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22-10-2012, 12:36
Visit the Called to the bar site (http://maltworms.blogspot.com/2012/10/brett-brewer-talks-about-gerbil-cages.html)



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Brett the brewer talks about gerbil cages



Some of the best breweries I’ve visited sit in the middle of nowhere: Dupont (http://www.brasserie-dupont.com/dupont/), Kacov (http://www.pivovarkacov.cz//index.php), Hook Norton (http://www.hooky.co.uk/) and now Wild Beer Company (http://wildbeerco.com/), to where I walked for a couple of miles up and down country lanes on Saturday (home is hidden away somewhere between Castle Cary and Shepton Mallet, right on the eastern edge of Somerset, in a lovely little hamlet called Westcombe). The day was a sort of launch for the brewery, a chance to try some of their beers, to engage with their ideas, to meet up with the like-minded. Fresh was their signature pale ale, a button-popping, corset-stretching joy of a juicy, luscious beer with a bitter, dry, peppery finish. It was gorgeous. Scarlet Claw was a red ale, with Centennial in the boil and finished off with Simcoe. The malt bill is also intruging — Mild ale and Brown plus CaraAroma and CaraRed from Weyermann (http://www.weyermann.de/) in Bavaria. It had a slightly creamy texture, silky almost, with lots of voluptuous grapefruit and pineapple notes, but also a delicious hint of what I can only describe as cherry-flavoured toffee. And then to the beer that Wild men Andrew and Brett descibe as ‘what we are all about’. Modus Operandi is described as an old ale that is then aged in wood and has wild yeast chucked into the mix. The earthy, chocolaty, Bretty, herbal, woody, vinous, cherry and balsamic vinegar nose just stunned me with its complexity. In the mouth it was a case of chocolate going off the rails, Brett in the train’s cabin pulling all the levers, while earthy sexiness, chocolate, cherry and soft vanilla passed through all the carriages before arriving with the sort of bitter finish that makes you realise why you like beer and want to keep drinking it. Or to put it another way, melodic and harmonic but strong willed in its character — Mahlerian perhaps. Possibly one of the best beers I’ve had this year and yet another indication of the way British craft brewers are really starting to up their game. If you’re in the vicinity of Bristol this week, I hear some is being delivered to the Colston Yard (http://www.colstonyard.butcombe.com/)…



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You’ll find Wild Beer just right of the photo’s centre,
in that little hamlet on the side of the hill


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