Eight Degrees Orange Ball
Origin: Ireland | Date: 2019 | ABV: 3.9% | On The Beer Nut: August 2019

I guess it was the orange, passionfruit and guava that are responsible for the gas build-up in this. Any freshness from the tropical fruit has departed, though there's still a pithy orange aroma, driven by plenty of fizz. My original review noted tea-like tannins, and that's the main feature of the flavour. The citrus is less apparent, leaving just an oily residue in the finish. It's not unpleasant, even if it's very much not as the brewer intended. The only downsides are an unwelcome sour staleness and a slightly metallic tang. I'm wondering if that's an inherent problem with old canned beers, especially pale ones. We'll see how that pans out in the others. It seems that some residue from the orange had clumped together and that was waiting at the bottom of the glass, increasing the intensity of the orange effect as I neared the end.
I wouldn't recommend cellaring this beer, and obviously it hasn't improved with age. It's still drinkable, however, so if you happen across some, no need to drain pour it, before you taste it anyway.
Eight Degrees Seisíun
Origin: Ireland | Date: 2018 | ABV: 4.5% | On The Beer Nut: July 2016

Took me a while to find my original review of this. It was called "Summer Days" at launch, then renamed for year-round drinking.
There shouldn't have been any rogue fermentables in this one, but the can warped anyway, though it didn't gush. Inside, the beer was a normal-looking hazy amber colour. There's an aroma of grapefruit which is pleasant, even if it's not exactly overwhelming with freshness. Unsurprisingly, the flavour is all about the bitterness rather than any fruity top notes, and yes, there's that metallic tang again.
Regardless, I think this one may have actually developed some positive complexity from the ageing. Along with the pithy orange bitterness, there's a coconut thread running through the middle of it, and a light cinnamon spicing too. That makes it all a bit Christmassy, which is fun, and not something I expected from a core-range session IPA.

Took me a while to find my original review of this. It was called "Summer Days" at launch, then renamed for year-round drinking.
There shouldn't have been any rogue fermentables in this one, but the can warped anyway, though it didn't gush. Inside, the beer was a normal-looking hazy amber colour. There's an aroma of grapefruit which is pleasant, even if it's not exactly overwhelming with freshness. Unsurprisingly, the flavour is all about the bitterness rather than any fruity top notes, and yes, there's that metallic tang again.
Regardless, I think this one may have actually developed some positive complexity from the ageing. Along with the pithy orange bitterness, there's a coconut thread running through the middle of it, and a light cinnamon spicing too. That makes it all a bit Christmassy, which is fun, and not something I expected from a core-range session IPA.
The White Hag Unfinished Business
Origin: Ireland | Date: 2019 | ABV: 4.5% | On The Beer Nut: December 2019
An all-Mosaic lager can't possibly have improved. This was another gusher, with barely enough condition left after pouring to form a head. Again it's a pithy aroma to start with, harsh and bitter, with none of the tropicality from when it was fresh. I think the metallic tang is here in the flavour but if so it's very muted. There's a hard-water mineral quality: intensely clean thanks to the cool fermentation. The hops sit on top of this, bringing unsubtle marmalade and jaffa peel. It definitely seems like the tropical flavour compounds have broken down, but the residual citrus is ensuring this beer remains worthwhile, six years after packaging. Even though the hops aren't fresh, I liked how the lager element is still pristine, lacking any off flavours or staleness.
For the most part, these were better than I expected. While of course I don't recommend that anyone age pale ales or hoppy lagers in the hope of improving them, not least because of the risk of explosion, it seems it takes a lot to properly ruin a beer once it's in its aluminium jacket. There are some more up there. If they start showing signs of internal disturbance, I'll get them blogged here too.
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