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  • Top 10 Beers

    Ok, so the newcastle brown thread got me thinking again about what my own favourite beers are. You see I realised that I was wedded to the proletarian grain rather than aristocratic grape at an early age. Beer instead of wine, whisky instead of brandy etc. Don't get me wrong, I have on many occasions drank wine and brandy, and enjoyed both greatly, but then I always feel kind of unfaithful and realise that the grass actually wasn't greener after all as I return, flat cap in hand, to my local pub vowing never to step foot in a trendy wine bar again.

    And so to my own personal top ten of beer. This isn't an all-time top ten, as it will almost certainly have changed by the end of the night, if not the end of this paragraph, but it is an attempt. A snapshot. A debating point for others in love with the grain. Even if you are american and unfortunately have to live with the worst beers anywhere in the world with the possible exception of Pyongyang where I believe one is made from rainwater collected in an old pair of Kim Jong-il underpants and some old tractor parts. No, on second thoughts american beer is still the worst in the world.

    1. Jennings - Sneck Lifter (5.1%). It was a close run thing between this and 'standard' Jennings bitter, but this is so complex, rich and satisfying that it has to be top. It makes you want to head out for the Lake District at the earliest opportunity, or failing that pick up a Wainwright guide to read.

    2. Roosters - Yankee (4.3%). Very hoppy but never bitter - a real floral taste that reminds me of when my mum used to make elderflower wine.

    3. Bass - Pale Ale (5.1%). Out of nostalgia really, because it isn't what it once was, a monster of a beer with a real sulphur bite. But sometimes, just sometimes, you get a hint of what it once was.

    4. Cains - Bitter (4%). A real success story even though the Liverpool brewery has been through some difficulot times. Dark, malty, moorish. Makes me long for a return to my former town, its music, people, pubs and beer.

    5. Becks bier (5%). Yes, its a big commercial beer, but it deserves its success. Still brewed to the german purity law, the 1516 Reinheitsgebot, it is full of flavour for a pils style lager, although for something a little 'cleaner' in taste you can't beat Bitburger (and "Bitte Ein Bit" has to be one of the best advertising slogans ever).

    6. Erdinger - Weissbier (5.3%). I love german wheat beers and could have happily had dozens of brands listed here, but Erdinger is the one I have drank most, so... Wheat beer has a unique bitter-sweet yeasty flavour that shouldn't work, but like a pancake with sugar and lemon does. One is never enough. The Belgiums do similar styles, but call it witbier and add ingredients like coriander and orange peel (the most famous being Hoegaarden) and it is similarly moorish, but as the observant amongst you will spot I am merely using this as a construct to increase my list beyond the tenth digit so I will say no more.

    7. Frank Boon - Geuze Lambic (6.5%). Again, I could have subsituted multiple varieties here, including the fruit beer lambics, but this one is one of the more readily available in the UK. Lambic is a unique Belgium style of beer that relies on natural airbourne yeasts for fermentation. The result is an extremely tart taste, but not one that is 'off'. An aquired taste perhaps, but like cigars once you get it you never look back.

    8. Guinness - Foreign Extra Stout (7.5%). I grew up on Guinness, but when I was a nipper it was rare outside of an Irish/catholic social club to ever see in on draught in mainland Britain. So to this day I perfer the more complex taste of bottled Guinness to the 'creamflow' version. However, even better is this 'export' version that ironically is brewed in Nigeria under license and then imported back to the UK and Ireland.

    9. Budweiser Budvar (5%). Ok, I couldn't resist inclusing this one. It is a great beer in the pilsner style, bursting with flavour after long maturation, but more to the point it is miles ahead of its american namesake that is a horrible thin tasting product that is made with a load of cheap rice (rather than pure malt and hops).

    10. Chimay - Triple (8%). Well no beer list would be complete without a trappist style beer would it! And not only is this one of the best, it is one of the few trappist beers still owned by monks, and while I've always been an athiest I have long believed that if you have to 'do god' then that is the way to do it. Despite its strength this top fermented beer is full of subtlety both on the tongue and the nose. Religion as it should be!

    Cheers!
    "The socialism I believe in is everyone working for each other, everyone having a share of the rewards. It's the way I see football, the way I see life"
    Bill Shankly

  • #2
    Sneck Lifter at number one. Good man! A mighty fine beer.

    I'll be back with my top ten once I've had a chance to think about it. I'll check my phone too - I keep score for all the new beers I try at the pumps and at festivals.
    My cigar review blog: The Cigar Monologues (Twitter / Facebook)
    My Company:
    Siparium Sporting

    Comment


    • #3
      I prefer drinking spirits, but some beers I really rate include:

      Mr Perrett's Traditional Stout is a English Stout style beer brewed by Wickwar Brewing Company in Wickwar, GB2, United Kingdom. Score: n/a with 4 ratings and reviews. Last update: 05-27-2022.

      Mr Perrett's Traditional Stout - Wckwar Brewing Company. A real winter warmer.


      Innes and Gunn Oak Aged. Mmmm - malty!

      And, of course, a point o' the black stuff.
      --------------------------------------------------
      There are 10 kinds of people in this world.
      Those that understand binary, and those that don't.

      Sent from a keyboard using my fingers.

      Comment


      • #4
        Originally posted by captain duff View Post
        9. Budweiser Budvar (5%). Ok, I couldn't resist inclusing this one.... it is miles ahead of its american namesake that is a horrible thin tasting product that is made with a load of cheap rice (rather than pure malt and hops).
        Bears as much relation to it's US namesake as Cuban Cohiba does to those with red dots or glass lids (and also I think subject to a similar court tussel over naming rights). Anyhow, it would be very difficult to put up a persuasive argument not to include it in a world's top 10 beer chart.

        I'm off tomorrow up to North Yorks for a week, from whence I'll be able to enjoy my favourite ever pint anywhere: Timothy Taylor Landlord from a Hotel bar just over the border in Co Durham. I've had Landlord all over the shop - it's rightly a very popular guest beer in many of the best pubs down here (including Heston Blumenthal's Hind's Head @ Bray). I must have been there 3 or 4 times over the last 5 years & it's Landlord is always a cut above any other anywhere including several decent pubs in the Dales which are all far closer to the brewery - ruling that out as a factor.

        I fully believed I might never taste anything so ambrosiac until a mini-pub crawl around the East End last Friday, finished up @ The Pride of Spitalfields. According to beerintheevening.com they usually sell out of their regular guest - Crouch Vale "Brewers Gold" by Thursday but we were in luck & it was on tap all night. Was the first time I'd tried it & couldn't stop drinking it, just for the taste, even after I knew I'd had more than enough to drink.

        Seek it out - it more than rewards any human effort:

        Comment


        • #5
          holy cow.........rating beerts............let's see........

          guinness
          guinness lager
          caffrey's
          hoegaarden
          leffe
          bass
          quilmes
          erdinger
          tiger
          brahma
          harp

          others of note........

          kasteel cru
          desperado
          corona
          sol
          newcastle brown ale.....

          f**k, i could go on all night! wish i could say that to the missus (she ain't here)

          alex

          Comment


          • #6
            I'm not a huge beer drinker but these are my favourites:

            hoegarden
            framboise
            Purity Ales - UBU

            I had an American real ale a few months ago and that was really nice - can't remember what it was called though. Waitrose do one of it's sister ales if anyone knows the one I'm on about?

            Rhiannon

            Comment


            • #7
              Okay, had time to check the records, then think about it, and re-order it. So, welcome to TOTB (Top Of The Beers), and here's my top ten:

              10. Sharps Doom Bar (Bitter; 4.0%) A beer that I rate very highly - one of the options that I will regularly go to if I'm in a pub that serves it well. Nice, straight-forward bitter.

              9. Art Brew Tempest Stout (Stout; 4.6%) A tidy little dark beer. A little malty, but bitter at the same time (). It has a dry, roasted finish, which will always win my favour. Unfortunately, it doesn't seem to be a regularly brewed beer.

              8. Jennings Tom Fool (Bitter; 4.0%). A nice bitter which is leaning towards some of the characteristics of a mild. A dark bitter, with some nice roasted malt flavours as well as a little sweet fruitiness. Nicely balanced.

              7. St Austell Proper Job (IPA; 4.5%) Hoppy, hoppy, hoppy. A fantastic summer beer from another fantastic brewery. There are a number of beers from St Austell that could make this list, easily a contender with Jennings for my favourite brewery.

              6. Jennings Golden Host (Bitter; 4.3%) A very light coloured bitter, this is a great and refreshing pint. Good flavourful beer, with a nice level of hoppiness.

              5. RCH Old Slug (Porter; 4.5%) A reasonably attractive pint in the glass, but strong chocolate and coffee make this an almost perfect porter for me.

              4. North Curry Level Headed ('Old Ale';4.7%) A very tasty, dark beer. Lots of roasted chocolate. My notes from the beer festival at Tuckers Maltings in Newton Abbott showed that I gave it (out of 10): Appearance 7, Aroma 9.5 and Taste 9.

              3. Jennings Cumberland Ale (Bitter; 4.0%) Nothing beats a pint of CA after a day of hiking in the Langdales. DO NOT, I repeat, DO NOT buy the bottled CA from the supermarket and think you are drinking Cumberland Ale. The supermarkets demanded a higher ABV version, Jennings didn't want to, but Marstons (the owners) told them to. At 4.7% the bottled version is very much different, and very much inferior to the real stuff.

              2. Jennings Sneck Lifter (5.1%) A cracking beer. At first I wasn't sure, but it grew on me. A great tasting beer, dark, smooth, chocolatey with a little roast on the finish. A wonderful combo of a mild and a porter. In the winter it would be number one in a flash.

              1. Church End Grave Digger's Ale (Mild; 3.8%) Currently holds mythical status for me... I've only had it once (at last year's Cotswold Beer Festival - unfortunately Church End weren't there this year), but that one occassion was a religious experience. Really fantastic, dry, roasted finish.

              An honourable mention should also go three more beers (at least)...

              Jennings Dark Mild (Mild; 3.1%) A beer that I love. I've left it out for two reasons - one, variety (the list was starting to look like a Jennings catalogue...) and two, I've yet to see it outside of the Jennings brewery itself...

              Robinsons Double Hop (Bitter; 3.8%) As the name suggests, surprisingly hoppy for the ABV. Still maintains a little maltiness. Not a bad session beer.

              Wells Bombardier Burning Gold (Bitter; 4.7%) A great beer, far better than the standard Bombardier. Very light in colour, very refreshing. Actually one of my absolute favourite beers, but only available in bottled form, so loses a place in the top ten.

              That's not even counting some of the other St Austell beauties, a number of other Jennings beers, some nice offerings from Marstons (Old Empire is a great IPA). In fact, IPAs are a little under-represented here, especially given how well they go down in the summer...

              As you may be able to tell, I'm quite keen on dark beers, and enjoy a dry, roasted charcter.

              A great opportunity to dig out this photo of me at the Jennings brewery bar:

              My cigar review blog: The Cigar Monologues (Twitter / Facebook)
              My Company:
              Siparium Sporting

              Comment


              • #8
                1. Hoegaarden
                2. Hoegaarden
                3. Hoegaarden
                4. Hoegaarden
                5. Hoegaarden
                6. Hoegaarden
                7. Hoegaarden
                8. Hoegaarden
                9. Tsing-Tao
                10. Guinness

                Comment


                • #9
                  Rochefort 10 is a fine beer same with Chimay blue and of course Duvel. Strange that the king of pilsners; Urquell didn't get a mention tis far and away the best of the type. It would be nice if English beers were brewed in the pre WW1 strengths the way they were meant to be. I used to brew a lot mainly in the old style and they were epic.

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Skinners of Truro do some really good brews including Cornish Knocker and Heligan Honey

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Ringwood brewery do some great beers in Hampshire.

                      Also I love a night on Corona, always gets me just the right level of drunk.

                      My other fav is Waggle dance, bishops finger, old peculiar and a good pint of Guniess.

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        Best beers?

                        Innes and Gunn
                        Raven Ale
                        Deuchars draught IPA
                        Skullsplitter
                        Dark Island
                        Anchor Steam (when I'm in Antioch CA)
                        Magners
                        Adnams Winter Warmer - Like a liquidised Xmas pud, but 11% abv!
                        Any dunkelwei?en
                        And a locally brewed Red Beer offered for sale on St Simon's Island, Georgia!
                        No man has the right to fix the boundary of a nation.
                        No man has the right to say to his country, "Thus far shalt thou go and no further."

                        CS Parnell



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                        • #13
                          glad to see praise for jennings, i rate cumberland ale and snecklifter as two of the finest

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                          • #14
                            hard one to pass coment on eveys one different but we have two brilliant micro brewers near by one in stokesley where i live called captain cooks not one of there beers is bad! And also pinchinthorpe hall near guisbrough they only do two beers a light and dark both organic and highly drinkerble and hand pulled aswell! you could have 10 pints of there stuff i find so many real ales can only be drunk in ones or twos!

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              Wychwood, Hobgoblin,
                              Cain?s, Raisin Beer
                              Fuller?s, ESB
                              Thornbridge, Jaipur IPA
                              Hebridean, Beserker Export
                              Porterhouse, An Brain Bl?sta
                              ?rainn Mh?r, RUA
                              Carlow, OHaras Irish Red
                              Franciscan Well, Rebel Red Ale
                              Dunkler, Bock
                              If you want to, you can.
                              And, if you can, you must!

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