Tag Archives: Chaos Theory

At Home with a BrewDog on International #IPADay

Unless you’ve been completely ignoring the beerblogosphere for the past few weeks, you’ll surely know that Thursday just gone was declared International IPA Day and a number of the UK’s top pubs, bars and beer houses put on events to celebrate the revitalisation, expansion and massive innovation that’s taken the style to a host of interesting, strange and sometimes astonishing places over the past few years. (And if you’re wondering what the heck an IPA is and why the big fuss, check out John Clarke’s rather excellent piece on the subject over at the Port Street Beer House blog).

For a variety of reasons I couldn’t make it to the Port Street Beer House event, but I was determined to mark the occasion in my own small way, so I rootled aroud in the back of the Special Cupboard (where I keep the Imperial Stouts and Barley Wine’s I’m trying my damnedest not to drink for at least a few years) and came out with a bottle each of BrewDog Chaos Theory and BrewDog Hardcore (the original 9% version, as opposed to the current 9.2% incarnation).

BrewDog Hardcore & Chaos Theory

I was torn, but decided the time had come to open my last bottle of Chaos Theory, it being, along with its stablemate Punk IPA, one of my earliest introductions to the big-hopped, mid-strength sector of the IPA spectrum, back at the end of 2008.

This bottle was best before sometime in October 2010, so I figured it was probably nicely mature by now. Cracking the cap released a fantastic waft of rich, fruit-cake malt aromas. The pour was perfect – no yeast explosion – and a frothy head meant it definitely hadn’t gone flat. As for the taste… just sensational. Intense, incredibly rich caramel up front, packed with dried fruit and with a slight hint of sherry or maybe Marsala wine, with a gradually strengthening bitterness as the mellowed hops slowly worked their way to the forefront. If I didn’t know better I’d have said this one was a barley-wine rather than a strong IPA (the two must be related, or separated by maturation time, surely?) and I enjoyed every last drop.

BrewDog Chaos Theory

I’ve mused before that although I enjoy the occasional tonsil-searing hop-blast, I’m a much bigger fan of an aged IPA that’s had enough time to round out and calm down a bit. One that’s matured enough to stop shouting and really start singing, and this one was definitely Pavarotti standard. A great example of the style, a sadly-missed (by me, at least) weapon in Brewdog’s arsenal and definitely a fitting glass to raise on International IPA Day in salute of one of the most interesting, intriguing and downright tasty beer styles in the world.

Tasting Notes: BrewDog 2009 Prototypes

Brewery: BrewDog
Location: Fraserburgh, Scotland
ABV: Various (see below)
Version: Bottled, prototype
Source: BrewDog mail order

A few weeks back I placed an order for a mixed case of independent Scottish brewery BrewDog’s Rip Tide Stout and Paradox Stout, partly to show my support for the brewery in their battle with the Portman Group, partly because I’m on something of a mission to find my perfect stout and I reckon these two could very well be contenders. Almost on a whim, I decided to order a case of BrewDog’s 2009 prototypes as well and this is the selection that arrived a few days later:

Brewdog stouts plus 2009 Prototypes

Yesterday evening I finally got around to sorting out a sampling session (it would have been sooner, but a bout of food poisoning and then a weekend away put paid to that) and here’s what I discovered:

 

BrewDog Bad Pixie Wheat Beer (4.7% abv)

BrewDog Bad PixieFirst up was Bad Pixie, a wheat beer brewed with juniper and lemon zest to 4.7% abv (which, let’s face it, is quite reserved and sedate for a BrewDog beer). I have to confess that I approached this one with mild trepidation: I have something of a gluten intolerance and whilst not out-and-out allergic, have usually shied away from anything too overtly wheat-based. Plus, Hoegaarden and I did not get on at all well, the one time I ventured there, so all-in-all, I can’t say I was actively looking forward to this one…

Which is probably why I was pleasantly surprised when I cracked open the bottle and poured – the beer was a very pale, very golden colour (see photo, utilising my trusty Leffe balloon goblet) and not at all the murky, cloudy affair I was half-expecting. Aroma-wise there was a light fruitiness, although I had trouble pinning down the specifics. Mouth-feel was good and the flavour was, again, faintly fruity – the juniper and lemon, I assumed – and quite bitter. As the drink went on it developed a distinct dryness which came to dominate, along with a lingering after-taste of… brie. No, seriously. And I think it might have been blue brie at that.

In conclusion: I thought Bad Pixie was a bit of an odd one. Not as unpleasant an experience as I initially feared it might be, but definitely not my cup of tea, either. As I say, I’m no expert on the wheat beer style, so I don’t know how if shapes up to other examples, but any beer with an after-taste of cheese would have to give me pause for thought in future.

 

Brewdog Zeit Geist Black Lager (5.1% abv)

Brewdog Zeit GeistZeit Geist is a black lager which “takes inspiration from the Czech classics” and indeed, it reminded me very much indeed of the Herold Bohemian that I sampled a few weeks ago.

As you can see from the photo, it poured a lovely ebony colour (although with ruby highlights that you can’t quite make out here) but that thick, frothy cream head disappeared in pretty short order. The aroma was smoky and spicy on the nose and the first sip provided a big hit of liquorice, which eventually settled down to something deeper, sweeter and fruitier. Jo suggested dried fruit and after thinking about it for a bit I came up with “barbecued raisins”, which makes no sense whatsoever but seemed to sum up the flavour quite nicely. There was a hint of muscovadot sugar in there as well, which made me think of dark rum, and I expected to find a few coffee tones, but they weren’t as obvious as I thought they might have been.

In conclusion: Zeit Geist is quite delicious and intense, but at the same time extremely more-ish. I reckon I could happily sit through a session on this one. I found it more flavoursome than the Herold and a lot more interesting than Leffe Brun – the other dark lager I’m best acquainted with. So, yes, if this one was produced on a larger scale then I’d definitely be interested.

 

BrewDog Chaos Theory IPA (7.1% ABV)

BrewDog Chaos TheoryDescribed as “a deep copper IPA with insane hops”, Chaos Theory really is a monster of a beer. The first thing you notice is its quite lovely colouring, which – as you can just about make out from the photo – lies somewhere between the advertised copper and a stronger ruby red. But it’s the nose that really leaves a big impression: this beer has an absolutely incredible aroma, an immense fruity tang that really slaps you around the head when you take that first deep sniff and keeps on doing so right to the bottom of the glass.

Taste-wise, Chaos Theory is just as intense. A big slosh of alcohol is followed up by some incredibly complex sweet & sour fruit flavours: raspberries, stewed plums, bitter oranges, mangoes and more, all carried along by a gloriously rich mouth-feel and with a smoothness of finish that belies its strength and power.

In conclusion: Chaos Theory is one is a hell of a beer, and no mistake. A relentless onslaught of flavour upon flavour, it’s definitely a sipper rather than a session beer and certainly not one for the faint-hearted. And this is the one was the eventual winner of the 2009 Prototype Challenge, has since gone into production and is available to buy from BrewDog.

 

To summarise, then: Bad Pixie wasn’t for me, but it certainly wasn’t awful. Chaos Theory is an incredible, huge beer that could give Meantime IPA a run for its money (although along a slightly different track) but I’m really not sure I could drink more than a glass or so at a time.

Instead, it was Zeit Geist that proved the overall winner for me. An interesting, tasty, highly-enjoyable variant on a style of beer that BrewDog haven’t already brewed en masse, I rather wish that they’d decided to put this one into production instead of Chaos Theory. Not because Chaos Theory isn’t a bloody good beer, but they already have their rather fantastic Punk IPA on the roster, so it seems a shame not to broaden their product base with something a little different. But maybe they’ll relent and brew a batch or two of Zeit Geist in 2009 anyhow. In which case, they can be assured of an order from me.