Burton Bridge IPA - feckin' fantastic!
99% of the people in the country would say it tastes like homebrew, and I'd reply "If only a few New Zealand beers did too."
Steady on the pour...
My own Summer Babe. Gorgeous as the name would suggest.
Before that copious pints (3,4 or 5) of the Old Blighty (lovely) at the hop and before then introduced my mates to Epic PA at the Thirsty Weta. One approval, one preferred the Tuatara Pilsner
Might be overstating the SB but she tastes great to me
Bambule's Saison (number 2) - Really great. Very very pale, dry, spicy, with bubblegum and lemon. I wish Mac's Sasion, a few years back, had been along these lines.
Mayhem - Yum, very drinkable. I think I have preferred it out of the bottle. Seems softer, more balanced. None of the hop harshness (as slight as it was) that I got from the keg.
Glad you liked it Stu, The hot weather we had whilst it was brewing played right into that yeasts hands. 26-28C really helped get it down to 1.007 FG.
Didn't dip into your random selection yet. I was a little hazy and sleep deprived after a weekend of imbibtion. But looking forward to it tonight.
My first kegged beer, an American amber/brown, wen't down a treat at the party. A little under carbonated and not as clear as I'd prefer after the bumpy car ride but this only accentuated the hop. Many people talked about having a mouth coating of hop resin afterwards, which is a desired effect.
It was approx 6.1%, I pulled it down from 6.8% from version 1 as, although very drinkable, tended to make for an early night. Yes, the Belgians have a curious idea about beer this strong being to quench your thirst during the day! A 3% saison does makes sense, although I think the style does need a bit of sugar in their to get the dry mouth feel.
Wikipedia tells me that the beer for farm labourers was actually around 3% (no potable water and all that). That's what got me thinking. Interstingly, I've had similar esters off a warm fermented lager yeast... I might give it a crack sometime.