Irish Lager
Kinsale Brewing Co in Kinsale, Cork, Ireland 🇮🇪
Lager - Pale Regular Out of Production|
Score
4.75
|
|
Kinsale Irish is a smooth, golden lager crafted from the finest natural ingredients and aged to perfection. No chemicals, no preservatives, and no gimmicks- just the only Irish lager actually brewed in Ireland and available here!
Sign up to add a tick or review
5.5/10
—
Appearance 8
Aroma 4
Flavor 4
Texture 6
Overall 7
Notes from the file last updated in 2010. Pours gold with white head. Aroma not noted. Flavor was light malt and hop. Not bitter.
Tried
on 16 Dec 2014
at 18:06
3.9/10
—
Appearance 4
Aroma 4
Flavor 4
Texture 4
Overall 3.5
bottle - Pours piss yellow with a thin head and a corn malt aroma. It’s sweet and light like a typical pale lager. There’s a trace of hops and nothing offensive about it. There’s just not much there to justify drinking it.
Tried
from Bottle
on 09 Aug 2007
at 20:59
3.8/10
—
Appearance 4
Aroma 3
Flavor 4
Texture 4
Overall 4
On tap at Claddagh’s Irish Pub, Lansing. Golden body, thin off-white head. Biscuity aroma with metallic hints. Light, biscuity malt, earthy, grassy hops. Light toast and sweetness. Standard fare.
Tried
from Draft
on 04 Mar 2006
at 14:17
3.1/10
—
Appearance 4
Aroma 3
Flavor 2
Texture 6
Overall 2.5
Pour is yellow with a white head. Aroma is very corny and you can guess what the flavor is like. Corny as well and very bland. There are other better beers in Ireland than this swill.
Tried
from Can
on 11 Dec 2004
at 19:57
3.8/10
—
Appearance 4
Aroma 4
Flavor 4
Texture 2
Overall 4
Typical macro-lager appearance and flavor, not unlike Sapporo, Peroni, Kirin, etc etc. I had it on draft but that's really the only positive thing I can think of to say about this beer.
Tried
from Draft
on 31 May 2002
at 06:50
2.6/10
—
Appearance 2
Aroma 3
Flavor 3
Texture 2
Overall 2.5
Bland, pointless international lager. If I want that, I can get local swill so much cheaper. What kind of loser would drink a yellow beer from Ireland instead of the black stuff?
Tried
from Can
on 19 Mar 2002
at 13:57