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We pick up the 2023 releases with number 3: Yes Marm. The name references its use of Seville oranges in a blended and mixed-culture fermented saison, given two years' barrel ageing. The result is 6.7% ABV and ochre in colour with a fine and lasting white head. It smells piquant and quite vinous, the point where Belgian-style wild beer meets cava and dry cider. I expected something thin and dry but it seems that Morrigan isn't very attenuative, and there's plenty of malt body left behind, opening the flavour on something close to a malt-loaf breadiness. The fruit arrives quickly afterwards, but it's the zingy tartness of white grape and gooseberry rather than oranges. I love it, but I'm a little disappointed that the headline novelty ingredient doesn't put in much of a showing. Maybe there's a little citrus shred complementing the tartness, but it's at the level where, equally, I could be imagining it. Regardless, this is a fine piece of work: weighty and satisfying, while also brimming with wild complexity. I have a particular fondness for these wine-like oak-aged saisons, and although this is more malt-forward than most, it still presses the correct buttons.
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After the last lot of Black Donkey beers I drank, I had set myself the task of finding more and catching up properly. This pair shows that to have been a wise move and one I intend to keep doing. Finding them is hard work, but very much worth it.
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