Showing posts with label adjuncts. Show all posts
Showing posts with label adjuncts. Show all posts

Sunday, 20 July 2014

Cider Week: Cider # 8 Sir Perry Pear Cider

Sir Perry




Gaymer's Cider
Gloucestershire, England, United Kingdom
Adjunct Hard Pear Cider 6.0 % ABV Aluminium Can 500 ml.
$3.00 (Canadian) At LCBO 
Twitter: Not found

Last one of the week and sadly probably the worst. Doesn't taste much like anything but alcoholic water filled with citric acid. (Sad Monkey again) Anyway Tonight we get back on track and start up with some really great beers to make up for a few misses we had here on Cider week. Don't get me wrong I enjoyed the change and I would like to do it again. I think I will do more research next time and I'll stock up some good ciders. Perry is an Old England term for a pear cider. 

Onto the (last... for now) Cider Week tasting.

Clear green gold with a white head that disperses quickly. Aroma is wet dog and earth. Very sweet, some pear. Citric and absorbic acid make it very tart and sour. Syrupy and sweet. Aeration gives ups pear and coffee. finish is mild spice.

Impressions: Fail, So-so, Pass, Exceptional 

Cost: 4/6 PASS
Colour: 5/6 PASS
Cider Style: 2/6 SO-SO
Re-Order:  2/6 SO-SO
Experience:  2/6 SO-SO

Final Thoughts:

Truly bad. this one is another in the "avoid" category.

Cheers

CJT


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Cider Week: Cider # 7 Blackthorn Cider

Blackthorn Cider


Gaymer Cider Company
Sommerset, England, United Kingdom
Owned by C&C Group PLC
Adjunct Hard Apple Cider 6.0 % ABV Aluminium Can 500 ml.
$3.15 (Canadian) At LCBO 
Twitter: @BlackthornCider

Second to last cider, and apparently I didn't save the best for last. The two English ciders I have left are adjunct ciders and are not very good. (Sad Monkey). 

Anyway onto the tasting.

Light coppery gold in colour with a white head that disperses quickly Nose is wine like, very bready and yeasty, some apple. First sip is tart and sugary, some sulphur in the background. Citric,and malic acid are prominent. slightly chemical. Apple is almost background. Alcohol is quite evident. Aeration is malic acid... it is so strong it dries out my teeth and gums.


Impressions: Fail, So-so, Pass, Exceptional 

Cost: 5/6 PASS
Colour: 5/6 PASS
Cider Style: 2/6 SO-SO
Re-Order:  2/6 SO-SO
Experience:  2/6 SO-SO

Final Thoughts:
Overly tart, overly sweet, overly chemical. Slide this one over into the "avoid" category.

Cheers

CJT


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Saturday, 19 July 2014

Cider Week: Cider # 5 Alexander Keith's Original Cider

Original Cider


Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada
Owned by Labatt Brewing Company a Subsidiary of Anheuser-Busch InBev LTD
Adjunct Cider 5.5 % ABV Aluminum Can 473 ml
$3.05 (Canadian) At LCBO 

Twitter: @alexanderkeiths

It's getting near the end of cider week and I am hurrying to get all of the ciders done because I have some big, BIG, beers waiting in the fridge of fame to be tasted. Tonight we are trying The Keith's version of "Original" cider. It is another adjunct cider. I am mystified as to why multinationals need to use so much chemicals. I can get over a little Malic Acid as it actually comes from apples. it's that green apple snappy taste you get when you bite into a Granny Smith, or a perfectly ripe MacIntosh. However, in this they use extra sugars, colour, and flavour. Let the apples speak.

Onto the tasting.


Very clear gold with a hint of green. White head that is short lived. Nose is candy and sugar some artificial apple. First sip is very sweet.Tart, candies, malic acid, green apple, light spice.Aeration is sour and tart, malic acid is strong, and artificial apple.

Impressions: Fail, So-so, Pass, Exceptional 

Cost: 5/6 PASS
Colour: 5/6 PASS
Cider Style: 3/6 SO-SO
Re-Order:  3/6 SO-SO
Experience:  3/6 SO-SO

Final Thoughts:

Another just average cider. Too much artificial flavours going on in it. But, it is still drinkable, especially if you poured it over ice as they recommend (seriously don't ever do that!). Of the adjunct ciders I have done this week this is probably the best so far.


Cheers

CJT


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Tuesday, 15 July 2014

Cider Week: Cider # 3 Magners Irish Cider

Magners Irish Cider

HP Bulmers Cider

Clonmel, Tipperary, Republic of Ireland
Owned by C&C Group PLC
Adjunct Hard Apple Cider 5.0 % ABV Aluminium Can 500 ml.
$3.15 (Canadian) At LCBO 
Twitter: @MagnersCanada

Magners is the name of the cider that is marketed outside of Ireland. Inside Ireland this same product is called Bulmers. Naming rights for the product only extended to the borders of the country so a new name had to be chosen. In 1935 the orchard when the company was started was owned by William Magner. He produced Magners cider for 2 years until he sold a half share of the companyy to English cider maker HP. Bulmer. Bulmer bought the remaining 50% after the war and changed the name to Bulmers. Bulmers was eventually sold to Guinness and then to its current owner C&C Group. Magners has been receiving a growing market share in Canada for the last 15 years and is still doing well they currently produce 4 flavours of cider: original, light, berry, and pear..

Enough history... onto the tasting.

Dark orange with hints of a peach colour as it pours. Head disperses quickly leaving no trace. Aroma is candy-like with hints of cinnamon and clove. There is a definite woodiness to it. First sip is tart and very effervescent. Bubbles across the tongue like champagne. Citric acid is very evident. very tart, tangy, slightly chemical. It does not taste like fresh apples, it tastes more like a juice made from concentrate or very processed. This product has has sugar, colour, sulfites, and citric acid added to it, so while we are still in the realm of cider... we are leaning more to the alcoholic beverage side. There is a light smokiness which I think has been added. The draught version of this product was supposed to be oak aged. I think that feeling has been added chemically in the canned version.

Impressions: Fail, So-so, Pass, Exceptional 

Cost: 5/6 PASS
Colour: 2/6 SO-SO
Cider Style: 3/6 SO-SO
Re-Order:  2/6 SO-SO
Experience:  3/6 SO-SO

Final Thoughts:

Huh. Very disappointed. I remember when I lived in the Beach in Toronto, I used to enjoy a Magners on draught and one of the local bars called Murphy's Law. And I seem to remember this cider being much, much better than this. The colour is unnatural, and the taste is very chemical. I will have to try this on draught again to see if it has changed too. Sadly, chalk this one up to the "Avoid" side.

P.S. I got through the whole post with out making a "Tipperary" joke... uh... almost.

Cheers

CJT


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Cider Week: Cider # 2 Molson Canadian Cider

Molson Canadian Cider

MolsonCoors LTD


Montreal, Quebec, Canada (Canadian Branch)
Denver, Colorado, USA (World Headquarters)
Multinational Corporation
Adjunct Hard Apple Cider 5.0 % ABV Aluminium Can 500 ml.
$2.95 (Canadian) At LCBO 
Twitter: @MolsonCoors

This one stood out in the crowd for me. It seemed very odd when I saw it. But it is beginning to dawn on me that the prevalence of ciders is due to the Gluten Free fad diet craze. This is obviously and attempt by MolsonCoors to retain brand-loyal market share among people who have adopted the GF lifestyle. "If I can't have my Molson Canadian because I'm GF now I can have Molson Canadian Cider." Well I'm not here to advocate or denounce any diet I'm just here for the beer... or the cider as the case may be.

Onto the tasting.

Light gold in colour very similar to apple juice. Thin head that disappears quickly leaving a skim of foam around the edge of the glass. Aroma is fresh apple juice and slightly winey. I also get some hints of wood. First sip is very sweet, and tastes of fresh pressed apple juice. Very carbonated, two sips in I got burpy. Slight tartness, a little chemical. I suspect that Malic acid has been added to fortify the "appley-ness." Finish is bruised apple, a little raisin and a chemical woodiness like fake oak or wood chips. Aeration gives off a citrus, green apple taste of malic acid and possibly citric acid.  They said on the can that this product contains sulfites... And boy they weren't kidding. After I had tasted this and the flavours had settled in my mouth, I began to get sulfur breath and a slight headache. Be warned if you can't handle sulfites.

Impressions: Fail, So-so, Pass, Exceptional 

Cost: 6/6 EXCEPTIONAL
Colour: 5/6 PASS
Cider Style: 4/6 PASS
Re-Order:  2/6 SO-SO
Experience:  3/6 SO-SO

Final Thoughts:

Sheer morbid curiosity drove me to try this product. And, I will say it is drinkable (certainly not something that can be said about the other alcoholic beverage that bears this name). Is it a cider? Well technically, but there have been tweaks to make it more mass-pleasing (and probably more uniform, apple cider flavours can vary largely from batch to batch). Would I drink it again? Sure, if someone else bought it (even though it is very reasonably priced). Should you try it? That is up to you. If you would like a slightly more chemical version of an Allen's Apple juice, with 5 % alcohol in it... go for it. But, I am sure you can find better places to drop $3.00. This is merely a cider version of it's namesake beer. A cheap, flavourless alcohol delivery device.

Cheers

CJT


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Tuesday, 11 December 2012

Beer # 92 Castello Lager

Castello Lager

Birra Castello SpA

San Giorgio Di Nogaro, Italy
Independent
Lager 4.8 % ABV Brown Glass Bottle 330 ml.
$1.95 (Canadian) At LCBO

Twitter: @birracastello (in Italian)



This beer I picked up on a whim as I had never seen it before and had not added an Italian beer to my list of hepatic accomplishments. I could not glean a lot from the website as most of it is in Italian by I managed to understand that this is a relatively new beer, founded in 1997 (Their slogan is "The Beer without a history"). Birra Castello purchased a large facility that had previously been producing, at separate times Birra Moretti, and Heineken Italy; they gutted and retooled it making it one of most modern brewing facilites in Italy. The company brews beer very scientifically, even on their website they list brewing calculations that mean very little to the average drinker. The water is drawn from four mountainside artesian wells and the highest quality ingredients are sourced from around Italy..

Avanti! On with the Tasting:


Light gold in colour. Thin white head that disappears rapidly. Nose is sweet and floral with traces of raw honey. First sip gives a strong indication of the corn content. The taste is even and balanced moving from corn to light or crystal malt, wet grain and a mild hay-like hop note in the finish. Aeration give us a woodiness and a little more of the herbaceous hop quality. No one flavour stands out. The product is simply a nice mild lager.


Impressions: Fail, So-so, Pass, Exceptional 

Cost: 5/6 PASS
Colour: 5/6 PASS
Beer Style: 5/6 PASS
Re-Order:  4/6 PASS
Experience:  4/6 PASS

Final Thoughts:

This beer is fine...Just fine. It doesn't stand out, it just does it's job. I imagine this is the average blue collar Italian's beer. It would go well with food, pizza especially, as it would not add a lot to the experience, nor detract from it.

Cheers
CJT


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Sunday, 20 March 2011

Beer # 42 Hite, South Korea

Growing up, my exposure to Asian culture was limited to watching re-runs of M*A*S*H on television. Screwball vaudevillian comedy set against a backdrop of roughly-sketched stereotypes of Asian culture, while quite funny, certainly does not do the culture any justice. That time was different, we were still shaking off the fears associated with three wars with the Asians. As always fear of the unknown leads to ignorance. I also remember when the tide began to shift, well at least for me. My family bought a Honda. Now I'm not saying this to be facetious, it's true. The Asian invasion began with the widespread arrival of the Honda car. It was a reliable inexpensive, well-built car. Asian awareness is all around us now, Sushi bars go up like donut shops, Pad Thai, and Bubble tea is part of our regular Ontario lexicon. Don't worry... this is a good thing. Exposure to other cultures makes us appreciate our own, and what we have to offer the global population. Best of all when new cultures arrive in our land, they bring their food, and as we see today, their drink.

Hite is a South Korean beer produced in Yeongdeungpo-gu, an administrative district of the capital city of Seoul. The company, now called "The Hite" or "Hite Holdings" ( Korean website here This site is in English  ) was originally opened in 1933 as "Chosun Brewery." In their 78 year history they have undergone numerous changes, updates, mergers, and acquisitions. They now produce, as well as beer, whiskey, Soju (a strong rice wine that has a similar effect on the body as vodka... I should know) Glass for bottles, steel pipes, and  golf clubs. Yes, golf clubs. Strange diversification, I know. They are also a top sponsor of Korean PGA golfers: Kim Dae-Hyun, and Seo Hee-Kyung. (Wonder if they have to redefine "don't drink and... drive!"

Enough of the funny stuff: let's try the beer.


Pale golden colour with a vibrant white head made up of medium-sized bubbles. 330ml brown glass bottle containing a lager of 4.5% ABV, and labeled with paper and foil labels (side note the foil label on the neck I haven't seen used in Canada since the early 1990's) The front paper label also has a temperature reactive spot in the shape of a bottle opener in the lower right corner, to tell you when your beer is cold enough, similar to a few other breweries, Coor's Light and Zywiec come to mind. Hite (pronounced "height") like Budwieser, and Tsing-Tao, contains a fair portion of rice as a fermentable material. This keeps the beer light and smooth and reduces the overall production cost. It's relative cheapness, an neutral flavour keeps Hite at the number one beer spot in South Korea. Light smooth citrus nose, some wet grain. First sip is clean, grainy, light on hops. Aeration gives us very little other than light grain. Beer is light and refreshing, neutral flavour (which is good for pairing with Korean food which can be spicy) and a dry almost non-existant aftertaste.

Overall results: (Fail, So-so, Pass, Exceptional)

Taste: Pass
Cost: Pass (In Ontario it is $11.70 for a six pack so $1.95 a beer)
Colour: Pass
Beer Style: Pass
Re-order: Exceptional
Experience: Pass

Final Thoughts: While not an outstanding beer it is another beer with a purpose. It is meant to be drunk with Korean food, which as I said can get spicy, especially the kim-chee. I had a wonderful experience eating Korean BBQ in Toronto at a restaurant called Miga. A quick search of the interweb shows that the location I went to is no longer operating but the original location still is, and  the website is here. This is where I first learned about Hite, and unfortunately Soju as well. I asked for, and the restaurant very kindly gave my my beer glass and the Soju glass I used that evening to remember my hangover, I mean my evening by.
Cheers
CJT

Thursday, 3 March 2011

Beer # 38 Crest Super 10% Premium Lager

Second in a series of two High Octane beers. This one is from England. Unlike our previous beer Faxe which was made with barley sugar, this beer contains a large proportion of maize and maize sugar. This gives the beer a very distinct corn on the cob feeling, I can almost taste the butter. This offering is from Wells and Young's in Bedford England. I had to copy what they said on their website about Crest... here it is:

Crest Super was launched following in-depth consumer and trade research, which suggested that a clean tasting higher strength ABV lager could satisfy those consumers who prefer to drink in smaller volumes but still wish to experience the strong, smooth taste of a super-strength, premium quality lager. It is brewed using the best quality barley malt and finest German Aroma hops to deliver a high quality strong lager, brewed to combine the delicate taste of a lager with a full flavour, medium gold in colour sweet bitter taste.
Crest Super is one of Wells and Young’s most popular export brands with extensive international distribution.


What I gleaned out of this is that they found kids just wanted to get drunk faster and not taste anything. I also found it interesting that they don't mention the corn.


Here is the tasting notes:

Gold in colour with an off-white head made up of small bubbles. 10% ABV in a 500ml can. Nose is sugary, and hot with alcohol and a hint of bitter herbs. First sip gives us corn and sugar. Chewy mouthfeel,very little malt, more of a raw grain and raw corn taste. No hops to speak of. Aeration gives us more sugary corn. No character, no taste profile, just a beer flavoured liquor.


Overall results: (Fail, So-so, Pass, Exceptional)

Taste: Fail
Cost: Pass (In Ontario it is $3.20)
Colour: Pass
Beer Style: So-so
Re-order: Fail
Experience: Fail

Final Thoughts: Really not a good beer which is a shame because Wells and Young's makes some very impressive real ales (only available in England unfortunately.) However, if inebriation is your mission, it is a cheap vehicle towards your goal.

Beer # 37 Faxe Extra Strong Beer 10%

Tonight we are looking at a strong lager from Denmark. Faxe is a brewery that has been in existence since 1901. Started by a young couple Nikoline and Conrad Nielsen in the town of Fakse it operated independantly until 1989 when it merged with Bryggerigruppen which eventually changed it's name to "Royal Unibrew."
 Faxe has a number of products, only some of which make it over here to Canada. Most popular seems to be this 10% vodka shot of a beer. Cheap and strong, which seems to go over well with some of our less discerning beer drinkers.

Onto tonight's tasting

Clear gold colour with a bright white head made up of tight bubbles. 10% ABV in a 500ml can. Aroma is alcohol and toasty grain. First sip is a spirited vodka or rum feel residual sugar and a hot nose like taking a straight shot of rum. Flavour is muted, light malt barely perceptable hops. Very smooth, very sugary. Light mineral mettalic, Aeration brings out the alcohol and brandy notes.



Overall results: (Fail, So-so, Pass, Exceptional)

Taste: Pass
Cost: Pass (In Ontario it is $3.20)
Colour: Pass
Beer Style: Pass
Re-order: So-so
Experience: Pass


Final Thoughts: Well this is a "getting drunk beer." Meant to be drunk ice cold there is not a lot of flavour, but there is a good alcoholic "punch." Not to say this beer doesn't have merits; it is not a sip and savour type of drink. One is reminded of the college student on a budget, Friday night wanting to be totally hammered before he hits the bar... Not that I have any experience in that department....
If anyone tells you different... it wasn't me!

Cheers
CJT

Thursday, 17 February 2011

Beer # 34 Lakefront Brewery New Grist Gluten Free

 Back again with a new post.  Lately many people have become aware of gluten intolerance. It is an allergy to  two specific proteins, glutenin and gliadin, found in grass-like grains such as barley wheat and rye. Symptoms for the condition vary depending on the severity of the allergy, and can range from simple indigestion, to severe weight loss and malnutrition. Other people may experience joint pain or lack of energy and ability to focus. What is gluten? Gluten's two proteins combine in the presence of water to form a structure similar to the many tiny holes in a sponge. They trap they moisture and when heated the moisture turns into steam and expands, causing a "rising" effect. The places you will most often notice this is breads (all those little tiny holes are gluten), cakes and gravies; the moisture trapping abilities allow gravies to be thickened. If you would like to know more visit www.celiac.ca in Canada or www.celiac.com in the United States. In other countries just type "celiac" into your web browser. So what does this have to do with beer you are ask? Well I'm glad you did. Barley, wheat, and rye are the three grains most commonly used in beer making. Although the proteins responsible for the allergy do not play a role in beer making, the extraction of the proteins prior to the process is impossible; so there is always a trace amount of gluten in the finished product... which unfortunately, leaves beer on the no-no list for most celiacs.

Sorghum
 Now beer CAN be made out of other things. Rice for instance which does not contain gluten can be made into beer and has been for thousands of years. In Japan rice wine or rice beer is Sake. I say it this way because wine is made from fruit and beer is typically made from grains while the Japanese consider Sake to be wine, is is more closely related to beer (but actually... neither! In Canada we call beer made out of rice... Budweiser). Other grains used in beer production are called "adjuncts" and are usually frowned upon. The German purity law (Reinheitsgebot) forbids them but some larger companies in search of cheap fermentable starches mix them in with the other grains to reduce costs and "soften" flavours (I say blandify). In some countries sorghum is used to make alcoholic beverages. Sorghum is a tall grassy plant that produces tiny round grains in a large heavy cluster. The leaves are similar to corn and the stalks look like elephant grass. China makes a sorghum "whiskey" called Maotai. Some other countries make beer out of it and another grain called millet, which we feed to chickadees in the winter.
Sorghum Grains

Tonights beer combines Sorghum and rice to produce one of North America's first gluten free beers New Grist is produced by Lakefront Brewery Inc www.lakefrontbrewery.com out of Milwaukee WI. The first brewery in the US to bottle a 100% organic beer in 1996 (Organic ESB) and the first to develope a successful and viable gluten free beer. Unfortunately when they first released it they were not allowed to call it a beer as it didn't contain the required 25% barley dictated by US law. So they successfully petitioned the U.S. Alcohol and Tobacco Tax and Trade Bureau and won the right to call their product beer.


Very clear to pale yellow colour with an off-white head of medium bubbles that dissipate quickly. 5.7% ABV in a 355 ml brown glass bottle. The aroma is mild and fruity, like fresh cut apples with a little isopropyl alcohol. Tart and fresh green apple over light bready notes. Finish is crisp and clean, not unlike an apple cider with a beer feel. Aeration gives a slight "sake" note indicating the rice in the mix.


Overall results: (Fail, So-so, Pass, Exceptional)

Taste: Exceptional
Cost: Pass (In Ontario it is $13.95 for a 6 pack or $2.33 a bottle)
Colour: Pass
Beer Style: N/A This is a new beer style
Re-order: Exceptional
Experience: Exceptional

Final thoughts: I am giving high praise to this beer, and it wasn't an easy thing to do. When you are tasting a gluten free beer you have to step back from convention and look at the larger picture. (1) Is this a beer? Yes and no. It is made from grain, it has hops, it has an alcohol content that is indicative of beer. However, the strict definition of beer it is not.  (2) Does it taste like beer? Yes and no. There are bready notes some mild hint of hops, but a lot of apple. (3) If I could no longer drink regular beer, would I be content to drink this for the rest of my life? Yes, undoubtedly. The flavour is good, it reminds me of beer, and well... I enjoyed it. Most importantly it is the only beer I can sit down and share with my sister... a Celiac.

Cheers
CJT

P.S. There is two gluten free beers in Canada made by a brewery in Quebec, as soon as I can get my hands on them I will review them