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Brew Dog – Punk IPA

Posted on Sunday, February 15th, 2009 at 7:16pm. #

Brew Dog IPA

I managed to snag myself a ticket to the recent London Twestival – spurred on not just by the desire to meet people who follow me (and who I follow) like @jemimah_knight, but also because there was beer on offer.

And not just any beer.

The lovely people at Brewdog had donated rather a lot of what is fast becoming my favourite beer, Punk IPA. And it was this fact that pushed me into getting a ticket from a secret, twice-the-price, stash that had been left back just for disorganised people like me who knew who to twitter.

Realistically, “Pale Ale” can be anything from a pint of bitter (or ‘heavy’ in Scotland), to very different varieties. In order to stay fresh all the way to India, IPA (India Pale Ale) was made much hoppier, with the hops acting as preservative. A good IPA (Greene King IPA being the one you’ll find in pubs most often) is hoppy and bitter, but a session beer nonetheless.

“American Pale Ale” is very different. Far hoppier still – very bitter, very tasty. Sierra Nevada – increasingly available in British pubs from the tap – is a prime example. Light in colour (that’ll be the ‘pale’ bit), the similarity to a lager disappears quickly when you taste it – bitter enough to make your face pucker if you’re not expecting the taste.

I think Brewdog’s “Punk IPA” is, whether they like it or not, really an American Pale Ale – though this 6% ale probably uses English hops rather than their American counterparts. I say ‘probably’ – the label and the website appear to be fairly coy about the type of hops they use. It’s a slightly smoother taste than Sierra Nevada, but still blisteringly bitter and tremendously refreshing.

Brewdog hasn’t been going for long. They only started in April 2007 – in Aberdeenshire, of all places, not somewhere I’d have thought of as a beer mecca. They’ve managed to get their beer in many places – not just in Utobeer, the nicely stocked beer shop in London’s Borough Market, but also into – of all places – Tesco. And it was here that I first discovered it: as they discontinued Sierra Nevada, Punk IPA cannily came to take its place. I’d much rather buy British than buy American, after all – even if US craft beers are closer to my taste these days – and this is a worthy substitute.

And not only has Brewdog got their distribution sorted, they’ve also got their copywriting sorted. The copywriting on the bottle – some of which you can see at the top of the page – is brilliantly done. When James May and Oz Clarke met the Brewdog team as part of their Oz and James Drink to Britain series (which you can watch in full on the BBC iPlayer), the Brewdog team were waiting for them in a park – passing over their bottles in paper bags, deliberately rebelling against drinking laws. As the label says, Brewdog is all about breaking the rules.

I would recommend it, and should the splendid people at Brewdog wish to send me their other beers to “test”, I’d be delighted, though the chances of that are less than zero, naturally.

See Brewdog Pale IPA at beeradvocate.com

4 comments

Dan Thornton
commenting at February 15th, 2009 at 7:31pm

You’re not the only fan of Brewdog’s approach (http://thewayoftheweb.net/2008/12/even-christmas-drinks-show-something-about-branding/), and I realise what you mean about the American pale Ale taste. It took me by surprise, having been used to the Greene King variety, but I’ve definitely developed a taste for it and want to try more of the range.

Now I really fancy a beer at 7.30pm on a Sunday night…curses.

(Removed spammy name/URL)
commenting at May 6th, 2009 at 10:38am

That is a brilliant label, I like it when companies have a bit of a sence of humor it makes me want to get some!

granulated
commenting at July 27th, 2009 at 12:55pm

hi… they are not at all coy about the type of hops used.
below cut and paste from the product page ‘brewsheet’

ABV:
6%
OG:
1052
IBU?s:
65
Malts:
Marris Otter Extra Pale Malt
Hops:
Chinook, Ahtanum, Nelson Sauvin
Twist:
Hopped with bucket loads of our favourite hops

cheers

granulated
commenting at July 27th, 2009 at 3:12pm

hmm…maybe they only recently added the info

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