Duck59
Legendary Member
- Joined
- 23 Apr 2015
- Local time
- 6:23 AM
- Messages
- 3,149
- Location
- Fife, Scotland
- Website
- duckholiday.com
agreed but if I had to try to name a few of my favourites I would go with the Orkney Ales with Red McGregor and Dark Isle being my favourite.
I'm lucky enough to get Orkney beer on a regular basis. Their Dragonhead Stout is absolutely gorgeous. It is only 4.0%, so you can drink it as a session beer, though if you tasted it blindfold, you'd swear it was stronger. Corncrake is a relatively new, pale beer which is very good. The 3.7% Raven is a lovely session ale and Northern Light is excellent on a warm day, if you can find a warm day, of course. Orkney Dark Island is known as Orkney Duck Island in this house.
There is a second Orkney brewery, the Swannay Brewery. I like their Island Hopping, a 3.8% session beer and the slightly misleadingly-named Orkney Best, which is a mere 3.6%, but very hoppy. Unusually for a Scottish brewery, they do a dark mild (Dark Munro), but the chap that runs the brewery comes from Lancashire, so knows about these things.
Shetland has its own brewery, too, Valhalla (a nod to the island's Viking roots). I like the Simmer Dim, a pale summer ale and the Sjolmet Stout.
When I first moved to Scotland in 1992, there were about seven or eight breweries and the brewing scene looked pretty dire. Now, there are breweries all over the place. Without access to my Good Beer Guide, I couldn't tell you how many, but there must be around 60 to 70.