17 November 2025

Apostrophising

An invitation to judge at this year's Brussels Beer Challenge had me in Belgium a fortnight ago. Despite the name, the event moves around the country, and this year was hosted in the far south: the sleepy village of Marche-en-Famenne in Belgian Luxembourg. You probably don't need to put it on your must-visit list and I can't tell you much about its hospitality establishments, although it has several. Judging was conducted at the local council's sports hall, and for the opening night there was a reception with beer pouring from a number of local breweries. It appears that the local dialect of French likes apostrophes, because they featured a lot in the beer names.

I started at the apostrophe-free Brasserie de la Lesse, and their pilsner Top Lesse. This pale and murky fellow was an instant reminder that Belgian pils is its own thing, and very nearly became fashionable a year or two ago. The horror! The problem, in this very typical example, is that it's far too dry, lacking all but the most acrid of leafy hop bittering and totally devoid of soft and balancing malt. The defining feature is a mineral rasp, like water with too much dissolved metal in it. In accordance with proper judging procedure, I award this example full marks for style fidelity, but I don't recommend drinking it unless you already have an affinity for specifically Belgian pils.

Next up was Brasserie Du Comte Hener, and one called IPA'ir Tendue. It's an IPA but I'm not going to unpick the name any further than that. Pale and hazy, with 5% ABV, the aroma begins on fresh and zesty citrus but quickly devolves into some ropey chlorophenols. There's no escaping that in the flavour: bleach, and plenty of it. No freshness; none of the rounded fruit esters that the Belgian way of brewing can impart. No enjoyment, in short. I well remember when exploring the world's beers meant regular encounters with commercial offerings that tasted like low-grade homebrew. It rarely happens these days, but this beer brought me right back there.

We plod along to La MA'riebrasse in the hope of better beer. Dark seems like a good idea right now. Their La Sainte MA'! Noire is not billed as a stout, but it has a lot in common with it. A chocolate foretaste kicks things off on the right foot, and is followed by a bouquet garni of herbs, from which I could pick out thyme, rosemary and fennel, though I'd say none are included in the recipe and it's all done with hops and a spicy, phenol-forward, Belgian yeast. 6% ABV gives it a satisfying weight, and ensures that the flavours are bright and the finish long. We haven't quite escaped from the homebrew effect here, but this unorthodox offering is at least fun.

Brasserie du Château de Leignon is the grand name of the next brewery in the queue, and Leignon Triple is the beer. I kept having to correct my spelling away from the usual Flemish "tripel". This example is broadly to style, with a thumping 9.1% ABV and a heat to match. The flavour is dominated by sweet pear, with no more than a hint of clove to make up the spice side of the profile. The overall impression is of a hybridised hard candy, part clove rock, part pear drop, and with enormous potential to cause devastating hangovers.

The brewery with the fanciest mobile set-up was Rochehaut, investing in American-style branded tap handles for each of its draught offerings. There was another tripel too, called simply Rochehaut Triple. This is another very clovey one, and although it's lighter than the previous at 8.5% ABV it's still pretty damn boozy, with the hot syrupy character offset only by the cold serving temperature. A bottle would likely have been much harder work. Still, I liked its full and chewy body, and that might have been lost if they dried it out more. I'll file this one under "workmanlike". And also "not bad for free".

Rochehaut also brought their winter ale, Hivern'ale. Kegs being what they are, this copper-coloured job was also pouring at Arctic temperatures, so at the beginning it was easy to miss its 10% ABV. But while it rounded out nicely after a few minutes under the lights, it didn't develop any great flavour complexity. There's clove aplenty once more, and a more piquant minty quality. The dark side manifests as no more than a sprinkling of burnt caramel. While I can see how it would work as a beer to drink in cold weather, I don't see the advantage of it over more mainstream -- and better -- year-round dark Belgian ales. Pick a quadrupel, any quadrupel.

But one more tripel before moving on. Triple du Miel is from the St. Monon brewery and, as the name states, is made with honey. I liked the idea of that, reckoning the flavours would be nicely complementary. Before I even got there, I found honey in the aroma, and indeed it was well integrated into the tripel experience, not feeling artificial or tacked-on. The honey is a bit more punchy in the flavour, tasting more waxy than sweet. The base beer is only 8% ABV and doesn't have much to say for itself; I was just happy this one didn't taste of cloves. On the whole it's decent and drinkable, but ultimately rather plain, in a way that this kind of strong ale shouldn't be. I still think there's more room for honey/tripel experimentation, though.

From the same brewery: St Monon Brune. Other than Leffe, you don't see many of these in the northern reaches of Belgium, and I think this one could easily pass for dubbel up there. It's a full 7.5% ABV for one thing, although the alcohol is well hidden. An attractive clear dark ruby colour, it opens with an almost porter-like roasted grain aroma. The flavour has lots of dubbel's fig and prune notes, but without the warmth it feels a little like something is missing: it doesn't go full fruitcake, and maybe that's what makes it merely brune. Regardless, it's a lovely beer, even if it's slightly strong for what it delivers.

There was something a little similar from Microbrasserie des Coccinelles, called La Morhette au Clair de Lune, pouring from a 75cl bottle. This one is a mere 5.9% ABV, and quite a pale amber colour for a beer invoking night scenes, but it tastes the part. There's a solid backbone of rich roastiness and smooth caramel, then a generous heaping of mixed Christmassy spice: clove, yes, but nutmeg and a little cinnamon too. It finishes dry, your slice of fruitcake served with a mug of strong black tea. Everything about it is incredibly, deliciously, Belgian. Except for the ABV.

Our finishers are pale. First it's a blonde ale by Brasserie de Tenneville, called Tenn'City. This 6.2%-er is a fizzy beast, and surprisingly light, given the strength. It refreshes almost as well as a lager, with only some mildly sweet pear and melon notes to indicate warm fermentation. This won't win any awards for complexity or elegance, but it's one of several I drank on the night that I would be perfectly happy to have as a characterful local beer if I lived in the region.

An IPA brings us out: how modern. And it's canned, too. Johnny is from Babeleir, in the big city of Namur, and is 6% ABV. It's straw yellow and lightly hazy, all contributing to its general too-cool-for-Belgium vibe. I'm guessing they've tried hard to make it taste like the New World, promising juice and a soft texture, but Belgium will out, and this seemed very much in the Belgian IPA style to me. Rather than juicy sweetness, it's a cleaner hard-candy effect, in both the flavour and aroma. The tell-tale cloves sneak their way into the middle, and the finish is assertively bitter, very much in an Old World way, with lots of Germanic grass and herb. For something presenting as fun, it's a little harsh, but I enjoyed the various twists it took. I don't get new Belgian IPAs very often, and it's noteworthy that I didn't see many others in the room, so finding this one was most welcome.

You may have noticed, as I did, a slightly amateurish vibe to many of the beers on display. I don't know if that's typical of small rural Belgian breweries in general, or just this somewhat remote part of the country. As someone who mostly sticks to the big Flemish cities, it felt a little like stepping back to the Belgian beer of 10 or more years ago. That can be a blessing or a curse, depending on the beer, but it's always interesting. In the next post I'll be stepping into a couple of other local breweries for some at-source critique.

14 November 2025

Medium roast

Autumnal red and brown is the palette for today's selection, as we face into the depths of winter proper.

Once upon a time, Rye River brewed an own-brand American-style brown ale for Lidl. It was a somewhat overlooked masterpiece, and then just as I was establishing it as regular in my fridge, it disappeared. Not long after, rival supermarket Dunnes added a new beer to its house label, Grafters. Night Shift is an American-style brown ale, brewed by Rye River. Has the original been saved, but moved?

The ABV matches, and it's the same deep garnet shade with a solid, reliable head. The American hops are present from the start of the aroma, with the almost-acrid sharpness of a good black IPA, mixing hot tar and pungent spices. It's smooth and creamy, heavy enough to be satisfying, yet with perfect drinkability. The initial flavour of soft milk chocolate and toffee matches this perfectly, and only in the finish do the spiky, spicy hops reassert themselves, wrapping the experience with a bracing blast of bitterness which adds a whole extra dimension. I'm reasonably sure this is the Lidl recipe. It's worth making a special trip to Dunnes for, and at €2.10 is a steal.

A year or so after Changing Times landed into Dublin's pubs, it's added a fourth beer to the line-up. Following the lager, pale ale and stout, the macro-clone range continues with a red ale. Bleedin Red is 4.2% ABV and a lovely clear dark copper colour.  It's topped with a firm and lasting head which makes it look nitrogenated but the very busy fizz apparent from the first sip tells me otherwise. There's not much by way of aroma, while the flavour leads on a harshly metallic bitterness and finishes on a nasty soapy twang. While it looks all caramelised, there is precious little crystal malt in evidence. The second half of the pint gave me aspirin, rubber, boiled spinach and beetroot, and while I'm certain that's all down to legitimate English hops, pleasant drinking it does not make. Red ale is a hard sell at the best of times, hence the handful of people claiming it's underrepresented on the Irish bar. Sales figures from this one will test if it's really something people want. Me, I think I'd prefer the watery embrace of Smithwick's to this rough character.

Finally, we have Malt Fiction, badged simply as a red ale, produced by BrewDog in Berlin and on sale in these parts at Aldi for €2 the 33cl can. It's quite red and completely clear, with a loose-bubbled head. The aroma has a sweet candy fruit thing, smelling like raspberry and strawberry, with a hint of richer malt behind. 5am Saint came immediately to mind. There's a lovely weight to this, derived from a malt base which manifests in the flavour as cake and biscuits: a little treacle, a little chocolate and lots of toffee. But it's not sickly and is very deftly balanced by the new-world hops, which add the summer fruits of the aroma, along with candied lemon and oily little sparks of pine bitterness. It's rather charming, and a world apart from my slightly dismal experience at the company's Dublin bar recently. I have a lot of time for American amber ale as a style, especially when the brewery doesn't try too hard on the bitterness. This is an excellent example, and if you're under forty and therefore too young to have ever drank one, here's your chance. Hashtag amber ale comeback.

There's definitely some good autumnal drinking available at the supermarkets. I'm not sure I'd bother searching the pubs though, if you're a Dubliner.

12 November 2025

The K club

Today's beers have nothing in common, other than names beginning with K.

Krush is a Korean "ice blast lager", from Kloud. I don't know what that means, but it's 4.5% ABV and a medium gold colour, looking like a typical continental-European macrobeer. According to the ingredients listing it's an all-malt recipe, and yet it still manages to taste like some cheap adjunct has been used: sweetcorn or rice. There's a grain-husk rasp and then an overly sweet syrupiness, before a finish that's dry but not clean enough to call crisp. That's "balanced" in a way by a metallic chemical tang that is presumably meant to taste like hops but is a long way from them. On the plus side, it has a decently full body, though that just carries the wonky flavours further than is enjoyable. This is a bust. I wouldn't like to try and place it on a league table of Korean beers, but globally, it's well towards the bottom.

The diversity of beer is what keeps me interested, and also filed under K is something quite different: Kaapse Leen Calvados Barrel Aged Barley Wine, from Kaapse of Rotterdam. This looks to have been a leftover from this year's Dublin Beer Festival, which I missed, and showed up on tap at UnderDog (RIP) in October. It's dark chestnut in colour, and quite dreggy looking, though that doesn't seem to have adversely affected the taste. I would have guessed a wine barrel rather than apple spirit because the aroma is full of grape juice and light summery red wine. That gets heavier and more oaky on tasting, calling to mind Tokaji or Sauternes, though with a significant bite of tartness alongside the sweet. Tart berries and Granny Smith apples continue the sour theme, and although there's an undeniable heat from its 11.2% ABV, it never really rounds out into the soft and smooth winter warmer that I think it ought to be. I'm generally a big fan of Calvados barrels for beer, but whatever way they've done this one, it hasn't quite worked out. Even as a small-measure sipper, it's quite a tough beer to drink.

Pick any two beers randomly and, chances are, neither will be much good. There's probably a lesson there, but I've no interest in learning it.

10 November 2025

The haze hose


It's the five newest (at time of etc.) releases from Whiplash today. While making lots of different types of beer, the brewery has built its reputation on one particular kind. See if you can spot what it is.

We begin on a comfy green-leather banquette at Fidelity. New from Whiplash here was Fetch, billed simply as an IPA but arriving shockingly beige with a fine white head. The aroma gives little away, only a faint air of dessertish vanilla. Its flavour is understated too, especially given the 6.8% ABV -- I guess the low serving temperature helped there. Fresh apricot and nectarine begins it, turning to a more severe oily garlic by the finish. When it eventually warmed, I got a touch of grittiness but otherwise it's quite free of haze flaws. Better than it looks but all told not very exciting, is the verdict here.

Whiplash also brews for Barcelona's Oddity, and there was a new IPA from them on the taps: Loose Plan. Beige is in, it seems, because here's another one. The aroma is brighter and more tropical here, suggesting pineapple in particular. The telltale grit is present in the flavour, but so is an invigorating bitterness, all pithy grapefruit in quite a west-coast way. That mostly covers up a garlic side which manifests only briefly at the end. Although this is a lighter beer than the last one, at 6.5% ABV, it packs in more flavour and most of it is enjoyable. There are dreggy haze compromises, and I think whatever they've hopped it with would work better in a clear IPA, but this is pretty good overall. It's not for haze sceptics but may convert some moderates to the murky cause.

Back home, another 6.8% ABV IPA, this one called Fear Phobia, a collaboration with Japanese brewery Totopia. It is, again, full-on murky, and foamy too, showing a tall stack of dense white froth when poured. The aroma is quite vegetal, smelling of spring onions and garlic in particular. The flavour, however, goes to fruit instead, I'm happy to say. It's not especially strong tasting, with subtle notes of pineapple, peach and passionfruit, all soft, ripe and juicy. The texture is similarly soft and rounded, the carbonation a gentle sparkle. I got a slightly harsher pithy bitterness and some dry grit on the finish, but otherwise this is easy going and easy drinking. It's another which won't convince any anti-hazers, but it does show off the style's positive sides in a calm and understated way. I approve.

That was followed by Only the Good Notes, yet another 6.8% ABV IPA. In a wider glass the head was more manageable, peeping above the rim like the dome that made a billion for Diageo. The aroma is brightly tropical, Citra seemingly staying quiet, in a trio with El Dorado and BRU-1. It gets bitterer on tasting. Though the sweet New England fuzz stops it turning sharp, there's a certain soft fibrous pith to the foretaste. That clears away quickly and is followed by a hit of cinnamon spice and a sugary orange jelly. A baked Alaska of vanilla, spongecake and tinned fruit sees us out. It's nice, but you've tasted it before. Again, based on this beer alone, I can't go off on one about how haze is a degenerative sort of IPA: it's very tasty stuff. More of what's produced should taste like this, however.

We raise the intensity to double IPA next, though the yellowish-orange earwax murk remains very much the lewk. Count To Three is 8% ABV and hopped with Pacifica and Wakatu. The aroma is vaguely tropical, but gives little away. It's thick, with a custard mouthfeel to match the vanilla foretaste. The hops don't really swing in after that, nor does the alcohol heat, and I'm reminded of a criticism I made of Whiplash earlier this year, that their beer isn't as flavourful as it used to be. It's quite herbal in that Germanic New Zealand way, missing the tropical fruit which would have been very welcome. A mild coconut oiliness is as sunny as it gets. I mean, it's big enough and sticky enough to meet the needs of the low-standards strong-and-hazy brigade. I'm not into it, however. I remain impressed every time a hazy IPA, like this, doesn't disgust me with its amateurishness. This is very competent, but it's still not brilliant beer, though it's presented and priced as one.

Regardless of the individual merits of these beers, do we really need so many similarly styled ones, in succession, from the same brewery? If you're one of those people who only ever buys hazy IPA, could you maybe try switching it up a little, for all our sakes.

07 November 2025

Periscope creep

Oh they are a capricious lot, the beer gods. Just after I complained about unnecessary extensions to the Sierra Nevada Torpedo brand, two new ones arrived into view. I must make the requisite sacrifice by drinking them.

But first, another inevitable extension. I swear the well of inspiration for the Little Thing series is running dry. I mean, Hoppy Little Thing? What's next? Fizzy Little Thing? Liquid Little Thing? Beery Little Thing? Hoppy is 5% ABV and a pale sort of yellow haze. It doesn't smell especially hoppy, just a vaguely zesty lime effect. The carbonation is faint, and that helps accentuate the New England softness. The flavour is hoppy, I guess, but it's quite plain: similar lime to the aroma, some lemon candy, a brush of onion, and then a vanilla sweetness which isn't hop-related at all. I don't get the point of this. It's like a watered-down version of the 6.7% ABV original. Was anyone asking for an extremely basic hazy IPA in 2025? Sierra Nevada thought they were.

Time next to ready the Torpedoes, and first up is Phantom Torpedo at a spectrally diaphanous 6% ABV. They have no convincing explanation for the name, but do tell us it's brewed with Vic Secret, Azacca and Magnum. It's a sort of grey-ish orange, which is unattractive, and translucently hazy with it. The aroma is pithy and bitter, all very classically Californian. Vic Secret's aniseed waits for the flavour to appear, where it's right in the foretaste, all very herbal with less of its usual bitterness. Oily jaffa orange follows, briefly, before an understated resinous finish, coating the palate without turning aggressive. I guess it's an echo or a ghost of regular Torpedo. Did anyone ask for a Torpedo that was less Torpedo-y? While I enjoyed it, it does feel like the flavour is building up to a kick that never gets delivered. Vic Secret has such a bold and distinctive flavour, ideal for this kind of IPA, it's a shame to see it low-balled like this. Good but with lots of room for improvement, is my take.

We're out the other side with Electric Torpedo, very slightly stronger than the original, at 7.5% ABV. The brewery has opted not to tell us what the hops here are, only that it's a blend. Once again it's a hazy orange, but looking rather less grey than the previous. I get marmalade from the aroma, with lots of oily orange and lime rind. Its flavour is altogether less processed, with zinging fresh citrus for days. I guess it's the gravity which allows that, and yet there's no boozy heat nor sugary malt to get in the way of the hops. This has a lot of Torpedo's aggressive charm, but I think has a subtler side too, leaning less on the harsh resins and allowing more of the fruit to come through. It's so clean and easy to drink that a 12oz bottle didn't feel like enough, despite that significant strength. "Electric" is perhaps an overstatement, but it's very lively and stimulating, and thoroughly enjoyable. If we hadn't all got sidetracked into the haze, this could have been what IPA evolved into, and we would all be the better for it.

OK, these departures into alternative-universe Torpedoes I do understand. If the brand-extension conceit is what it takes to put more tasty west-coast IPAs on the market, then I'm all in favour. Consider the series to be an answer to the prayers of all those rheumy-eyed old hopheads, hankering after one last hit of pine in a world of vanilla and garlic sludge. Who could deny them?

05 November 2025

Unionise!

Thornbridge acquired the Burton union system that Marston's were throwing out. You don't need me to tell you this: it was all over the beer news. Likewise, you don't need me to tell you what a Burton union is and does, which I easily could because I understand it completely. Two union-derived beers have arrived in Ireland in bottled form, and here they are.

The Union is the grandly titled flagship, an IPA with a grand ABV of 7%. Bottle conditioning has left the pale amber liquid a little hazy, which I'm sure a classically constructed English beer like this isn't meant to be. And by "classically constructed", I mean Maris Otter, Goldings, Northdown and invert sugar number 2. The aroma is very English, with an almost gastric sharp acidity. It's nicely light bodied, wearing its strength gently, much like the brewery's flagship IPA, Jaipur, does. And like Jaipur, the flavour opens with a pithy kick. There's citrus, but in the more easy-going jaffa orange manner of English hops, rather than any American grapefruit, and this sits next to a slightly metallic tang and a peppery spice. It became heavier as it warmed, and a single half litre serving was plenty. If there's something specifically union-y about the taste, I missed it: this is pretty much what I would expect an English-hopped 7% ABV IPA to taste like, similar perhaps to the one Meantime used to have as its claim to past glories. It's maybe a little strong to celebrate too loudly, but I enjoyed it regardless.

Now, that one was marked "a pure union brew" on the label; the West Coast IPA simply says "from the union". Is something different going on with the production here? I'm confused and a little suspicious. Anyway, this one is 6.5% ABV and collaborated on by Burning Sky. It's slightly hazier than the previous, and a paler shade of spun gold. The aroma's fresh grapefruit brings us straight to the west coast of the USA, and the mix of spritzy zest and oily dank in the flavour keeps us there. There's a certain softness in amongst the sharp hops, which is delightful and adds a welcome subtlety to what would otherwise be quite a brash beer. Is that the union's doing? Regardless, this is just the sort of high-end quality one expects from Thornbridge; bold and full-flavoured, but with a charming old fashioned classiness. Yes, it's a true-to-style American IPA, but there's a beautifully softer English vibe happening as well.

I am none the wiser as to what I, the beer drinker, am expected to expect from the use of a Burton union. These beers are both lovely, but very much in the way Thornbridge already operates. With luck, one of England's many fine beer writers will be able to explain what difference the equipment actually makes to the product, beyond the press releases and collaborations.

03 November 2025

Packed to the Gills

This post has been a long time coming, and it's all the fault of the brewery's prolific output and nothing to do with my sluggishness in turning notes and drafts into consumable content. So I am, to say the least, several months behind in my coverage of Lough Gill.

It all started back in August, with a couple of sunny summer cans. I hadn't seen the word "crushable" in a beer description for quite some time. The word seemed to have a moment back in the craft heyday and appeared on these pages exclusively between 2014 and 2020. Lough Gill deployed it anew for their latest lager, called Rake. I guess the name implies that one can drink it in quantity, though the 5.5% ABV puts it above the level of your standard Irish pint. It's also "west coast" according to the can, single-hopped with Chinook. It looks well, being a dark, almost reddish, golden colour with good head retention. The Chinook is quite shy in the aroma, and instead there's a Czech-like bready malt effect, with maybe a hint of lemon. The Czech impression continues in the mouthfeel, which is very full and almost sticky, something which I would say has an adverse effect on its crushability. It doesn't taste very American; the hop side is all bitterness with very little citric or pine flavour. I tend to think of Chinook as a bittering hop in the main, and that's borne out here. There's a resinous payload which gums up the palate without delivering any accompanying dank enjoyment. Coupled with the big body, that makes this a somewhat cloying affair, far from the session-drinker that the brewery seems to have envisioned it as. Your mileage may vary, but this satisfied neither my need for clean lager, nor for American-style hop fun.

We should have some proper hop fun next, with Sunbrella, brewed with wunderkind hop Krush alongside fruity fellow-Kiwi Nectaron. We're back in Lough Gill's comfort zone with a 6% ABV hazy IPA. "Tropical" it says in all caps on the front, but this is another serious beer, tasting like it has nothing in common with the fruity soft drinks that I imagine the word is intended to convey. The weedy quality is set on another very full body, with an alcohol heat that tastes of all its 6% ABV and more. Here it meets a strongly sweet custard vanilla, but the hops hold their own, creating a proper balance in a type of beer not really known for that. The flavour has similar length and depth as the previous beer but is far more enjoyable, sparking with a mineral spice and citrus pith in addition to the main theme. It's not crushable, and I'm sure it's not meant to be, and neither does it show the bitterly herbal hallmarks typical of New Zealand's more established hop varieties. It is a banger, though: fresh and bright tasting, while warm and soft feeling. Taking my time over it, I did find a certain degree of garlic building up as it warmed, though not to an offensive degree. I don't always enjoy it when Lough Gill does the haze, but they've nailed it here. You don't even need sunny weather to enjoy it.

That's hop-forward beers for you: some you win and some you don't. An all-Chinook lager was a courageous flex but I don't think it worked out. The new-wave New Zealand hops continue to impress, however.

A few days after drinking these, I paid a visit to the brewery where they were nearing the end of their winter preparations, with the usual selection of strong dark beers going out again this year. The imperial stouts are joined by a couple of different small cans, though following the usual Gaelic theme which the receiving importers presumably lap up.

I haven't seen Emerald for sale at all in Ireland and it may have all gone to the Netherlands, which isn't at all unusual for an Irish beer these days. It says "Irish Export Stout" on the label, and I guess they mean that literally. I tend to expect bitterness from this style: substantial hopping and lots of roast, with any sweet side being burnt caramel or molasses, where there's a darker, more grown-up aspect to the sugar. This one is all-out sweet, however, which was disconcerting. Sticky chocolate sauce builds, even in a small sample, to the point of becoming like pink marshmallows. Lough Gill was an early adopter of kerr-azy pastry stout recipes, but this one shows you don't actually need the daft adjuncts to get the same effect. It's not my sort of thing, regardless. 

I was able to buy the next pair locally, beginning with Celtic, an "oak whiskey red ale". Unlike most Irish reds, it's 6.5% ABV, though the clear dark garnet colour checks out. The whiskey side is very strong in the aroma, in a lovely, warming, hot-toddy sort of way. A side order of caramel comes with that, and the caramel takes the lead in the flavour. Though sweet again, it somehow avoids being sticky, showing remarkable restraint. That allows the whiskey side to return in the finish, bringing notes of honeycomb and raisins. Though they've put the word "oak" up front in the description, there's no honking sap or vanilla here; the oak's contribution has been fully integrated into everything else happening, and I would be very hard pressed to pick it out. I assume oak chips rather than barrel ageing is the reason behind the wording. That process does tend to have a much less impactful effect on beer, and I'm impressed that so much of the whiskey side has come through. This is a very pleasant wintertime sipping beer and I can report that a nip of Power's on the side helps enhance its Irish whiskey features even further.

It's a shame that an "Irish breakfast stout" has been named Shamrock rather than "Rasher", but that's the export market for you: no sense of humour. We're up to 7.5% ABV and, as the description implies, oatmeal and coffee have been engaged. I was expecting sweet but the first sip gave me significant bitterness which, after a moment, turned out to be a combination of black toasted grain and dark roast coffee. That would have been severe were it not for the soft malt base behind it, bringing gentler chocolate and golden syrup, with a wisp of rauchbier smoke. Rasher: I'm just saying. There's a bum note too, and to me it tastes autolytic, of Marmite or soy sauce. It might be an effect of the coffee rather than a fermentation flaw, but it didn't sit right with me. In a beer of this sort, I like the coffee to be creamy and oily, contributing more to its sweet side rather than the roast. That doesn't happen here, and it's to the beer's detriment. Shamrock files with the more serious and slightly acrid school of Irish export stouts. Normally I'd be all in, but the savoury tang, whether from coffee or dead yeast, spoiled it for me. It's just as well I still had some Power's left to take the edge off.

And it wouldn't be winter without Lough Gill's plethora of little black cans. At the brewery, I got a bit of insight into the process behind these, too. They're all made from the same base, and this year for the first time, they've released it as a standalone: the plainly-titled Imperial Oatmeal Stout. For something developed as a means to a different end, it's an excellent beer in its own right. The checklist for a 10% ABV imperial stout is all there, with lots of chocolate, a dark fruit complexity -- raisin and prune -- and then a decadent liqueur warmth. This is aided by the oatmeal doing exactly what it's supposed to, making the texture silky and cream-like, lengthening the flavour and enhancing the drinking experience. While this is surpassed in different ways by its barrel-aged progeny, it's still worth drinking, especially if you're a fan of the barrel-aged ones. It would be nice to have it available year-round, rather than trying to compete with the elaborate seasonal specials.

Speaking of which: Warrior is among the returning versions for 2025. It's new to me, however, because previous vintages were packaged in spendy 75cl bottles. Moving it to a 33cl can has brought it into my price bracket for the first time. Warrior Warning 1 is that it keeps going up in strength, having started at 12.8% ABV in 2023, it's now a very full 15%. Warrior Warning 2 is that it's peated, pointed out in all-caps on the label. And not just peated: the wood involved previously held the Turf Queen herself, Laphroaig. This is immediately apparent on cracking the can, wafting up vapours of salty seaweed and TCP. The beautifully smooth and rich stout (see above) helps offset the effect in the flavour, but I wouldn't exactly call it balanced. Instead, there are two parallel streams: the unctuous velvety stout, with soft dark malt notes, comforting winter warmth and a distinctive and distinguished smokiness, and then an absolute foghorn of chlorophenols on top of this, like it's been given a jet of disinfectant. The latter arrives late but hangs around on the palate for... well, at time of writing, possibly permanently. You really really need to enjoy peated product to get value out of this one. I do, and even I found it a bit much, especially in the first few sips. I guess there are enough fans of the big smoke to keep it on the market for three winters and counting.

On to new business, and with Solera we depart from the Celtic theme, because it wants to tell you about the sherry brandy barrel, latterly used for whiskey, it was aged in. I assume this is "brandy" in the sense of the not-for-drinking fortification spirit used in making sherry. It's a light one, at a mere 11.9% ABV, though is the usual dense black, of course. The aroma tells us that some barrelling has been going on but is vague on the details. It's more wine fruit than spirit heat. That continues in the flavour, with notes of raisin and fig, while the base beer is still very much in evidence, with its smooth chocolate dessert and affogato coffee and vanilla. I enjoyed the subtlety of it. Even though there's lots going on, every flavour gets a turn, and the brandy complements the stout beautifully. You can take the sumptuous velvety texture as read; likewise the lack of excessive heat or rough oak. This is a future classic and I hope we'll be seeing it again in the years to come. 

There's more wine to be found in Wine Geese, using ex-Bordeaux barrels and referencing the French winemakers of Irish extraction. This one is 12% ABV, though seemed a little thinner on pouring, its café crème head quickly crackling away to nothing. Dried dark fruit features again in the aroma: plump and juicy raisins with sweeter prune, and the flavour allies these with the same blend of chocolate and coffee as the above. So they're similar beers, but different. This one has even less spirit heat despite the extra strength, and although it's quite sweet in the middle, it finishes on a balancing dry roasted note, cleaning it respectfully off the palate. I caught a little splintery oak too, as well as some oily coconut and a mildly meaty twang, suggesting a touch of autolysis. You'd need to be a very fussy drinker to pick those out, or even designate them as off-flavours. It's very hard to find fault here otherwise.

A highlight of the brewery visit was a final new addition to the sequence, one which hadn't got as far as canning yet and was tasted from the tank. With Celt, the imperial oatmeal stout has been given the Cognac barrel treatment, finishing at 12.6% ABV. There's no mistaking the spirit: this opens with a strong kick of distilled alcohol, before softening into that luxurious vinousness that is uniquely Cognac. The stout still manages to hold its own, ensuring that the significant warmth doesn't become a burn, and contributing that beautiful oatmeal texture to combine smooth beer with mature brandy. The finish is surprisingly clean, considering everything going on, and there's a pleasant aftertaste of Christmas jollity. This is an excellent candidate to drink on The Big Day, if I'm allowed mention it this early in November.

It strikes me that a palate reset would be a good idea after all that. At a Sligo off licence on the way to the Dublin train, I picked up some 1928, a Helles that Lough Gill brews in support of Sligo Rovers football team. This is light for the style at 4.2% ABV yet still manages to display all the necessary Helles qualities. It may even over-compensate, its principal malt character going beyond light spongecake and into the full melanoidin effect of treacle cookies and steamed pudding. There's just enough grain-husk crispness to prevent that turning unpleasantly sweet. For a beer that is, presumably, not aimed at the especially particular lager drinker, it has a great deal of character and class.

I think that's enough to be getting on with, and a nice broad sweep of what Lough Gill put out, at least in the winter when we're safe from all the fruity gloopy jobs they're a bit too fond of. A big thanks to James at the brewery for showing us around on the day. A taproom is in development which will make Sligo Town even more of a beer destination than great pubs like The Swagman and Thomas Connolly's already make it.