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Alexander Hita Yisra'elit

Alexander Hita Yisra’elit

Alexander Hita Yisra’elit

www.alexander-beer.co.il/

Brewed by Alexander Brewery 
Style: Weissbier – Hefeweizen
Alexander, Israel

Alexander Beer is an Israeli craft brewery, founded in August, 2008 in Emek Hefer, near the Alexander River stream in Central Israel. They aim to brew the best Israeli craft beers, using only top European malt and hops (too hot to grow hops in Israel) and Israeli water from the famous Sea of Galilee.

Alexander Hita Yisra'elitAfter his discharge from Israel’s air force in 2007 following a 30-year career as a pilot, Ori Sagi 54, decided to become a brewmaster. Putting his hobbyist’s love for brewing and his business degree to use, he launched Alexander Beer with the support of investors. The name of the brewery of course is named after the Alexander River that runs close to the operation, while the logo of the turtles, well they are a plenty in that said river! Today, Alexander Beer produces about six different kinds of beer, bottles and kegs combined, as well as special edition beers a few times a year. 

A while ago they made the papers for selling a limited edition ‘Gaza Border Beer’ where profits went to support Israeli farmers living in border communities, whose fields suffered from clashes with Palestinians. Some of the ingredients for the beer were made from wheat that survived torched fields targeted by incendiary devices (kites and balloons) launched from Gaza. So definitely not a hipsters beer of choice then. As for me, not a shit I give…….its beer and I drink. And plenty others are on the same page as the beers were an overwhelming success, selling out quick fast and, to date, over $60,000 from the beer sales has been contributed to the Gaza border farmers. Of course the positive PR with this act no doubt helped the company too…..

Review: 33cl bottle of Alexander Hita Yisra’elit: 5.0% vol.

Coming in an interesting bottle, with some Hebrew that looks unpronounceable to me, its not immediately clear what’s the name of this beer, but I picked it as I wanted to try a beer from Israel, a new nation on the list for me.

I do see the word Alexander, which I guessed at the time was the name of the brewery, and there is also the point that this is an “Israeli boutique brewery”, and that this beer is “a non conventional wheat beer”, which sounds dead exciting

There is a nice logo of a flying turtle, which is a bit strange, but looks cool! And wheat fields with pretty flowers on show at the front, all very nice and colourful. 

Alexander Hita Yisra'elitOn pour got a very nice frothy white head, very good, and a yellowish golden colour. A decent appearance. Head maintained very well and stuck around, standing tall in this good looking brew. Looks the business. Some lacing present.

Yes got the usual Hefeweizen aroma, wheaty for sure, the cloves, the spices, the fruits, the malts, all present. Typical of the style but a very, very nice beer on the nose.

The taste is not bad, get a full mouthful of the wheat, Israeli wheat at that, very nice. Like a typical Hefeweizen, fruity and spicy, wheaty, coriander, cloves, all nicely balanced, nothing out of joint. 

The wheaty taste dies down a bit the more you get into the beer, but its fine to drink. I think perhaps a regular Hefeweizen drinker might be a tad disappointed but for me its fine. 

I would class it as safe, not daring, doesn’t want to disappoint. All the typical Hefeweizen tastes here but nothing strong enough to make an impression. 

All in the front, hits you right from the start, and it isn’t bad, but overall its just too light, especially for the style.  But for me it was overall ok, pleasant enough and I might try again.

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Big Drop Pine Trail Pale Ale

Big Drop Pine Trail Pale Ale

Big Drop 

www.bigdropbrew.com

Brewed by Big Drop Brewing Company
Style: Non Alcoholic beer
Ipswich, Suffolk, England

Launched in October 2016 by the-then City lawyer Rob Fink, who, along with his school-friend/band-mate, designer and entrepreneur, James Kindred, saw a gap in the market for a craft brewery dedicated solely to great quality, full-flavoured low/no alcohol beer, as opposed to major drink manufacturers producing non alcohol beers as an afterthought. The result was Big Drop Brewing Company, who specialise in producing low-alcohol beers.

Big Drop Pine Trail Pale AleThe company make a large variety of different styles of non-alcoholic beer, including a sour, a regular lager, a golden ale and a milk stout, and sell far and wide, including to Hong Kong, Singapore, the Netherlands, Belgium, France, Germany, Sweden, Norway, Finland, Canada and Australia. They are savvy with their network distribution as they have many large supermarket chains selling their wares, from Tesco’s, Waitrose, Sainsbury’s and Morrisons (all in UK), and Albert Heijn in the Netherlands.  And it isn’t only cans, they even are on draught as well in certain places in the UK. 

They have won numerous awards and accolades in their very short existence, which is impressive. In 2020 they won two golds at the World Beer Awards for their style and their Pine Trail Pale Ale won the World’s Best in the Low Alcohol Pale category, plus country best, their Galactic Milk Stout won World’s Best Flavoured Low Alcohol category, plus country best, Paradiso Citra IPA won Best Specialty IPA in the UK, and for the World Beer Awards in 2019 their Brown Ale won World’s Best in the Dark Beer Low Strength category, while for the 2017 edition of the World Beer Awards World Beer Awards, the Pale Ale was named World’s Best Pale Beer (low strength). So they have done good. Even the Beeb got in on the act by naming the brewery as one of three ‘Best Drinks Producers’ in the BBC Food & Farming Awards 2018.

I see its Stout won a Gold Medal at the International Beer Challenge and a UK Silver Medal at the World Beer Awards, when judged against full-strength stouts and porters. Ha ha, now that’s just taking the piss. Better than a Guinness? YEAH SURE……..

Big Drop Pine Trail Pale AleAnd seeing their pen pics on their site, they have that soy look down to a tee, go figure as this is non alcoholic after all……. They do have the whiff of the BrewDog about them, definitely tapping into that hipster market, with their snazzy can designs, crowdfunding platforms and appealing to the upper and middle class tippler. They are even into movement therapy and yoga, yes, fucking yoga of all things. Not football but yoga, lol. Look at the Covid year, to say a big thank you to the NHS staff, Big Drop visited various hospitals in and around London and gave the staff free pints of their piss to “enjoy”. “What, a 20 hour shift? No worries, have a pint of our non alcoholic pish” That’s tone deaf marketing, really scraping the barrel stuff. Look I know the market for non alcoholic beer is expanding rapidly at the moment, but still……ffs

Review: 300ml can of Big Drop Pine Trail Pale Ale: 0.5% vol.

Comes in a nice dinky can, small but very easy on the eye, I guess that is why my wife bought it for me when I told her to grab me a few beers when in town. I mean why the fuck else would I be drinking non alcoholic beer, I mean come on, lol!

It says on the can that it is a “World Beer Award Style winner”, I can see that as the can logo and design is quite swanky. It is also a Certified Gluten Free brew, low in sugar and ok for vegetarians, if non alcoholic wasn’t bad enough!

Can be bought widely in the UK, and comes in cans and bottles.

Big Drop Pine Trail Pale AleFrom the pour we get a massive white head, pretty big, a lot of carbonation going on. The colour is golden amber. Not bad on the eye.  

The aroma is very sweet, very sweet malts I am getting. Piney and citrusy on the nose, plus some honey. Kind of smells like a perfume, very aromatic, floral and distinctive. Nice.

Ok onto the taste…… oh no, not nice at all, very light and has a taste that just escapes as quick as possible from your mouth, running away from the taste buds. 

Also far too sugary, a yucky sickly taste. Is this to overcompensate for the lack of an alcoholic bite?

Disgusting aftertaste as well, the Hops are not nice at all, and fruits are too overbearing. This is not looking well.

Generally pish water, hard to stomach. No thanks. Sorry I am not “hip” enough to appreciate!

To be fair to them it does taste like a real beer, like an IPA, and not like the usual low alcohol beers that do be very shandy like in their taste. I just reviewed it as a bad pale ale, and not as a non alcohol beer, to which I am generally allergic too! So in that sense it does work as an non alcohol pale ale, just I didn’t like it very much! 

Reading into that, it says on their bio online, that unlike other non-alcoholic craft brewers, the Big Drop guys don’t boil off the alcohol or use a centrifuge or other technology on their recipes, they just use a particular “magic” yeast that naturally ferments to 0.5 per cent. OK, interesting, as a Guinness aficionado, I would love to try their famous stout, must look out for it in the future. 

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Jai Alai

Jai Alai India Pale Ale

Jai Alai India Pale Ale

www.cigarcitybrewing.com

Brewed by Cigar City Brewing
Style: American IPA
Tampa, Florida, USA

Jai AlaiFounded in 2007 by Joey Redner, Cigar City Brewing, is a craft brewery in Tampa, Florida, the Sunshine State. Joey had previous experience with Dunedin Brewery (Florida’s oldest microbrewery), and was also a well respected beer reviewer with the Tampa Bay Times, so it was no surprise when he decided to start up his own beer enterprise.

Working with top brewmaster Wayne Wambles (Yes that’s a real name!), their first batch was a Maduro Brown Ale. Additional beers followed, including Jai Alai IPA and Florida Cracker Belgian-style White Ale. Since then, Cigar City’s Spruce Street brewery has expanded to include a 15 bbl and 30 bbl brewhouse, a packaging hall and a tasting room. The company has grown to produce 170,000 barrels of beer annually with distribution in 39 States. 

Ratebeer.com a site I often frequent, or at least post up these shitty beer reviews, had Cigar City Brewing as the 3rd best Brewer in the World for the year 2010. Impressive indeed.

Review: 355 ml can of Jai Alai India Pale Ale: 7.5% vol.

Jai AlaiThe name of the beer is a reference to the sport, Jai Alai, a game native to the Basque region of Spain, which is played on a court called a fronton. Jai Alai players attempt to catch a ball using a curved mitt, whilst the ball travels at speeds of up to 188 miles per hour! Tampa was once home to a busy Jai Alai fronton but sadly no more. At least Jai Alai India Pale Ale remains!

Bought it very cheaply in a six pack in local supermarket store. Thought it was an Indian beer because of the funny name and interesting colours on can, two colours that are on the flag of India! 

On the pour get a very big frothy white head, all nice and a lovely golden coloured brew.

A good bit of carbonation going on, quite a lot actually, which results in a damn fine looking beer.  A lot of lacing too, shows quality. 

Smell is a typical IPA, hoppy piney notes and caramel sweetness, all nice on the nose. Get the tropical fruits, the grapes, the orange peel and the citrus and lemon, and an earthy feel to it.  Good start. 

A typical IPA taste, not too bad, easy enough to drink but perhaps a tad bit boring, needs more of a kick or a standout flavour to get it going. Now I often criticize over hopped IPAs but at least there is something there to taste, this has nothing really that I can decipher that stands out.

The Hops are there alright, and manageable, well balanced for sure but nothing to really excite the tastebuds. Its hard to imagine that this has 7.5% in alcohol, as I cant taste it, it looks like it was neutered in the taste, bit light for an IPA.

Orange peel, citrus, caramel and malts, with the hops. Ok for the style, but its boring. Nothing to see here unfortunately…….

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Liberty and Freedom in Poland with Sebastian Ross

Liberty and Freedom in Poland with Sebastian Ross

A nice chat with Sebastian Ross from the the Liberty party (Wolność) of Poland.
Sebastian is a Polish businessman and politician who lives and works in London, and as a member of the Liberty party (Wolność) ran for the European Parliament elections in 2019.

Liberty and Freedom in Poland with Sebastian Ross

Sebastian gave me a good insight into Polish politics, the general mood and political disposition of his fellow country men and women, both in the West and back home in Poland, as well as getting some of Sebastian’s opinions on Libertarian issues and politics in general.

Check out Sebastian’s

YouTube page

Facebook Page

 

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Sunny Bräu

Sunny Bräu Ananas Mango IPA

Sunny Bräu

Brewed by Sunnybräu
Style: IPA
Binningen, Basel-Country Switzerland

Not a whole lot about this on the net, but the brewery is located in Binningen, a municipality in the canton of Basel-Landschaft perched on a hill overlooking the city of Basel in North West Switzerland.

Review: 330ml brown bottle of Sunny Bräu Ananas Mango IPA: 8.8% vol.

Coming in a brown bottle we get a cute drawing of a doggy. Plain and simple, I like it. Pretty much why I went for it in the off license! 

On opening the bottle I got a nice puff, good start! A massive white, creamy and frothy head appears with a dark golden colour. When the beer eventually settles down, it all looks good and very inviting on the eye.

Good amount of lacing left behind on glass. 

The smell is a typical IPA, the hops are prominent on the nose, the sweet malts, very sweet, piney and, of course, the fruits. Lovely aroma. Two out of two so far, in looks and aroma. 

Onto the taste. Very sweet, those malts definitely coming to the fore. The hops are on the low level, not so bitter, manageable and calm enough to enjoy.

Very nice to drink, went down very well, enjoyable and relaxing, and will definitely like to return in the near future. Perhaps also to try their other fare as well. But this one was good. 

I would say the fruits could be a bit more alive and were found a bit wanting in the beer, but this is just a slight negative for me as overall I enjoyed the beer.

Lovely poured cold. Recommended.

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Longboard Island lager

Longboard Island lager

Longboard Island lager

https://konabrewingco.com

Brewed by Kona Brewing Company (Craft Brew Alliance – AB InBev) 
Style: Pale Lager
Kailua-Kona, Hawaii, United States

Longboard Island lagerKona Brewing Company is a brewery in Kailua-Kona, a town on the west coast of Hawaii Island (the Big Island!).

Founded in 1994 by Cameron Healy and his son Spoon Khalsa. Yes his name is Spoon! The pair had a vision to reflect the spirit, culture, and beauty of Hawaii in a collection of locally produced island craft beers. This extends to the way the beers are brewed, harnessing solar energy to power their brewery and brew pubs, use recycled water, and even leftover grains to bake into the pizza crust for their Kailua-Kona bar and restaurant. They also love giving back to the community by supporting local organizations that display an appreciation to the Hawaiian culture and history.

From the 1st of October, 2010, it has been owned by Craft Brew Alliance, a larger brewing company from Portland, Oregon, which itself has been purchased by an even bigger fish, multinational giant, AB InBev!

They mostly produce IPAs, Wheat Ales and Seasonal brews. Kona’s beers are available in most places in the United States, and on occasion you might be lucky to find it further afield. Like myself, picking it up in small town Switzerland in the local supermarket! 

Review: 355ml bottle of Longboard Island lager: 4.6% vol.

Available all year round this quintessential beach beer comes in cans and bottles, and on draft in Hawaii.

Longboard is the name given to a very long surf board ubiquitous on the waves this side of the world! As they say on their site……the Longboard Island Lager was crafted as a tribute to those who continue to practice the tradition of longboard surfing. 

Cool logo on the bottle, of surfers on low tide, the problem with this is that it doesn’t look like a beer at all, more like something that advertises a fizzy pop. Bottle top is cool though as it has a pic of a lizard, the emblem of the company. 

On pour I get a standard looking lager, clear golden colour with a nice frothy white head, which diminishes fast enough. Typical lager look. 

The smell is very light, of grains and sweet malt, it is ok but very faint and weak……..

Longboard Island lagerNice crispy mouthfuls initially on the taste, a good start and a refreshing intro to this beer.  Tastes like a regular lager and does the business for sure, smooth and easy to drink. 

But was a little disappointed as the price was a bit high compared to the many decent supermarket discount beers that can taste about the same or even better…….

Hops are on the very low level and any flavours are barely noticeable in the taste, the malts do make an appearance as you would expect, and it is a clean beer but is far too thin, a bit tasteless to be honest. I can’t imagine it would even taste any better if I was on a beach in Hawaii as the sun shines down on me head. 

A simple light lager, ok to drink but nothing extraordinary in an otherwise very crowded market…….something my mother would like to sip at I think! Not terrible just disappointing…….

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Brooklyn Brewery East India Pale Ale

Brooklyn Brewery East India Pale Ale

Brooklyn Brewery

www.brooklynbrewery.com

Brewed by Brooklyn Brewery
Style: IPA
Brooklyn, New York, United States.

In 1988 Brooklyn, New York City, Brooklyn Brewery was set up by Steve Hindy and Tom Potter. Hindy was a Correspondent for the Associated Press and had spent over 5 years covering wars, and what have you, out there in the big scary world of the Middle East. In his down time he liked to partake in social events where home brews were a flowing, as its quite tricky to get alcohol in some of these places. On his return he started to try his hand at home brewing for himself, picking up on some of the skills he had learned on his travels. He collared his downstairs neighbour, Tom Potter, who was a banker at the time, and between the two of them they established the Brooklyn Brewery. 

Brooklyn Brewery East India Pale AleOriginally all their beer was brewed by contract by Matt Brewing Company, it was here that they first developed their famous Brooklyn lager. Other beer types were developed in time, a Weisse to an exciting Black Chocolate Stout to a more standard East IPA.

The pair started their own distribution company and personally transported and marketed their beer to bars and retailers around New York City. All their hard work paid off as the beer was proving to be extremely popular in the Big City’s bar scene. Something new and totally different to the generic rubbish people were pouring down their throats at that time in the early 1980’s.  

In 1996, they acquired a former factory in Williamsburg, Brooklyn, and converted it into a functional brewery. A $6.5 million expansion of the brewery in 2009 allowed them to remain in their “spiritual home” of brewing. The original brewing hobby that turned into a brewery that is known the world over to beer buffs, is still today in the hands of its original owners and proudly independent. 

Their trademark brew is their Brooklyn Lager, an award winning brew that is loved the world over. But the brewery also churns out a whole range of other beers, from all sorts of the more traditional types of ales to more fruitier versions (Pumpkin ale anyone?), to stouts, wheat beers,  and pilsners, selling to thirsty punters all over the globe, from Scandinavia (in partnership with Carlsberg), to the Far East and Australasia, and to mainland Europe and the UK.

The brewery are at the forefront of culture, sponsoring festivals, concerts, food tours and more. They also offer beer education courses in The Art and Science of Brewing with the Culinary Institute of America. Now that’s a course I could get into, a full curriculum on beer which includes the science and practicalities behind brewing and the business and social aspects to it. Beers are produced as part of the course. 

If that wasn’t enough learning for you, the founding duo have released a best selling book, “Beer School: Bottling Success At The Brooklyn Brewery” published by John Wiley & Sons” in 2005. The book is both a guide to entrepreneurship and beer brewing as well as a memoir of the authors’ time together while building the Brooklyn Brewery. 

In 2016, Japanese brewing giant, Kirin, acquired a 24.5% stake in the company. 

I have previously tried their Brooklyn Lager, the award winning beer, which is the Brewery’s flagship label, and found it quite nice, a well balanced beer that hit the spot. 

Review: 355ml bottle of Brooklyn Brewery East India Pale Ale: 6.9% vol.

Bottle, can, or, if you are lucky enough, draft. 

Brooklyn Brewery East India Pale AleOn pour it looks fantastic, a good sized frothy head, some nice carbonation and a lovely dark golden colour, very appetizing, game on! Very good lacing. 

Get a typical IPA aroma, nice and lovely on the nose, fresh.

Has a lagery smell, malty and citrus, also pine and floral notes, and a hint of spice, a bit of everything really, but it works.

Onto the taste, nice and crispy on the tongue, good start, hoppy enough but on the light level.

A very relaxing beer to down, easy to drink and easy to enjoy. Nice creamy tastes, caramel also noted. 

Not extraordinary but does the business and I think that’s the whole point of this brew, an IPA for the everyman drinker to enjoy as well as the craft beer nerd.  

Overall I like it, its nice, clean and well balanced, very drinkable, and has a little bite to it which I always like, of course! A 6.9% ABV. that is well hidden!

Recommended and I will be buying again. I knew Brooklyn Brewery wouldn’t let me down…….

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Leo Beer

Leo Beer

Leo Beer

www.boonrawd.co.th

Brewed by Boon Rawd Brewery
Style: Pale Lager
Bangkok, Thailand

Leo BeerMade by Boon Rawd Brewery, a well-known Thai brewery and beverage company founded by entrepreneur Phraya Bhirom Bhakdi (Boonrawd Sreshthaputra, his birth name), the county’s first brewery. Boonrawd toured Germany and Denmark to learn how beer was made. On his return, he constructed his brewery in 1933, and the first bottles rolled off the assembly line in 1934. The brewery remains under the management of his descendants, who use Bhirom Bhakdi as their family name.

The Garuda on the bottle’s neck of their Singha brand shows Boonrawd Brewery’s royal approval, which is granted only to companies with a long-standing favorable reputation. It received this on 25 October 1939, by a royal warrant signed by King Rama VII’s Regent. Boon Rawd is the only brewery in Thailand to receive such a right.

The brewery produces a variety of beers, soft drinks and bottled drinking water and their best known product is the pale lager, Singha. Other well known brands include Leo, U, Snow, and Asahi. Roughly ten percent of its production is exported.

Review: 330ml bottle of Leo Beer: 5.0% vol.

In cans and bottles.

Leo Beer, very cool logo, it’s a leopard though and not a lion which is slightly confusing for me, since Leo is the star sign with the zodiac symbol of a lion, bit silly, unless it means something different in Asia. Says on the bottle that the major Thai beer conglomerate, Singha corporation co. Ltd, own this brew. 

Leo BeerThe colour is a pale golden yellow with a small white head, that does die a death very quick. Some carbonation and the general look is ok.

Lovely aroma on the nose, a nice beery smell, a little sweet but nice, even if its a little faint. Sweet corn, the hops and yeast and mild grains……

A lager taste is there for sure, but on the low level, watered down and with minimal hop presence. Light grains and that’s about it really.

Also a bit raw and a slight astringent aftertaste.

Not nice, no flavours and not smooth or crisp enough to be enjoyed. A nothing beer.

Rubbish beer, forgettable, tasteless, not enjoyable, I will pass on this……

Have tried Chang and Singha Premium and I have to say this is also a Thai beer that doesn’t do it for me. Perhaps it’s better in Thailand, but I can only go on what I get in the local off license and this beer is pretty tasteless, typical of Asian beers in general. 

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Kitchen Brew

Kitchen Brew Everyday Pale Ale

Kitchen Brew 

www.kitchenbrew.ch

Brewed by Kitchen Brew 
Style: Blonde Ale
Allschwil, Switzerland

North American craft beer scene implanted in Switzerland, that is what Kitchen Brew are all about. Fabian Ehinger, brewer and founder of Kitchen Brew, inspired by the craft beer revolution in the USA, drinking imports from the States made his mind wander……what if!

Finally, in spring 2012, Fabian moved to North America. On a six-month trip across the USA, he was inspired by what he had seen, from small home brewing startups based in kitchens to mega bars with 100 plus taps on the go, Fabian took it all in……. and not all industrial beers too, he discovered a wide variety of specialties of all beer types imaginable . 

Kitchen BrewAs a barman and manager of a small bar in Basel, North Switzerland, Fabian could get a birds eye view of the US craft beer imports and see what made them click with consumers. He started to create a few of his own beers with highly aromatic hops and made with innovative brewing techniques such as dry hopping. He worked from an empty kitchen hence the name of the brewery……Kitchen Brew! His customers were kind of like his guinea pigs, testing his new beers and seeing if North American craft beer trends could catch on in this part of the world. 

After guest brewing for local breweries, in and around the Basel region, Fabian finally got to open, with the support of Peter Oppliger, his new factory and event hall in the small suburb of Allschwil, near Basel, in November 2016, becoming one of the youngest microbreweries in Switzerland.

In 2013, a Cascade Amber Ale was their first real foray onto the scene. The initial beer got off to a great start, proving very popular amongst the great Swiss drinking public, and also going on to win numerous awards for its taste and quality. After that came other beers, Kölsch style brews, wheat beers with Belgian yeasts, the usual IPA’s that are the connoisseurs oh so love, a variety of beers but all well balanced and pleasant to drink. 

Review: 33cl bottle of Kitchen Brew Everyday Pale Ale: 5.2% vol.

Kitchen BrewBought in Swiss supermarket Coop, bottle comes with nice big lettering which stands out, showing that sometimes simplicity does work, no flashy logos or silly imagery, plain and simple, I like that. Calls itself a Swiss craft bier.

On pour I get a nice clear golden coloured beer with a massive frothy white head. A good bit of carbonation making this beer appear alive!

Not much comes out of the small bottle, but when it all eventually settles it looks good.

Head maintains well, a good bit of lacing and a decent looking beer.

On the nose I am getting a faint whiff of the light wheaty malts and barley, faint though. A lagery smell overall, citric and light hops.   

The initial taste is one of a lagery feel, wheaty and all the hops detected. 

With the hops very prominent this isn’t just another boring lager, there is some clear character in this brew. On the light level but enough to stand out. A little sour perhaps but manageable all the same.

Overall its an enjoyable beer, easy to drink, the taste is smooth and crisp, and I am enjoying the nice big creamy mouthfuls I am getting. 

It is a beer to relax with, and light enough to enjoy. Will buy again, and look forward to trying out their other varieties.

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The Power of Forgiveness with Lucy Witts

The Power of Forgiveness with Lucy Witts

Good discussion with Lucy Witts about The Power of Forgiveness 

We discuss her documentary, Dragan’s Lair, where she bravely confronted her father who sexual abused her when she was very young. 

The link to the documentary: Dragan’s Lair – Paedophile Documentary on Child Sexual Abuse: 

Check out Lucy’s blog:

https://thedraganslair.wordpress.com/

The Power of Forgiveness with Lucy Witts

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The Power of Forgiveness with Lucy Witts

 

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