
The
European Beer Consumers Union held one of its regular receptions in Brussels a couple of weeks ago, hosted at the local offices of the
Italian farmers' organisation. Grain to glass and all that. All members of EBCU were asked to bring beers from their own countries, but the selection was centred around Italian beers, all winners in national competitions.
Eager to get stuck in, my first beer was
La Mancina, from Forte. This is 7.5% ABV and described as a strong ale. It's a bright amber colour and absolutely teeming with too-warm-fermentation fruit esters. From an aroma of hot brown bananas, it leads to a flavour of the same, the sickly sweetness only fading enough to give impressions of fruitcake or treacle bread. That's tough going to drink, and there's nothing much else happening: despite it being a strong beer, there is little by way of complexity or contrasting flavours on offer. Maybe this is a perfect, to-style, rendering of some ghastly sub-genre of Italian beer, but I wouldn't have given it any prizes myself.

The next Italian in my glass was a stout:
Cliffs, by Birrificio Humus in Abruzzo. I had brought stout to the meeting because our poor European neighbours tend to be in shortly supply of the pintable sort, but this one was only 4% ABV. You'd never guess from drinking it, though. It bursts with righteous stouty goodness: fresh coffee beans, dense dark chocolate and an unexplained seam of sweet coconut. The smooth body is big enough to carry all that, yet it's very much a dry stout, not a sweet one. If I hadn't been rushing through the selection (for
your benefit, gentle reader) I would have liked to spend more time with this one.

There was much curiosity in the room about the Italian beer labelled as a "German Ale".
Spitze, by AcmE, turned out to be nothing more exciting than a Kölsch: the
law which prevents even mentioning or depicting Cologne on the label is
not actually helping consumers. Its nature is immediately apparent from the first pour and sip: pale gold with a light and crisp malt aroma, followed by an equally clean crisp flavour, with a hint of sulphurous spice for character. I found it deliciously refreshing, and I hope those who thought there would be more hops involved aren't disappointed.

We stay on German styles for the next couple, starting with Officina del Baccano's
Ziegenbock, an 8% ABV Doppelbock. There's not much to say about this, other than it's a flawless representation of the style, albeit missing any individual features. But it's the requisite chestnut colour, with a heavy texture lightened somewhat by its lager fizz. Chocolate and cereal malts meet with the grass and asparagus of noble German hop varieties. It is at once chewy and satisfying while also conversational and easy-going. Pure awards bait.

Another Italian brewery I've never heard of but am delighted to discover is Styles, from the east coast. At the reception, I tried
Lilly Smoke, their rauchbier. Obviously, any sane brewer is going to try and copy Schlenkerla's Märzen, and this has a little of its dark tint, albeit not so severe. It's also on the sweet side, which is justifiable at 6% ABV. They've done a very good job of putting the smoke at the centre of the flavour while also keeping the beer balanced and drinkable, something Schlenkerla makes look easy but few breweries manage. It's actually the bock-like density and sweetness which turns out to be the beer's weak spot for me, but that's more a matter of taste than anything. This is very well made.

Among the beers I took home was another from Styles, and another stout.
Black Eyes purports to be American style and is 5.6% ABV. In the glass it is quite black, with garnet highlights. An attractively ivory head doesn't last long. There's little aroma to speak of -- no blast of C-hops, which is what I want when I see the word "American" next to "Stout" -- and the flavour is similarly restrained. There's a delicate creaminess here, and subtle notes of sweet flowers and bitter herbs, but nothing jangling, difficult or, frankly, distinctive. We're in the smooth zone, where all is blended together to the point of blandness. A few light pinches of pepper and rosemary are as assertive as it gets. On the one hand it's a very well-made beer; on the other, this was suitcased from Italy to Belgium and then flown to Ireland, and I'm not sure it was worth the mileage. If you're on Italy's east coast, though, get it into you.

Next it's a couple of beers from Lombardian brewery 50&50, starting on a session IPA called
God of Laif. Finally we get some colourful hops from the New World, and I don't know which varieties they use in this, but they're a superb advertisement for the American hop industry. The lead-in aroma is attractively spicy with lots of pine, while the flavour is deeply and thickly resinous, to begin. It then blends this with happy and bright tropical notes which add drinkability and a lightness of touch. The cherry on top is a light 4.5% ABV. This really does have all that's great about American IPA presented in a genuinely sessionable package.

50&50 is the first brewery I've found making an Italian grape lager, the style perhaps an inevitability given Italian microbrewing's contributions to world beer culture so far.
Graziela is [rub fingers gesture] 6.5% ABV and pours a medium gold with a modicum of haze and a lacklustre head. The aroma is mostly that of a dry lager -- almost Japanese style -- but with some sort of estery chemical overtone, which I guess is the grapes. The flavour brings these two sides together much more harmoniously. Yes, it's a lager to the core: extremely dry and brittle, sanding down your tongue to leave it wanting more. The grape isn't exactly subtle, with a strong note of gooey Muscat or even Sauternes, which doesn't suggest Italy to me at all. Nevertheless, it
works: summery crisp fizz meeting a more perfumed autumnal richness. I'm impressed, and not just because I've never tasted anything quite like it before. It's genuinely easy to drink and exquisitely balanced. Why they thought to send it out into the world in a can with two badly-drawn cartoon characters on it is anyone's guess.

I wrapped up my Italian explorations on the night with
Quadro, from Barbaforte, a saison. Funny, I remember this as being a tripel, and now I turn to my notes I see that I thought it smelled like one, with more of a sweet spice than saison normally has. While the taste is predominantly dry, with a subtle cinnamon spice, there's an unwelcome banana element as well: harsh skin at the front and ripe flesh in the finish. It's not a dealbreaker but it didn't add anything positive to the experience for me. This is an acceptable saison, and nicely drinkable for 6.4% ABV, but it's by no means an exceptional one.
Litha is a witbier, from Arte Brassicola Mastio in central Italy. All appearances are of an orthodox example of the style: 5.2% ABV and hazy yellow. Not content with coriander and orange peel, the brewer has also added cardamom. There's a distinctly herbal note from the aroma, but the promise of citrus zest as well. Alas the zest gets somewhat lost in the flavour, and it's the cardamom which is most pronounced, giving it a strongly savoury character. That is at least a character, but it's not one I care for. It's quite a weighty beer, and the cardamom adds to an overall feeling of heaviness: zingy summer drinking it is not, even straight from the fridge. If you like a more serious and involved witbier, this is one you might enjoy, though I've never met anyone who does.

Last of the Italian beers I nabbed from the post-event leftovers is
Ponale, described by its brewer, Leder, as "hoppy pils" -- a reminder that the whole "Italian pilsner" designation isn't much of a thing in Italy. This is 5% ABV and a hazy pale yellow with lots of foam piling up. The aroma is fantastically zesty, giving limoncello and lemon sherbet. It doesn't
feel like a pilsner, being quite heavy and ale-like. I would almost swear that the lemon is provided by a syrup flavouring, but it isn't. The sweetness tails off, but leaves those damn lemons in the finish -- sharply citric, like fancy lemonade. It's a fun beer, and worked well on a sunny day, but between the fuzzy murk and the IPA hops, it doesn't deliver what I want from a pilsner of any stripe. Where is the crispness? I had hoped for a classic but got a novelty instead.

Turning to the beers from elsewhere, EBCU's Swedish member recently celebrated its 40th anniversary with a commemorative dark mild. Weird flex, but OK.
40 år Jubileumsöl was produced at Nynäshamns Ångbryggeri in Stockholm, and packed in 500ml bottles. It's quite a pale brown colour and 4.2% ABV, so similarities to English mild are scant. The fruit esters, too, are not the right sort. The best milds have a plummy, autumnal fruit character; this was a more basic raisin and banana effect. Likewise, I enjoy a kick of coffee roast in a mild, and this seemed to be aiming for it but lacks impact, coming across meek and miserly. I think they've taken the notion that mild isn't meant to be an exciting beer a bit too far. As celebrations go, it's a muted one.

The sole German appearance was from a Berliner weisse called
Kaiserweisse, brewed by Tyrell BrauKunstAtelier in Brandenburg. This was the 2022 vintage, and there was only one bottle, so I had merely a tiny sip, but it's very good. I could tell it's stronger than normal Berliner weisse but would never have guessed the strength is as high as 9.5% ABV. An innocent pale hazy yellow, it's dry more than it's sour, with an understated acidic sharpness and no high-gravity warmth. The aroma has a snatch of sulphur while the flavour, I guess using Brettanomyces yeast, offers soft ripe stonefruit and pineapple, seasoned with a mild peppery spice. There's a lot to it and I'd be keen to try some other years.

I tend to associate Iceland with dark and smoky beers -- perhaps that's mostly what gets exported -- but the delegates brought something quite different: a light and fruity sour ale. Gæðingur Brugghús makes
Eldgosi, souring the mash with a local yoghurt-like culture (skyr) and adding cumin, herbs and seasalt before finishing it with raspberries. There is an unfruited version and I would like to try that, because the raspberries tend to take over here. Candy-like summer fruit -- cherry in particular -- is the long and the short of it, given a clean and spritzy base, making for thirst-quenching fun at just 4.1% ABV. I couldn't help thinking I was missing out on the base beer's deeper complexity, however.

This next one should be good. Lager maestros De La Senne have got together with the pioneering Birrificio Italiano and revered Schönramer to create a talent-pooling lager called
Freundeslager. While it's an unpromising 4% ABV it has plenty of body and loads of flavour. Though the hops are a mix of Belgian and German, it's the latter which is most prominent, with a hay-like dryness and lots of greenly herbal bitterness. That took a bit of getting used to, but I was enjoying the overall loud brashness of it before long. The beer is also hazy, and that doesn't help things, adding an unwelcome gritty fuzz: not to tell these people their jobs, but pale lager works best when fully transparent. Some gentle citrus emerges as it warms, adding a layer of peach and mandarin next to the herbs, though the finish is acridily dry; almost a crêpe-paper rasp. I get what they're trying to do here, but I found it somewhat overdone, pulling in multiple directions instead of presenting a seamless and integrated flavour experience. It's lager, but not as I want it. All three breweries make better examples by themselves.

And finally, from Austria, there was Ottakringer
G'mischte. This isn't really a beer in its own right, being a blend of the brewery's Helles and Dunkles lagers, presumably in equal measures. I'm not at all sure why they would do this, but I guess it's a convenience thing. The result is a flawless dark copper colour with a subtle herbal quality in the aroma leading to a less subtle one in the flavour. This adds aniseed and basil to the malt's caramel and toast, and the combination works beautifully. While there's plenty going on, it's all blended together perfectly. The only thing upsetting things slightly is its high density and considerable sweetness, making it tough drinking for a beer that's only 4.8% ABV. Still, taking time over it is no hardship. I still think the component beers are perhaps better enjoyed apart, but nothing has been diluted by turning them into this.
With the reception over, the tidying up done, and the goodbyes said, it was off to see
what else was happening in Brussels.