Vestfyen are perhaps best known for the Willemoes range, but they also make a stylishly-labelled Schwarzbier. It's an appropriate brownish-red shade, with the sort of alluring tan head you just do not see on enough lagers. On the nose there's a very clear indication of the muscovado molasses, laced with a nice herbal hop complexity. First impressions on tasting are smooth and dry, quite like an Irish stout, but with that warm chocolate and caramel character again -- the muscovado adjunct at work. The milk chocolate notes are accentuated by the full and silky texture, and finishes with a comforting warming buzz brought on by a quite hefty 6.5% ABV. In a German version of the same I might expect some unpleasant metallic or saccharine flavours, but there's none of that here. Good all the way through.
I can't say the same for Skælskør Original Stout, though. It's from another venerable brewery -- Harboe, dating back to 1883 -- and claims an Irish influence but I really can't see from where. It's 8% ABV, for one thing, and a very pale shade of ruby. Not much of an aroma comes from the short-lived head, but the foretaste offers a powerful blast of mocha -- a second of pleasure followed by an overpowering wave of chocolatey cough syrup, finishing on a galvanic metal twang. A bit of an assualt on the tastebuds, all-in-all, though the light texture keeps it drinkable while it's cool. The more it warms, however, the tougher it gets. While it's not an offensive beer, or possessed of any off-flavours per se, it is one I found myself fighting with rather than relaxing into -- definitely not what I'm after in a strong stout.Looks like it's back to the Danish micros for me...