
As the name suggests, Neomexicanus is brewed with the distinctive south-western hop variety. Unlike the Neomexicanus beer that St. Mel's Brewery produced last year, the hops in this one came from a commercial farm in Washington State rather than a desert monastery. Can conditioning deposited a lot of yeasty goop in the bottom of the tin so the beer poured hazy -- pale yellow like a witbier. Smells a bit witlike too: a mix of soapy spices and lemons. Lemon is very pronounced in the flavour, calling to mind of the effect normally produced by Sorachi Ace hops. There's a little of the fried savoury quality found in the St. Mel's beer but it's altogether a lighter and more quaffable affair; it certainly doesn't taste anywhere close to 6% ABV, though a pleasantly American resinous quality creeps in if you don't quaff it too fast.
A fun beer overall, even if it's not as charmingly off-kilter as its Irish cousin. Neomexicanus hops remain on my "ooh, this'll be interesting" watchlist. Cheers for the can, Thomas.