Thursday, 1 July 2010

Summer's Day

Pale, hoppy ales are all the rage in these summer months and justifiably so: they do have a knack of refreshing the parts during the warm weather and our own seasonal offerings sell ridiculously well. But down here by the sea the summer months stretch away for half a year, from start to finish, and we look to break up the monotony with something to contest the notion that only gold works in the heat. We re-write the rule book, casting aside conformity and received wisdom in search of progress and enlightenment. Into the mash tun goes Munich malt to create body and sweet fullness. In too goes crystalised rye and with it colour and juicy, red berry flavours. As for the hops, well it's easy to gain thirst slaking quality from high bitterness so we avoid that, choosing instead a level of hop addition to balance the malt sweetness rather than smother it. And for hop flavour we look to varieties that will deliver a little citrus and a lot of lychee, gooseberry and white grape. The consequence is a full amber ale, replete with the flavour of summer and fashioned for contemplation at the end of another long, hot day on the beach.


On July the 25th ten summers ago, my first kid was born and my life changed in the most profound way possible (believe me, that's no understatement, ask my Mum). We called her Summer and I brought sunflowers in the morning.

3 comments:

Mark said...

This sounds absolutely delicious!

Would those flavour/aroma hops be coming from New Zealand by chance?

I wish your beer made it further afield. None of it makes it as far as London and when Im back home in sunny Thanet I've usually got a list of things as long as my arm to do ... and going to the pub is forced pretty much to the bottom.

Eddie said...

I've spent a lifetime ensuring going to the pub is at the top of any list.

Some beer makes it to London via our friends at Dark Stare but lord knows where, and it isn't much. I'm pretty comfortable with local distribution - if it's known it sells better, therefore quicker, therefore fresher etc etc. Easy life.

Mark said...

Yeah, I agree it makes sense to sell it locally ... doesn't stop me being able to complain though does it! :P

Never seen your beer in London outside of the time The Rake had some. Interesting that some does make it here ... thought none did.