Blending Crystal and Pale malts gives you an amber ale. Using the correct hop schedule gives you an Amber Ale from James Squire.

This brew has a unique, yet familiar, taste low in bitterness and about mid-range on the mouthfeel scale. Leaving a some-what fresh after taste, JS’s Amber Ale has a brilliant deep copper colour that seems to fit it’s earthy flavour tones and the sweet and very malty aroma.
While I don’t feel JS’s Amber Ale will find it’s way into my fridge regularly, that doesn’t mean I won’t be enjoying it every so often as a way of changing things up.
345mL/5.0%


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