Tag Archives: De Dolle

Tasting Notes: De Dolle Special Extra Export Stout – #OpenIt No.3

Brewery: De Dolle Brouwers
Location: Esen (near Diksmuide), Belgium
Style: Imperial Stout
ABV: 9.0%
Version: bottled
Source: Beermerchants.com

Open It! beer number three, and my last one for the evening, was De Dolle Special Extra Export Stout. This bottle of De Dolle Special Extra Export Stout arrived as part of a BeerMerchants.com self-mixed case that I ordered back in July.

De Dolle are a Belgian brewery with some odd (or maybe just tongue-in-cheek?) ideas about stout (“Stout is an old-fashioned beer, but still popular in English speaking countries”? Try telling that to the Danes…) and this was the first of their beers that I’d encountered.

Pre-warned by Mr Dredge, I carefully opened the bottle over the sink and prepared for a lightning-quick decanting, but I must have been lucky with this one: the beer behaved itself and I got pretty much all of it into the glass.

De Dolle Special Extra Export Stout

As you can see from the pic, De Dolle SEE Stout poured with a thick, oily, black body and a huge tan head. First impressions: a light effervescence cuts through the luscious mouth-feel. Flavours are big, rich and delicious: dark chocolate truffle, vanilla and port-wine flavours abound, with a dry mocha-coffee edge. Deep and sensuous, this is a beer most definitely to be savoured, which is what I did for the remainder of my Friday OpenIt! evening.

Delicious stuff – just the sort of robust, flavourful stout I thoroughly enjoy – and one that I won’t hesitate to buy and try again if the chance presents itself. Speaking of: looks like Beermerchants.com are out of stock at the moment, but then the De Dolle website does say they only brew stout twice a year, so I’ll just have to keep my eyes peeled. Either that or raid John Clarke’s cellar… ;)

Tasting Notes: Hardknott Infra Red – #OpenIt No.1

Brewery: Hardknott [@Hardknottann]
Location: Millom, Cumbria, England
Style: Red IPA
ABV: 6.5%
Version: Bottled
Source: Utobeer, Covent Garden, London

Friday Night was Open It! night, so I brought out a trio of beers that I’d been saving for a while. First up was Hardknott Infra Red. I (literally) grabbed this bottle off the shelf on a visit to Utobeer earlier this year (I think it was their last one) and had been saving it ever since.

The first thing I noticed was the thick, spicy hop aroma that poured from the bottle when I cracked the top. Infra Red poured with a deep, copper-red body and a frothy beige head.

Hardknott Infra Red IPA

Hardknott Infra Red is a very savoury beer. The first sip brought a flood of flavours that were all about the hop-burn. It was slightly sour (in a Belgian Red kinda way) and slightly metallic, with a long, lingering dryness, and hints of something that was struggling towards sweetness but never quite arrived. Burnt sugars – caramelised roast veg, something like that – came in towards the very end but there was still nothing you could call ‘sweet’ about it.

All in all we’re talking a distinctly acerbic, bone-dry, big IPA in a very definite Brewdog Hardcore mode, rather than what seems to be a more common sweet malt base for the big US-produced IPAs that I’ve sampled recently. Definitely a beer for the more adventurous palate, but one that rewards the bold-hearted with a big, brash blast of hoppy flavour. I liked it a lot and I’ll be buying more the very next chance I get.

Tonight is the first Open It! Night… #OpenIt

Dredge and Mogg‘s latest beer-related wheeze is Open It! – a weekend-long celebration of all those rare and interesting bottled beers that beer geeks like me have a bad habit of stashing away at the back of a cupboard for a ‘special occasion’.

Open It!

Simple idea: pick out a choice bottle or three, Open It! and blog about it.

Here’s my Friday evening selection:

Open It! Friday

That’s a bottle each of:

  • Harvey’s Elizabethan Ale
  • Hardknott Infra Red 2009
  • De Dolle Special Extra Export Stout

Maybe not the rarest beers you’ve ever seen, but I’ve been saving them all for a while and I’m looking forward to trying all three of them immensely.

Btw, does anyone else think “Dredge and Mogg” sounds like a firm of Dickensian solicitors..? :)

New Arrivals: Kernel, Viven, Moor (and more) from Beermerchants.com

This order actually came in about a month ago, but I’m only just getting round to sampling some of the contents. In a weird bit of mathematical synchronicity the whole lot (including p&p) came to £50.00 exactly.*

First up:

Kernel & Viven beers from Beermerchants.com

  • Kernel Porter and Pale Ale
  • Viven Porter and Ale

The Kernel beers were one of the main reasons for putting the order in, and I’d heard good buzz about the Vivens as well.

Next:

Four Moor beers from Beermerchants.com

  • Moor Old Freddie Walker, JJJ IPA, Peat Porter and Fusion

The other main reason for ordering… heard nothing but great things about these beers, looking forward to trying them.

And finally, to make up the 12-case, a few miscellaneous Belgians:

A few Belgian beers from Beermerchants.com

  • Het Anker Gouden Carolus
  • De Dolle Special Extra Export Stout
  • Van Steenbergen Gulden Draak
  • Brasserie Lefebvre Floreffe Blonde

Tasting notes to follow on all of the above in due course!

*Okay, okay, I confess. I hunted around for a bottle priced at £1.80 to make up the round number. Mild numerical OCD strikes again.

Tasting Notes: De Dolle Arabier

Brewery: De Dolle Brouwers
Location: Esen (near Diksmuide), Belgium
ABV: 8%
Version: 330ml bottle

Arabier is one of the two main beers, they do make quite a few others, from De Dolle and is available throughout the year. The first impression I got from it wasn’t good; there was so much pressure in the bottle that I lost about a third of the beer as it all fizzed out on opening, even though the bottle had been sitting in my beer store (a corner of the kitchen, not a dedicated room… if only) for quite a few weeks.

I quickly decanted the remainder into the glass to reveal a dark golden, very murky and unsurprisingly still very foamy beer. Aroma is citrus fruity with some floral notes. The subsequent flavour, once I left it a bit longer to settle, is quite sweet and fruity with very little from the malt. The alcohol is certainly noticable but it doesn’t dominate. It may be popular and well-liked, certainly if its 92 percentile rating on RateBeer is any indicator, but it’s not for me, just too sweet, and I very much doubt I’d have it again.