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07-07-2017, 18:11
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https://i0.wp.com/boakandbailey.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/07/cascade_express_840.jpg?resize=650%2C321Mark Lindner at*By the Barrel has asked us to consider so-called SMaSH beers (http://marklindner.info/bbl/2017/07/smash-beers-session-125/) — that is, those made using one variety of malt and one variety of hops.We were going to give this a miss because we couldn’t think of any such beer we’d drunk in recent years, or at least not any that made a virtue of their SMaSH status and proclaimed it at point of sale.
(St Austell did release a series of SMaSH beers a couple of years ago but unfortunately, like so many of the more interesting products of our (not for much longer) local giant they proved impossible to actually find on sale in any of the pubs we visited at the time.)
But then we began to wonder… How many quite commonly found beers are SMaSH beers even if they don’t declare it?
Rooster’s Yankee, for example — a beer we wrote about at length in*Brew Britannia and have often touched on elsewhere (http://boakandbailey.com/2013/02/continuity-in-the-world-of-brewing/) — is (as far as we can tell) made with 100 per cent Golden Promise malt and 100 per cent Cascade hops. And we believe (evidenced corrections welcome) that*Crouch Vale Brewer’s Gold, another long-time favourite of ours, is made using 100 per cent English lager malt and 100 per cent, er, Brewer’s Gold hops.
You might say, in fact, that the pale-n-hoppy UK cask ale sub-style (http://allaboutbeer.com/the-emergence-of-pale-n-hoppy-beers-in-the-uk/)*is often SMaSH by default. Sean Franklin, the founder of Rooster’s, has long championed the idea of using 100 per cent pale malt to provide the cleanest possible background for hops to express themselves, and that’s certainly approximately*how most of the best examples of HLA (http://zythophile.co.uk/2016/02/10/shall-we-call-this-new-british-beer-style-hoppy-light-ale/) seem to be engineered. Perhaps there’s some wheat in there (see Jarl (http://www.fyneales.com/shop/beers/jarl)) or a dab of something like Munich malt just to round it out a little but, generally, Franklinian simplicity seems to be the preferred route.
So, what other examples of Stealth SMaSH are out there in UK pubs?
And does anyone know, for example, if Oakham Citra might be a SMaSH beer? Online homebrew forums are full of guessed recipes (guesscipes…) but we can’t find authoritative information. Our guess is, yes, in which case, it turns out we’ve drunk tons of SMaSH beer after all.
Session #125: Single Malt, Single Hop (http://boakandbailey.com/2017/07/session-125-single-malt-single-hop/) originally posted at Boak & Bailey's Beer Blog (http://boakandbailey.com)


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