Sorry, mate. I was only thinking aloud. Nothing personal. Although I can see how it might have been read otherwise I just don't rate Kevin so I'm never going to recommend it unless you're making Norwegian spud moonshine.floydmeddler wrote: ↑Wed Jan 20, 2021 8:17 pmThis apparent obsession with time from grain to glass has more to do with alcohol dependency than appreciation of fine ale.
No. I have 6 beautifully conditioned beers on my keezer. No rush for more alcohol.
What I know for sure is that it really isn't associated with fine ale or any recognisable culture thereof.
I've no interest in this ale being considered 'fine' (whatever that means). With regards to it not being associated with a culture that is recognisable to you, well, maybe that's because I'm not trying to brew a beer that reflects any specific culture at all. It's just a brew I knocked up to put Kveik yeast to the test. AKA. A bit of fun. A bit of an experiment.
I'm sure some biased bellends would be happy to cherry pick an over hopped beer where yeast would have played a minimal part
It would have played a major part as it wouldn't be a beer without it It's safe to say, though, there will always be bellends who stick their heads in to cherry pick over stuff that they don't quite get. Way of the world I guess.
What I was meaning to imply was that Norwegians have had serious alcohol problems for about a thousand years. But they struggled to get hold of malted barley. With less than 2% of Norway's landscape being arable and the wrong climate most would have relied on sporadic supplies of malted barley. It seems when they got their hands on any they brewed then downed it Anyway, it's much easier to grow small, sticky (starch rich) spuds in Norway for moonshine. This selected for Kevin over time. Then a few years back, about 2015, when Norway managed to secure steady imported supplies of malted barley, some brewers used Kevin instead of decent brewer's strains. The results were surprisingly predictable. Like distiller's yeast generally it fermented quite rapidly. Quite often the wort isn't boiled (like so-called 'raw ale') so the moonshiner depends on rapid ethanol production during fermentation to sanitise his wash prior to distillation.