Monday, May 1, 2023

CorkBillyBeers #21. Craft Wheat beer with Rye River, Tom Crean, Whitefield, Ballykilcavan.

CorkBillyBeers #21

Craft Wheat beer with Rye River, Tom Crean, Whitefield, Ballykilcavan

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Rye River Backwaters American Wheat, 6.2% ABV, 500 ml bottle Supervalu


Beers brewed in this American Wheat style do not exhibit the clove or high levels of banana-like esters that are hallmarks of the Bavarian wheat beer styles. And this is the case here. Regular European wheat beers use special strains of yeast that produce notes of banana and clove as by-products of fermentation.


Backwaters has the clear golden colour you’d expect from a wheat beer. Dank aromas rise from the glass in a diplomatic kind of way, nothing extreme, plus mild aromas of passion fruit and citrus. The hops, Cascade and Strata, bring bright fresh fruit. 


With the darker colour and malt prominent, you are inclined to think lager rather than wheat beer. But everything’s fine in this beer garden from start to a very satisfactory clean and crisp finish, hops and malts combining more or less perfectly.


And that dankness? Well it comes from the Strata which has been described as “Passion fruit meets pot.” Along with the exotic fruit comes this herbal note of drifting cannabis (the dankness)

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Cascade is one of the best known hops and has been described as the hop  “that made hops famous”. Bursting with zesty grapefruit flavour and aroma, Cascade, with its bright citrus and some soft floral and spice, is a real treat and is credited with the making of American Pale. In this wheat beer, it also plays a crucial role. In fairness, Rye River have used their ingredients well and we have a good one in our hands.


Very Highly Recommended.


Geeks Bits

Malts: CARAPILS, VIENNA MALT, WHEAT, ALE MALT,

Hops: CASCADE, STRATA

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Tom Crean Druid’s Wheat Beer, 4.2% ABV, 440ml can, Carry Out Killarney


Druid’s, the wheat beer, “celebrates the landscape”,  according to the brewery. “… a beer that gives acknowledgement to our rich local ancient history, we used delicately smoked oak malted barley, the reduced hop bill allows the full wheat and yeast flavours to dominate.” 


Colour is a hazy pale lemon/yellow with a soft white head that soon loses height. The delicately smoked barley and the yeast has its say as seems to have been the intention here. Finishes with a refreshing tartness.


Not your classic wheat beer, but not a million miles away either. Brewer Bill Shepherd has his way of doing things.  He has his fans. In Christmas 2021 the Independent’s Aoife Carrigy recommended this as one of her 10 great Irish beers to pair with festive food.

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Bill was born in Chester in the northwest of England. He worked as a firefighter in the London Fire Brigade and later graduated from Chester University with a degree in Archaeology.  He has retrained as a brewer and is turning out quite a range of Tom Crean beers, everything from the 1% Last man Standing to the Six Magpies Stout with lots of ales (pale and red and IPA) in between.


With a wide range of beers and ales brewed on the premises, including prize winners, their brewery bar is the perfect place to enjoy a refreshing pint and soak in the atmosphere. Head over to the brewery page here  for more info…


For a recent post on the brewery go here.  


Recommended


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Whitefield The Banker Weissbier, 5.2% ABV, 500 ml bottle No. 21


Whitefield’s Cuilan tells us about this beer: A slight twist on the German classic wheat beer the addition of rye malt gives a drier, lighter flavour profile and is very refreshing on warm summer days. Yes! I know we live in Ireland.”


The brewery kit in Templemore was made to make wheat beer. Really. “Our brewhouse was originally commissioned by Pauliner, so it is designed as a wheat beer brewery. The fermentation tanks are low, wide and flat bottomed to help maintain consistent flavour profile while using a volatile yeast. So it comes as no surprise that our best sellers in both draught and bottle are Weiss beers. This makes it tricky to brew drier hoppy beers, so we focus on the malty styles of beer with plenty of sweetness.”

Colour here is a mid-amber, no haze and you can see fountains of little bubbles rising. The head doesn’t hang about. Aromas are on the modest side, hints of spice perhaps, rye perhaps. On the palate, there is no shortage of flavour, banana and clove included. An excellent supple drink with flavours continuing to a refreshing finish.

Highly Recommended.

Recent detailed post on Whitefield here.

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Ballykilcavan Robinson's Revenge Raspberry Wheat Beer 5.00% ABV, 440ml can CraftCentral


In the winter of 1861, after a bitter quarrel, the famous gardener William Robinson stormed out of Ballykilcavan opening all the greenhouses to kill the plants in them. This American Raspberry Wheat Beer gets his name from that vengeful act. That’s the story, at least one side of it, behind the beer’s name.


Colour is a darkish amber/orange, murky (enough to enable dastardly acts). Aromas are modest with hops taking a firm grip early on. And never really letting go though the raspberry (listed in the ingredients) gets a turn in the mouth before the US hops closes its grip again.


Ingredients: Water, wheat, Barley, Oats, Raspberries, Hops, Yeast.


The producers: “Ballykilcavan Farm has been the home of our family for 13 generations. We have lived and worked here since 1639, and diversification has always been important to keep our farm viable for future generations. When I took over Ballykilcavan from my father in 2004, my motivation was to try to sustain it so that someone else would be able to take it over from me.”


Ballykilcavan is an amazing place. We recently published a post on the brewery there and you may read it here


Recommended


Saturday, April 29, 2023

Achill Island In The Sun. And Wind!

 Achill Island In The Sun. And Wind!

The classic shot of Keem Bay

Lucky to get a bright sun all day long on a recent visit to the beautiful Achill Island, one of the best parts of County Mayo. We drove on, as you must, at Achill Sound, and then cut left to do a loop along the coast, heading for Dooega, then back across to rejoin the R319, before driving on to Keem with its well-known bay.



Featherweight world boxing champion, Johnny Kilbane,
stands near the Achill Boxing Club 

In the early part of the loop, from the R319 toi Dooga and back, there are some fantastic coastal views. Look out for the sculpture of world boxing champion Johnny Kilbane and the castle (or tower) associated with Grace O'Malley). Keem, the end of the line, has caught international attention as it was featured in the recent Banshees of Inisherin film.

Grace O'Malley castle with lifeboat.

Enjoyed the stop there and then began to retrace our steps. As it was getting close to lunchtime and having remembered that we had dined at the Beehive in Keel on a previous visit, we did the same again. Having made a reasonably early start, we had enough time on our hands to visit the Ballycroy National Park and that will feature in another post.

Graveyard on slope.

Swirling water creates foamy trails. By edge of Keem Beach

Swirling water creates foamy trails. By edge of Keem Beach


Swirling water creates foamy trails. By edge of Keem Beach


Swirling water creates foamy trails. By edge of Keem Beach


Cuan na hAisleime

Cuan na hAisleime

Cheeky lamb

Keem Bay

Keem Bay

Keem Bay

Keem Bay

Keem Bay

Cuan na hAisleime

Cuan na hAisleime

Panini at The Beehive, Keel. It is a fully licensed café and craft shop. 

Busy in the sky. Every time I looked, I saw at least one contrail

Panini at The Beehive, Keel. They take pride in providing "honest wholesome foods sourced from local suppliers and are open seven days:

 



Also on this trip

Superb Dining At Westport's The Pantry & Corkscrew

Achill Island in the sun. And wind.

Sipping Mescan Beer. Doolough Valley.

Ballycroy National Park



Friday, April 28, 2023

Ballycroy Wild Nephin National Park. Prepare to be surprised and delighted.

Ballycroy Wild Nephin National Park

Prepare to be surprised and delighted. 



Ballycroy Wild Nephin National Park, in North Mayo, is one of the last intact active blanket bog systems in Ireland and Western Europe.

The Visitor Centre in Ballycroy village is the main information point for the Park. Relax and enjoy the hospitality at the Visitor Centre, which houses an interactive exhibition, experienced National Park Guides, the Ginger & Wild Café and the accessible Tóchar Daithí Bán Nature Trail (2km).

Achill's Slievemore (from the viewing point)

We started off on the nature trail (quite a bit of it is on a boardwalk) and finished later in the afternoon on another easy trail, the 2km Claggan Mountain Coastal Trail. We stopped first at a long-standing pool with wildflowers and many insects, including those busy water beatles, to be seen. 

Soon we got a helping hand from S——- and spotted the tadpoles flying around just below the surface. We helped net a few for the nearby hut where visiting kids (somewhat younger than us!) get an idea, both entertaining and educational, of what lives in the park. (If your school can’t come, they will go to you!).


Go to full size to see the tadpoles!

Much of what they do here is hands on, as with us and the tadpoles, and insects such as the rower (on his belly) and the paddler (on his back). As you move on, keep an eye out for insect-eating plants such as sundew and butterwort, as well as hares, hen harriers and peregrine falcons. !

More to learn then from a sod of turf and how it stores carbon and how that carbon is released if the turf is lifted. In the visitor centre itself there are some marvellous exhibits, on life in the old days (Mammy's kitchen), including a history of currachs.


Much of it here is also hands on, Lift a “grassy” cover and underneath you get a big lump of bog butter. Another shows various wild plants and how they can feed us. Like the Bilberry for instance. Spin the choices next to it and you see its berries and what they can be used for.


And speaking of food, the cafe’s light, airy seating area offers a bird’s-eye view to Achill Island, the majestic Nephin Beg Mountains and the magical wild Atlantic coast. The food is all homemade, using locally-sourced produce and quality ingredients. We would have had eaten there had we known but had already had enjoyed lunch on Achill.

Visitor centre

After the pool, we continued on the walk and detoured to the higher viewing point and got great views of the park and its mountains and especially out towards Achill where Slievemore was directly across from us. There are information boards all along the walk, some of them attached to exposed bog wood.

I've only scratched the surface. There are walks much longer than 2km, but check the camping regulations and consult the guides. They have guided walks and special events and then there is the Mayo Dark Sky Park Viewing Point. Check it all out on the website.

Bog timber

We said goodbye to the friendly and helpful staff and headed down the road to our second walk, the Claggan Mountain Coastal Trail surrounded by mountains and sea inlets. We weren’t alone in the shining sun, Marvellous.

And, by the way,  it doesn’t cost you a cent to visit the magnificent park.

Ballycroy National Park

The coastal walk

Also on this trip

Superb Dining At Westport's The Pantry & Corkscrew

Achill Island in the sun. And wind.

Sipping Mescan Beer. Doolough Valley.

Ballycroy National Park


Thursday, April 27, 2023

BAKESTONE CAFÉ & PANTRY CELEBRATE TEN YEARS IN FOTA RETAIL PARK

BAKESTONE CAFÉ & PANTRY CELEBRATE TEN YEARS IN FOTA RETAIL PARK

Common Grounds: Neil Muscheidt, Bakestone, Brock Lewin, Badger & Dodo,
and Joe Carey, Bakestone
 


East Cork’s Bakestone Café & Pantry is celebrating
its tenth birthday in Fota Retail Park this month.


Bakestone Café & Pantry was founded by Cork natives Joe and Maura Carey in 2013 in Carrigtwohill. It offers an all-day menu with a focus on high-quality locally-sourced ingredients. In 2018, Bakestone Café added a new retail element to the business in the form of The Pantry which sells a wide variety of local artisan products and baked goods. The Bakestone Pantry highlights over 150 Irish producers including many of the best Cork producers plus a whole range of homemade Bakehouse chutneys, jams, pickles, relishes and dressings.


Joe said he is delighted to be celebrating ten years of following his passion for great food and for supporting local producers “We feel very honoured to have served the people of East Cork and beyond over the past 10 years, we cherish the relationships we've built with our wonderful food producers and suppliers, and we feel very lucky to have our wonderful Bakestone team collected around everything we do.”

All Irish at the Bakestone Pantry


To mark the celebration Bakestone has announced a very special partnership with Badger & Dodo by launching a new exclusive house coffee blend called Common Grounds.


Common Grounds, a house blend, is the result of a collaboration between the much-loved Cork café, which has outlets in Fota Retail Park and at Fota House, and Fermoy-based coffee roasters Badger & Dodo. Founded by Australian Brock Lewin, Badger & Dodo has been roasting coffee in Cork since 2008. The brand sources only the best beans available, from quality single-origin estates, with all blending done by hand. 


This exclusive coffee blend only available to Bakestone, consists of washed Peruvian and natural Ethiopian beans that boast flavours of vanilla, milk chocolate and orange. Medium body with a smooth round finish on the palate.



Common Grounds is available at Bakestone Café & Pantry, Fota Retail Park in Carrigtwohill, County Cork and Baketone @ Fota House, Arboretum & Gardens Fota Island also in Carrigtwohill, or buy online at www.bakestone.ie


Bakestone will celebrate its 10th year with a series of events taking place in Bakestone including a Meet The Makers event in Autumn. Keep up to date with the latest news by following Bakestone Café & Pantry on social @bakestonecafe.


Press release