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As it happened we were staying just a block away from the Steam Whistle brewery, or at least its original part. It's sited in a photogenic round train shed with a bar in front, extensive event space, and the compact production brewery at the back where now only the draught beer is produced. The tour was fun, as these things go, and offered my first taste of Steam Whistle Pilsner, swigged from a satisfyingly heavy reusable green glass bottle on the way round.
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Down by the waterfront is another outpost of a Toronto brewing institution: the Amsterdam BrewHouse. The brewery was founded in this neighbourhood in 1986 before expanding to larger facilities elsewhere, then returning downtown to open this vast and barn-like restaurant in 2013. Despite much signage advertising special edition beers, the selection was mostly limited to the core range.
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The squat orange beer next to it is Space Invader IPA. The aroma here is a mix of tropical juice and resinous herbal dankness, showing off the advertised Citra rather well. There's an expected powerful hit of lime in the flavour, as well as a less welcome fried onion vibe. Bright citrus zest finishes it on a lighter, less severe, note. As one gets accustomed to the hops, its base malt becomes a lot more apparent. While far from groundbreaking or otherwise exceptional, this is a very decent American-style IPA. Enough so for my wife to order a second while I went with the sole seasonal on offer.
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From one brick-built downtown bar space to another. C'est What? has been a fixture of the Toronto beer scene for as long as I've been paying attention to it. Despite a very central location it's a little hard to find, situated in a roomy but windowless cellar, dark and quiet on the rainy afternoon we landed in.
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The other dark beer, obviously kegged, is C'est What?'s Mocha Porter. This is a wholesome and filling affair: 6% ABV, smelling and tasting of dark chocolate but with a quick clean finish, reminding me of Baltic porter more than the usual warm-fermented type. It's as smooth, rich and creamy as it looks: a perfect sup for a dismal day.
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I picked the barrel-aged Indie Table Beer, one of just 3.8% ABV, though I appear to have omitted any note of what sort of barrel it was aged in. Apologies. I'm going to say white wine, though, as it had the fresh kiwifruit notes of a Sauvignon Blanc and a toasty Chardonnay finish. A more distinctly hop-derived tangerine note runs through it as well, and the whole thing is deliciously spritzy and refreshing.
For the other half, Breakfast Porter. This was a 7.2% ABV thumper with a powerful coffee aroma. The texture is thick and syrupy with a cloying sweetness to match. A metallic tang and a certain black-cherry sour note did little to balance it. I'm guessing they were shooting for "bold" in the flavour design here, and if so they've achieved it. They're wide of the mark on "good", however.
On our first evening in the city we fought our way through the glamourously-attired hordes, paparazzi and celeb-spotters who had gathered for the Toronto Film Festival and made our way to Bar Hop on King Street. It was doing rather well out of the event, it seemed: the table next to us was occupied by blazered security men, earpieces out, as they took their evening meal and swapped stories.
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A baseball-themed novelty beer accompanies that. Squints is a gose from Toronto brewer Left Field, designed to resemble the classic ballpark snack of sunflower seeds. No, I didn't know either. There's also lime and black pepper because why not? The whole thing is a bit of a mess, to be honest. The flavours are all there, even the savoury seeds, but they all shout too loudly over each other. I don't know if black pepper concentrate exists, but that's how it smells, and then the flavour is rough and sour with a lime cordial sweetness and a sickly brine finish. It's just too weird to enjoy.
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Karma Citra IPA is 6.6% ABV and a cloudy orange colour. Another promising aroma: loads of resinous weedy dank to the fore. But once more the flavour doesn't match up, providing a confusing mix of granary loaf, caraway seed and harsh lemon and lime pith. Again, this one gets the very basics right but just seems to be lacking something: substance or spirit or depth.
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And a porter to end on: Kemuri, a smoked one from Godspeed, another Toronto brewpub but one we didn't visit. A strong bacony aroma sets out its stall very early on. The flavour is a little acrid: a harsh metallic twang in with the peaty phenols. I usually like this sort of thing but I felt this one leaned too much on the smoke novelty at the expense of the underlying porter. A few points higher than its 5% ABV might have helped balance it better. Another one for the "bold but no thanks" file.
Much more Toronto pubbing to come later this week, but tomorrow is a holiday and I know just the beers...
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