Showing posts with label totally tropical. Show all posts
Showing posts with label totally tropical. Show all posts

13 July 2020

Back on Black's

Another week of breakneck Irish beer reviews begins down Kinsale way with four new ones from Black's.

As a mix of "lager and pink grapefruit soda", Ready Up! meets the technical specifications of a radler, though with an ABV of 3.8% it packs a lot more heft than one of this style ought to. In the glass it's a clear deep golden; completely without haze or pinkness. I love when beer shows real grapefruit characteristics, and this has that spicy, peppery grapefruit rind effect strongly in the aroma. The flavour is sweeter — a sugary lemonade foretaste entirely in keeping with a radler — and enough of a grapefruit taste. The extra dose of lager is very apparent too, however, bringing a clean malt crispness and even a mildly green hop bite, as well as a decently full body. There are no soft-drink tendencies and it definitely leans more towards being a "normal" beer than a shandy. As a midstrength grapefruit-flavoured lager it does an excellent job. You don't even need to wait for a sunny day to drink it.

The brewery has made a couple of return visits to the recipe for the cloudy IPA, Ace of Haze, it first released in 2017. The second version dropped the ABV from 5.1% to 4.2% and deployed Simcoe, Citra and Mosaic hops in their cryo form. It's a custard yellow colour and smells of all the greens: spring onion, mint and marijuana. You don't often get this sort of beer at such a low strength but it works really well for the texture, rendering it light and fluffy. An oily garlic burn in the foretaste gives way to a deliciously juicy middle and finish, showing apricot, pineapple and mandarin. Even though it demonstrates some of the NEIPA features I dislike, there's enough good stuff to more than tip the balance positively, offering lots of great complexity at a very modest strength. They could have stopped twiddling the recipe here.

But they didn't, and it was followed by Ace of Haze - Idaho 7 in which the lead hop is joined by Cashmere and Strata while the ABV stays where it was. It's duller — hazier, I suppose — than the foregoing. The aroma is beautifully juicy, full of mango, pineapple and peach. It's just as light but not as fluffy and even a little thin. A lemony bitterness opens the flavour, followed by a lightly peppery spice, fading to oily resins and just a rub of garlic. The juice has all but vanished but I'm happy with what's left. It's flavoursome but very sessionable, and completely clean. The two beers deliver a similar message but with the accents in completely different places.

There are at least a couple more Aces to come and I'm looking forward to giving them a whirl in due course. In the meantime, both of these are well worth your while.

Perhaps I didn't get the full effect from the final beer, Totally Tropical, as the weather was overcast and windy when I opened it. This is an IPA with pineapple and mango, a deep orange colour with a slight haze. It smells quite artificial: perfumed rather than fruity. The texture is thick and there's a vanilla foretaste, enough to make me check the ingredients for lactose (there isn't any). That chemical syrup effect is even more concentrated in the flavour, claggy and unpleasant. There's a certain herbal heat behind this; an out-of-place kick of peppermint. Given it blind I doubt I would have been able to pick out the supposed fruits it's meant to taste of. And, as with so many beers like this, nothing about it says "IPA" either: nothing you could call a hop profile. There is, granted, a waft of Lilt in the afterburp, but it has taken more than that to impress me for some years now. This really isn't my sort of thing and I question anyone's ability to have "a chill summer session" on it, as promised by the can description.

I tend to associate Black's with big heavy-hitting beers in the American style but, Tropical IPA aside, there's a good demonstration here of how well they also work in the more sessionable space.