nzherald.co.nz

Don Kavanagh: Stretch the boundaries

By Don Kavanagh
9:30 AM Tuesday Jun 19, 2012
Distinctive new beers on the market are pleasing palates. Photo / Thinkstock

Distinctive new beers on the market are pleasing palates. Photo / Thinkstock

As the midwinter Christmas season approaches, a new year starts too, with the evenings starting to get longer from next Friday, June 22.

I mention this only to make an utterly tenuous link between the time of the year and a few new beers I've tried recently. One of them, Invercargill Brewery's Saison, is one of the most interesting beers I've had in ages.

Saison beers originated in the French-speaking part of Belgium as a lower-alcohol option to slake the thirst of those gathering the harvest. Often made with a wheat component, many saisons also included ginger, orange and coriander.

Steve Nally's Invercargill version opts for a more vigorous level of alcohol (it comes in at 6.8 per cent), but without sacrificing any flavour to the hotter alcohol. In fact, this beer is all about flavour, with a really tangy orange character coming through on the palate and a huge belt of citrus and passionfruit on the nose. It's a really impressive beer and cements the brewery's place as one of the country's best and most innovative.

Another new beer from Invercargill is the Wasp Pilsner. This 4.8 per cent kamahi honey-flavoured pils is a wonderfully refreshing drop, with the sweetness of honey balancing the crispness of the lager. The name comes from the fact that wasps steal honey in the wild and that's what the brewery did to get the ingredients for this beer (although I can't help suspecting that no one realised that wasps don't make honey until after the labels had been printed.)

Another couple of new-ish ales I've come across recently will get me in trouble with the beer snobs, but frankly who cares?

Boundary Road Brewery in the Hunua ranges used to be Independent Brewing and still makes international brands such as Carlsberg under licence. In the past year it has also been concentrating on a range of craft beers and two of the latest additions are worth checking out.

Mumbo Jumbo IPA is a big, beefy IPA with a lovely floral nose and a good piney hop bite on the palate. Weighing in at 5.2 per cent, it's not going to knock you about too much either.

The Chocolate Moose (see what they did there?) is a 4.5 per cent chocolate stout with real coffee and dark chocolate aromas along with a warming burst of pure cocoa on the palate.

As I say, many purists will roll their eyes at the mention of Boundary Road, which they tend to view with suspicion because it is part of what used to be Independent Liquor, the company that almost single-handedly invented the RTD. But the Boundary Road range is getting more interesting with every beer and they are worth both the time and effort of tracking them down. Happy hunting.

By Don Kavanagh

- Herald on Sunday

Kiwi_in_Perth (Perth) | 09:04AM Wednesday, 20 Jun 2012
I live in Perth and I am astonished by all the great new beers from nz coming into the locaL store. When I was at uni the only beers that I ever noticed that even resembled craft brews was Macs and Montieths.

Now I get
No8 Wire
Flying Nun
EPIC
Crouchers
Yestie Boys
Moa
Tuatara
Renaissance

All amazing beers.
derp herpington () | 10:30AM Thursday, 05 Jul 2012
Fine, except all the boundary road beers are rubbish.
BKR (New Zealand) | 09:57AM Monday, 20 Aug 2012
I think Boundary Road is rubbish compared to say, Green Man, Emerson's, Yeastie Boys, Liberty, etc. But it's a hell of a lot better than Tui, Export, and so on. I still don't support them, though, because they pour hundreds of thousands of dollars into pretending to be a small grass-roots genuine craft brewery.

Interesting that Don praised the Mumbo Jumbo IPA - and its aroma. The one I drank had virtually no nose at all, which was extremely disappointing since one of my favorite things about IPAs is a big floral aroma. I found there was very little flavor, too - definitely not the big, bold IPA I was hoping for.

I also thought the Chocolate Moose tasted more like beer-y chocolate sauce than chocolate-y beer. I'm probably making the transition to full on beer snob with this next comment, but "it lacked subtlety".

Tonight at Galbraith's I had the Garage Project's Triple Hop IPA and Renaissance's Craftsman Chocolate Oatmeal Stout - both beers reach heights that Boundary Road never will - they probably don't even genuinely aspire to.
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