Friday, 30 June 2017

Fresh is best: two breweries taking on the green hop challenge

Beer, like most things, follows a fashion. And in this new age of ‘craft’ brewing, one trend that is constantly being talked about is ‘fresh’ beer: ales rammed with hops that are designed to be consumed before the aromas begin to fade. Yet, in most instances, the hops used in the brewing process will be far from fresh: they’ll be dried, sold to the brewery vacuum packed or compounded into pellets.

To really get the freshest possible brew you’ll need to seek out a much rarer product – green hopped beers. These are beers that use hops picked straight from the vine before being tipped into the beery wort before they begin to deteriorate. It’s a process that can obviously only happen at harvest time – a date that can’t be accurately predicted in advance – with the brewer needing immediate access to the hops, making it a much more challenging prospect. And besides this physical challenge, green hops are also harder to work with: it’s a messier process and the hops can provide less predictable results in the finished beer, with any changes in soil condition or climate making a more noticeable difference to the flavouring and bittering properties of the hop compared to its dried equivalents.

One brewery to have hop access within spitting distance of the brewing kettles is De Plukker, situated on the organic hop farm of co-owner Joris Cambie in the town of Poperinge, Belgium’s undisputed hop capital.

Being so close to the hops he has grown and harvested all his life, Joris has a natural respect for the plants and a desire to promote them at their best within the brewery’s beers. Among their range is a single green hopped beer, brewed every year on a pre-determined day during the September harvest, with the hop variety chosen according to what is ready to pick.

On our visit Joris shared with us his 2016 green hop edition, a 5.5% amber beer limited to a run of under 2,000 bottles, which showcases the variety Phoenix. Our bottle was around five months old and already a slight degradation of the hop aroma was apparent,* but the overall quality was high and the characteristics of Phoenix, a British hop, appeared fresh among the flavours. A florally focussed variety it has a tangy British bitterness which is scattered with gentle spruce and spice notes. In Joris’s beer those fresh whole cones also offered distinctive grassy and herby ‘green’ flavours that are more likely to be lost when the hops are dried.

The overall impression of the beer is of an easy-going Belgian ale, along traditional lines, with the hops allowed to gently work their magic rather than hit hard like many modern hop show-off brews. It’s very much a fresh beer, crafted with care and respect for the ingredients that go into making it.

De Plukker Phoenix hop beer

Main picture and left: the hops were just beginning to reveal themselves during our visit to the De Plukker brewery and hop farm
Right: Joris and some of De Plukkers; beers, including the 2016 Green Hop limited eiditon

With green hopped beers providing a challenge for both brewing logistics and beer consistency, they’re not the kind of drink bigger breweries tend to go for. So it was a bit of a surprise that our next green hopped beer was produced by a much larger outfit – the Czech Republic’s Budweiser Budvar.

We met Josh Nesfield from the brewery’s UK headquarters in a pub in Bristol, where explained that the idea for the beer came not from his marketing colleagues, but from workers at the brewery. As with Joris at De Plukker, the brewery takes great pride in its hops, the Saaz variety, which are celebrated in the local town’s annual hop festival, ‘Dočesná in Žatec’, the biggest such event in the world.

To show the effects on flavour of green hops, Josh – a man with no fear of the office hangover – lined up the 2017 fresh hop release, an imperial lager, alongside three other beers from the Budvar taps. “Each beer uses the same ingredients” he pointed out “but they all taste completely different.” The initial thing we noticed about the imperial lager was its strength, 7.5% compared to the 5% of the brewery’s most well known lager. But after adjusting to the added booziness, those fresh hop flavours started to come to the fore: the Saaz spiciness is prominent but has more noticeable floral and grassy notes than we were used to, and a more obvious hoppy aroma that aided the fresh experience. We’ve always enjoyed a glass of Budvar, but reckoned this to be the best of their beers – although after four swiftly consumed pints our judgement may not have been all that sound.

Due to its 200 day lagering process, Budweiser Budvar’s green hopped lager is at its fresh best considerably later than De Plukker’s beer, but it still has a limited run and is only available for a few months from April each year. It’s well worth seeking out when that time comes around again.

Producing these beers can be a challenge, but with breweries keen to explore new flavours by turning to a huge range of unusual brewing adjuncts, perhaps there’s one obvious ingredient that is worthy of more consideration: the fresh, green hop.

Budvar Imperial Lage 2017

Josh oversees our Budvar tasting session

*Beers that start to lose their hoppy freshness are often described as having a ‘wet dog’ aroma. That would be cruel to De Plukkers feint loss of quality. Let’s call it ‘damp kitten’ instead.

 

Thanks to Paul Walsh of Belgian Beer and Food magazine and the tourist boards of Flanders and Poperinge for arranging the visit to De Plukker.

To find out more about Budweisers green hopped beer check out the feature and video on their excellent Czech Stories website.

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from Two Thirsty Gardeners http://twothirstygardeners.co.uk/2017/06/fresh-hop-breweries-de-plukker-budweiser-budvar/

Thursday, 29 June 2017

Win! Krombacher beer and glasses

Fans of German beer will be licking their lips at the prospect of winning our latest top prize, because we’ve been chatting with our pals at Krombacher and have managed to secure six bottles of their delicious pils AND four branded pilsner glasses to guzzle them from.

Impress your mates by not only giving them a bottle of authentic pils the next time they’re round for the footy, but gain beer cred points by serving it to them in a proper pilsner glass (maths aces will quickly deduce that’s four beers between you and three mates with two more beers for you to enjoy when they’ve cleared off home).

 

How to win

To stand with a chance of winning, simply log into Twitter, make sure you are following @thirstygardener and @krombacherUK, and retweet our Krombacher pils tweet with the hashtag #GlugGlug

All names successfully completing the criteria above will go into into our ‘barrel of malty desires’ and the winner will be picked out randomly on Monday 10th July 2017.

Check the Ts&Cs below, point your browser in twitter’s direction, and keep your fingers crossed…

Terms and conditions
  • Entries must be submitted by midnight on Sunday 9th July 2017.
  • The decision of the judges is final and no correspondence will be entered into.
  • The winner will be drawn at random from all entries received by the closing date.
  • Failure to respond and/or provide an address for delivery, or failure to meet the eligibility requirements may result in forfeiture of the prize. Should the Promoter be unable to contact the winners or should the winners be unable to accept the prizes by 10th July, the Promoter reserves the right to award the prizes to an alternative winner, drawn in accordance with these terms and conditions.
  • Entry is open to residents of the UK except employees (and their families) of the prize suppliers.
  • Use of a false name or address will result in disqualification.
  • Entrants must be over the age of 18 on 9th July 2017
  • Entries that are incomplete, illegible, indecipherable, or inaudible (if made by phone) will not be valid and deemed void.
  • No responsibility can be accepted for entries lost, damaged or delayed in the post, or due to computer error in transit.
  • The prizes are as stated, are not transferable to another individual and no cash or other alternatives will be offered.
  • In the event of a prize being unavailable, the promoter reserves the right to offer an alternative prize of equal or greater value.
  • The winner(s) agree(s) to the use of their name, photograph and disclosure of county of residence and will co-operate with any other reasonable requests relating to any post-winning publicity.

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from Two Thirsty Gardeners http://twothirstygardeners.co.uk/2017/06/win-krombacher-pilsner-beer-glasses/

Tuesday, 20 June 2017

Five beer glasses everyone should own

Want even more enjoyment from your favourite beer? Then picking the right glass might just improve the drinking experience. The Germans and Belgians have appreciated this for years and now, at long last, us Brits are catching up. We’ve enlisted the help of our Bavarian brewing pals Krombacher to pick five drinking vessels that every kitchen cupboard should contain…

Pilsner Glass Illustration
Pilsner Glass

Pilsners were the first beers to consistently look great as well as taste great, making glass the natural material to show off their clear golden properties (previously beer’s murkier appearance was hidden in ceramic or pewter). Krombacher’s Pilsner glass follows classical curvy lines: it’s narrow to maximise clarity and allow the drinker to gaze longingly at the bubbles rising through the liquid, slightly widening as the pristine white froth forms on the surface.

 

Wheat Beer Glass Illustration
Wheat Beer Glass

A unique shape but vital if you’re a fan of proper wheat beers, of which Krombacher are masters. A bulbous base quickly narrows before changing direction towards a wide opening. It’s a shape that stirs a gassy rumble on pouring, with the liquid spinning as it climbs the glass walls, building a huge head off froth which towers above the rim. Pouring takes a bit of practice to avoid a foam-only beer.

 

Tankard Glass Illustration

Tankard

From the classic British dimpled pint pot to the huge steins of Munich beer halls, the choice of tankards is wide ranging. Wrapping your fist around a handle connected to a weighty mug of beer induces glugging, rather than dainty sipping, and comes in handy if you’re swinging and clinking your glass at a social knees up. We’re admirers of Krombacker’s unusual ceramic tankard , complete with curves to encourage a head of beer to peek above the surface.
Snifter Glass Illustration

Tulip glass or snifter

Belgian’s have been showing off their strong ales in tulip glasses for decades, but now the shape – and the squatter snifter – has been adopted by the craft crowd for just about any beer style. Krombacher’s branded tulip glass is suitably rotund: its job, apart from looking good, is to allow the beer to swirl on pouring releasing the aromas, with ample room for nasal investigation.
Stemmed Glass Illustration

Stemmed glass or flute

With the above four classic vessel shapes on your shelf you’ve got most bases covered, allowing you room for something a little fancier. Thin stemmed or fluted glasses are great at adding a sophisticated edge to your boozy nights. Tall and slender they’re best suited for bright, sparkling ales, and they’re brilliant at showing off the colours of a fruit beer,  giving you a good excuse for turning down the fizzy wine the next time you need some celebratory bubbles. Cheers!

 

This is a sponsored post

The post Five beer glasses everyone should own appeared first on Two Thirsty Gardeners.



from Two Thirsty Gardeners http://twothirstygardeners.co.uk/2017/06/five-beer-glasses-own-pilsner-wheat-flute-stein-tulip-krombacher/

Thursday, 15 June 2017

Beer TUBE of the Week – The Best of British Beer Yard of Ale

Remember the frisson of excitement that you had as a child when receiving one of those giant tubes of Jelly Tots at Christmas? Well dial that excitement up TO THE MAX and grab yourself one of these ‘reimagined’ yards of ale* from our pals at Best of British Beer!
This 1 metre** cardboard tube comes stuffed with eight high quality cans of British booze, selected especially for summertime supping. Contents are subject to change, but ours contained the following boozes…

 

1 East London Brewing Company, Cowcatcher, 4.8%
Stuffed to the saddlebags with citrusy hops.
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2 Allendale Brewery, Mosaic, 4.4%
Peachy and pale, bourn of the mosaic.
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3 East London Brewing Company, Pale Ale, 4%
Crisp, delicate and subtly fruity – A mighty fine session-able booze.
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4 Williams Brothers, Joker IPA, 5%
An understated, BBQ friendly thirst-quencher.
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5 Tomos Watkin, Delilah, 4%
My, my, my. A light and tasty golden ale from Swansea, with love.
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6 Williams Brothers, Caesar Augustus, 4%
All hail this lager/IPA mashup. Subtle hoppage and light malts ahoy.
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7 Allendale Brewery, Vienna, 4.4%
A lush, piney New World lager. Mystic and soulful.
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8 Tollgate Brewery, California Steam, 4.2%
From Ashby De La Zouch, via California. A crisp, refreshing, lager-style booze.

All in all, the perfect fathers day gift, we say. And when you’ve finished your beers, you’ve got a giant cardboard tube to blow down to annoy your kids/partner/pets. Waaaarrrrrrrrp!

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Available from: Best of British Beer
Price: £20

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* The yard of ale dates from the 17th century, where it was believed to have been a vessel favoured by stagecoach drivers from which to drink their booze. Yards of ale are often used in pubs by students/rugby clubs as a means of spilling their drinks down themselves as quickly as possible, thus avoiding the imbibing of said drink.

** Slightly shorter than a yard, if you want to get all pedantic.

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from Two Thirsty Gardeners http://twothirstygardeners.co.uk/2017/06/beer-tube-week-best-british-beer-yard-ale/

Tuesday, 13 June 2017

More Than words

A few weeks ago, we were asked by More Than insurance to act as ‘Agony Aunts’ to help answer some of their customers gardening questions. Never the one to turn down a spot of work, Nick fired over a reply, as quick as a flash.

“Yes, WE would love to help!”, he said, cc-ing me in to the email conversation before promptly engaging his ‘out of office’ email reply.

Cheers, Nick.

So, sitting at my desk, surrounded by a stack of gardening books, my mouse cursor a’ twitching over the Google search box, I patiently awaited my horticultural inquiry. As it turned out, there was to be no agony – the question, in, er, question was concerning one of my areas of expertise – poorly maintained, filthy garden furniture.

Stand down, Google, I’ve got this one covered…

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My garden furniture was once gleaming white, but after a few years of having it it’s now grey and weather-stained. How can I get it back to being bright white?”

A very good question. Pristine white tables and chairs will turn fifty shades of grey after a relatively short time if left outside and unprotected against the elements. Fortunately, we have a couple of tricks up our sleeves which will see them sparkle as white as a Hollywood smile.

Place your grubby furniture on a patio or similar, and crack open a pack of soda crystals which you can buy from most supermarkets. Add your crystals to a basin of hot water and give the solution a stir. Apply the solution to the furniture with a cloth or sponge, making sure you pay extra attention to any particularly filthy areas. If you can, leave for 24 hours before rinsing off with water. Repeat this process if you’ve still got any unsightly grey patches, and make sure you avoid getting the solution on any lawn or flower beds – this stuff isn’t very plant friendly.

For those wishing to avoid going down the chemical route, you’ll need to get hold of a pressure washer. These are handy gadgets to have on call, as they are great for scrubbing patios and washing down tools. You can also use pressure washers for cleaning wooden garden furniture, but just be mindful that some of the higher powered washers on the market can be rather brutal and will damage delicate wooden finishes if you get carried away.

Before you begin, make sure you’re wearing waterproof clothes as you’ll invariably suffer a spot of splashback. You may also wish to check wind direction before turning on the water, to make sure any clothes-laiden washing lines or al-fresco neighbours are well out of soaking distance.

Cleaning is a simple process of working your way back and forth over the surface of the furniture, paying particular attention to any nooks and crannies. You’ll also want to ensure your furniture is secured before turning on the water, or you’ll send your plastic furniture flying across the garden and through your herbaceous borders. A well-placed wellington boot should hold it firm.

Of course, to ensure your chairs and tables remain pristine for the longest time possible, prevention is always better than cure. If you’ ve got the capacity, stow away your furniture in a shed or garage when not in use. If space is an issue, cover them with a tarpaulin and weigh it down with bricks to stop the weather having its wicked way.

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For more great gardening advice, head on over to the More Than Blog here

The post More Than words appeared first on Two Thirsty Gardeners.



from Two Thirsty Gardeners http://twothirstygardeners.co.uk/2017/06/more-than-words/

Sunday, 4 June 2017

Father’s Day BBQ – how to cook the ultimate burger.

Father’s Day is fast approaching, and up goes the traditional chorus call from the kids…

“Hey, let’s treat dad to a nice BBQ on Father’s Day! He loves stuffing his face with meat, and we could fire up the BBQ and cook him dinner!”

Oh, foolish children, you won’t be allowed ANYWHERE near the BBQ – dad will NEVER relinquish his rightful place in front of the grill. Outdoor cooking is his domain, so stand aside. Dad is ‘Master of Meat’, the ‘Sausage Solicitor’. He’s ‘Père Grills’. Dad Must Cook BBQ – dad must provide…

Which of course means dad spending the day sweating over a hot grill, flipping burgers for everyone else’s enjoyment. Maybe he’ll have time to wolf down an ash covered offering in between chef-ing and waiter-ing. Maybe not. Maybe he’ll do a bit of crying as his carefully prepared halloumi kebabs slowly shed their cheesy cargo into the flaming coals, leaving behind nothing but charred peppers on sticks. This is more than a possibility.

Happily, our own Father’s Day BBQ shindig should run a lot smoother thanks to Debenhams, who have kindly furnished us with the necessary hardware to chef up something tasty. We’ve got a Charbroil gas grill ready to rumble, we are armed to the teeth with Jamie Oliver endorsed BBQ utensils (the beef patty shovel looks ideal for batting wasps away from pints of cider ) and we are even sporting a Jamie Oliver apron, complete with insensitive pig motif on the front.

But what kind of BBQ feast to serve up? Read on, meat-fans…

The ultimate, fail-proof burger recipe.

We started out using an old John Torode recipe and have gradually customised it to devastating effect. Trust us, after you’ve tried one of these meaty mouthfuls, you won’t want to go back to shop bought ones. Captain Birdseye and his flotilla of frozen meat patties will curse the very day you set eyes on this INCREDI-BURGER recipe.

Serves 6
Prep time 25 minutes plus chilling.
Cooks in 30 minutes

Ingredients
For the burgers
1 red onion, finely chopped
1 chilli (the hotter the better), finely chopped
1 large handful flat-leaf parsley, roughly chopped
2 tbsp tomato ketchup
1 tbsp oyster sauce
1 tbsp Worcestershire sauce
1 egg yolk
750g / 1lb 10oz minced beef

For the buns
Burger buns, butter, mayonnaise, ketchup, sliced tomato (beefsteak works best) and iceberg lettuce leaves.

  1. Tip the onion, chilli, parsley, ketchup, oyster sauce, Worcestershire sauce and egg yolk into a bowl with the mince. Mix and knead everything together with your manly dad hands until combined. Separate the mix into six then roll into tennis ball sized, er, balls. Flatten the burgers slightly, place them in a fridge and leave them to chill for around an hour. (This will help them hold together when cooking)
  2. Fire up the BBQ. Lay the burgers over the heat and leave them for a few minutes until the edges start to brown. Slide a fish slice under the burgers (or use a Jamie Oliver beef patty shovel) and flip them over. Leave to cook for a good 15 minutes before serving between your lettuce and tomato-ed, ketchup-lashed buns.

Bon appétit!

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For a handy list of beers to go with your burnt offerings perfectly cooked burgers, look no further than this piece Nick penned recently for the Indy Best

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Want to kit yourself out with the same fancy BBQ gear we’ve been manhandling?
Click away…

Charbroil Red ‘Patio Bistro 240’ gas barbeque
http://www.debenhams.com/webapp/wcs/stores/servlet/prod_10701_10001_326001243403_-1

Jamie Oliver ‘BBQ’ ice cold drinks tub
Price: £25
http://www.debenhams.com/webapp/wcs/stores/servlet/prod_10701_10001_3310068151971SZE_-1

Jamie Oliver ‘BBQ’ wooden handle steel spatula
Price: £12
http://www.debenhams.com/webapp/wcs/stores/servlet/prod_10701_10001_3310088153861SZE_-1

Jamie Oliver ‘BBQ’ open stripe apron
Price: £18
http://www.debenhams.com/webapp/wcs/stores/servlet/prod_10701_10001_3310268155941SZE_-1

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With thanks to Meantime for providing tasty liquid refreshment.

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from Two Thirsty Gardeners http://twothirstygardeners.co.uk/2017/06/best-burger-recipe-fathers-day-bbq/

Friday, 2 June 2017

Shelfish behaviour – a shed shelf unit review

Our allotment shed is in a disgraceful state, having been used as a receptacle of junk for most of its life. It’s a giant, wooden, allotment-based rubbish bin, to be honest. Venturing into said shed is fraught with danger – the chances of skidding on rotten pumpkin entrails or being buried under an avalanche of collapsing bean poles is high, so when Filplastic offered us a vented plastic shelving unit in an attempt to restore some kind of resemblance of order, we were more than happy to accept.

The shelf kit in question comes supplied with five fat shelves and the various supports and components needed for construction. The smaller parts come attached together in one of those plastic frame things, like a giant Airfix kit. We liked this – it prevented parts getting lost amongst the nettle/grass ‘border’ that skirts round our shed.

Construction of the unit was a straightforward affair. It took around 15 minutes to put our shelves together, and the whole process ran smoothly and swear-free*, which is possibly a first. There’s a bit of a knack getting the supporting legs to couple with the shelf sections, but we found that a gentle tap or two with a rubber head mallet helped coax them through the holes. Once up and in position, the legs on the base of the shelf unit can be screwed up or down (like the legs on a washing machine) so it will sit level on wonky surfaces.

We’ve piled all kinds of shed detritus on to our new shelves – a pair of old mice-nibbled boots, four never-to be-opened bottles of Nick’s Pea-pod wine, a brown ‘thing’ in a bag – and we’ve also discovered that it’s the perfect stage from which to rack our ciders and wines. You can fit up to ten demijohns per shelf** and the grated vents will hold a syphon tube as steady as a rock.

It’s double thumbs up from us – we’ve got a booze rack, a shelving unit, and we can now actually see the shed floor (meaning we can fit more junk inside). Hurrah for shelves!

 

Vented Plastic Shelving Unit
Size: 930 x 455 x 1885mm
Price: Normally £56.90 but they are currently on sale at a bargainous £33.63
Available from:
https://www.filplastic.co.uk/products/ventilated-plastic-shelving-930x455x1885mm

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*Jobs that cause allotment swearing (on a sliding scale of obscenity – 1 being the highest)

  1. Pulling up bindweed
  2. Attaching bird netting
  3. Stacking/unstacking plant pots
  4. Fumbling with small seeds
  5. Any other gardening job that doesn’t involve lounging around sipping cider.

** A full demijohn weighs 6.5kg, and these vented shelves can hold up to 70kg

 

 

 

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from Two Thirsty Gardeners http://twothirstygardeners.co.uk/2017/06/shelfish-behaviour-a-shed-shelf-unit-review-cider/