
For the first, Born to B Wild, it's not too much of a jump to collaborate with Crosby Hops. When breweries do this, I can't help wondering if highlighting the hop merchant means they get the relevant proprietary ingredient at a discount. It's Amarillo® CGX® (yes, two ®s there) in this Extra Pale Ale, along with Elani™, and open-source Centennial. True to the style, it's the bright pale gold of a light pilsner and almost perfectly clear, not looking like the full 5% ABV. The head retention is excellent, adding to the attractive visuals. Its aroma is fresh and zesty with lots of the American citrus character which pale ales had long before the corporations claimed ownership of the hop varieties. From the first mouthful it becomes apparent how deceptive the appearance is. While it looks light and fizzy, the carbonation is low and the malt base big and chewy; almost syrupy. It's not syrupy, though, it's just a nicely rounded pale ale which happens not to look like one.
They haven't really gone to town with the hop flavour. I mean, there's plenty of it there, but it's basic, in a perfectly pleasant way. The same zesty bitterness sits up front and it becomes pithier and more intense later on. The malt reasserts itself after a moment, so the fade-out effect is of lemon candy or cordial. For all that it's in a new beer style with whizz-bang lawyered-up hop stuff, this seemed to me like a simple and classical sort of American pale ale, of the kind Wicklow Wolf set out to bring to the Irish market back in 2014. That's not a criticism, only a suggestion that you adjust your expectations accordingly on approach to this very tasty beer.

The first thing that's apparent from the flavour is that it's a lager. While there is a significant caramel presence in the flavour, it's not set on a base of heavy residual sugar but is lager-clean and even a little crisp. The burnt sugar flashes in the foretaste but fades promptly, while the middle displays the herbal noble hops. Unusually for me, I would have liked more of this; a bigger bitterness which I think the beer could have carried without being thrown off balance. Still, it's nicely done and is fully true to what amber bock ought to be, with none of the hop harshness I get from the paler ones, and fun hints at the dense dark pleasures of doppelbock. Most of all, it is a perfect beer for the drawing-in evenings we're heading for. I don't know that it's especially well-suited to cheese, but there's no harm finding out.

Not that Wicklow Wolf needs collaborators to keep it on top of its game, but these three were particularly good releases. Maybe the other guys in the room had something to do with that.
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