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It's four more from Mikkeller today, two from the mainstream side of the business plus a couple of fancier offerings.
Visions looks like an attempt to straddle both worlds, being a 4.5% ABV lager, very pale in colour, but with a misting of craft haze as well. The aroma, a vague grassiness, marks it as pretty plain fare, but it opens up on tasting. There's a bright and zesty lemon buzz which, coupled with a gentle carbonation, reminds me of brewpub lager from central Europe. It's quite a while since I last drank any of that, so the recollection was very pleasant. Proustian reflections aside, this is a very decent beer, offering excellent sunny-day refreshment. There's even a little extra complexity available if you look for it: some coconut, a pinch of chamomile and a brush of eucalyptus. Or you can just drink it. Thumbs-up from me either way.
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Also pale and hazy is
Burst, an IPA. Hazy, though not densely so. The aroma is all mango and passionfruit tropicals, and while that sorbet or ice-pop element is the basis of the flavour, there's a balancing bitter side as well. I get lime and grapefruit, with the merest trace of waxy, gritty dregs. A little bit of cleaning up would help it. It's also quite thin, in a way that a 5.5% ABV beer shouldn't be. There's a watery side to the finish which undoes some of the main flavour's good work. For me, this is fine, but a little lacklustre. Maybe it's harder to do hazy IPA for cheap at a level of quality that the style's aficionados will accept.
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Challenge accepted, then:
Hop Opera is a New England-style double IPA and produced in Denmark at To Øl rather than by the Belgian workhorses of De Proef, like the first two. It's 9% ABV and a dun orange colour. The aroma is strangely lacking: I got nothing at all from it. Even bad examples tend to at least smell like alcohol. The flavour is similarly muted. Here the alcohol does play a part, with a warm and smooth heat, the sort you'd find hidden in a fruity vodka cocktail. The fruit is quite a simple orange cordial. It's clean, at least, but there's a serious lack of complexity. When I'm paying €6 for a can, I want to have a strong opinion on what's inside; this is too plain and inoffensive for the money.
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The next can was €7, though the beer inside only 5.5% ABV. I guess they knew there would be an eager market for a
Game of Thrones Iron Anniversary IPA. "This better be good" I thought. It wasn't. Behind the hazy orange facade there's a pithy, Orangina aroma, which is fair enough, but the flavour is a nasty mix of raw onion, garlic paste and dry breadcrumbs. The texture is thin too, even allowing for the strength. There's a little friendly fluff from the haze proteins, but otherwise it's seriously savoury and appropriate for celebrating only the grimmest of TV shows.
Belgian lager beats Danish NEIPA. That's official.