Tag Archives: Wells and Young’s

Six Beer Links to 07.10.11

In which I post another half-dozen links to items of interest I’ve spotted around the Beerblogosphere since my last Six Beer Links post.

Bargainwatch: New 2 for £3 selection at Sainsbury's

My local Sainsbury’s has rotated its 2 for £3 offers again (I must have bee a little late to spot the previous rotation).

My personal highlights this time around:

Find Courage on Facebook

Justin from PR agency Boom! dropped us a line to say that Courage now has a Facebook page, where Courage fans can congregate and talk about all things beery, at www.facebook.com/couragebeers.

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Bargainwatch: new selection of 3 for £5 ales at Sainsburys

Nipped in to the local Sainsbury’s last night to do the weekly shop and noticed that they’ve rotated their selection of 3 for £5 bottled ales. Potential highlights this time around include:

You can also get a quid off a 750ml bottle of either Leffe Brun or Leffe Blonde (making them £2.69 apiece in our local) and they’ve got promotional four-packs of Old Speckled Hen for £4 a go.

Just in time for the World Cup kicking off tonight…

Quick catch-up #3: The Rest of 2008, Part II

Back to the notebook for another lightning gallop through some of the beers that I sampled last year but didn’t quite get around to writing up in full…

Wells Bombardier Satanic MillsWells Bombardier Satanic Mills (5.0% abv, bottled)
Pitch black with a light tan head, almost stout-like, you can certainly tell this sister beer to Wells’ Bombardier and Bombardier Burning Gold is brewed with chocolate malt. With coffee notes and a lingering sweetness as well, it’s got a bit of variety to it as well. Very nice.

Greene King Strong Suffolk Ale (6.0% abv, bottled)
A very dark, almost black, ale with a strong, sharp flavour. Not too sweet, not too heavy, I’d happily have another go at this one.

Innis & Gunn Cask Strength Oak Aged Ale (7.7% abv, bottled)
There’s an incredibly rich, complex flavour to this 77-day ages strong ale, with a gobful of toffee at the fore. Quite sweet but with a dry edge: rather like liquified treacle tart. Very nice indeed.

Hall & Woodhouse Badger Hopping Hare (4.5% abv, bottled)
This “thrice-hopped” golden ale is exactly as described: hopped up and dry to the taste, with a refreshing finish. Not the hoppiest I had all year (BrewDog’s Chaos Theory and Saltaire Stateside IPA spring to mind) but hoppier than most, certainly.

Shepherd Neame Whitstable Bay Organic Ale
Brewed using English organic barley and New Zealand organic Gem and Hallertau hops, this pale, golden ale has a very mild character with definite citrus notes and a pleasantly hoppy after-taste. Refreshing and easy-drinking, I think this one might be a staple summer ale of choice if I can find a stockist round about May or June time.

Whitewater Clotworthy DobbinWhitewater Clotworthy Dobbin (5.0% abv, draught)
Had a pint of this one in the Crown Liquor Saloon (Belfast’s finest beer-related tourist trap) on a visit to Ed’s neck of the woods last August. The website says it’s a ruby porter, but I remember it as more of a strong ale, to be honest. Either way, it was a rich, malty brew with a grapefruit-sourness that mellowed as the pint went on… definitely interesting, if perhaps a bit of an acquired taste.

Whitewater Belfast Ale (4.5% abv, draught)
A second pint in the Crown, this time Whitewater’s signature bitter. A rich amber colour, poured a bit on the thin side (although Ed’s pint looked heartier than mine), tasted like a slightly less strident version of the Clotworthy, making it a more drinkable session choice, perhaps.

Aecht Schlenkerla Rauchbier Marzen (5.1% abv, bottled)
One of a batch of bottled beers I picked up at the Vineyard off-licence on the Ormeau Road in Belfast while we were in town. This German smokebeer is brewed with smoked-barley malt and it really shows: it smells like a wet barbecue and tastes like smoky bacon crisps (although, I hasten to point out, still in a good way). Definitely an acquired taste and I for one couldn’t drink it in quantity, but I reckon a bottle or two would go very nicely indeed with a good cumberland sausage or some crumbly white cheese.

Harviestoun Old Engine Oil (6.0% abv, bottled)
Another one from The Vineyard, sampled whilst staying with friends in their cottage on the east coast of Northern Ireland. An incredibly rich, smooth porter / stout cross-over with hints of chocolate and caramel. Very potent and very drinkable, this one compared extremely favourably to the Meantime beers I was drinking on the same evening, being just as characterful but not quite as sharp on the palate and I’d definitely grab a couple more bottles if I spotted it again.

St Peter's Cream StoutSt Peter’s Cream Stout (6.5% abv, bottled)
I’ve been on a personal mission to find my perfect stout for a while now and I think this may be a definite contender. And as I’ve just found out from the St Peter’s website that there might be an outlet near me that stocks their beers, I’m hoping to re-visit this one before too long for a full write-up. Short version for now: a rich, huge-flavoured, intensely satisfying stout that delivers a massive hit of liquorice via an incredibly silky-smooth mouth-feel.

Leeds Brewery Leeds Pale Ale (3.8% abv, draught)
Tried this one at the Ackhorne Inn on our most recent visit to York. It’s a very pale ale that turned out to have enough hops for a decent IPA. Hops upon hoped upon hops in fact, resulting in a drop that’s very dry, very sharp and very, very bitter.

Everards Tiger Best Bitter (4.2% abv, draught)
On the same night out in York, we wandered down to the Yorkshire Hussar, where this turned out to be the only ale they had on draught. It also turned out to be a bit of an odd one: very smooth, quite sweet and with an after-taste that I eventually identified as fresh strawberries (I kid ye not). The website claims a ’rounded toffee character’, so perhaps my tastebuds were just mis-firing.

Right then, that’s another twelve to be going on with, I’ll stop there for now. I think I’ve got another dozen or so in the notebook that are worth a quick mention, so I’ll make up a third batch with those sometime this week, time allowing.

Tasting Notes: Wells Bombardier Burning Gold

Wells Bombardier Burning GoldBrewery: Wells and Young’s
Location: Bedford, England
ABV: 4.7%
Version: 500ml bottle
Source: Sainsburys

Billed as a sister beer to Bombardier, Wells and Young’s reckon this should appeal to ale and lager drinkers. They may well be correct on the latter but I’m not convinced about the former.

As you can see from the picture this beer is aptly named, it’s a lovely orangey gold colour. Opening the bottle and we get a light citrus fruit aroma of lemons and limes, pleasant but quite restrained, presumably so as not to frighten off those lager drinkers. The flavour continues with the light citrus hop character, with a dry, grassy finish which only serves to add some harshness and stop the whole thing from being a refreshing, if uneventful, drop. Overall, Burning Gold doesn’t amount to much and I certainly have no burning desire to have another.

Tasting Notes: Kew Gold

Brewery: Wells and Young’s
Origin: Bedford, England
ABV: 4.8%
Version: 500ml bottle
Source: Sainsburys

Young’s Kew Gold is (so it says on the neck label) “inspired by hops grown at the Royal Botanical Gardens, Kew” and a donation from the sale of each bottle goes towards rare species conservation.

The beer itself is a bottle-conditioned, amber ale with a warm, sweet aroma backed up with a satisfyingly fresh, hoppy and flavoursome taste, with hints of citrus in both. It pours fairly flat but a slight effervescence keeps the flavour alive and I’m sure on draught it would make for a very satisfying pint indeed, particularly on a warm summer afternoon in a beer garden somewhere. I don’t think it’s one I would stay on for a full session, but I’m definitely glad I tried it.

In a review in the July edition of CAMRA’s Beer magazine, Des de Moor suggests it would be “a good entry level Real Ale in a Bottle for the lager drinker.” Can’t argue with that.