Tasting Notes: BrewDog Zephyr
Brewery: BrewDog
Location: Fraserburgh, Scotland
ABV: 12.5%
Version: Bottled
Source: BrewDog.com
A few weeks ago I placed an order via the BrewDog website for a bottle of their ultra-limited edition (only 100 bottles made available for sale at £25 each) Zephyr ale, along with a few bottles of BrewDog / Mikkeller Devine Rebel and BrewDog How to Disappear Completely (tasting notes for that one will be posted before too long).
Initially brewed as a 9% ABV IPA (by a brewery that knows a thing or two about brewing an IPA), BrewDog Zephyr was subsequently decanted into 1965 Invergordon whisky casks packed full of strawberries and then left to mature for exactly 600 days. The end result: a 12.5% ABV "strawberry infused Belgian inspired wood aged ale" that tastes like nothing else I've tried to-date...
But how to describe BrewDog Zephyr? Mark Dredge and Ms Impy Malting have both resorted to rapturous prose-poetry and the reviews at ratebeer have been similarly full of (slightly more prosaic) praise. And I for one am happy to add my own small paean to the growing cacophony: this is a truly fantastic beer.

The bottle opened with an appropriate champagne-pop, releasing a thick, strawberry infused aroma. The pour was lively, the beer's effervescence contributing to a frothy, if short-lived, head and an ongoing pleasant fizziness. First taste: an intense explosion of mixed flavours that was clearly going to take some time to sort out, and a fructose sweetness that was distinct but not overly sugary. A bit hit of alcohol, but nothing too harsh or over-powering. Interesting. Very interesting.
After a couple more sips (I certainly wasn't going to gulp this one) I began to pick out a few of those flavours: I kept looking for strawberries - knowing full well that those casks had been packed with them - but that particular note was elusive. Instead, I was getting unripe peaches and apricots, maybe even a slice of mango? A hint of the advertised coconut, wrapped up in shortbread. And of course, the whisky was there too. Speaking of which, I'd be very interested indeed to try a drop of the 1965 Invergordon, if only to help me with a theory I've got...

Because after a while I began to realise - and this was confirmed for me by the lovely Jo - that BrewDog Zephyr is actually really rather salty. Not something you often encounter in a beer - particularly in a Belgian-style of this strength, I'd imagine (having only experienced a few of those) but the saltiness was definitely there. And eventually, I think I worked out why: the Invergordon distillery was (in 1965 at least and still is if it's still a going concern) situated on the coast, as this multimap reference, provided by the distillery profile page at scotchwhisky.net illustrates.
I went through a bit of a malt whisky phase before I came back to real ale, and one thing I learnt is that during maturation, a whisky will take on not only the characteristics of the ingredients and methods used in its distillation and the cask it's matured in (hence the port wood / madeira wood etc. finishes you see on the shelves), but its character can also take in elements from the surrounding environment. Which is why a whisky like Old Pulteney tastes - quite distinctly - of the North Sea. And as Old Pulteney was the whisky that was most strongly brought to mind when I tasted BrewDog Zephyr, I would guess that a 1965 Invergordon whisky, distilled and matured on the coast, would have a similar sea-salt character and that the saltiness would have lingered in the casks long after the whisky was decanted, transferring in turn to the Zephyr.
Not - I hasten to add - that this in any way spoiled the flavour; quite the opposite in fact: salt is an obvious flavour enhancer and I'm sure Zephyr's many fruit notes were only enhanced by its inclusion in the mix. And as I progressed through the 750ml (slowly, savouring every mouthful as I went) those fruit flavours merged and mingled with the alcohol and caramel-sweetness and saltiness and hop-bitterness - which was there, although it took a long time to come through and was never quite as prevalent as it is in BrewDog's other IPA brews - to result in a drink experience that was, frankly, quite amazing.
All in all, I'm absolutely delighted that I splashed out £25 for a single bottle of a beer this rare and remarkable and I'd definitely do so again if the opportunity arose. In fact, if I remember rightly, BrewDog have an Atlantic IPA in the works - matured on-board a working trawler vessel in order to approximate the original sea-going life-cycle of the first India Pale Ales - and I'll definitely be keeping an eye out for a purchase of that one, even at a similar price-point. I've said before that I'm a sucker for a beer with a good story behind it and at the moment, BrewDog seem to be producing a series of literary masterpieces. Long may they continue to create!
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It's a pretty special and unique beer, that's for sure! I only had a small amount of the 330ml bottle (I shared it between 4!) and I can't wait to open my 750ml bottle now!
I got a salty/umami quality in a number of beers, particularly barrel aged beers (Paradox Smokehead, for example). I think it adds a fantastic complexity to the flavour.
I love a good beer story. I read a great article on the NY Times website from last year about Dogfish Head and some of their beers. I'll put a post with links up about it soon - things like this fascinate me.
I now just need a special enough occasion to open up my Zephyr!
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Umami! That's the word I was looking for, thanks, Mark! It's something I'll be looking out for in future, certainly. I don't remember it in the Smokehead, but then the smokiness was rather dominating everything else at the time. But I've got another bottle of that tucked away, so I'll keep it in mind.
I'll look out for that Dogfish Head story on Pencil & Spoon :)
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I'm also a sucker for a beer with a good story and BrewDog seem to get this and consistently produce narratively evocative beers.
I love the details/information about the salt in the beer-- that you could taste a place in a beer that is distant in time as well as geography-- splendid!
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