A variant that seems especially suited to the style was the Rum Finish variety that I recently picked up in Tesco. (The photo says “Rum Cask”, but it was “Rum Finish” on the actual bottle) This was a rather steep £1.99 for 330 mls, but was available in a 3 for 2 offer covering a wide range of “world” and “craft” beers. It’s 7.4% ABV, so just coming under the HSBD threshold, and in the glass looks very much like Coke – dark but translucent with a thin but lasting head.
The typical I & G vanilla character is fairly subdued, but the toffee comes through strongly, and it is mixed with distinct fruit and spice notes. There’s a definite alcohol kick, but it’s relatively smooth and light-bodied and so is easy to drink – it’s not a heavy, chewy beer like many ales of this kind of strength. An ideal beer to sip and savour on a cold winter’s night, and probably the best I have sampled from this brewery.
Like with American Bourbon, I&G use unaged oak casks, and in fact they're seasoning the casks for use by other drinks, the beer was originally to be ditched. I quite enjoy them too, even though a lot of people seem to dislike it. Would love to try some beers aged in different unused woods, how would beech affect a beer's taste for example?
ReplyDeletethe other half and I have been enjoying the Rum version for a while - it's definitely a welcome addition to the fairly poor beer range in our local Tesco superstore (mostly the the big name 'boring brown beers').
ReplyDeletethe 1.49 Finest Porter (Harviestoun i think) is pleasant too, they often sneak their way into the trolley
I think the rum one's the best of the bunch.
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