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08-11-2017, 11:24
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This is a quick entry in our series of notes on beers suggested by our Patreon subscribers (https://www.patreon.com/boakandbailey). This time it’s the*bottled version of Dark Star Hophead as suggested by @AleingPaul (https://twitter.com/AleingPaul)*who has never tried it himself.We bought this from Beer Ritz at £2.78 per 500ml bottle and, like the cask version, it has an ABV of 3.8%.
A note, first, on that cask beer — a classic we think it’s fair to say, or at least a standard. Here’s a bit on the history of the beer from an article we wrote for*All About Beer a couple of years ago (http://allaboutbeer.com/the-emergence-of-pale-n-hoppy-beers-in-the-uk/):

Another cult favourite is Hophead from Dark Star, a brewery in Brighton, a fashionable coastal resort an hour’s train ride south of London. Mark Tranter… worked at Dark Star from the 1990s until 2013. He recalls that, at some time after 1996, one of the owners of the Evening Star pub where the brewery was then based went to California and came back with Cascade hop pellets. These, along with other U.S. hops available in small quantities via hop merchants Charles Faram, formed the basis of ‘The Hophead Club’, conceived by Dark Star founder Rob Jones. At each meeting of the club members would taste a different single-hopped beer. ‘Cascade was the customers’ and brewers’ favourite, so it was not long until that became the staple,’ recalls Tranter. When he took on more responsibility in the brewery, Tranter tweaked the recipe, reducing its bitterness, and, in 2001, dropping its strength from 4% to 3.8%. Today, with the brewery under new ownership and with a different team in the brew-house, the beer remains single-minded and popular, giving absolute priority to bright aromas of grapefruit and elderflower.
Cask Hophead*might have had a wobble a few years ago, or it might just have been that we had a run of bad luck, but on the whole it’s been a beer we cannot help but drink when it’s on offer. Its relatively low strength means we can take a decent amount without getting in a whirl or suffering the next day; its light body makes it swiggable and easygoing; but it is far from bland, even by the hop-saturated standards of 2017.
Perhaps our fondness is partly down to the fact that we’re of the Cascade generation and developed our love of beer when that hop variety was*the coolest thing in town. Whatever the reason, fond we are.
So, how is the bottle? Does it capture the magic? Can you get that Hophead buzz in the comfort of your front room, dressed in your jim-jams?
Apparently not.
The bottled beer is utterly dull — a pan-and-scan VHS, K-Tel edit, plastic imitation.
It’s not horrid — there’s enough hop character there to spark a little pleasure — but it feels heavy, tastes as if it’s been microwaved, and has nothing to set it apart from any number of golden ales from less beloved breweries available in every supermarket in the land.
It’s weird to feel so irritated by a mediocre beer, but it must be because it’s a mediocre incarnation of a*great beer.
We won’t be going out of our way to buy it again but will perhaps enjoy our next encounter with cask Hophead all the more.
Patreon’s Choice #2: Bottled Hophead (https://boakandbailey.com/2017/11/patreons-choice-2-bottled-hophead/) originally posted at Boak & Bailey's Beer Blog (https://boakandbailey.com)


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