Tag Archive | "Jessica Heidrich"

Beer Labels – Do They Really Tell Us Anything? Part 2


Part 1 of this two-part article can be found here.

“A fiery coloured beer brewed using the finest malts, hops and crystal clear water from our own 700 metre deep well which gives this warming beer its rich, elegant finish. A perfect beer to enjoy with friends and to round off a great meal”.

Now stop a second and read that imaginary beer label description again. Then ask yourself the question “what does it actually tell me about the beer?”

We don't want one of these when reading beer labels. We want facts!

The truth is nothing, except maybe that it’s red. Or yellow. Or possibly orange.

To me all this description really says is that whoever wrote it should get out of the beer business as quickly as possible and go and write a novel.*

The scary thing is that 10 years I was writing beer labels that were pretty damn close to the one above. I was part of the problem, working in a beer industry that had gotten lazy and was content in pawning beer drinkers off with pointless prose rather than seizing the chance to educate them about the drink in the bottle.

In the past decade my opinions about how beer should be presented have changed radically. The arrival of craft beer to Europe is largely to thank for that because craft beer by its very nature almost always has something worth saying.

Craft brewers, by definition, try and use the best ingredients available to them, often in quantities that would make the bean counters at the major breweries wince. BrewDog, for example, typically uses 35 times more hops per barrel than the average industrial brewery.

So now more than ever before there’s a reason why breweries should list their ingredients. In doing so they not only make a proud statement that their beer is a quality and complex product but they also help us beer drinkers understand it just that little bit better.

To give a snapshot of where we are in the Swedish beer scene right now I grabbed three Swedish craft beers off the shelves of my local Systembolaget store to see what their packaging tells us about the beer inside.

First out we have S.t Eriks IPA from the indefatigable Jessica Heidrich. There’s no doubt the elegant 330ml bottle does a great job in raising expectations of this beer but the description itself, on this occasion, is frustratingly vague.

“A dark amber coloured IPA generously hopped with aromatic American hop varieties” is what it tells us. 

For the die-hard beer enthusiasts among us our minds instantly start churning over caramel malts and intoxicatingly stinky US hops like Amarillo, but on the basis of this description alone it is merely guesswork. For the average beer drinker who has taken this off the shelf for the first time it will almost certainly mean nothing at all**.

Next up is Gustafs Finger from Dugges. Here the Gothenburg brewery in my opinion does a good job in conveying the beer’s character as well as telling us about the major ingredients that go into making it.

This Strong Bitter (beer style – check!) with its classic dark malts (malts – check!) has both richness and strength (beer description – check!). Gustaf has a refreshing hoppy bite where Chinook, Brewers Gold and Cascade hops (hops – check!) lend taste and an inviting aroma.”

Finally lets look at the best of the bunch, Mohawk Extra India Pale Ale from flying brewer Stefan Gustavsson. This bottle label is a slam-dunk for me, containing pretty much everything I want to know about the beer inside.

“Mohawk Extra IPA is an extreme beer in the style of the American west coast brewing tradition (Beer style – check!)….. “lots of hops, high alcohol and extremely complex (beer description – check!)….”the colour is golden yellow with hints of amber (another beer description – check!).

The label then goes on to spell out all the different varieties of malts and hops in the beer (and in this particular beer that’s a lot of words!). Lots of checks there.

I concede the Mohawk is a 500ml bottle and therefore there’s considerably more room to fit on text than the two previous skinnier examples. However if this little exercise is anything to go by it’s encouraging to see that craft breweries in this country seem to be well ahead of the big boys when it comes to sharing information with us drinkers.

What would you like to see printed on beer bottle labels and cans as standard? Do you really want to know the names of the hops and malts or is it all just overkill? Would you like to know serving temperatures, the correct glassware, what foods to pair it with or the day the beer was bottled or canned?

Have you got any examples of beer labels that say a lot but nothing at all or have you already found the perfect beer label?

Let us know your thoughts by commenting below. Using you feedback I’ll maybe then attempt to construct the ideal beer label :)

 

(Ed Note: I have a lot more to say about this subject, such as the idea of Swedish breweries implementing a standardized beer ‘guide’ similar to the Cyclops scheme in the UK and the equivalent that’s already in place here at the Systembolaget – does anyone pay any attention to those funny little symbols by the way? – so I’ll be returning to this topic in the coming weeks).

*As I wrote that I’m probably going to ignore my own advice. However I really do want to write a novel (and play for Liverpool).

**In fairness to S:t Eriks they have a wonderful website which goes into great detail about each of their beers. Of course you’d never all know this from picking up the bottle……

 

 

 

 

 

Posted in Mish MashComments (18)

That was the week that was.


To avoid the danger of knäck poisoning from all the Christmas beers I’m tasting right now I thought I’d change lanes for a bit and bring you news of some stories that broke in the Swedish beer scene this week.

Erm..can someone please explain the blow-up doll in the background?

First out one of the nicest (and most tattooed?) guys in the Swedish beer industry, Jonas Danielsson from Brill & Co, took to the airwaves yesterday to tell listeners of Bandit FM why beer is rocking the drinks scene right now. Great to hear Jonas explaining why more and more people are switching on to craft beer and off from ‘McDonald’ beers!

Mathias and Jessica want to get beer back on the dining room table.

Food and beer is one of the most exciting and simultaneously frustrating aspects of working with beer. It’s like being told the secret to clean energy but despite screaming about it to everyone you meet most of them just smile politely and continue using fossil fuels anyway.

So that’s why this week’s announcement that Swedish Michelin-starred chef Mathias Dahlgren is teaming up with the Queen of flying brewers Jessica Heidrich to produce a series of new beers is so significant. Dahlgren has long been an advocate of pairing beer with food and as one of this country’s leading culinary figures could really help turn the tide in beer’s favour at long last. Details of the two beers (which will be available from next year exclusively at Dahlgren’s restaurant in Stockholm) can be found here.

Most of us already knew Akkurat in Stockholm was a great place to drink suds and this week they had it confirmed (again) in writing by scooping the ‘Best Beer Bar 2011’ award at the Bartender’s Choice Awards. Congratulations to Stene, Rille and the rest of the crew. Worth mentioning that Oliver Twist and Black & Brown were also nominated in the same category.

And lastly this was the week that the BeerSweden Forum galloped past the 15,000 post mark! That’s 15,000 posts that the irritatingly friendly BSF community have made about beer since the end of the summer. If there’s a more active and generally awesome online beery hang-out for the likes of people like us then I haven’t seen it. Great work all you BSF-ers!

That’s it for now gang. Looking out of the window looking at the sideways snow I’m suddenly feeling the urge for a stout. Perhaps this one?

Have a great Friday and I hope you drift happily into a brilliant weekend!

Cheers and beers!

Darren

 

 

Posted in The BeervineComments (0)

Is this Sweden’s best beer brand website?


It may only be a few hours ago that it went ‘live’ but I’m already prepared to throw my hat into the ring and say that the new S:t Eriks website is the best branded Swedish beer site on the net.

Followers of this blog will of course know that I am a huge advocate of putting beer online. It’s the axis around which this blog spins because although no-one can confidently predict the future of craft beer what we do know for certain is that it will be somewhere online.

Which is why I have always been more than a little frustrated that the majority of the Swedish beer industry has yet to totally grasp the importance of providing good-looking, engaging and updated content to us, the growing legion of virtual beer drinkers.

And which is also why I almost jumped off my chair with excitement when I clicked into the new S:t Eriks website. Finally here’s a site with back stories, character, an elegant and sophisticated design and usable content in the form of in-depth product details (it even has handy tasting spider graphs). Throw in an in-built blog, a picture library and much more and this isn’t just a home-run for Jessica and the team – they’ve gone and knocked it out of the park!

Other beer brand owners and importers take note. This is the kind of way we want to see our beers look online. This is more like how we want to be informed, educated and (this is important) entertained about our favourite drink.

Congratulations to Jessica and everyone else behind putting this great-looking website together. Today you’ve just raised the beer bar a little bit higher.

 

 

 

 

 

Posted in The BeervineComments (3)

BeerSwedenTV EP99 – Jessica vs. Mattias


Posted in VideosComments (4)

The European Beer Bloggers Conference 2011


Right this second I know exactly how that crazy Microsoft founder felt.*

After three days at the first ever European Beer Bloggers Conference 2011 in London I feel so pumped I could run up to complete strangers and shout things like “THE FUTURE OF BEER MEDIA IS ONLINE!” and “BLOGGERS ROCK!” right into their startled faces.

But I won’t because quite frankly that would be a little silly (although both statements are true I don’t think people are really ready for that just yet).

So instead I’ll try and climb out of the bloggers bubble I’ve been inflating around myselft over the past few days, exercise restraint and say that I believe I have just witnessed the genre of beer blogging come of age in London and stake its claim as a credible and indispensable media source of the future.

Over 70 delegates attended this inaugural event with the vast majority from the UK blogging scene as well as representatives from Belgium, Italy, the Netherlands and of course me waving the flag for Sweden.

*It might not look cool when learning how to detect faults in beer but it was a fascinating experiment to sample beers spiked with off-flavours. Food and beer pairings were a major theme throughout the conference and some of the leading UK bloggers (and an international panel of bloggers with me in it) gave a series of talks on where we see the future of online media heading.

Over three days of fascinating sessions and passionate debate (fuelled by some amazing beers) we took a long hard look at ourselves as a community, talked about how far we’d already come and more importantly how far we’ve still got left to go in establishing beer blogs as a respected and trusted source of beer content.

What I learnt has left me in no doubt bloggers are the vanguard of modern beer media. As conference organiser Allan Wright put it: “You (bloggers) have an opportunity to become the leading source of information about beer on the planet. You just have to take it”.

The people I met at #bbc11 (just twitter search that for an entertaining timeline rundown of what happened in London) were possibly the most passionate, engaged, driven and inspiring bunch I’ve ever met. The vast majority spend hundreds, even thousands of hours each year blogging about beer without a thought for reward.

They do it simply because they love beer and because they want more people to feel the same way about it as they do.

*Some random images from the conference, which attracted some big beer names, a goblin and the opportunity to try some amazing beers from all over Europe. Oh and if anyone from Camden Town Brewery has seen the other half of my glasses I’d be grateful if you’d get in touch :)

But blogging aside the European Beer Bloggers Conference was a breakthrough for an entirely different reason as four Swedish breweries took their first tentative steps into the world of export.

Sigtuna Brygghus, Jessica Heidrich (with her S:t Eriks beers), Nynäshmans and Oppigårds all had their beers represented at the conference’s headline event ‘The Night of Many Beers’ and I think it’s fair to say we grabbed more than our fair share of attention.

It was amazing to see beers from 4 Swedish craft brewers being poured in London. Here's Mattias and Jessica getting ready to greet the bloggers.

To see Swedish beers being poured up in the UK capital was pretty special and to witness the smiles on the faces of hardened beer bloggers as they tried them (in-between furiously scribbling down notes) confirmed something I’ve been saying for some time now.

Swedish craft beer is world class. **

There’s a lot of people I’d like to thank for the last few days. Firstly the four Swedish breweries that took the time and the initiative to be a part of this amazing event. It was important to showcase just how far the Swedish beer scene has come and in my opinion we did all that and more.

I’d also like to thank the conference organisers Zephyr Adventures for staging an amazing event that far exceeded any expectations I had and Mark Dredge for helping pull everything together.

Then there’s the sponsors, headed by MolsonCoors, whose financial contributions made the event happen but more importantly made us bloggers feel valued. I’ve also got to pick out Pilsner Urquell for cleverly transforming a room in a London conference centre into a little bit of Pilsen and serving us their beer in all its unfiltered and unpasteurised greatness.

Finally I want to say thanks to all the amazing bloggers I met, who shared their passion for beer with me and made me realise that I am a part of something incredibly big and exciting.

The talk is the European Beer Bloggers Conference 2012 will be held in either the UK or the Czech Republic. Wherever it’s held BeerSweden will be there and I urge as many of the other Swedish beer bloggers who can make it to join me there.***

*minus the horrendous level of personal sweat of course.

** I know a big statement like this will inevitably get some of you rolling your eyes up to the heavens and itching to post a comment telling me to get a grip on reality but our beers were poured up together with some amazing beers from the US, France, the UK and Italy and they more than held their own. So say what you want but we were there and we owned it!

***I apologise if this post is a little too much blog and not enough beer but hope you’ll humour me just this once.

Posted in The BeervineComments (7)

BeerSweden to attend 2011 European Beer Bloggers Conference


Next weekend it’s ”all London Baby!” as I pack my bags and head over to the UK capital for the first ever European Beer Bloggers Conference!

Now I can practically hear the sniggering in some quarters already. A conference for beer bloggers? Are you serious? Whatever next? A conference for hundreds of fans of a particular make of American BBQ that like to call themselves Eggheads? (actually there already is one of those).

The serious truth is that beer blogging as a genre has developed in recent years to such an extent it now feels grown up enough to stage its own conference. In fact the first North American Beer Bloggers Conference was held back in November last year in Boulder, Colarado , where over 100 delegates participated.

The first European sister event runs over a packed two days and has attracted some of the most influential beer bloggers, food and drink writers and drinks industry figures, mainly from the UK but also Italy, the Netherlands and yes me representing Sweden!

And the good news is I won’t be all by myself as I’ve managed to talk Sigtuna Brygghus’s Head Brewer Mattias Hammenlind and flying brewer Jessica Heidrich (the creator of the S:t Eriks series of beers) into joining me in London to spread the buzz about Swedish beers among conference-goers.

Not only that but both Oppigårds Bryggeri and Nynäshamns Ångbryggeri are also sending over cases of their beers which will contribute to a formidable Swedish table that we are jointly hosting at the main ‘Night of Many Beers’ event being held at the Camden Town Brewery.

I’ll also be joining an international panel of bloggers to share experiences with delegates about the pitfalls and pleasures of writing and running blogs and to explore the possibilities of cooperating on an international scale.

I’m unbelievably excited to be a part of this inaugural conference and have high hopes it will underline what I have been saying for years now about the increasingly import role of blogs in spreading the word about great beer to a growing community of ‘on-line drinkers’.

To borrow a line from an article I wrote for Maltsen a few months back: “The responsibility to improve the status of beer blogging, is, of course, largely that of the bloggers themselves. As a group we need to take ourselves seriously first before we can expect anybody else to”.

This conference is a giant step towards this goal. The fact that four of Sweden’s most ambitious craft breweries will be represented at the conference in London next week also tells its own story.

I’ll of course be blogging the whole trip (you can’t attend a bloggers conference and not blog it now, can you) so remember to check back to see how we get on!

(ps: It’s still not too late to join us if you fancy a few days drinking world class beer in one of the most exciting cities in the world!)

 

 

Posted in The BeervineComments (1)

Beer Review – St Eriks IPA


An India Pale Ale (IPA)

A collaboration between brewer Jessica Heidrich and Galatea. 5.3% ABV. Systembolaget Article Number 1463. Price 17.90SEK (330ml bottle) An India Pale Ale (IPA)

Crystal clear golden orange/amber body sitting under an eggshell white head.

It's taken me a few beers but I think I've got the signature smell of St Eriks nailed down now. There's a distinct theme I detect running through Jessia Heidrich's hoppy beers (the Pilsner, Sommarlager, this IPA and the Pale Ale I tried at the Stockholm Beer and Whisky Festival). It's a sulphur compound with the catchy name p-mentha-8-thiol-3-one. The more acceptable 'drink-speak' terminology refers to it as ripe blackcurrants and the aromas of Sauvignon Blanc wine. I call it cats pee. There's a grassy, hay-like hop aroma to this beer and smells of stinging nettles 'sprinkled' by felines. Despite describing itself as a US-style IPA I don't pick up much of the usual sweet pineapple and tropical fruit. This beer, like many of the St Eriks beers before it has an invigoratingly raw and distinctly spicy, citrus nose.

Despite some rather jagged aromas the beer itself is surprisingly gentle in the mouth, with some nice soft peach/apricot notes washing over a herbal, bitter hop finish. There's a pleasant grape-like sweetness to this beer too. Perhaps the wine references don't just stop at cats!

IPAs like this one combine drinkability with nice levels of hoppy bitterness, making them perfect modern all-round beers to have in the fridge. St Eriks IPA will match up well with a wide range of foods, including Asian cuisine, pizzas and pratically any spicy dish where the herbal qualities of this beer will find a willing partner.

Nerd note

I continue to be a fan of the St Eriks range of beers, which is doing a fine job of delivering interesting beers at reasonable prices to a wider drinking audience. However with this IPA I felt the intense flavours of sweet mango, grapefruit and rich pineapple I associate with US IPAs could have been explored a bit more. It feels like we've got a little stuck with the same hop flavours as in the first Pilsner and this was the beer style to unleash them in. Having said that it's a very easy-drinking IPA and for those of you not too familiar with the style who don't want to jump straight into the deep end with the ultra-hoppy US versions this is a great place to start getting hooked on hops.

Rating

3.2 of 5

Posted in Beer ReviewsComments (5)

Beer Review – St Eriks Pompona Porter


A Porter. A collaboration between brewer Jessica Heidrich and Galatea. Available between 1st September – 14th November or while stocks last.

5.4% ABV. Systembolaget Article Number 11409-03. Price 19.90SEK (330ml bottle)

Look

A delicious looking dark dark brown porter with a thick, clingy cappuccino-coloured head. If you count the bottle too (which has been embellished and embossed) then this is one hell of a sexy looking beer!

Smell

Not surprisingly for a porter named after a type of vanilla the first thing to register with your olfactory system (also known as your nose) is creamy vanilla sauce, backed up by dark chocolate, juniper berries and burnt toast. After a while the vanilla subsides but the chocolate lingers on. I swear the smell of this beer was so rich I actually put on weight sniffing it. A 5 out of 5 aroma!

Taste

The intensity of the nose somehow didn’t all transfer over to the taste of this porter. There’s a creamy vanilla sauce front and then things suddenly change and the flavours turn dry, bitter and roasted. The mouthfeel also seems to transform from medium bodied to a shade thin, making me think of an odd combination of BrewDog’s Zeitgeist watered down with Guinness. Bags of piquant roasted malt, chocolate and ink before a dry coffee-like finish.

Food

With its distinctive vanilla and chocolate character this porter screams out to be paired with a rich chocolate cake and other chocolate-based dessert.

Nerd Note

Pompona Porter is the latest edition to the revitalised S:t Eriks family of beers created by Swedish brewer Jessica Heidrich and Galatea. The fact Jessica has experimented with vanilla with this popular Swedish beer brand demonstrates just how exciting and adventurous beer making in this country is right now. At 5.4% this has a lot of the coffee and chocolate flavours you’ll find in more rugged US porters but has a far higher degree of drinkability. If you like vanilla that is!

Score


Posted in Beer ReviewsComments (2)

Beer review – S:t Eriks Sommarlager


A Premium Lager

A collaboration between brewer Jessica Heidrich, Galatea and Three Towns Independent Brewers 4.7% ABV. Systembolaget Article Number 11417. 17.90SEK (330ml bottle) A Premium Lager

An extremely pale 'white gold' body under a thick brilliant white head. Just have to mention the bottle again as I think it is elegant branding with a capital E!

Light aromas of grass and floral perfume, some cereal malt and a sprinkle of dirt. Not the pine and tropical hop rush I was expecting.

Much of the action in the beer comes at the end. There's an odd bitter/sweet start that reminded me of tonic water (quinine). In the middle there's some light bready malt action and a hint of peaches and then wham....say hello to the hops! There's a surprisingly aggressive finish given this beer's faint nose. Perhaps a suggestion of metal?

This is hand and glove stuff for the Swedish midsommar table. Not only does it look stunning but this beer's light malt and hop character will pair wonderfully with the endless amounts of pickled herring, salmon and almond potatoes you'll be scoffing to celebrate this most 'Swedish' of Swedish holidays.

Nerd note

This is the second S:t Eriks from brewer Jessica Heidrich and Three Towns Independent Brewers, following on from the S:t Eriks Pilsner launched back in the end of March. It doesn't have as much going on as its predecessor and I feel it's a touch unbalanced, with a weak start but strong bitter finish. However at under 18 SEK a bottle I think this is a very solid summer beer and ideal for midsommar!

Rating

3.0 of 5

Posted in Beer ReviewsComments (5)


Advert

Facebook

BeerSweden.se on Facebook