- Location
- London
But american ipa is different i think.IPA was specially brewed so it would keep all the way to India.
Tried brewdog once in a spoons, didn't like it. And like all the "branded" stuff it costs more.
But american ipa is different i think.IPA was specially brewed so it would keep all the way to India.
Agree with you about the bizarre fashion for fruitiness. At least spoons describes its beers -any hint of fruit* and i usually swerve.I'm in a minority clearly but I think it tastes really foul, all hops and nothing else, although that's very much the fashion right now isn't it. There's loads of beers that parrot this new American/ West Coast IPA style, all tasting of grapefruit peel and flowers, or something.
I'm also not keen on Brewdog's "tiny independent, just a couple of lads, sticking it to the man and the big brewers" schtick... it might have been true once but they're a very, very big, corporate brewery these days.
But to each his own, I'm glad if you like it!
On the theme of IPA, this is a cracking read
View: https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B005GUZ0ZY/ref=dp-kindle-redirect?_encoding=UTF8&btkr=1
Nah still on the dark malty stuff here (when I go out that is) in fact I'd sooner drink a Mild. My favourite used to be M&B 'Flying Stag' with a bottle of Worthington 'White Shield' poured in when you got halfway down the pint.Punk IPA is a good beer but not a great one. But what makes a great beer?
Fact is there’s such a choice out there, something for everyone. My taste has also changed with time towards a lighter hoppier beer than the heavier favourites of old.
From Brewdog I prefer Hazy Jane to Punk IPA.
Very fruity. But at 6.5% you don’t want too many.Quite fond of the Brewdog Clockwork Tangerine and Elvis Juice...
One of the best things about drinking it, that's why we used to go to work on Saturday mornings nothing like disappearing to the bog for a quarter of an hour on overtime just after you got to work plus none of the Office staff would be there so if you'd been beaten to the workshop loo you could just use the posh ones.Ugh no. I can't drink those heavy sticky beers. Fuller's London Pride is one and it's usually served warm and flat.
Theakston's Old Peculiar gives me a very rapid evacuation the next morning, I think it's the pectin.
....and laughing all the way to the bank....Punk IPA was great when it first came out as it was difficult to find that kind of US-style pale ale in the UK at the time.
Brewing has moved on though and Brewdog hasn't kept up - their focus seems to be entirely on growing their business rather than on improving their beer. Watt and Dickie are great businessmen, but average brewers.