After the positive performance by Bådin's saisons last month, I noticed there were seven other beers from the same brewery in the fridge at Craft Central. I took six of them, judiciously deciding that I didn't need their hazy IPA.First and lowest-strength is Nightshift, a Czech-style dark lager. There's rarely anything to dislike in these. It looks well: the appropriate shade of cola-brown or dark garnet with a decent off-white head. The aroma says rich and wholesome, with elements of malt loaf, burnt toast and dark, viscous treacle. That made it surprising that's it's relatively light of body at 5% ABV, and very drinkable. 440ml is too small a measure for this, which does a very good job, I thought, of replicating a sessionable sort of dark lager, designed for venues where a multiplicity of beer styles is not part of the offer. That said, it's also far from bland, delivering a beautiful combination of earthy, savoury umami, lighter caramel and a decent poke of Mitteleuropa herb-and-grass hop bitterness. Full marks for style fidelity, then, which also means it's a very tasty beer. I can't think of anything I'd change.
Two West Coast IPAs follow, beginning on Hyperion, at 6.5% ABV. I requested no haze but the haze has found me: this is murky, though at least amber rather than yellow, and with a very handsome layer of loose bubbles. For hops it uses Galaxy, Amarillo and Centennial, which I associate with orangey citrus flavours, and this does have a significant sharp and pithy quality in the flavour. It's not clean, though: the murk makes itself felt in a fuzzy texture and a rough dregginess. It's not unpleasant, but it lacks polish and poise. The bitterness is also a little lower than I would have liked; we do not progress beyond pith into pine. Its aroma does much the same as its flavour, though adding a little spice to the fruit effect, presumably from the suspended lees. I had Bådin tagged as a brewery that pays attention to style fidelity, but I don't think they've managed west coast IPA proper with this one, and its raw roughness means it wasn't as enjoyable as I'd hoped.
Their second chance is Swim, a collaboration with Outer Range. The ABV goes up to 7% and the mist clears a little, but it's still an unacceptably cloudy orange for something calling itself west coast. The aroma is juicy, dammit, which is lovely, but off-style. The flavour is plainer, however, deriving from Krush, Centennial, Simcoe and Citra. I'm guessing the Krush is responsible for that juice thing, which manifests in the flavour as mandarin segments. There's something a bit off behind that: burnt rubber or plastic, and I'm blaming those dregs. Again the bitter side is low and it just doesn't zing the way west coast should zing. I got the impression that maybe IPA isn't Bådin's forte.
Hold on, what's this? Three beers in, I discover that while I definitely left one hazy IPA behind, I accidentally took a different hazy IPA. This hazy IPA is called Hazy IPA, which makes the mistake even more egregious. Making the best of it, I note that it's not all that hazy, and the bright translucent orange colour does make it more attractive than the two IPAs which went before. The aroma is extremely juicy, like real satsuma spritz and tangerine flesh, bordering on Fanta-grade sweetness. The carbonation is low and the texture quite weighty, which doesn't go well with the sweet flavour. While it doesn't taste any way dreggy, there's a candy-chew and undiluted squash character to it. The density and intensity are more than I would have expected for 6% ABV. Still, for all the fruit sugar, it's clean, and relatively inoffensive. I see that Nelson Sauvin and Motueka hops are included in the recipe but I didn't pick up any of their distinctive features, which is a shame. Overall, it's not a bad effort, and I retract my previous catty remark about Bådin and IPA. When they're meant to be hazy, the result is passable.
We're back on track with a stout next, similarly simplistically named, as Bådin Stout. Though a full 7% ABV, it looked a little thin on pouring, and is red-brown in the glass, rather than black, with a fast-fading head. The aroma is sweet, with lots of caramel plus an aniseed-candy herbal side. It's not thin, I'm happy to say, but it doesn't quite reach the realm of creaminess, and I wouldn't have guessed it's as strong as it is. The flavour is plain. Chocolate forms the centre and then doesn't go anywhere especially interesting from there. There's a little buttery toffee and a slightly acrid smoky side. Some coffee roast would have been nice; likewise proper hop bittering to take the edge off all the sugar, but neither materialises. Sure, this qualifies as a stout, but it's not a great one. Strong and dark doesn't have to mean sweet.
I guess if you want coffee, you have to ask for it. It's an ingredient in The French Dispatch, a 10% ABV imperial stout created in collaboration with French brewery Prizm. There's vanilla too, so I was expecting another very sweet job, but got a pleasant surprise. The aroma doesn't give much away, showing a little chocolate sauce or caramel, but nothing especially distinctive. The flavour, however, makes excellent use of the coffee, bringing all the complementary oily, roasty fun which matches well with the toasted grain and caramelised sugar. The vanilla is restrained, for once. I would normally expect a big hit of milk chocolate due to its effect, but here it's all the high-cocoa dark sort, which is much classier. There's an excellent balance to this, keeping sweetness, booze, and the novelty gimmick factor in check, while still being sumptuous and satisfying: perfect as a dessert beer.Don't trust Bådin with west coast IPA seems to be the takeaway lesson from these six cans. I'm sneakily happy that I made a mistake and inadvertently bought one of the hazy IPAs, because it helped make sense of those other two. Overall, the brewery seems to know what it's doing, which is very much normal for Norway, in my experience.












