Tag Archive | "Stefan Gustavsson"

Beer Review – Mohawk Unfiltered Lager


A Vienna Lager (with ambitions to be a pale ale)

From Mohawk Brewing Brewing Company (Stefan Gustavsson), Sweden. (brewed at De Proefbrouwerij, Belgium) 5.3& ABV. 35 IBUs. Coming to the Systembolaget June 1st. Currently available in selected restaurants & bars. A Vienna Lager (with ambitions to be a pale ale)

It has the orangy golden shimmer of a Vienna lager and the rawness of a homebrewed beer as it pours at first slightly hazy before getting progressively more and more cloudy as the yeast in the bottle mixes into the beer. Small, fragile white head. I just love the unfiltered look!

Oh what a difference from the last lager I reviewed! Not a hint of metal or artificial malt sweetness. Here there's a subtle hint of tangerines and toffee and lightly toasted white bread. Some flowers and cream too. Everything smells authentic, wholesome, handmade.

The key to this beer is not so much in its taste - although it delivers some deliciously juicy orange and passionfruit flavours - but it's the almost frightening ease in which you drink it. There is such an exquisite balance between the crisp German bittering hops and the 'fruit salad' US and NZ aroma and dry-hops that it's practically impossible to resist gulping it down. The unfiltered approach combined with bottle priming creates a satisfying and soft mouthfeel.

As the picture suggests this lager is the perfect counter to spicy Mexican food. I had my bottle together with strips of beef fried in garlic, chilli, cumin and lime, home-baked tortilla breads, oven-grilled vegetables with chill, garlic, coriander and goats cheese and all this served with guacamole and homemade salsa. It really doesn't get any better.

Nerd note

This is another beer from Swedish 'flying brewer' Stefan 'Mr Mohawk' Gustavsson brewed at De Proefbrouwerij in Belgium. It is described as a mash-up between a Vienna lager and a 'new world' pale ale - a description that is spot on in my book. Bottle conditioning means there is some yeast 'throw' in the bottle so it's up to you if you want to pour it gently or give it a whirl and slam it all into your glass. I'm a fan of the second approach! I'm not sure how many bottles are coming to the Systembolaget this June but I doubt if they are going to be enough. I'm coming out early with my predication that this is going to be one of the summer smashes of 2012!

Rating

4.3 of 5

Posted in Beer ReviewsComments (2)

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 (17)

BeerSweden Advent Beer Calendar 2011 – Dec 1


Posted in VideosComments (7)

BeerSweden TV EP68 – Mohawk Goldings vs Amarillo


I got a little ‘hop-headed’ in this episode and neglected to mention that Mr Mohawk Stefan Gustavsson brewed both these beers at Sigtuna Brygghus. If you really want to know the levels of Alpha Acid in each hop variety (the stuff that makes hops bitter) in Goldings it is typically around 4-6% while in US Amarillo hops it is up around 8-11%.


Posted in VideosComments (6)

First Look at Sigtuna’s Christmas Beers


Christmas may still be 66 shopping days away but in terms of beer it’s come a little early this year with this exclusive first look at what’s coming out of Sigtuna Brygghus this Yuletide.

The Mohawk series just keeps on running with the upcoming release of Blizzard, a 9.7% ABV porter I first wrote about here. Seems that gypsy brewer Stefan Gustavsson is feeling particularly generous this Christmas, gifting us a beer with 10 different types of malts in it!

The much acclaimed Midvinternattens Mörker also makes a welcome return (in a slightly more festive disguise than last year). This spicy 6.2% ABV winter ale is yet another creation of Stefan’s together with the team at Wicked Wine and is being billed as the ideal partner to strong cheeses and chocolate desserts.

Finally we have Sigtuna’s very own Merry Christmas, a 6% ABV ale that is English in style and flavoured with bitter orange, vanilla and cloves to give it that festive feeling. I wonder who the rather bemused looking Santa is on the front label….?





Posted in The BeervineComments (5)

BeerSweden TV EP 43 – Mohawk Barley Wine


Posted in VideosComments (1)

Beer Review – Mohawk Barley Wine


A Barley Wine

A colloboration between Wicked Wine and Stefan Gustavsson. Brewed at Sigtuna Brygghus. 10.5% ABV - Systembolaget Article Number TBC. 36.40 SEK (330ml bottle) A Barley Wine

Reassuring burst of CO2 upon opening. Cloudy cognac colour under a roasted corn-coloured head that quickly evaporates. There's an intriguing deep amber/red tinge to it. It looks old - like the cover of an antique leather-bound book.

Straight away the English heritage of this beer shines through. The candy-spicy-floral notes from the Goldings hops are layered over a rich, bread-dipped-in rum body. It's completely lacking any US grapefruit and pine vibes - Hallelujah! There's wood in there too. It smells like an old staircase that someone's painted with treacle. Biggest negative is that there's a hint of solvent from all the booze. It's muscling its way through the malt, saying "look at me, look at me!!!" This beer needs some time.

Before I start describing the tastes I've got to mention the mouth feel. There is hardly any carbonation here at all. The beer is incredibly smooth, with just a tickle of gentle effervescence in the finish. Treacle, treacle, treacle, melted brown sugar, nutty, toffee pecan ice-cream (without the ice-cream), molases, some dry leafy tea notes. Taste starts off as sweet then transmogrifies into a balancing dry, nutty middle and finishes with a warming boozy glow. There's reputedly 100 IBUs in here but it is perfectly checked by the treacle sweetness.

Barley wine is one of, if not the, greatest cheese beer there is and often knocks wine flat on its back. US BWs (which tend to be more hoppy and tropically sweet than English BWs) are fab with Blue/Gorgonzola, while the drier, nuttier, more raisin-like English BWs go hand and glove with mature cheddars and a stinky chunk of English Stilton.

Nerd note

Mohawk Barley Wine joins a very exclusive club of Swedish craft beers that have strayed over 10% ABV. What makes this beer particularly interesting is that it is brewed using only Goldings hops from Kent in the UK (and is dry hopped with them too for extra intensity) and this classic hop's signature candy-spice-floral notes are clearly evident in the nose and taste. Personally I think it's running a bit hot right now and would benefit from a few years of ageing in order for the residual sugars to calm down and the booze to soften out. I'm scoring it as it tastes today, but can imagine it might easily increase a half point in years to come.

Rating

3.5 of 5

Posted in Beer ReviewsComments (7)

Mohawk Barley Wine – an exclusive first look!


Here’s an exclusive first look at the latest in one of Sweden’s most successful ever beer franchises – Mohawk Barley Wine!

I’ve been lucky enough to get my hands on a couple of bottles of this eagerly anticipated 10.5% ABV barley wine that boasts a tongue-curling 100 IBUs and is modelled on a recipe for an imperial ale made in Scotland back in 1835.

Now stop, read the previous paragraph one more time and then tell me beer isn’t the most interesting, innovative and just drop-dead-gorgeous drink out there right now – I dare you!

Gypsy brewer Stefan Gustavsson has kept good to every single word he told followers of BeerSweden’s Facebook page back in April by producing two new additions to the Mohawk family – the barley wine you see above and Mohawk Stitch (a brown porter) which both go on sale at the Systembolaget on September 1st.

I’ll be hunting down a bottle of Stitch over the next few days (so stayed tuned) but what do we already know about this big-arse barley wine?

Well once again it is a beer borne out of the collaboration between Stefan and Swedish drinks importer Wicked Wine and once again it has been brewed by the creative team over at Sigtuna Brygghus.

In a departure from all the US-dominated beers released of late MBW is brewed using ONLY East Kent Goldings hops from Kent for both aroma and bitterness. It’s even been dry-hopped with them too for good measure to ramp it up to the levels of a modern day double IPA.

Now I was born and raised in East Kent, so I’m extra excited about trying this beer!

It is built on a foundation of pale ale and pilsner malts with a sprinkling of Munich and Crystal malt to add more depth of flavour.

Barley wine is a malt-accented beer that benefits hugely from being stored for several years in order to fully develop and express all its complex wine-like layers of flavours. I however can’t wait that long, so expect the first ever blog review of Mohawk Barley Wine in the next 24 hours!

Posted in The BeervineComments (6)

Last of the Mohawk-ans


It’s a great headline isn’t it? In fact I can just picture it strapping the front page of the infamous tattle-trading English newspaper The Sun, famous for such unforgettable tabloid headlines like OBAMA LAMA DING DONG (used above a story covering the meeting of President Obama and the Dalai Lama) and I’M ONLY HERE FOR DE BEERS, printed the day after thieves attempted to steal a De Beers diamond from London’s Millennium Dome.

You thought there were only three Mohawks didn't you? You were wrong!

I feel a bit like one of those fanatical Star Wars fans just after they found out that the first three films they had worshipped and committed line-by-line to memory over the last 16 years were not, in fact, the entire story but there was actually quite a lot more Mr Lucas had been holding back. The cheeky little peko-peko.

But in keeping with the tabloid philosophy of never letting facts get in the way of a good story headline I’m using it anyway, as it was generally accepted this was going to be a beer trilogy until the man behind the Mohawks, gypsy brewer Stefan Gustavsson jumped into a debate on BeerSweden’s Facebook page the other day to tell me otherwise.

Lamenting the last of the Mohawk-ans (it’s so good I used it twice) he replied: ”Don’t worry Darren. You will see more Mohawk in September”!

”For this autumn Systembolaget wanted to go Old World. The first one they liked is Mohawk Stitch. It is inspired by the strong brown beers that used to be party-gyled (Ed: that means mixed people) from March and October beer in England in the 18th century. Our version is a Brown Porter at 5,3 % abv, made with brown malt, honey and dark sugars.

”The second one is … More Mohawk Barley Wine (Ed: oh I like that!!). This one is modelled on a recipe for an Imperial Ale made in Scotland in 1835. It is made with mostly pale malt and huge amounts of classic English hops to an abv of 10,5 % and around 90 IBU. I suspect that it will age well for a few years. :-)

”I think I will keep the third one a secret for a while yet…”.






Posted in Mish MashComments (4)

Beer Review – Mohawk Extra IPA


An India Pale Ale (IPA)

A collaboration between Wicked Wine, Stefan Gustavsson and Sigtuna Brygghus 7.5% ABV. Systembolaget Article Number: 1419-01 An India Pale Ale (IPA)

A crystal clear orange/amber body with a thick, creamy puck of white head.

For a beer with 7 - that's right 7 - hop varieties the leafy nose on this beer is predictably huge but not as 'green' and fresh as in Amarillo Spring (another Swedish hop fav of mine). They're more thick, more musty and heavy hitting. Put it this way, if I was to put Mohawk in the ring with Amarillo Spring Mohawk would be George Foreman and AS would be Ali. Loads of spicy orange marmalade and a dash of that lime chutney you get with your popodoms at Indian restaurants. Surprisingly sweet malt smells coming through too.

There's not as much lemon/pineapple vibes as I would expect considering the abundance of US hop varieties. It's more spicy marmalade, some tropical fruit juice and then the hops, oh boy those hops come crashing in. I'm not talking fresh hop cones here but more intense, acidic, bitter hop pellets. Anyone who's chewed on one of these on a brewery tour will know exactly what I mean. This really needed every decimal point of its 7.5% ABV to carry off such a wild level of hop intensity.

With such an intense IPA you're going to need a dish with intense flavours to stand up to it. I mentioned some Indian spice and think this would meld perfectly with a spicy Indian meal.

Nerd note

IBUs (International Bitterness Units) are measured on a scale from 1-100, after which your tongue normally raises the white flag. That's what makes this beer so intriguing, because on paper it just shouldn't work but somehow the guys behind it have managed to make a 127 IBU beer smooth and drinkable. If you think you can handle your hops then you're going to love this!

Rating

4.5 of 5

Posted in Beer ReviewsComments (4)

Advert

Facebook

BeerSweden.se on Facebook