Sunday, 25 August 2013

#10th Instalment of the Beer Tour of the World


Beer, Food & Liquor Reviews

 

 

#10th  Instalment of the Beer Tour of the World

The food section
 
I was wandering along the main drag in Lampedusa on our last day, provisioning.  Mostly, I needed a sausage.  They come in lengths of about 2’ in Italy so I went to the Macelleria to get one.  He had a nice pork one and I bought it all for about €3.

 I went back out in the street to go to the boat and along came an old cheese seller.  Carol, Olivier and Laura had spoken to him a couple of days before but I had not.  I recognised him because he had a red woollen cap on that he always wears according to the locals and he was pushing an old wheelbarrow.  His name is Giacomino.  Under the cloth on the wheelbarrow were cheeses.  The front half were goat cheeses, hard-ish and €6 for about ¾ of a kilo.  The back were fresh sheep mozzarella, still hot, in plastic bags for €4.  He tips it out of its plastic bucket and into the bag and off you go, with the bag full of whey from the still-ripening cheese.

Carol rates this as the best fresh Mozarella she’s ever had.  Especially on toast with Cherry Jam.

 Anyway, as a banker/economist, I got to thinking.

 The wheelbarrow is your average household wheelbarrow.  Holds maybe 30 goats’ cheese rounds in the front, maybe 40 mozarella sheep cheeses in the back where it’s wider.  30 goats’ cheeses at €6 is €180.  40 sheep cheeses at €4 is €160.  So the wheelbarrow has €340 on it.  Some he will discount to the Enotecas (I saw two) so he won’t get full dollar for them, and some of the fresh will not sell so he keeps them to age, (and sell for €6 later) but let’s say he gets €180 per day.  That is a huge quid in a place where €180 a week would be considered good going.  But, to look at him, he hasn’t got two bob to rub together.  I think maybe he just might not be as simple as the world might see him, either.

He was absolutely convinced I could speak Italian because as much as I tried to tell him I spoke English, he just raised his voice a little bit and repeated the sales spiel – I guess he thought if he said it often enough I would eventually get it in Italian.

 Excellent cheese.
 

Beer

Dreher. 

Seems to be made in Milano.  4.7%.  A lager, so there’s not really much chance to be different from other lagers.  Quite nice – a little bit of sourness to wake you up.  ½ litre can for €1.8.  Originally a Czech brewer, and still made there, but this one was from the Italian production line.

Castello

From the brewery that made Moretti before Heineken bought it out and sold the brewery and the stream it’s on to these people.  What is it with modern corporations who think they are so smart that they can buy a successful product, dump what made it successful in the first place and just market the name?  When Heineken bought Moretti, they didn’t want the brewery or the stream / river it sat on so they disposed of it.  In effect, what is now Moretti is Heineken rubbish and what is now Castello is what Moretti used to be when it was good.  Just so y’all know.
 
Farson Simons Breweries of Malta

Cisk Lager -  Lovely.  Strong hint of sourness from the hop leaf. 

Hopleaf – nice.  Light bitter aftertaste.  Probably my pick of all the Farson brews.

Extra Strong (XS) 9% abv.  Didn’t like at all, nor did my friend Olivier.  All alcohol taste and nothing else.

Amber Ale.  I don’t normally like anything that tastes like fruit but this is nicely underdone in that area, although it does have a smidgin of fruit.  Nutty and perhaps a little on the sweet edge but not so that I don’t like it.  Only saw it at one pub, the Jubilee and nowhere else at all.

Blue Label.  An ale and perhaps a little weak but not bad if you intend having more than one.  I’ve had quite a few, in different restaurants here, and it’s easy to drink.

 
There is a bar here called the Jubilee Bar.  It is attempting to franchise itself and there are offers in the bar for people interested to discuss.  They already sell their in-house food in supermarkets.  We had beer and free snacks there in a lengthy session with Olivier and Lauren before they departed for Gozo and Syracuse.  Then Carol and I returned for dinner and had more beer and some food, too.  I had a steak-and-ale pie and chips.   Carol had an in-house made ravioli of fish and a white sauce which was very nice.  My pie was OK but could have done with more gravy inside.  We both had desserts, me apple pie and ice cream and Cal a lemon sorbet.  Cost for 2 x 600ml Amber Ale bottles, 1 half pint of Cisk Lager for Cal, two mains and two desserts?  €22.95.  Including VAT.  Third time there I asked for gravy and lo and behold, out came a gravy boat for my pie.
 

Wuhrer


 Bought a case of this in the wholesaler in Lampedusa.  It was €12 for a case of 15 large bottles.

It is a little bit sweet for mine, but OK if it’s cold enough to mask that a bit.  Brewed by one of my favourite brewers in the whole world but not a beer I’d go back to

 
Hermann Muller

Made in Poland by a brewery called Gamintojas as near as I can tell.  Found this in a discount store in Sliema, Malta.  4 x 500ml cans for €3.5.  Good deal.  Nice beer.  Crisp, low head and not gassy at all.  Reasonable amount of hop flavor as much as a lager can have.  Like it very much.  Put it on the purchase list.

 We went to our friend Tano Role’s house for a day of catching up and enjoying the company of an old friend and his wife.  Late in the evening we finished up with some liquers and these came out of Tano’s cabinet.
 

Cynar

Italian Artichoke liquer.  Very much like tea.  Can’t recommend it with any conviction.  Trivia:  someone posed a question recently on Carol’s FB that you couldn’t think of a drink without an “e” in the name.  Bet I can.
 

Limuncell of Gozo

Very nice, much more of a tart flavor.  We had a bottle recently (among a few of us, not just us) that was from Sorrento and one would assume was “autentico” but it was very syrupy and ultra sweet.  This one from Gozo was lighter on the sugar and stronger on the lemon.  Very nice. Which is good because I just bought one of their Tangerine liquers and haven’t started it yet.
 
Disaronno

Amaretto to the older ones among us, but it’s been sold as Disaronno for over ten years now.  It was Amaretto di Saronno, then Originale di Saronno and now just Disaronno.  It is the best selling Italian liquer in the world.  It deserves to be – I remember having this in a coffee in the Sheraton in Singapore back in the middle 1980s, with a side shot to go with it.  It was nice then and I still find it smooth and warming.  All class.  And no “e” either.

 John Smith Extra Smooth.

Had this on draft in Gibraltar and thought it was a publican’s beer (see Reviews #8).  Just bought 4 cans to see if there’s any difference.  Tastes the same, i.e. not much taste at all.  Smooth and creamy like a Kilkenny – cans come with those little widgets in them that go off when you rip the top.  Nice head, very smooth but only 3.8% and not much to recommend it.
 

Clausthaler Classic

 This is in RED because it’s a warning.  I bought two bottles of this in the Gala Supermarket, which strangely enough is on the first floor of the Malta Skoda dealership (same family owns both so why waste premises?)

I bought it because on the label is a medal “World Beer Awards”.  Silly me, they must have been in a category all their own.  I took one swig and realized I’d been had.  It’s NON-ALCOHOLIC!  It tastes like that South Australian stuff Southwark with no alcohol.  Thank the lucky stars I only bought two small bottles to try it.  I’ll pass on the reaction of the unlucky soul I foist the remaining one on.
 
Bavaria.

One of the ‘bespoke’ beers that are made for supermarket sale.  5.0%  Nice – large cans, quite sharp and a big seller here in Malta.  Not surprised, would hold its own in most company.

86. 


This is Bavaria’s “Special Blond Beer”.  Most Australian “blond’ beers are a euphemism for “lo-carb” i.e. low alcohol.  This is 7.9% so it’s no way low alcohol.  Made in Holland, even though it’s called Bavaria.  Very nice indeed but it will set you back on your pins if you have too many.

Skol

Brought to you by Carlsberg/Tetley Brewing.  Tetley make good stuff.  This variety is brewed in Malta under licence by Farsons, who bring you Cisk, Blue Label etc above.  And good stuff it is too.  It’s “By Appointment To Her Majesty The Queen” and she sure knows her beers.  I think that’s courtesy of the Tetley’s link.  Comes in large 500ml cans and you can usually get it around the islands for around €3.50 for a four-pack.

Cody’s


Brewed in Bremen Germany, so it is made where they know beer.  5.4%.  Not bad but a little sweetish.  Price? .49c for a 500ml can.

Carl Theodor Lager

Another generic.  Says “produced in Germany” but with marketing language designed to mislead, the term is probably meaningless.  Seems to be a Romanian company.  Nothing to recommend it but equally it is not to be avoided.  Again only .49c for a 500ml can so if you see it at that price, put it in the fridge.  Not as sweet as the Cody’s so it goes up in my listing.

Note:-  Arrived in Sicily last night.  Into the Koala Bar in Porto Paolo (yes, there is a Koala Bar in Porto Paolo, Sicily) and had two Nastro Azzura’s.  It’s nice to be back with one of the world’s best beers in every fridge!  €2 each.

Norbertus Heller Bock


Strong Lager, 7.5%

In Don Carmelo’s, Syracusa.  Had the house beer first and didn’t like it and opted for this from their “Special Beers” section.

Very nice, double malted.  Tasted a little smoky or peaty.  Complex, but not a lot of fruit thank goodness.  There is some there from the double malt but it is by no means a turnoff.  Big bottle, with one of those wire flip tops on it.  Comes cold but not icy which was nice as it let the taste through.  It is one of the brands made by Allgauer Brauhaus

 
Hacker-Pschorr


This brewery has gone full circle, from Hacker, to being bought out by the son-in-law Pschorr, to the next two sons going their separate ways and re-merging in the 1970s.  It is one of the famous “six” located inside Munich and therefore one of the six allowed to sell at the Oktoberfest.  They also own Paulaner (very nice).

I had this on tap in the Camel Bar in Le Castella in Calabria.  I thought it a bit sweet for me but I very quickly add that these guys make many different beers (King Ludwig had Pschorr create some for his wedding) and they’ve got 580 years of experience so there’s more than just this one.

Overall, crisp and nice with a frothy head (barman had to sweep it with his stick) and at 5.5% not to be drunk carelessly.  If it was the tap beer in a bar I went into I’d buy it again.


Hacker-Pschorr Sternweisse

Later, in Piraeus, I was in a chandlery.  We’d bought some stuff there and the chandler gave me a bottle of this – they look after the yacht of one of the two owners of the brewery, and he gives them heaps of beer as a perk.  Not usually a wheat-beer drinker but this wasn’t too bad.  Very large head, which dropped away after a while.  Sour and sharp.  Pours dark and almost brown.  Nice stuff.
 

Willianbrau Pils

The beer by this name on RateBeer is a Belgian of 4.2% alcohol.  The one I have is 4.6% and is brewed in Slovenia for an Italian company.  I have no idea how you can have two beers with identical names being sold when they are completely different beers?

Anyway, this one, the Slovenian one, is a bit on the ordinary side.  Not much froth, but nice and crisp.  When faced with a tap with this on it I’d buy one but I wouldn’t go lookies for it.  500ml can, .69c.  Can’t complain about the price.

 Ceria

Sicilian beer.  Double malted.  7%.  Starting to get a bit on the citrusy side.  Each bottle is individually numbered.  It’s twice to three times the price of whatever else is in the pub and it’s probably not worth that much.  Good to support a boutique brewery and all – maybe with more acceptance and volume the price will come down?
 
I'm about 10 beers behind, or maybe 12, from Albania and Greece.  Some good brews to come.

 

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