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Flavoured Beers
Toronto Life Eating + Drinking 2007
By Margaret Swaine
For centuries, long before hops were accepted as the universal seasoning
in beer, man used a host of plants, herbs and spices to flavour his brews.
Juniper, angelica and bog myrtle are still used in Scandinavian countries
in traditional home brews. In Belgium their famous cherry (kriek) and
raspberry (framboise) predate the hop beers. (Current versions include
hops in the mix plus the additional flavouring. The basic beer recipe
today is malted grain, hops, water and yeast to ferment it all.) Belgium's
fruity beers still set the world standard for these type of specialty
brews. Meanwhile in Ontario a growing number of craft brewers are perfecting
their art of flavouring with a slew of local ingredients. All of the beers
below are available in select LCBO and The Beer Store locations, at the
breweries and local pubs throughout Ontario. For more on the Ontario brews
see www.ontariocraftbrewers.ca or to locate a store nearest you go to
www.lcbo.com/products.
Amsterdam Framboise
If you think fruit is for wimps this classic Belgian style ale will change
your mind. Fermented a second time with whole raspberries, it's full bodied
and malty with a tangy tart raspberry flavour. (Toronto, 6.5% alcohol)
Better Bitters Nickel Brook Green Apple Pilsener
Hide from your kids or they'll be seduced by the fresh apple juice flavour
of this slightly sweet brew from Burlington. Rounded with just hints of
hops, it's all about the apple. (Burlington, 4% alcohol)
Cool Brew Buzz Beer
Made with the finest B.C. hemp and choice German hops, it's a wholesome
high (hops are part of the nettle family, first cousin to cannabis, a
hemp plant). Smooth, medium bodied with a nice roasted malt flavour, sorry
to say smoke fans, the buzz is only from the alcohol. (Brampton, 5% alcohol)
Lakes of Muskoka Honey Brown Lager
Made in cottage country from pure malts enhanced by the bee, this amber
coloured lager has a honey of a nose. Light and delicately floral, it's
a smooth thirst quencher with notes from the apiary. (Bracebridge, 5%
alcohol)
Mill Street Balzac's Coffee Porter
The perfect java jolt, this robust, rich ale has a great black coffee
character with dark chocolate notes. Flavoured with coffee from Balzac
in the Distillery District, its buzz betters Starbuck's. (Toronto, 5.5%
alcohol)
Trafalgar Abbey Belgian Spiced Ale
A beer you can sip as you nibble a chocolate, it has a rich, deep spicy
sweetness and a dark brown colour. Or forget dessert, this is your postprandial.
(Oakville, 6.5% alcohol)
Trafalgar Blueberry Mead
Not technically a beer, but mead, reputedly the oldest recorded fermented
beverage known to man. No hops, rather made from fermented honey and PEI
blueberries, its honeyed bubbly blueberry character makes it the perfect
base for an adult style ice cream soda. (Oakville, 9% alcohol)
Belle-Vue Kriek
Lambic style (spontaneously fermented by wild yeasts), aged in barrels,
then infused with cherries and refermented for about a year, it has pleasing
complexity. The cherry comes through nicely in the nose and taste which
finishes with a refreshing slight cherry pit bitterness. (Molenbeek, Belgium,
5.1%)
Mort-Subite Framboise Lambic
The name means sudden death in French but no chance of that with this
lambic style, raspberry juice enhanced brew. Matured slowly in oak casks,
its raspberry flavours are multi-levelled and rounded by sweetness. (Asse-Kobbegem,
Belgium, 4.5% alcohol)
Mott's Clamato Red Eye
What's more Canadian than a bloody Caesar and a beer? Well put the two
together and hold the vodka eh. Beer and tomato clam juice is a hangover
remedy for some; others may want to create the condition by downing a
pack of Red Eye. (Canada, 4.8% alcohol)
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