Timothy Taylor's Landlord (Bottle)

Landlord (Bottle)
(Batch of Landlord)

 

Timothy Taylor's in Keighley, West Yorkshire, England 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿

  Pale Ale - Classic English Regular
Score
6.72
ABV: 4.1% IBU: - Ticks: 317
The drinkers’ favourite, a 4.1% classic pale ale with a complex citrus and hoppy aroma. A recent survey revealed that Landlord has the highest proportion of drinkers who call it their favourite ale. And it has won more awards than any other beer, winning both CAMRA’s Champion Beer of Britain and the Brewing Industry Challenge Cup four times.
 

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7.5/10 Appearance 10 Aroma 7 Flavor 7 Texture 8 Overall 7
7-5-7-4-14 Bottle, #L3081C, ten months before bbd. Pours clear dark golden, with a big creamy head. Aroma is malts with bread and toffee, as well as earthy hops with herbs and citrusy notes. Medium body, with soft to average carbonation. Flavour is roasted malts with bread crust, caramel and heather, as well as earthy hops with marmalade. Lingering citrusy finish. Nicely balanced and refreshing.
Tried from Bottle on 03 May 2023 at 20:50

7/10
Malty.medium/high carbonation.low/medium bitterness.medium body.herbs,toffee.brit hops. Bbe:05/2023
Tried on 18 Feb 2023 at 18:26

7/10 Appearance 8 Aroma 6 Flavor 7 Texture 8 Overall 7
Brun klar med høyt hvitt skum. Lukter karamell og noe urter. Smaker malt, karamell. Myk i munnfølelse.
Tried on 18 Feb 2023 at 13:06

8/10 Appearance 8 Aroma 8 Flavor 8 Texture 8 Overall 8
Bottle. Clear orange/gold with a decent white head. Aroma of malts, tea, citrus fruits and herbal hops with a little whiff of enjoyable diacetyl. Taste of malts, biscuits, black tea, citrus fruits, flowers and bergamot. Distinctive long lasting bitterness. Low carbonation. Smooth mouthfeel. A very balanced, flavourful and surprisingly bitter Bitter (no pun intended). Lovely.
Tried from Bottle on 17 Jan 2023 at 22:09

8/10
Tried on 24 Jul 2022 at 14:38

6/10 Appearance 6 Aroma 6 Flavor 6 Texture 6 Overall 6
# 2774; 3/2022. Malty, bready and citrusy aroma. Clear gold body; white head. Malty, bready, zesty. Long bready finish. 0,5 l, bottle, supermarket, Lincoln (Lincolnshire, England).
Tried from Bottle on 04 Mar 2022 at 21:59

7.8/10 Appearance 8 Aroma 7 Flavor 8 Texture 8 Overall 8
From bottle at Knights Tower 16.02.22. Clear dark golden. Foamy white head. Distinctive aroma and taste of pale malt, a touch of crystal malt, meadowy hops and Sevilla marmalade. Very quaffable!
Tried from Bottle on 16 Feb 2022 at 22:57

7.4/10 Appearance 8 Aroma 8 Flavor 7 Texture 7 Overall 7
One of the great classics of traditional English pale ales or bitters, originally aimed at local miners but apparently Madonna's favourite beer as well, at least according to what she claimed in an interview with talk show host Jonathan Ross in 2003... I never had this one cask-conditioned, alas, but luckily I did manage to get my hands on a bottle of the filtered version - which I suppose qualifies as an EPA just for being bottled. Quite regular, egg-white, moussy, slightly and irregularly lacing, stable head on a crystal clear, deep 'old golden' beer with 'rusty' amberish tinge. Aroma of warm margarine, dried mugwort leaves, unsalted peanuts, butter on hot toast, dry hay, field flowers, dandelion, a whiff of dry Earl Grey tea, moist white pepper, vague whiff of unsmoked cigarette shag. Cleanish onset, restrainedly fruity with notes of unripe apricot and dried peach, finely tingling but very active carbonation adding a lot of refreshing, almost 'metallic' minerality as in fresh spring water, smooth body - a little bit buttery even. A margarine-like aspect, possibly a diacetyl remnant, floats over a toasty-bitterish, peanutty and bread-crusty maltiness, which remains slender but adds a late bitterness which is eventually taken over by noble hops, in a somewhat earthy and leafy, but also wormwoody, spicy way, lingering for quite a while and doing a perfect job in drying the finish; the very pronounced minerality I already mentioned, lingers on with it after swallowing. This Yorkshire classic is about as English as it gets for a bottled beer (keeping in mind that tapped beer, whether cask-conditioned or not, is still the dominant factor in English beer culture), with a crisp, light-footed, elegant and still powerful character. This kind of 19th-century style ales may not be as hip and trendy as all those American-inspired craft beers flowing over the United Kingdom, I think we still need to honour them and respect them for their huge historical influence, and it is good to know that many (even self-proclaimed beer geek Madonna) still do. I love drinking a classic like this every now and then and I am glad that I can finally tick this famous beer off my list - it seems the guy depicted on the front label used to smile more explicitly on the former version of the label, but I see no reason why he should restrain his smile, this is as solid as it gets in this particular class of beer. Cheers to sir Timothy Taylor!
Tried on 23 Oct 2021 at 23:56

7.4/10 Appearance 7 Aroma 8 Flavor 7.5 Texture 7 Overall 7
Pours a quite clear light copper/amber, with a couple of fingers of a quite dense, slightest off-white head. Decent retention and lacing. Aroma notes: delicate malty base of caramel and nuttiness, a nice underlying wet earth feel, soft fruity notes of citrus and perhaps berries. The aroma is overall not especially strong, but nicely soft, clean and well defined. Taste notes follow the aroma closely, perhaps with a bit less precision/definition, but with excellent bittersweet balance. Medium sweet and medium bitter, with none standing out in the mouth and the slightest bitter edge in a semi-dry, semi-earthy finish. Light bodied with average carbonation, resulting in a quite easy, semi-smooth mouthfeel. I guess the mouthfeel is probably where the bottled version misses the most if compared to the cask version. Overall, this is still a pretty good drink.
Tried from Bottle on 08 Oct 2021 at 15:07

6/10
Bottle from Tesco. Pours a clear amber colour with a medium sized throthy white head. Aromas of caramel, bread, biscuits with a hint of citrus and floral. Taste has caramel, citrus, biscuits, a touch of floral and some peppery spice. Earthy hop bitterness on the finish. Medium body with fair carbonation. More fizzy and bitter than i remember. Not bad
Tried from Bottle on 29 Sep 2021 at 18:57