Indeed, I have attended the 2026 Dark Beer Festival held at The Jolly Fisherman (blog), 3 East Beach Street, Hastings TN34 3AR, and there were some very interesting beers available, and the 'rare classic' I mentioned is first on this blog's list. I'm starting off with the cask ales first, followed by the crafty keg beers, and with the full list in the bottom image, because I haven't imbibed them all. ๐ There are a few not great images, but those photographs were taken in the evening, so lighting wasn't great, my apologies, I trust you'll cope! ๐บ
The 'classic' in question is Thomas Hardy's Ale (11.3%), originally brewed by Eldridge Pope, who sadly no longer exist, closing in 2003. In 2013 ownership of the recipe/brand was bought by 2 brothers, Sandro and Michele Vecchiato, in more recent times it has been brewed in West Sussex at Hepworth Brewery (website). You will notice that this barley wine, and the one following, aren't really dark beers at all, but they certainly are strong ales!
Thomas Hardy's Ale is brewed with Maris Otter pale malt, a small amount of Crystal malt in the grist, and with a small amount of cane syrup to increase the gravity. The hop varieties used are Fuggle (hopslist) and Golding (hopslist), producing a complex flavour, certainly big malt taste from the Crystal, my notes say "sweet start, dry bitterness, almost metallic finish, good stuff! ๐ The image I used includes the charity box for cystic fibrosis remembering my training module at Sydenham Children's Hospital, who were then the local 'experts' for the condition.
The second barley wine is a wee bit paler, brewed in the West Midlands at Sarah Hughes Brewery (website), renowned for their 6.0% Dark Ruby Mild. However, this ale was their Snowflake, named CAMRA's Champion Winter Beer of Britain 2 years ago. Similar to the Thomas Hardy's it is brewed with Maris Otter pale malt and a small amount of Crystal, and the same hops too, Fuggle and Golding, a barley wine recipe indeed, but with no added sugars to make it as strong. So, not as powerful, but still a big 8.0% with a fruity sweetness at first taste, with spicy orange and a hint of vanilla, but dried out to a bitter finish, nice one. ๐
My third cask ale here, though drunk earlier, was from the traditional heartland of Burton upon Trent in Staffordshire, and Burton Bridge Brewery (website), their 4.0% (dark) XL Mild. I believe brewed with the same hops as the 2 barley wines, but this is a much darker brew, very easy to drink, smooth with hints of liquorice and caramel in the taste, a little nutty, smooth and, yes, very easy to drink indeed, good stuff! ๐
On to my first keg beer and, from German brewery Konig Ludwig (website), their 5.5% Weissbier Dunkel, a Bavarian dark reddish wheat beer. They use Hallertau hops (hopslist) for their lighter weissbier, probably for this too, but certainly other hops from the same region must be used, although I do apologise for not being able to ascertain which hops. I found, quoting from my notes, it has a very fruity aroma and taste, dark and stoned fruits, hints of spices, chocolate and banana, light in depth and a dry bitter finish, very drinkable. ๐
Next, from the North West in Salford, Pomona Island Brew Co (website), their 6.5% Frangipane/Pastry Stout, No 'Rabbit in a Hat' Tricks, which does what it suggests, tasting of almond, vanilla and with hints of caramel and chocolate. I cannot find the hops used, but the flavour is dominated by the malts used and additions, it is a rich smooth luxurious beer! ๐
To Belgium for this one and Brouwerij Rodenbach (website), their Vintage, a classic 7.0% Flanders Red, matured in (not all of!) 294 enormous oak casks (foeders) for 2 years in cellars below the brewery, in which a secondary fermentation is created by wild yeasts. An older style of porter has a very important influence following Eugene Rodenbach's visit to England in the 1870s, where he learnt how to brew the porter of that time, which probably influenced his choice of hops too. Hops used in the copper include English types like Target and Brewers Gold, but the hops are used for retarding bacteria, not to balance the beer, the flavours develop in the foeders! Rodenbach Vintage tastes of red berries and tart apples, it really is bitter-sweet, not overly tart but gently pronounced. Surprisingly easy to drink. ๐ฎ
My penultimate beer reviewed is also from Belgium, but this time from a Trappist brewery, that is Chimay (website), and their 9.0% Grande Reserve (Blue). Chimay primarily use Hersbrucker hops for their beers (hopslist), sadly, I cannot discover whatever else is added for this one. Dark and dried fruits in the aroma and taste, with subtle hints of liquorice and chocolate, my notes say "complex and delightful" and yes, I liked it a lot, pretty darn good! ๐
Finally, the strongest ale here, just, a collaboration between West Yorkshire's Amity Brew Co (website), where it's brewed, and Leicestershire's Emperor's Brewery (website), Twelve Parsecs, a 12.0% Tiramisu Imperial Stout. Brewed with 8 different malt varieties, and for the tiramisu edge, Brazilian coffee beans are suspended in the fermenter for 2 days, replaced by cacao nibs for 5 days. The hops used are not divulged, but the aroma and taste are all about the malts, coffee and cacao, and they produce the desired effect, with chocolate, coffee and vanilla significant. It's described as a 'rich and decadent tiramisu stout' and that is what you get. ๐
I didn't drink every beer, as said above, a few too many for just a couple of visits, but the full list of what was available is in the image above, cheers folks! ๐ป










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