Oct 15 09

Tasting Notes: BrewDog Nanny State

Posted by: Darren Turpin

Brewdog Nanny StateBrewery: BrewDog
Location: Freserburgh, Scotland
ABV: 1.1%
Version: Bottled
Source: BrewDog

Regular visitors to the beerblogosphere will most likely be familiar with the story of this beer's creation, but in case you missed it: BrewDog were taken to task by the Portman Group and much of the mainstream media over the strength of their (exquisite, superb) Tokyo* Imperial Stout. In response, they announced the creation of Nanny State, an "Imperial Mild", weighing in at a mere 1.1% abv but uber-hopped up to an incredible 225 theoretical IBUs (International Bitterness Units - 20-40 or so being the usual for a bitter ale). A gesture of defiance, a deliberate slap in the face of the over-bearing, over-ignorant, over-reactive powers-that-be and a beer that - in its current, young, green state at least - I'm sorry to have to report I thought was unpleasant to the point of being pretty much undrinkable.

There, I've said it. An undrinkable beer from Brewdog - not a phrase I ever expected to type on this blog, I have to admit. Largely as a result of BrewDog's sterling efforts (Hardcore IPA, Punk IPA, Chaos Theory IPA) I've learned to love big, hoppy beers; a style I wasn't anywhere near as keen on this time last year. I wasn't sure what I was expecting when I opened my bottle of Nanny State, but based on the last Imperial Mild that BrewDog released - the challengingly bitter but still quite suppable How to Disappear Completely - I think I was expecting a beer I could likewise learn to love after a bottle or two, however viciously ascerbic it might turn out to be.

A faintly rank odour emanated from the bottle when I opened it - not the best omen, but understandable considering the top-heavy hop content - and although the beer poured a pleasantly deep red-brown, my first sip dispelled any notions that this would be one I could even finish, never mind drink again. It was thin to the point of being watery and the flavour was dominated by a vegetative sourness that had more to do with stewed grass clippings than a clean, hoppy-freshness. The overall impression was one of cold coffee. And not 'cold coffee' as in "Extra shot mocha frappacino, hold the whipped cream, please", either. More like "How long has this cup of supermarket own-brand instant been sitting here? Three days? Oh, well, I'm sure it won't hurt..."

Seriously. It was really, really unpleasant, to the point of being downright nasty. I struggled manfully on for another couple of sips, then headed for the kitchen sink...

Caveat time: this one could have gone off in the bottle, of course. Plus, as I mentioned, it is still a very young beer, and based on Pete Brown's description (in Hops and Glory) of the way changes in hop-profiles can affect the flavour of beer over time, I'm planning on saving my second bottle (I bought two, just in case) for at least six months, and then I'll re-sample and re-visit. I have no idea if a 1.1% abv beer will survive six months intact, but it can't get much more undrinkable than it currently is, so I'm willing to give it a go.

But something about the whole situation is still bugging me and I have questions.
Assuming the bottle I opened hadn't actually gone off, is Nanny State supposed to taste this bad? And if so, is that a gag too far? I'm a huge fan of BrewDog's brewing and I enjoy their hugely tongue-in-cheek philosophy. I cheer every time they send a two-fingered salute in the direction of the hypocritically ineffective Portman Group and all the other engines of Nanny State-ism, because it's fun to see them take the piss out of self-righteous, pompous kill-joys. But surely they shouldn't also be taking the piss out of their paying customers as well?

By all means, show the Nanny Staters that you can easily brew a small beer that still tastes great (you just choose not to). And yes, if you want to, have a laugh at their expense by brewing something weak but undrinkable just for the publicity of it and then send them all free samples. But in the latter case, where's the sense in flogging it at £2.50 a shot to your loyal fans and customers at the same time? Has the Punk attitude gone so far that BrewDog have decided they don't need loyal fans and customers any more?

Brewdog's own take, back when they first announced the beer, was:

"Nanny State is an extraordinary little beer. It contains more hops than any other beer we have ever brewed. There is over 60 kilos used in our tiny 20HL batch. It contains more hops than any other beer ever brewed in the UK. It has a theoretical IBU of 225. It is jam packed with our favourite hops and already tastes amazing."

Okay, I guess I'm wrong about the deliberate nastiness. Ah well, chalk it up to my novice palate, perhaps. And anyhow, one bad experience with Nanny State isn't going to be enough to turn me against BrewDog or their beers - I have half a beer cupboard full of BrewDogs and I'm looking forward to all of them - but I will admit I'm a little less enamoured of them than I was before I opened my bottle of Nanny State. And I'll be taking their next gimmick-beer with a much bigger pinch of salt.

Nanny State around the Beerblogosphere

  • Barm had better luck with it than me, over at I Might Have a Glass of Beer
  • Mark Dredge came to pretty much the same conclusion as me and says so over at Pencil and Spoon ("...it's just too bitter to be drinkable and the whole point of a 1.1% beer is for it to be drinkable").
  • Gunmakers landlord Jeffo wasn't at all impressed either: "It was dark brown and flat as a witch's tit. It tastes harsh and astringent. It wasn't too thin - a surprise - but there wasn't much else but that unpleasant hop flavour ... So, in short, I think this is rubbish."

Anyone else tried it yet? Please do comment...

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6 Comments to-date
  1. Posted by Mark, Real-Ale-Reviews.com on 15/10/2009 at 08:49:18

    I'm looking forward to trying this whether it's good or not. It seems than How To Disappear Completely and Nanny State might just divide the beer community more than Tokyo, I've heard such varied reports on both.

    We might actually do a Tokyo versus Nanny State taste off actually, as we have 3 bottles of the former to go. Now just need to get some of the latter!



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  2. Posted by mike, on 15/10/2009 at 09:01:38

    I have to say I disagree with this. I bought 6 bottles from the website and although expensive, 2.50 per bottle with no beer duty to pay (go figure) I thought it was a beer that i could really get into. You need to be a hop maniac to enjoy this perhaps but to get that much flavour into a beer that you can more or less drink as much as you like and still be able to act and function like a human being i found mightily impressive. On the first sittng i had 3 bottles and felt great. Long lingering powerfull hop bitterness from strong america hops. Well done I say, more brewers should try the same.
    Mike.



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  3. Posted by Darren Turpin on 15/10/2009 at 10:04:51

    @Mark - That should be an intriguing comparison... they're antipodean opposites in my book, it'll be interesting to see if you can find any points of similarity.

    @Mike - I'm glad you enjoyed it. Adds weight to the possibility that there was something wrong with my bottle as well, which means there's hope for me with the second one, eh?



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  4. Posted by AndrewS on 15/10/2009 at 13:20:08

    Sounds like you had a bad bottle. I sampled Nanny State on draught at the Sheffield beerfest and thoroughly enjoyed it (but, then, I'm a total hop monster). My tasting notes say:

    'Murky deep brown colour. Intense creamy orange and grapefruit hop aromas on nose. Overwhelming earthy, bitter hop and coffee flavours with a tongue-scouringly bitter and mouth drying finish. Amazing for its ABV.'



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  5. Posted by Ed Ashby on 10/11/2009 at 22:06:28

    Picked up a couple of bottles this evening and nearly finished the first one. And I have to admit, I quite like it. Citrusy, with a vegetative, grassy approach that I don't usually go for, but here is very well balanced. No sourness evvident either, so maybe there a few dodgy bottles out there. Don't think I could drink too much of it though, the two bottles I have will do me for now, which does seem a bit at odds with the strength.
    I would like to know where the label went, all I got was a basic white one identifying the brewery, beer, strength and bottle size; no green label adorned with BrewDog marketing spiel. But then I only paid £1.59 per bottle.



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  6. Posted by Darren Turpin on 11/11/2009 at 14:39:38

    Ed mate, sounds like you got a couple of pre-release (proof?) bottles or something? In which case, I suppose it could be possible that they changed the recipe from the experimental to the mass-production version?



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