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Bottle and glass of The Kernel Imperial Brown Stout on a table with a cityscape background
Two people working with barrels against a brick wall.
Two people working on a barrel against a brick wall.
Person working on a barrel with tools in a dimly lit room.
Two people moving a barrel through a dimly lit brewery.
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, Bottle and glass of The Kernel Imperial Brown Stout on a table with a cityscape background
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, Two people working with barrels against a brick wall.
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, Two people working on a barrel against a brick wall.
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, Person working on a barrel with tools in a dimly lit room.
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, Two people moving a barrel through a dimly lit brewery.

Imperial Brown Stout, Whisky Barrel Aged, 11.8%- 330ml

Vendor
The Kernel Brewery
Regular price
£8.50
Sale price
£8.50
Regular price
Sold out
Unit price
per 
Tax included.

Imperial Brown Stout, Whisky Barrel Aged, 11.8%

Malt:
Maris Otter Pale Ale Malt, Amber, Brown, Black
Hops: Magnum
Yeast:  House Ale Yeast (Cal Ale).
Barrel:
Glen Moray 1994 and 2013, Glenburgie 2011 (all Speyside) and Glengarioch 2003 (Highland)

The base beer, as always, follows our well worn groove of using recipes from the archives of extinct British breweries, this one from London’s Barclay Perkins, from 1856. The Imperial Brown Stouts developed into what became known as the Russian Imperial Stouts, and this particular recipe developed into the Courage RIS, which is most notable because a) it was an excellent beer, and b) it continued to be produced until 1992, as the only surviving link to a certain brewing tradition that was huge in London, and made London famous, for over 200 years. And of course, a tradition which is now itself about extinct

In May 2025 we filled 4 different barrels (Glen Moray 1994 and 2013, Glenburgie 2011 (all Speyside) and Glengarioch 2003 (Highland)), sourced via the Scottish Malt Whisky Society.  These were then blended
 back together and packed in September. The result is surprisingly unsurprising: everything in its right place, - smooth and balanced despite all the big flavours thrown together in this beer.  Aromatically the whisky is most prominent, but it smells like whisky without the heat, which leaves vanilla toasted wood and coconut.  The flavour flows directly from this in the expected and logical fashion: vanilla custard, apple, dried fruit (prune and fig), all these tones suggesting a sweetness that however is not itself prominent, and there is still a touch of bitterness from the beer, but it is rather the tannins from the wood that give this its structure, holding it back away from sweetness and booziness by keeping the finished poised, even slightly dry.