Wednesday, 28 May 2025

#384: Not Like the Others

 Of Foam and Fury was a bit of a bombshell back in the day - rightfully scooping Beoir's Beer of the Year for 2013 (I think?) with it's proper heft and blast of hops. From my first draught pull I was impressed, but it's been years since I've gone back.

Good timing then for a bit of a revival, albeit modernised and embellished with some Riwaka in celebration of its twelfth year. There's something immediately anachronistic going on here, as Of Foam and Fury Riwaka Edition pours pale and hazy. Another crank of the 'modernise' dial has led to a nose that is sweet and juicy with passion fruit tropicals and a heavy lean toward stone fruit. So far so pleasant, if not entirely in line with the original flavour profile (which, to be fair, is loudly announced on the label of the beer). 

The true novelty and queerness of the beer is apparent on the palate though, where there's an initial wash of what I initially could only describe as butter. No, not diacetyl or any fermentation wonk; it's the strangest thing, a particular creamy sweetness that almost does suggest butterscotch and that is quite at odds with the zestier notes also making themselves known.  This might not sound too promising but arguably even queerer is how the palate quickly adjusts to it, as it turns to a more conventional vanilla. This vanilla along with lime maramalade, tangerine and sparkly sherbert are a sweetish bounty that fill the mouth before calming and rounding down to pineapple and apricot. It's unconventional, it's unexpected, it's delicious. Gone is the crystalline caramel of the old beer - this is almost always the first thing to go with these sort of throuwback beers - but the new hazy vanilla body is not quite the standard NEIPA mode, though it's clearly in that ballpark.

This is nothing like Of Foam and Fury of old, and more importantly - and impressively - it's nothing like most of the more modern/hazy IPAs around at the moment. Mission accomplished.


Friday, 23 May 2025

#383: Bullish

To break the monotony of German or German-inspired beer I've got some actually fresh IPA to chew through from the lovely Bullhouse Brew Co.

First up is the NEIPA Merc Bro, which pours shockingly dark for the style, a shady orange as opposed to the usual pale yellow. The nose is immediately met with sweet strawberry and apricot jam, enticing and genuinely interesting, but the promise of this is not really matched on the palate. Not that it's unpleasant - it's not - but it's also not the cleanest or brightest example of this sort of thing going around. It tastes almost as murky as it looks, a but muddy and indistinct, and is far stickier than the 6.5% ABV would normally suggest. Some of the fruit survives, again in the form of stone fruit and sweet jam, but I was quite glad to move on to the next one.

Which is King Size, a double IPA of 8%. This one is immediately more promising, or at least more conventional for a modern hazy IPA as I expect to find them; it's a good deal paler, even if it is still just as opaque. Again there's oozing sweet juice and again there's sweet strawberry, but this time there's a lot more fun to be had. Heady, fumey pear makes that 8% initially seem closer to 10%, but this is just aromatic bloom. What follows is a suerbly indulgent and enjoyable modern strong IPA, with all the trappings of such; sweet, juicy, tonnes of fruit and a distinct lack of yeast bite. That last bit is in spite of the fact that there are definitely yeast solids in the can, so pour with care. 

King Size is definitely the more successful of the two for me but the Merc Bro could well be doing something for you.