Fruit in a brewery: Cantillon, not for an IPA, though the time of the cherry IPA is presumably about to dawn, craft eh? |
Friday, 15 January 2016
Fruit of the (IPA) Boom
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Fruit in a brewery: Cantillon, not for an IPA, though the time of the cherry IPA is presumably about to dawn, craft eh? |
Herslev Aspargesøl, though. Mwah!
ReplyDeletean image of you wearing a chef’s hat and blowing kisses to all and sundry somehow crops up in the storage cupboard of my brain!! ;-)
DeleteAdrian, keep quiet about Vocation, we want to keep as much as possible of it in Yorkshire.
ReplyDeletedon’t think that’s going to be possible, they’re really good beers, tasted the full range over Xmas, fantastic.
DeleteAdrian, keep quiet about Vocation, we want to keep as much as possible of it in Yorkshire.
ReplyDeleteIf you try Siren-Limoncello or Pompelmocello you might find that fruit ipa,s will be the future.
ReplyDeletesorry, I studied history for three years and it left me with an enduring suspicion of the ‘future’
ReplyDeleteSorry Abrewhaha,the secrets already out in London about Vocation.Saw it in the Rake,Tap East,Crown and Anchor ,Kings arms se1.King and co,Craft beer co and the Ring bar.Nice beer.
ReplyDeleteI've made beer with mad ingredients and I'm also well aware that "purity laws" can still make toss beer, but the more I bore into my brewing, the more I loathe the lazy approach of creating difference in beer with throwing something "crazy" in the kettle/fermentor/barrel. Get a sound knowledge of raw materials and yeast metabolism, then get down to business. There's plenty of "outside the box" brewing to be done with traditional means.
ReplyDelete