Posts Tagged ‘Hebridean’

Scottish Real Ale Festival 2009 - Day 1

Thursday, June 25th, 2009

Edinburgh is a city well known for festivals, and fortunately for us on the BeerCast they aren’t just restricted to the arts. The 2009 Scottish Real Ale Festival has rolled around again, held at the Assembly rooms on George Street. As promised in our recent preview we turned up with high expectations, given the impressive beer list. Getting right down to business, the first beer sampled was the Hebridean Brewery’s Seaforth Ale (4.2%), which completed the full set from the Stornoway producer (we sampled their other four beers during BeerCast #30). Seaforth was very light, slightly soapy but a decent golden ale – a pretty good start to the festival.

Next up was Williams Bros Birds & Bees (4.3%), a new beer from the Alloa brothers Scott and Bruce. Recently it got through to the finals of the Sainsbury’s Bottled Beer Challenge – we’ll have to see how it differs in the bottle, as on cask it was flowery and lemony and very sessionable. We were trying to work out if it was their Williams Gold remixed slightly, as it has many similar tastes. The third beer on the agenda was Traditional Scottish Ales’ Gold Thistle (4.5%), a sharp-tasting golden bitter which suffered from a poor woody smell. The flavours were light and hoppy, with a bit of golden ale biscuit.

Windie Goat are a very small micro who brew almost exclusively for the Failford Inn in Ayrshire, and having previously sampled Gutter Slab (5.5%) we had to go back for another taste. After three gentle golden ales, the difference was startling – Cascade hops on the nose, and a wonderful bitter citrus flavour and aftertaste. It was so good that it sold out very quickly, so we can count ourselves lucky to have got in while we could. Beer number five was from a producer I’ve never tried before – Aberdeenshire’s Hillside/Deeside (they recently changed names) – their 4.0% Nechtan. This one was also tremendous, grapefruity and refreshing, it really delivered that zesty summer flavour many brewers fail to get into their beers.

Beer six was the traditional ‘BeerCaster’s choice’ round, where we buy one for someone else on the panel – avoiding the cruelty of a 9% barleywine. The one I ended up with was Sulwath’s The Grace (4.3%), which tasted far stronger than it’s abv and had a similar grapefruit aroma to the Nechtan. The flavours were different however, there was a sweetness I’d not picked up in any of the previous beers, presumably down to the mix of two types of malt and three of hop. Sulwath are based in Castle Douglas near Dumfries, and clearly put a lot of effort into their beers if this one was anything to go by.

The final beer of the night was the also traditional ‘lucky dip’ round, selecting a totally new random beer based purely on the name. This year it was the turn of Caledonian’s Top Banana, which given the name unsurprisingly had some gentle banana tastes on the back of a powerful banana aroma. It was nice for a fruit beer though, and reminded me of Wells&Young’s Banana Bread Beer. A sweet palate cleanser at the end of the night – almost like a dessert after a (particularly lengthy) meal. Speaking of which, we’ll be back tomorrow for seconds. Stay tuned…

BeerCast #30 - Hebridean Showcase

Wednesday, April 15th, 2009

Our 30th BeerCast podcast is a second attempt to showcase the wares from a single brewer. We tried that previously for Gloucestershire’s Wickwar Brewery in BeerCast #22. This time, friend of the BeerCast Gary managed to persuade the head of the Hebridean Brewery to let us have a foursome of his finest, and these take centre stage in our podcast today. Andy Ribbens founded the operation in 2001 on the Isle of Lewis, and from their Stornoway base they are the only legal alcohol producer in the Western Isles. From their range we sample today - Clansman Ale (3.9%), Islander Strong Premium Ale (4.8%), Celtic Black Ale (3.9%), and finally Beserker Export Pale Ale (7.5%). These varying styles and types of beer produced interesting results. On the panel today are regulars Richard, MrB, Shovels and Grooben.


1. Clansman Ale (3.9%abv)
Hebridean Brewery, Stornoway, Isle of Lewis.
500ml glass bottle

What They Say
“Golden Hebridean bitter, brewed with Scottish malts. Lightly bittered, a session beer with a light golden colour. Good all day beer, plenty of hop and malt character, with lots of malt in the finish. Brewed to make you want more - so go-on, give in, you know you want to!” [Official Website] “A light Hebridean beer, brewed with Scottish malts and lightly hopped to give a subtle bittering.” [Good Beer Guide]

What We Say
MrB - It’s a pleasant session ale with a strange aftertaste 7
Grooben - Not sure about it, but your palate would acclimatise 6
Shovels - Nice until you get to the bitter aftertaste 6
Richard - Astringancy detracts from it’s session beeryness


2. Islander Strong Premium Ale (4.8%abv)
Hebridean Brewery, Stornoway, Isle of Lewis.
500ml glass bottle

What They Say
“Brewed with special coloured Scots malt, deep ruby in colour and predominantly malty with robust hopping to match. Complex like the Hebrides themselves, with hidden rewards waiting for those who search them out.” [Official Website] “A malty, fruity strong bitter drinking dangerously below its ABV.” [Good Beer Guide]

What We Say
MrB - Refreshing and slightly wheatbeery, I like that a lot 8
Richard - Not ruby, but is similar to a dry northern bitter
Shovels - There’s an orange hint to it but it’s alright
Grooben - Tastes like the Clansman with added orangepeel 7


3. Celtic Black Ale (3.9%abv)
Hebridean Brewery, Stornoway, Isle of Lewis.
500ml glass bottle

What They Say
“A dark porter style ale full of flavour, balancing an aromatic hop combined with a subtle bite and a pleasantly smooth caramel after taste.” [Official Website]

What We Say
MrB - The first dark beer I’ve ever found to be refreshing 7
Shovels - A session porter, no bitterness to it at all 5
Grooben - It’s like a dark lager you could brush your teeth with 5
Richard - Dark but insipid, tastes vaguely beery 4


4. Beserker Export Pale Ale (7.5%abv)
Hebridean Brewery, Stornoway, Isle of Lewis.
500ml glass bottle

What They Say
“A real India pale ale based on 150 year old recipies. Light in colour but strong in flavour. Malty with an intense hop to match. Conditioned over a number of weeks to develop full and complex flavour.” [Official Website] “This malty, fruity winter warmer is packed full of flavour, with toffee apple and caramel notes right through to the long, satisfying aftertaste.” [Good Beer Guide]

What We Say
MrB - I think it’s an unexpectedly nice warming surprise
Richard - A malty, bitter aftertaste to it with some warmth 4
Grooben - Strong and sweet without a bitter punch to offset 4
Shovels - I can’t find anything redeeming about it at all, the more I drink the more I don’t want it

BeerCast panel verdict
Islander Strong Premium Ale (30/40)
Clansman Ale (24½/40)
Celtic Black Ale (21/40)
Beserker Export Pale Ale (17/40)


Panellists - (from top left) Shovels, MrB, Grooben, Richard

We’ll be back in a couple of weeks with our next podcast, episode 31. Stay tuned for details…and please leave us comments on the blog or iTunes, or emails. Cheers!