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Mountain Man Brewing Co. Hairy Goat

Mountain Man Brewing Co. Hairy Goat

From the Irish Times online ‘Take it Home’ 21st August, 2015

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DSCF6041€3.39 for a 500ml bottle

I keep bumping into Mountain Man at fairs, tastings and festivals. There’s usually a lot of hair around, on the logo, as well as on the man that’s pouring. It seems to attract hairy, bearded men too. Behind it all are Phil Cullen and Gordon Lucey, who met on a brewing course in 2012. ‘We were both looking at setting something up at the same time so we thought we might as well put our heads together’, says Cullen. The logo and labeling are distinctive. ‘We took great care with our labels and bottles – you need to have a really good beer, but there’s more to it than that. Nine out of ten people read the label before buying and I thought there was an awful lot of wasted space on some, so we made ours stand out. We have useful information and something to make you smile.’ As for the beards, ‘When we went to the first couple of festivals people asked me ‘Is this your beer? Then where’s your beard?’ So I started growing one. It has become a job requirement now!’ Hairy Goat is an English style IPA, with lovely plump fruits, a nicely balanced hoppiness and a dry but not overly bitter finish. Nice beer. Widely available at €3.99 for a 500ml bottle

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Lombeline Sauvignon Blanc 2014, Vin de Loire

Lombeline Sauvignon Blanc 2014, Vin de Loire

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€10.50-11.00

Available from La Touche, Greystones; Jus de Vine, Portmarnock; McCabes, Blackrock & Foxrock; Rua, Castelbar; Liston’s, Camden St.

Herby, grassy aromas and fresh clean green fruits with a nice zesty kick.

Before dinner, with fishy starters or mild goat’s cheese salad.

Lombeline is selected by Charles Derain, former sommelier at Patrick Guilbaud, and one of the best tasters in this country. As well as bringing in a very nice range of fine Burgundy and a few other goodies, he sources this Loire Sauvignon. We all need a house white, something reliable that we can crack open and enjoy before dinner or with a starter. The Lombeline falls into this category; inexpensive, well-made and satisfying.

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Tesco’s Finest Montepulciano d’Abruzzo La Francese 2013

Tesco’s Finest Montepulciano d’Abruzzo La Francese 2013

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€12

Available from Tesco

Light juicy dark cherry and plum fruits with a nice freshness.

A great all-purpose wine, but I imagine this would go very nicely with pizza as well as lighter meat pasta dishes.

I remember meeting Gatene Carron back in the late 1990’s (both she and I were very young then!). She was very glamorous too – a globe-trotting winemaker, fluent in four languages, who had studied in France before working in China, Australia, Oregon and Chile, where she made wine at Concha y Toro. When I met her she was a flying winemaker for UK company Western Wines, who made wine in various parts of the world. She now works for Mondo del Vino, a large Italian producer that supplies many of the importers and multiples in Ireland and the UK. The wines are consistent and reliable with the odd star. This is one of the good ones, named after her, La Francese.

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El Grano Chardonnay 2012, Poda Corta, Curico Valley (Organic)

El Grano Chardonnay 2012, Poda Corta, Curico Valley (Organic)

Image€15.90

Available from Le Caveau, Kilkenny; Baggot Street Wines; Blackrock Cellar; 64 wine, Glasthule; Green Man Wines, Terenure.

Very nicely textured wine with subtle toast, grilled nuts and tasty ripe tropical fruits.

With lightly spicy chicken or prawns.

Chile produces some pretty good Chardonnay, but its not every day that a proprietor pulls you over to urge you to try one. But this happened to me recently, and I now know why; this is a very well-made wine with some real interest. As an aside, it is getting hard to find a Chardonnay with oaky flavours – all of the Aussies and Chileans seem to have gone down the lean and crisp route. It is nice to have a Dolly Parton every now and again, although this does not qualify. This wine is made by Frenchman Denis Duveau who sold his property in the Loire Valley and instead began advising producers in France and elsewhere. In 2002, he set up a winery in the Curico valley in Chile, determined to make terroir-driven organic wine. The Chardonnay stands out as something special.

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Tenute Dettori Vino Renosu Rosso NV, Sardinia

Tenute Dettori Vino Renosu Rosso NV, Sardinia

DSCF5907€17.50

Available from 64wine, Glasthule.

A fascinating and intriguing wine – warm, earthy and herby, with soft ripe red fruits – plush and rounded yet light and elegant at the same time. It tasted even better the next day.

I imagine something Italian and homely – sausages with lentils or beans

Allessandro Dettori, based on the island of Sardinia, is committed to non-interventionist natural wine making, using organic grapes, wild yeasts, ageing in cement tanks and using as little sulphur dioxide as possible. This is made from Cannonau, aka Grenache, something of a speciality in Sardinia. I am not a fan of all natural wines but I really enjoyed this a lot.

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Domaine Begude Etoile 2013, Limoux

Domaine Begude Etoile 2013, Limoux

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€19.99

Available from O’Briens

Also from O’Briens, the latest vintage of Etoile from James Kinglake of Domaine Begude. I am a big fan of his Le Bel Ange (great value at €12.99), but this Chardonnay is his finest wine yet. Impeccably balanced peach and orange fruits, with a touch of toasty oak, plush but refreshing with excellent length. A seriously good wine at a bargain price. I tried it alongside a very posh Puligny-Montrachet, both from the same vintage. At this stage the Etoile comfortably outclassed it at a third of the price.

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Julia Florista Vinho Branco, Portugal

Julia Florista Vinho Branco, Portugal

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€9.99

Available from O’Briens

It is rare to find anything exciting at this sort of price. You are generally looking for a lack of faults rather than a fine wine. The Julia Florista, from the team that brought you Porta 6, delivers a very satisfying mouthful of fresh green fruits, good refreshing acidity and a snappy finish. Perfect for everyday drinking, this would make a great party wine. Julia, by the way, was a legendary fado singer who passed away in 1925.

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Whiskey – roll out the barrel.

Whiskey – roll out the barrel.

Without barrels there would be no whiskey,’ says Ger Buckley, cooper at Midleton distillery. Until relatively recently, all alcoholic drinks were transported around the world in wooden barrels. It was the cheapest and most efficient method of moving it from maker to seller. Bespoke wine merchants such as Mitchell & Son, Findlaters, Morgans or Woodford Bourne would take delivery of claret, madeira, sherry and port, and mature the wines in cask until they were judged ready for bottling here. You can still find the odd bottle of Chateau This or Chateau That, bearing the label, “bottled by Mitchell & Son, Dublin”.

The same importers also bought freshly distilled spirit from our whiskey producers, which they added to their redundant wine casks. Left to gently mature for a few years, the spirit became smoother and took on a lovely amber colour. It also developed all of those familiar, highly desirable flavours of wood, nuts and caramel. Then, in the 1960s and 1970s, wine producers began to bottle their wine at source. In many regions, they were legally obliged to do so. Back in Ireland the distilleries were now ageing and bottling their own whiskey. But they were finding it increasingly difficult to find used oak, a problem they solved by going directly to the wine and spirit producers in Spain, Portugal and the US.

Nowadays most distilleries pay big money for used oak barrels that have been used to store wines and bourbon whisky. As sherry, madeira and port producers don’t change their casks very often, these are more expensive – €700-€800 each. Bourbon casks are less expensive (about $100 but the barrels are smaller) as, by law, all bourbon must be aged in new oak casks. At some stage, distillers here and in Scotland realised specific wines added different flavours to the whiskey, and began to “finish” their whiskies for a short period in cask of a single origin. Typically a whiskey is aged in bourbon casks, before six months to two years in sherry or madeira barrels. This week, there are three new whiskies, each finished in a very different kind of oak barrel.

Irish Irish Distillers recently released limited quantities of Dair Ghaelach (Irish oak), the first whiskey finished in new native Irish oak barrels. This blend of 15-22-year-old single pot still whiskies was aged first in American bourbon casks before spending its final 10 months in new Kilkenny oak casks. A mere 12,000 numbered bottles were produced. As part of the project, each of the nine 130-year-old trees felled was processed into separate barrels, so that every bottle can be linked to a specific tree. The forest is Grinsell’s Wood on Ballaghtobin Estate that has belonged to the Gabbets for 350 years. The trees were transported to Galicia to be quarter-sawn, before moving to Jerez, where cooper Antonio Paez Lobato seasoned the wood for 16 months, made 40 hogsheads and gave them a medium toast. Transported to Ireland, they were filled with the whiskey.

Mitchell & Son were one of the merchants that imported wine and then aged whiskey in the same barrels. Green Spot and Yellow Spot whiskies are descendants of these. They have teamed up with the Barton family in Bordeaux to create Green Spot Ch. Léoville-Barton. Initially aged in sherry and bourbon casks, this is finished in oak barrels first used to mature Ch. Léoville-Barton, one of the great grands crus classés of St Julien. The casks were then shipped to Ireland, and filled with Green Spot. Tullamore has released a whiskey finished in barrels used to ferment cider. The freshly squeezed apple juice was added to bourbon casks and left to ferment and mature for three months, before being replaced by Tullamore DEW Orginal for three further months. The result is quite intriguing.

DSCF5795Tullamore D.E.W. Cider Cask Finish Irish Whiskey
40%
€54 for a 1 litre bottle

Honeyed, toasty, spicy and rich with attractive subtle notes of red apple.

Stockists: Duty-free shops and the Tullamore D.E.W. visitor centre

Image 6Green Spot Ch. Léoville-Barton Single Pot Still Whiskey
46%
€70

Apple and pear fruits with hints of vanilla and blackcurrant. Textured and smooth with a lovely lingering finish.

Stockists: Specialist off-licences.

Image 2Midleton Dair Ghaelach Single Pot Still Whiskey
57.9%
€260

A complex nose of toast, vanilla and dark chocolate, full-bodied on the palate, with forest fruits underpinned by caramel, finishing with a note of coffee and spice.

Stockists: Specialist off-licences.

Posted in: Beer & Whiskey, Irish Times

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Brooklyn Sorachi Ace

From The Irish Times online 22nd May, 2015

7.6%
€12.99

“The beer you grew up with did not taste of beer. It was crappy beer.”

Garrett Oliver hauled up at the Ballymaloe Litfest last weekend to take part in debates and promote the cause of craft beer. Articulate, witty and hugely knowledgeable, he is a formidable and persuasive speaker. As well as writing the Oxford Beer Companion and The Brewmaster’s Table, he has been the driving force behind the Brooklyn Brewery, one of the most successful and innovative craft brewers in the US. In addition to their standard range, Brooklyn produces once-off highly experimental beers and seasonal releases.

Oliver uses leftover lees from cider, spruce needles, myrtle, citrus peels, pepper, honey, bourbon casks, and a host of other ingredients to add flavour and complexity to the beers. He is a great believer in matching beer and food too. The Sorachi Ace hop was developed in Japan in the 1970s, a cross between a Czech and British hop. The beer has wonderful herby lemon zest aromas, a soft dry palate full of herby flavours. Unique and delicious.

Widely available.

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