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08-09-2014, 10:35
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It’s been a while since a beer delighted us, without quibbles and caveats.That’s how life goes, of course: most beers — or films, books, cakes, or whatever — are*absolutely fine without necessarily triggering swooning fits.
But still, we have made an effort to try a few new beers lately, hoping to find a gem, and placed orders with Beer Merchants and Beer Ritz with that in mind.
Multiple IPAs and US-style pale ales from British breweries, however, triggered the same reaction:*“It’s fine, but nothing to write home about.” (Or, rather, to write a blog post about.) Grassiness; occasionally yeastiness; one-dimensionality…*none gave us chills.
Maybe we’re just tired of beers which are all about hops, though, because *the two beers that did cause us to sit up straight, included to make up the numbers in our order from Beer Ritz, are members of the stout family: Samuel Smith’s Taddy Porter and the same brewery’s Imperial Stout.
Now, these beers are by no means new to us, or to anyone else. When we used to drink in London, hardly a week went by without a bottle or two of the former, while the latter, being rarer, was a beer we would go out of our way to find. (Tip: the Dover Castle, Weymouth Mews, always seems to have it.)
And Sam Smith’s is not a trendy brewery, nor even very likeable — something which, being human, can influence our opinions.
The taste, though! In both cases, the word that springs to mind is luscious, and both share a tongue-coating, silky, fortified wine feel in the mouth.
Taddy Porter (5%, £2.62 per 550ml) is the kind of beer that we would like to be able to drink more often on draught, in the pub. Just over the line from brown into a black, and a notch beyond sessionable, it is boldly flavoured without being attention-seeking, the emphasis being on flavours of sweetened cocoa and plummy, dark berries. If you’ve ever soaked dried fruit overnight in black tea as a cake ingredient, you’ll get the idea. Perhaps the best bottled porter on the market today?
Imperial Stout (£2.16 per 355ml) makes more sense as a*‘double stout’ — not so dark and heavy as to insist on a fancy glass, a smoking jacket and the undivided attention of the drinker, but perfect for nights when you want just one beer before bed. The flavour is somewhere between chocolate brownie and Christmas pudding, with just a suggestion of something bright and green, like gooseberry, ringing in the background. Resolution: we should always have some of this in the house.
The source of the*‘wow’ in both beers is hard to pin down. Our best guess is that, being cleanly and simply made, without a fog of off-flavours and confusion, the flavours of dark malt and dark brewing sugars are really allowed to shine through, in instantly gratifying fashion. But that’s just a guess, and there’s not much point in asking Mr Smith to elaborate.
Like the 60-year-old we once saw steal the show in a nightclub by performing a series of expert line dancing manoeuvres across the centre of the dance floor, one of these beers in particular — Taddy Porter —*has made itself*a contender for our beer of the year, in the unlikely company of Magic Rock/Lervig Farmhouse IPA (http://boakandbailey.com/2014/05/magic-rock-lervig-farmhouse-ipa/)*and*Bristol Beer Factory Belgian Conspiracy. We’ll schedule a proper taste-off for December.
Unlikely Wow Factor (http://boakandbailey.com/2014/09/unlikely-wow-factor/)


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