Today's
Beer
Name
– Vertigo
Brewer
– Salopian
Classification
– Black IPA
Strength
– 7.2% ABV
Verdict
- At A Glance
On
the eye
– The very deepest, darkest brown currently known to humankind.
Monumentally appealing.
On
the nose
– Sweet, razor sharp citrus. Impossible. Delightful.
On
the tongue
– Off the scale. Every scale, and in every sense.
On
the subject
– Salopian
sent Vertigo
over to me with a bonus bottle of their Darwin's Origin, one of the more established beers on their roster but one which I'd also never tried before. Needless to say I have tried it now, and it ranks among the greatest bitters I've tried in a very long time. I figured that was worth mentioning.
On
the market
– Vertigo is hideously rare at this early stage in its existence If you live near
a specialist beer shop you might be in luck – providing you can
dodge the long range missiles launched at you almost constantly by
jealous folk like me who don't live anywhere near a specialist beer
shop. Alternatively, you could avoid harm by going online.
On the whole – 9.5/10
On the whole – 9.5/10
Full
Review
I've
never sniffed a fluid so much.
There
was a peculiar moment early on in this review session when I wondered
if it might be better if I didn't transfer any of this beer into my
mouth – as the only possible outcome was sure to be a relative
reduction in the amount of pleasure the substance was already
bringing into my sorry little life. After all, handing over
responsibility from one sense organ to the next can so often result
in a joy-sapping anti-climax – especially in these days of ever
more fevered hop-centric experimentation wherein pungent 'whiffs'
can often be followed by oddly lacklustre tastes. (I still don't
really understand how high fragrance and low flavour can so easily
coincide.)
Anyway,
having eventually reminded myself that beer reviews traditionally
require at least a rudimentary flavour assessment, I took the plunge
and had a sip.
Well,
I'm happy to report that the nose-to-mouth progression in Vertigo's
case was not at all anti-climactic. Indeed, by some miraculous means,
what rapidly became one of the best smelling beers I've ever
encountered also turned out to be one of the best tasting.
Who'd have thunk!
As
you can imagine then, what we're dealing with here is a drink of
exemplary all-round quality, but oddly enough that's not the best thing about
it.
It's
not just a good beer – it's also a useful one.
I
think this could be the perfect beverage to bridge the gap between those
who are keen to remain within the hallowed walls of Traditional
Beersville, and those who have flown that particular nest and feel
determined never to return.
Ingeniously,
Vertigo sums-up in one delicious glass the last half decade or
so of creativity which has all but transformed the beer industry,
whilst also being a beer imbued with a super clear sense of
tradition. It's unquestionably a 'funky modern', but it's also one of
those ever-familiar fine ales we've all grown to love at some point
in our beer-supping lives. In effect, this is a brew that drinks like
a concise appraisal of beer's entire story, starting right back from
ale's humble beginnings, and zooming right the way through to the
current outer margins of contemporary ingenuity and innovation.
Very
often I find myself thinking how glad I am that I'm a beer drinker at
this particular point in time. Lovers of the brewer's art today have
such a wealth of options available to them, there are almost no
limits to the variety of flavours, textures and aromas,
notwithstanding the boundless range of colours, strengths and even
recommended serving temperatures to constantly leave us with exciting
new territory to explore. And for those not wishing to leap too far
from tradition, there are obviously still an abundance of well known, 'classic style' beers being produced and enjoyed. But just to have the
option of switching back and forth from our old favourites to the new
breed of flavour-forward concoctions makes us a very lucky bunch
in my estimation.
And
what beers like Vertigo give us – is the chance to do both
all at once.
Beers
like Vertigo shrink the gap
between old and new beer styles with effortless grace, and they are
pretty much guaranteed to leave members of all three camps
(the trads, the mods and the go-betweens) with
nothing but smiles on their satisfied faces.
When
I say beers 'like' Vertigo, I don't mean Black IPA's, necessarily.
Some of these beers can feel distinctly 'edgy' and contemporary
(which is fine by me),whilst others can feel like someone has simply
applied 'new funky jargon' onto the label of a watery stout.
Vertigo
is an excellent drink in its own right, which happens to wear the
Black IPA name (with strong justification), but which takes the
concept of 'style fusion' back to its essential roots. Consequently,
you have a beer which feels fresh, modern and dynamic, but which is
also appropriately aware of the back-story to its own existence.
As
I started writing this, I felt that listing the many flavours at work
within this beer was much less important than stressing just how enjoyable and how downright 'important' I believe this brew
is, as well as how the assembly of Vertigo's flavours is every bit
as key as the nature of them. But as I know that such an
omission would (rightfully) annoy most of you, I'll now pull out just
a few of the major flavour players -
Tropical
tree fruit, hedgerow berries, rich molasses, dark roast coffee, star
anise, kiwi, gooseberry, burnt toast, licorice, traditional 'fruit
salad' chews, black forest gateaux, wild grass, giant lorry loads
more.... are you getting the picture?
Let me re-emphasise, though, that this beer is about so much more than taste. It's
an education. A comprehensive lesson in beer's history, starting at
the very beginning, and showing us all just how far we have come.
A
modern beer with a classic soul.
It is simply
magnificent.
Find
it, buy it, drink it.
Whatever beers you love, you will love this beer.
Whatever beers you love, you will love this beer.
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