Yeastie Boys
Location | Wellington, New Zealand |
---|---|
Opened | 2008 |
Owner(s) | Independent |
Yeastie Boys is an independent brewing company based in Wellington, New Zealand. It was established by beer activists Stu McKinlay and Sam Possenniskie in 2008. The brewery's name is a play on that of the band Beastie Boys. Yeastie Boys have a roster of three regular beers which are produced year round, and also produce a limited release of seasonal beers which are released each spring, summer, autumn and winter.[1]
Each Yeastie Boys beer name is based on popular culture references, with some being straightforward and others more obscure. They Yeastie Boys themselves shun the popular practice of beer and food matching, instead choosing to match their beers with music, films, places or people.
Yeastie Boys beers are all developed by Yeastie Boys director Stu McKinlay in Wellington, New Zealand. The beers are commercially produced at the Invercargill Brewery in Invercargill, New Zealand.
Awards
Pot Kettle Black:
- Best in Class (Porters and Stouts) and Gold Medal - 2009 BrewNZ Beer Awards[2]
- People's Choice - Beervana 2009
- Silver Medal (Porters) - 2010 Australian International Beer Awards[3]
- Silver Medal (Ales) - 2011 Australian International Beer Awards[4]
- Silver Medal (Porters and Stouts) - 2011 BrewNZ Beer Awards
- Bronze Medal (Porters and Stouts) - 2012 Brewers Guild of NZ Awards
- Gold Medal (Porters) - 2012 Asia Beer Awards
- Champion Beer - 2012 Asia Beer Awards
- Best Black IPA - 2014 Hong Kong International Beer Awards
- Champion Beer - 2014 Hong Kong International Beer Awards
Rex Attitude:
- Morton Coutts Trophy for Innovation - 2011 BrewNZ Beer Awards
PKB Remix 2010:
- Bronze Medal (Ales) - 2011 Australian International Beer Awards[4]
His Majesty 2010:
- Silver Medal (Ales) - 2011 Australian International Beer Awards[4]
His Majesty 2009:
- Bronze Medal - 2009 BrewNZ Beer Awards[2]
Yakima Monster 2010:
- Silver Medal - 2010 BrewNZ Beer Awards[5]
Her Majesty 2010:
- Bronze Medal - 2010 BrewNZ Beer Awards[5]
All Year Bottled Beers
- Pot Kettle Black - 6.0% Black IPA a multiple award-winning beer and New Zealand's first Black IPA
- Hud-a-wa' Strong - 6.8% rich, strong, hoppy Amber Ale
- Rex Attitude - 7.0% peat-smoked strong Golden Ale
- Gunnamatta - 6.5% Earl grey tea infused IPA
- Digital - 5.7% Tropical balanced IPA
Seasonal Bottled Beers
- His Majesty - The inaugural release, in 2009, was an assertively bitter,[6] 6.5% India Pale Ale.[7][8]
- Her Majesty: Inaugural release at Beervana 2010.
- PKB Remix: a playful annual remix of Pot Kettle Black to celebrate its double trophy-winning effort at BrewNZ 2009. In 2009 the hoppy porter becomes a 6.66% hoppy stout, while 2010 saw the NZ hops replaced by US Cascade and the ABV was upped to 6.8%.
- Digital IPA: An India Pale Ale released late 2011. This Free Beer has the exact recipe made widely available ('open source') to enable home brewers to brew their own versions.[9][10]
Seasonal Draught/Tap Beers
- Pot Kettle Black (Porter): a popular assertively hopped Porter, which has been called a 'Black IPA' due to its notably strong New Zealand hop character. Released in September 2008 (5.2%) and June 2009 (6.0%).
- Golden Boy - 4.7% Golden Ale: a single malt summer ale using Maris Otter malt and liberally hopped with New Zealand Styrian Golding and Nelson Sauvin. Released December 2008.
- Kid Chocolate - 3.6% Mild ale: a reddish session ale, in the Yeastie Boys self-proclaimed favourite style, with a mild balance of malt and hop. One of the lowest alcohol commercial beers released in New Zealand. Released March 2009.
- Plan K - 4.6% Belgian Pale Ale: a Belgian-styled pale ale released at Beervana, Wellington, in August 2009.
- PKB Remix 2009 - 6.66% (Stout): a playful remix of Pot Kettle Black to celebrate its double trophy-winning effort at BrewNZ 2009. The hoppy porter becomes a hoppy stout.
- The Nerdherders - 4.8% New Zealand Pale Ale: A modern pacific-styled pale ale (aromatic and highly bittered) with intercontinenatal and transatlantic influences. Two batches of this beer were produced - 'B' and 'D' (referring to the respective use of Motueka and Riwaka hops - formerly known as 'Saaz B' and 'Saaz D'). Released in December 2009.
- Return to Magenta - 5.0% Hoppy Belgian Amber Ale: An amber ale with a soul twist... aromatic new world hops, biscuity malt and a spicy Belgian yeast. Released in April 2010.
- The Monsters - 6.0% New Zealand IPA and American IPA: Two India Pale Ales for winter with 100% UK malt and a monster load of hops. Two near identical batches of this beer were produced - 'Yakima Monster' and 'Motueka Monster' (referring to the respective hop growing regions of the hops used in each beer: USA and NZ respectively). Released in June 2010.
- Punkadiddle - 3.7% Ordinary Bitter: a red-hued Ordinary Bitter with 100% English malt, East Kent Goldings and a London ESB yeast.
- Rapture and Europa - 4.2% Blonde Ale: a pair of mildly hopped blond session ales brewed for summer 2009/2010 utilising the same recipe but using different yeasts (a Belgian Abbey yeast for Rapture and a German Kolsch yeast for Europa).
References
- ↑ "For a short time only, real beer". The Dominion Post. 6 October 2008. Retrieved 25 August 2009.
- 1 2 "BrewNZ Beer Awards 2009" (PDF). BrewNZ. Retrieved 2010-12-06.
- ↑ "AIBA 2010" (PDF). AIBA. Retrieved 2010-05-20.
- 1 2 3 "AIBA 2011" (PDF). AIBA. Retrieved 2011-05-20.
- 1 2 "BrewNZ 2010 Results" (PDF). BrewNZ.
- ↑ "Big New Ale Fit For A King". Fairfax. Retrieved 2009-11-13.
- ↑ "Yeastie Brews". Salient. Retrieved 2009-09-21.
- ↑ "Fight For Your Right To Party". Fairfax. Retrieved 2009-11-21.
- ↑ Brown, Casey (2012-08-31). "Beer brings people together: Obama, homebrewers, and online communities". opensource.com. Retrieved 2015-07-25.
The Yeastie Boys Digital IPA has also been frequently tossed around in conversations in the open source community over the past few days. To describe the beer, the Yeastie Boys' website states, "Just as the term digital is all about zeroes and ones, the concept of IPA is all about malts and hops." This beer stands out from other homebrews because the Yeastie Boys cleverly put QR codes on the bottles that link to the recipe, so you can try the brew yourself. They also link to different forms of social media so fans can easily share their tweaked recipes.
- ↑ digital-ipa-recipe on yeastieboys.tumblr.com