
Photo by Timothy Dykes on Unsplash
Have you ever thought to yourself βthis 4% beer just isnβt cutting it - I really need one thatβll make me sway after a few sips.β? No, me neither. The ever-increasing popularity of the craft beer industry has meant that we have seen a rise in experimentation in the beer world. One of the more interesting recent trends is making beer high in alcohol (like, really high). So as to stay relevant many breweries are creating novelty beers for customers thirsty for more - double and even triple IPAs are becoming the norm as demand for new, exciting beer intensifies.
How High Alcohol Beers Are Made
The simplest approach to making a higher alcohol beer is to add more sugar during fermentation. During beer's fermentation process, yeast chomps on the sugar made from malted grain and then converts it into alcohol. If there is more available sugar, the yeast has more food to eat, which produces more alcohol. Simply put - it's about addingΒ more sugar to create more booze.
The Battle Between BrewDog & SchorschbrΓ€u
A decade ago, Scottish brewer BrewDog and GermanyβsΒ SchorschbrΓ€uΒ began their now-infamous battle for The Worldβs Strongest Beer.Β SchorschbrΓ€uΒ are renowned for pushing the limits when it comes to wheat beers and bocks intended to blow your socks off, so it was no mean feat to knock them off their perch - but the mad geniuses behind BrewDog, Martin Dickie and James Watt, decided to do just that.
It began back in 2009, the then fresh-on-the-scene BrewDog released a 32% ABV beer called Tactical Nuclear Penguin. This was specifically to snatch the Worldβs Strongest Beer title fromΒ SchorschbrΓ€u'sΒ 31% Schorschbock, to put Scotland on the map for progressive craft beers and push the boundaries to a whole new level.
Yet, SchorschbrΓ€uΒ didnβt let them bask in glory for long - quickly responding by creating a 40 percenter. This of course led to BrewDog releasingΒ Sink the Bismarck the next year which came in at 41%. SchorschbrΓ€uΒ then intensified its Schorschbock to 43% ABV, which ended up with BrewDog releasing the now-legendary 55%Β End of History (Iβm exhausted after all that, I donβt know about you).
In 2011, Schorschbrau countered one final time with a 57% Schorschbock, bringing a halt to the back-and-forth battle. BrewDog had been defeatedβ¦.Or had they?
To honour their previous ABV battle, the brewers decided to collaborate. ThusΒ Strength In NumbersΒ was born, creating a new contender for the Worldβs Strongest Beer.
Watch their entertaining story here:Β
The Strongest Beer In The World
Now, although BrewDog and Schorschbrau gave it a good crack, thereβs another contender: Snake Venom. Not for the faint-hearted, Scottish brewery Brewmeister created Snake Venom in 2013 claiming a whopping 67.5% ABV. They even put a warning label on the bottle, advising consumers to only drink (and share) one per sitting. Brewmeister claimed that the beer "tastes like a liquor and has a whole host of different flavours, ranging from bubble-gum to caramel." However, Guinness Book of Records still considers the strongest beer ever sold to be Brewdog's The End of History, perhaps due to ethyl alcohol being added to Snake Venom to reach the desired ABV of 67.5%. Either way, would you try it?
The Strongest Beer In Australia
Now weβve got the international beers out of the way, what about our very own, Aussie-made strong ABV beer?
WhileΒ Hope Estate have made it their focus to brew someΒ pretty big beers with their F-Jet and F/A series,Β Pirate Lifeβs Eisbock comes in higher at 29.2%. This makes it the strongest beer by an Australian brewery so far - one can alone contains 5.8 standard drinks. It sold out pretty fast but at $25 for 250ml, itβs not cheap. `
The guys at Pirate Life explain, βThis freeze distilled IIIPA is indeed best shared. Picture a one thousand litre tub filled with Pirate Life's IPA, IIPA and IIIPA in a refrigeration unit set minus thirty degrees. As the water in the beer freezes, a boozy concentrate drips from the ice. We collect it, repeat the process, then bang it in a can.It pours like syrup, with a fiery orange hue. Expect aromas of apricot brandy and spice, with lifted notes of olive brine. On the palate, buttered rum, marmalade and a good of lick of herbaceous hops.β
If you fancy one, you might have to wait a while as they didnβt make a lot of this stuff. Head over toΒ Pirate lifeβs website to keep updated on their limited releases or keep an eye on our Pirate life stock here.
The Classics - Belgian Ales
Although weβve seen a rise in the high ABV beers, itβs not just a fad. In fact, many of the OG BelgianΒ trappist alesbreweries likeΒ Chimay,Β Rochefort andΒ Westmalle make ales high in alcohol - and have done for a long time.
The first beers that were higher in ABV included Duvel at 8.5% which was first released in 1920, with many others being introduced from the 1950's onwards. Belgian brewers use higher temperatures when the beer is yeasting and fermenting. This results in a stronger taste and a higher alcohol content. They include styles likeΒ quadruples,Β dubbels andΒ tripels - frequently starting at 6% and increasing from there. It seems high ABV beers will be around for some time, from classic, hundred year old breweries to modern-day experiments.Β