Video | Agriculture | Confidence | Economy | Energy | Employment | Finance | Media | Property | RBNZ | Science | SOEs | Tax | Technology | Telecoms | Tourism | Transport | Search

 


Mac’s Brewjolais – Back for its third year

Wednesday 2 April, 2008
For immediate release


The early bird catches the…errrr…Hops?
Mac’s Brewjolais – Back for its third year

Following another triumphant appearance at Mac's Brewbars last year, the seasonal madness that is Brewjolais makes its third appearance in 2008. Our Mac’s Brewers have been busy picking the first Riwaka hops of the season and adding them green and fresh to a pale ale to produce a very hoppy, bitter beer – Mac’s Brewjolais.

Mac’s Brewjolais celebrates and honours the annual hop harvest and 2008 promises to be a vintage year for fresh hops and fresh thinking.

“This year’s vintage is a little different, as is becoming tradition with Brewjolais. We have kept the malt grist simple, as this beer is all about the hops,” says Mac’s Marketing Manager Kerry Wheeler.

“We’ve used Riwaka hops, from Colin Oldham's farm in the Rakau Valley and added 12 pokes of fresh, un-kilned Riwaka hops, which have added a huge passionfruit character to the beer.”

Mac’s Brewjolais is fermented with an American ale yeast to develop this fruit character further, resulting in a satisfying ale that is full in flavour and bitterness.

Ensure you make the most of the limited release Mac's Brewjolais, because when it runs out, 12 months will seem like an awfully long time to wait for the next batch.

Mac’s Brewjolais has an ABV of 5.5% and is available fresh on tap from the following selected outlets:

The Northern Steamship Brewbar Auckland
Nuffield Street Brewbar Auckland
Brewery Bar and Restaurant Wellington
Aikmans Christchurch
Smugglers Pub and Café Nelson
The Honest Lawyer Nelson
Victorian Rose Nelson
Prince Albert Hotel Nelson
Pohara Sands Takaka


ENDS

 
 
 
 
 
Business Headlines | Sci-Tech Headlines

 

Stats: Rugby World Cup Visitors Spent $390 Million

Visitors to New Zealand for the Rugby World Cup spent around $390 million, according to the International Visitors Survey released by the Ministry of Economic Development today. More>>

ALSO:

Scoop Business: SCF Accused Name Suppression Lapses

Name suppression for the last two people accused of committing a $1.7 billion fraud though failed lender South Canterbury Finance lapsed today. More>>

ALSO:

Scoop Business: Over—paying Just As Risky As Underpaying, Says Hudson

Overpaying employees is just as risky as underpaying them, according to recruitment firm Hudson’s latest report, as no organisation wants to be represented by someone driven by price. More>>

ALSO:

Scoop Business: Lloyd Morrison Leaves Big Shoes To Fill In NZ Leadership

With the untimely death of Wellington businessman and identity Lloyd Morrison at the age of 54, New Zealand has lost one of its singular characters, let alone business leaders. More>>

ALSO:

NIWA: Experts Set Sail To See How The Ocean Creates Clouds

Next week, NIWA’s research vessel Tangaroa will set sail for the Chatham Rise, for an international study of how microscopic organisms in the surface waters may affect the creation of clouds. This work is important because, “We need to understand ... More>>

ALSO

 
 
 
 
 
Business
Search Scoop  
 
 
powered by newsagent
NZ independent news