could possibly go wrong?

Well the beer is presented in a wonderfully shaped bottle, very continental long body, short neck.

On opening then I was slightly disappointed with the lack of any real stand out aroma. I press on.

Pour is a watery muddy affair, and although it looks well carbonated a head mysteriously and not unusually fails to appear. Aroma in the glass is somewhat more, and some familiar sweet and spicy notes.

The ForgottenFirst taste is promising, a wash of alcohol isn't well hidden, but there is that familiar warm sugar in this, and a finish that is surprisingly dry. It does though, at the moment, not offer a lot of body, not a full mouthfeel of billowing softness. It is surprisingly easy on the palate though and very sippable.

But you feel there is something missing, after all it's a great back story, a really good story for me this really does lack body and fullness that you'd probably expect from something as mature and aged as this beer is.

I'd have thought more fruits, more sweet malts, and perhaps some heightened spice notes.  But then I show;don't think too often.

For that though it isn't undrinkable or bad as a beer, it's one of those  expectations and delivery gap things.  The aroma in glass before you sip promises something deep and rich, the mouthfeel however is a bit thin and lacking.

I hate being harsh about beer that I feel should be nicer or better, but I'm writing as I drinking these are my thoughts uncoloured,  Annoying though because this does have small flashes of the things that you look for in a good Tripel, or Belgium beer, the astringent, perhaps the bubblegum, the malts.

The second half of the the bottle, the second glass, much darker and a head! I didn't see a thing about having a sediment or being 'en lees' but whatever happened it got a much more pronounced aroma and a slight bigger mouthfeel, became a much nicer experience.

[caption id="attachment_11206" align="alignright" width="224"]Now darker and with head Now darker and with head[/caption]

The pdubyah-o-meter rates this as 7 of its things from the thing. That makes it 'Good' on the random scale. In places this is like a familiar friend, but the overall experience leaves you a bit empty and wanting a bit more, it's just not rewarding enough a beer until the second half, when it came to the party as it were, perhaps just a little late.

The double dip review

Am I enjoying it? I love a Belgium beer, and this is nice in places, I'm not not enjoying it, I'm just not loving it.
Would I have another? Probably not, but it reminds me that I like Belgium beers.
Would I share with a friend on a porch and set the world to rights? Based on the story and the lovely bottle I would share this, but I think it'd be an interesting conversation about the style.

Music for this is 'Sweet Billy Pilgrim',  'Coloma Blues' from the new upcoming album 'Motorcade Amnesiacs'. Sweet Billy Pilgrim are an English experimental rock/art rock band.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aVIHC0E1Vpw

BELGIAN ALE



Belgian-style ales seldom fit neatly into classic beer styles, but this category represents those "session" ales (in Belgium this means under 7% abv!) that do not fit other categories. Colour ranges from golden to deep amber, with the occasional example coming in darker. Body tends to be light to medium, with a wide range of hop and malt levels. Yeastiness and acidity may also be present.

ABBEY TRIPEL



Like other abbey ales, Tripels are strong, yeasty-malty beers. But they are also pale, and have a notable hop profile. Hop bitterness may be higher than a typical abbey ale, up to 35IBUs. But the finish is where the hops really shine, as tripels should finish fairly dry. Otherwise, maltiness is still essential to the style, and the assertive yeast note typical of all abbey ales will be more apparent in tripels, since they do not have the rich dark malts to distract the palate. Alcohol flavours feature more prominently in Tripels that in just about any other style.



Tuesday, March 31, 2015

Thoughts on a beer

UnknownI was kindly sent a 12 box of beers from Harrington's Brewery. Out of the blue, unsolicited but very welcome. I've listed them below and in brackets the arbitrary score out of 10 that I chose to reflect how I felt about them. The links click to the specific reviews.


  • 5-6 = Average,

  • 6-7 = Above Average,

  • 7 = Good,

  • 7-8 = Better than Good,

  • 8 = Very Good,

  • 9 = Great.

  • 1-4 you need to avoid and 10 = Awesome



The 12 beers then:



I invested some time and learnt a few of things drinking beer from Harrington's.

They talk to the  winning the Brewer's Guild Grand Champion NZ Brewery Award in 2012, A sterling effort in itself, so congratulations on that success.

Harrington's started up in 1991 as a response to "Overpriced brown ales" and straight from some romantic novel began to brew  "real beer at a price that was agreeable to the hard working folk of New Zealand". The founder also prefers to be knows as "the Godfather of NZ Craft Beer". 

I notice that I don't see  'craft beer' but I do see "real beer" and an alternative to what was available, so pretty much something not 'Brown Ale' by which of course they mean "California Common, or Ambers", but I digress.

"The beer was different because it was brewed according to the German purity law",  Which is either some laudable crusade or brewing sensibly with the kit available at he time. Or, and I'm going to get really offside, a bit  like Homebrew.

Currently they boast a range of over 30 beer, yes over 30 beers. Range suggesting common regular output, not specials or collaborations. a roster of 30 beers through their brewing facility.

I want to pick on a phrase "Not bad for a stubborn little idea" which I think is the crux of the matter. I think, and this is just me, that John Harrington might have at one time been the leading edge, but not so much now.

An Earthquake in 2011 might be the catalyst for a lot of the changes they've been through, the brewery might have realised this and are hurrying to re-brand, re-package and re-invent their beers, but not re-invent their recipes. This would explain the confusion of names, and style descriptions with some of the beers I drank so far.

So where others have gone to batch brewed beers,  for instance to 'hop overload' styles Harrington's have stuck to the way they did it in 1992. Things have changed. They haven't. Or don't appear to have. Perhaps they're on that journey now. Perhaps they're at the end and are satisfied. 30 beers on a roster is a big roster.

Sure of course they've won awards, some of the beer isn't bad, but if it ever was it's just not the edge anymore.

I don't know if they know how to, or want to,  get there, the edge, stubborn is good, but stubborn and blinkered isn't. Commercial quantity brewing, as distinct from craft quantity brewing might be where I went wrong. These are commercial quantity mainstream everyman beers, that's what they do, that is what they are.

I don't think these beers are craft, and the cynical in me says they're making a play for the craft beer drinker based on the huge rise in the number of craft mic brewers that have appeared.

For me the beers sit well in the pack of similar beers, nothing outstanding, nothing too dreadful, nothing different, just safe, mainstream, middle-of-the-road.

You are expected to pay a premium price for that though, which  is the bit I really don't get.

Friday, March 27, 2015

Beer - #573 - Harrington's - The Rogue Hop Organic Pilsner (Can)

So straight  to a Can of  Harrington's "The Rogue Hop Organic Pilsner". In a can!

".. brewed using organic malt and hops.. and put in a can "


This is a can of a beer that is 5% ABV,  50 IBU, so that would be 1.2  standard drink units, and 150 calories a serve size,

Brewed by Harringtons Breweries (Christchurch) in the style that is of Pilsener and they are in Christchurch, New Zealand

[caption id="attachment_10769" align="alignleft" width="300"]A Can, so dinky A Can, so dinky[/caption]

Brewed with Organic Malt and Hops to the style of a Bohemian Pilsner with our own Rogue Hop to give it an exciting strong yet lingering hop finish.

A great one for a mouth feel challenge!

What could possibly go wrong?

A can, I'm a bit excited. I should get out more. I'm sort of expecting this to be different to the bottle I just had not a short time ago.

There is still something base about the ke-chink of opening a beer.



Hop aroma is deeper. In the glass same pale pour, decent head, and a real bloom of hop grassiness.

The Rogue Hop Organic Pilsner - canI have to say that this is bigger in the hop grassiness. Might shoutier.

I also have to say that he head was less, a lot less,

Hop aroma is loud on the nose, and again this doesn't translate at the same level into taste profile, but again this seems dialled up a tad in the can.

Fresher?

Then I got a metallic/plastic twang thing? I'm not sure that was supposed to be there, it's a bit odd. I'm going to put that down to the fear of canned beer though.  It was a bit odd. I was a bit miffed.

Nowhere near the same lacing as the bottle version. The taste profile is different to. Lots more tart grassiness (which might have been that odd taste I thought was something else, perhaps).

Much different to the bottle version then, I should have done a side-to-side but then that would require a bit of planning and thinking, neither seem to have been in supply when I thought I'd have a beer this afternoon.

I'm in my head trying to make sense of this, there can't be much difference in the process of bottle and cans, he said, no expert, but there is, and they get delivered differently. Cans are supposed to be closer and more accurate to the way intended, are they not. In which case I'm a bit of an enigma as the bottle version seemed better to my taste than this.

I warmed, the metallic/plastic thing didn't go away, it wasn't the hops, I think, who knows I'm not an expert.

The pdubyah-o-meter rates this as 7 a of its things from the thing. I don't like the can version as much as the bottle version which seems a lot softer and balanced. This has a sharper hop edge that dominated and for me isn't that welcoming. 

The double dip review

  1. Am I enjoying it? From a can, no, it's a bit, er odd.

  2. Would I have another? Not from a can, I don't think it rang my bell.

  3. Would I share with a friend on a porch and set the world to rights? I'd be tempted to take the bottle version if I had to. So no.


 



Note: I was provided this beer by the brewer to try and review, without catches,  this is 1 of 12 should youwonder about the sudden love of a brewer out of the blue.


Musically then, I'd changed by this time, and moved on to "Elbow"

This is McGregor from an album called "Dead in the Boot " listen here 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HJ94RjN8a3M

Just well written lyrics. Or this "Some Riot"

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Y_kk9WZ2zLw

 

PILSENER



While the definition of “pilsner” is open to much debate in the beer community, it generally refers to pale, hoppy lagers, ranging from 28 IBUs and up.

Beer - #572 - Harrington's - The Rogue Hop Organic Pilsner

So to a Harrington's "The Rogue Hop" an Organic Pilsner.

".. brewed using organic malt and hops.."


This is a 500ml bottle of a beer that is 5% ABV, and at 50 IBU things,  so that would be 2 standard drink units in the bottle. and 150 calories a serve size,

Brewed by Harringtons Breweries (Christchurch) in the style that is of Pilsener and they are in Christchurch, New Zealand

[caption id="attachment_10764" align="alignright" width="300"]Organic as opposed to inorganic? Organic as opposed to inorganic?[/caption]

Brewed with Organic Malt and Hops to the style of a Bohemian Pilsner with our own Rogue Hop to give it an exciting strong yet lingering hop finish.

A great one for a mouth feel challenge!

What could possibly go wrong?

That has a nice hop fresh aroma on opening.

That aroma really blooms in the glass on the pour. Really pale and with a really decent fluffy head to top it out. very inviting.

The Rogue Hop Organic PilsnerI was expecting more 'bite' in the palate, that distinctive thing, with this it's less pronounced but that doesn't seem to handicap what was a nice first impression.

The profile of this seems to be very even and the tastes are all there at the same time and without a dominant thing, making it really quite quaffable really.

The hop aroma is a really nice greeting to the nose as you lift to tip, sadly though this doesn't translate to the hopiness in the beer that I would like.

A beer that talks a good talk then, all the things it has and does are good but not quite great. I've had worse though, trust me, this isn't a bad drinking beer.

As it warms some of the hop grassiness begins to show through, it leaves it late.



The pdubyah-o-meter rates this as 8 a of its things from the thing. That makes this on the arbitrary scale as 'very good' it is nicer than some Pilsener beers that I've had, and not as good as some others. There isn't a lot that you would take away as memorable from this though, it is at the end of the glass just another Lager beer, just a bit better than some.  

The double dip review

  1. Am I enjoying it? I am, it's not bad.

  2. Would I have another? I think you could easily persuade me that it would be a good idea.

  3. Would I share with a friend on a porch and set the world to rights? It is great but it isn't a show off beer, there are other easily accessible beers of this style that are priced more sensitively.


 



Note: I was provided this beer by the brewer to try and review, without catches,  this is 1 of 12 should you wonder about the sudden love of a brewer out of the blue.


Musically then I was listening to "The Black Keys" for no reason at all, the album of course "El Camino" Listen here

The Black Keys is an American rock duo formed in Akron, Ohio in 2001 - this track "Lonely Boy"

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a_426RiwST8

Brilliant video.

PILSENER



While the definition of “pilsner” is open to much debate in the beer community, it generally refers to pale, hoppy lagers, ranging from 28 IBUs and up.

Monday, March 23, 2015

Beer- #570 - Harringtons - Belgium Trapist - thRreedux

Same beer new name, Same band same name, same numbers and the similar parties

The 3rd time, a three-peat, that I've drunk this as a beer then. Except this time it's not the same. Or is it? Let's not get ahead of the game.

"...makes this beer big, rich and full of fruitiness. Palate is rich and subtle malty. Full bodied.."


Brewers standard 500ml bottle of beer, this time 60 IBU, and 7.2 % ABV, which is 240 calories a serve size, and it is 2.8 standard drinks. I note that 7.2% ABV is new, that's less. Is it more?

Brewed by Harringtons Breweries (Christchurch) in the style of a  Abbey Tripel from the deep south as far away as Christchurch, New Zealand. EXCEPT not, they now label is as a Saison/Farmhouse. I think they're reaching for a style.

Beer #132  and #32 it was labeled as a "Strong Ale" look at the pictures of the label, blue then, yellow now. It scored a 4 both time I had it before, perhaps I'll be swayed by a new packaging.

Even the brewer can't decide on this, it's listed still on the their website as "Belgium Tempest" and 8% ABV.

[caption id="attachment_10721" align="alignright" width="300"]Multi personality beer, why would you frown? Multi personality beer, why would you frown?[/caption]

Belgium strong styled golden lager with plenty of malty flavour and rounded awarding characteristics.

Born out of a very old recipe, our Tempest is traditionally brewed with Nelson hops to a high alcohol level that enhances the warmth and vigour of this great beer style.

Brewed using Belgian Ale yeast makes this beer big, rich and full of fruitiness. Palate is rich and subtle malty. Full bodied sweetness dominates most of the palate but dies to a dryer finish with a herbal/phenol crisp hop bitterness.

So, what could go wrong? Based on the conflicting information, notes, the multi-personality labelling and all that, who knows what beer I'm having, Jekyll or Hyde.

So with a clear mind and empty head I venture forth.

Pops like a firework!,  Aroma though, bready, yeasty.

Pour is a lovely rich brown and a lovely head too! Aroma though, not so much, perhaps some orange peel. It looks ok though.

Harrington's Belgium TrapistTaste. I can't shake the dull bready yeasty taste that pervades this.  BUT they've improved the aroma and the palate from other iterations of this.

So the you get to a point where either they have some bloody minded old curmudgeon that loves a name and thinks he's a master of style, or I have nothing else, they've clearly been floundering around with this as a beer for at least 3 different versions that I can find.

Based on a name. And this one does appear different in taste from the one's I've had before. Perhaps they should have stuck with Strong Lager?

Nothing at all Belgium. Nothing at all Trappist. Not even close to a Saison. not even. A Lager or Ale, someone in marketing or sucking up to the originator of the beer needs to look in the mirror, man up, and tell the man. today. Honest.

On the other hand, a really really nice drinking beer, that offers up low bitterness, a lovely maltiness, and a hint of a dry finish. If it could drop the bready yeast bit it's be a really good beer, really it would.

Based on my diary notes of the last two times I had this (Beer #132  and way back when #32)  this is hardly the same beer.

As it warms it picks up a sour note, which the maltiness just fails to carry, the aroma still confuses and confounds, and the finish is bitter and not totally pleasing.

This though is a world away from the previous versions, and in the right direction, I wonder if the brewer would be open to leaning further in the same direction because he would have something good going on.

Hey what where did all the beer go, he said, disingenuously, as this is more than sipping beer, nothing that is sharp or discordant to make you put it aside, I might even venture that I'd go again on this version as it clearly is on a journey that I hope they want to continue as the future looks bright if they do. But it isn't perfect and it is a little jaggy and unbalanced, unfinished and a bit rough. For a Brewery staple this should be more polished. Perhaps.

The pdubyah-o-meter - delightful as this is stretches t a 7.5

Lower ABV more enjoyment since when did that happen last? It has because this really is an improve on the other versions.  I'm not going to even pretend to be the voice of the punter or even to know what I'm talking about, should they even care to listen at the brewery but I might be tempted to make this a really strong ale as a 'special' and take it off the standard brew list where I think it's been struggling. I have no idea their consumer test group comes from, if it is friends of the brewer people stop listening to them, really please, this has such potential.

And on that bombshell.....

The double dip review


  1. Am I enjoying it? I rather am.

  2. Would I have another?  I think I would, I might, I'd think about it. Perhaps. It's complicated.

  3. Would I share with a friend on a porch and set the world to rights? No. It's just not up to scratch, yet.



Note: I was provided this beer by the brewer to try and review, without catches,  this is 1 of 12 should wonder about the sudden love of a brewer out of the blue

Musically I was listen to Leonard Cohen on Spotify here an album called "Popular Problems"  This is "Slow"

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Vwvy_QsWffY

I really am betwixt and between on the spoken word as 'singing' and yes I include 'rap' in that, and only John Cooper Clarke or Sam Hunt should be allowed to do it.  Send me a message if you want to discuss this :-)

ABBEY TRIPEL



Like other abbey ales, Tripels are strong, yeasty-malty beers. But they are also pale, and have a notable hop profile. Hop bitterness may be higher than a typical abbey ale, up to 35IBUs. But the finish is where the hops really shine, as tripels should finish fairly dry. Otherwise, maltiness is still essential to the style, and the assertive yeast note typical of all abbey ales will be more apparent in tripels, since they do not have the rich dark malts to distract the palate. Alcohol flavours feature more prominently in Tripels that in just about any other style.

SAISON



Fruity esters dominate the aroma. Clarity is good with a large foamy head on top. The addition of several spices and herbs create a complex fruity or citrusy flavor. Light to medium bodied with very high carbonation. Alcohol level is medium to high.

 

Saturday, March 21, 2015

Beer - #568 - Harrington's - The East Indies Lager

Lager, Larger, Largest, Large!

A clean refreshing lager, moderately hopped.


The 500ml bottle of beer, that is 5% ABV, 150 calories a serve size, making this about 1.97 standard drink units.

Brewed by Harringtons Breweries (Christchurch), this one in the style that is good old Pale Lager and they do that in Christchurch, New Zealand

[caption id="attachment_10706" align="alignleft" width="300"]Lager Lout! Lager Lout![/caption]

Brewed using only the finest natural ingredients. The result is a smooth Indian lager that is the perfect beer to enjoy with spicy foods.

East Indies is batched brewed to the authentic style of an East Indian beer. Amber in colour, full in flavour light on the palate with a hop edge to compliment a dry finish. We love it, and know you will too.

What could possibly go wrong?

Nothing exciting on opening, aroma is standard lager type aroma, slightly green slightly sour.

Harrington's East Indies LagerExtremely pale pour, with a lovely head, well carbonated. Aroma moves to something more peppery.

Not as much 'bite' as you get with some lager offerings.

It is then for all intents and purpose a stock standard beer, of which I can't think of anything to say, good or bad.

The pdubyah-o-meter rates this as  6  of its things from the thing. It's just un-inspiring and a bit bland.

It's missing the soft fully full mouthfeel, it's missing the hop bite, it's missing that grassy under-note.

The double dip review


  1. Am I enjoying it? Yes, despite it being a bit run-of-the-mill

  2. Would I have another? Possibly, it's a bulk over substance beer.

  3. Would I share with a friend on a porch and set the world to rights? Beer for beer, dollar for dollar, nom you'd embarrass me with something you had in your fridge, similar but a bit different.



Note: I was provided this beer by the brewer to try and review, without catches,  this is 1 of 12 should wonder about the sudden love of a brewer out of the blue. 

It's time for a bit of Seasick Steve's who has a new album “Sonic Soul Surfer” -  listen here

This is "Summer Time Boy" Bit of Blues never hurt anyone. Especially good Blues.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Gq0PmDhkb4c

 

PALE LAGER



The colour of pale lager ranges from light bronze to nearly transparent and the alcohol anywhere from 4-6%. Adjunct usage may be quite high, though in some cases the beer is all-malt. Carbonation is typically forced, though not always. One thing that doesnt vary is that neither the malt nor the hops make much of an impression on the palate. These beers are brewed for minimum character, though faint traces of hop or malt may show through. More likely though is that adjuncts like corn will show through, or you’ll find notes of higher alcohols (fuel notes) due to the use of high-gravity brewing. The body will be thin and watery, and the finish is typically non-existent.



Beer - #566 - Harrington's - The Yankdak APA

Fresh beer, Fresh music, a fresh number and party fresh.

".. a fist pumping hop mix of Simcoe & Amarillo"


This is a 500ml bottle, that is beer with a 4.7% ABV, which is about 141 calories a serve, in drink units that would be 1.9 standard drink units. 

Yankdak is brewed by Harringtons Breweries (Christchurch) in the style that is American Pale Ale and thy are in Christchurch, New Zealand

[caption id="attachment_10695" align="alignleft" width="300"]A confused look as I try to figure it out A confused look as I try to figure it out[/caption]

A light golden American ale, with a fist pumping hop mix of Simcoe and Amarillo.

Our brewers hammered hop combos and remeasured malt mixes to work the APA recipe down to the essence of this great New World beer style.

A flavourful reward for the end of the day session.

So what could go wrong with that?

First a sigh, another lower ABV beer, another beer claiming "session", another 'Pale Ale', it's all getting a bit much.

I also have no idea what "Yankdak" is either. Often they are some ind of slang or clever abbreviations, this though? no idea

Citrus type aroma on opening, that's be the Amarillo of course, I don't get much pine though, which would be from Simcoe. (technical there !)

Golden orange colour on the pour with a small but firm head. Good size nearly fits into a standard English Pint glass. Good stuff. I don't get an aroma in the glass though.

YANKDAKSlighty bitter which washes over the palate and leaves a dryish and lingering finish.

For me, and it might just be me, the lower ABV beers struggle with body, and I think that's the case with this. On the other side though this is pleasantly bitter enough, and delivers enough taste profile to satisfy a thirst.

As it warms the other citrus, florals and malt notes begin to show, and you get a nice detectable but faint aroma as you drink. It's not bad for contemplative drinking

Which is what I was doing.

The pdubyah-o-meter rates this as 7 a of its things from the thing. It is after all said just another 'session beer' that has to rely on flavour, and there are some hits and some misses. This is close,and I enjoyed it, I would though prefer something with more body, truth be told.

The double dip review


  1. Am I enjoying it? I enjoyed it more the less there was in the glass.

  2. Would I have another? Easily.

  3. Would I share with a friend on a porch and set the world to rights? It isn't a beer you'd seek out or brag about having, if you had some I'd be ok with that. I might not be bringing it as a usual beer though.



Note: I was provided this beer by the brewer to try and review, without catches,  this is 1 of 12 should anyone wonder about the sudden love of a brewer out of the blue. 

Fresh listening is a Mark Knopfler thing. An Album called "Tracker" this is a track. It is a soundtrack to a Movie. Seems. Check in on Spotify here

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=M7-cpV_H_z4

I've was an early Dire Straits fan, then they got that awful piano  organ thing going on and went all commercial nonsense. But I've seen Mark Knopfler before we was famous, he was good then, he can only have got better.

Unlike some of the beers I've been drinking.

AMERICAN PALE ALE



American Pale Ales are light in color, ranging from golden to a light copper color. The style of this beer is defined by the American hops used. American hops typically have high bitterness and aroma.This is a perfect beer for big fare like grilled burgers or combination pizzas, as well as lighter fare like sushi and green salads.