Today's beer is a coda to Monday's post about the Mullingar beer festival. This bottle was very kindly suitcased all the way from Cavan by Mr Thomas Carroll. Bréifne Gael Brewing is, I think, Ireland's newest brewery, and possibly the first legitimate one in Cavan in the modern era -- I never saw any evidence that Ó Cléirigh ever troubled themselves with acquiring a licence.Ór Dubh is the name: "Black Gold" writing a big cheque for a 4.3% ABV stout. It doesn't say if it's bottle conditioned but there looks to be a bit of murk in the brownish black body. A head forms on pouring though fades quite quickly. That doesn't stop it from having a fabulously chocolatey aroma, suggesting the classy high-cocoa sort. It's light and sparsely carbonated, and the chocolate takes a backward step in the flavour. Not that it's any way bland. The vestiges of chocolate meet a raspberry-jam fruit seam and a super-clean dry charcoal roast. So, there's complexity to pick apart for those who indulge, but it's first and foremost a refreshing drinking stout, light but uncompromised, and brilliantly sessionable, as this kind of beer should be.
I've been a bit down on the half-litre-bottle squad of Irish country brewers lately, but this is an exceptional exception. It does taste like homebrew, but in the sense of a brewer who has honed and refined their technique to make the best possible beer. I found it totally devoid of amateur production flaws and poor recipe decisions; managing to be both straightforward and familiar while also top quality drinking. I have no idea if and when I'll get to try more Bréfine Gael beer, but should you happen across any, I'd suggest buying and drinking it.
Being from Cavan, it's definitely the first modern era beer brewed in Cavan. O Cléirigh as you say, and Hyland Brewing made an attempt, but I believe these were all co-op made beers on kits in Dublin. Delighted you enjoyed this one
ReplyDeleteAh yes. Well Hyland was unmistakably a contract brand.
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