The Irish/Dublin Beer Festival returns to its roots

Festive vibes in the RDS

The Irish Craft Beer Festival returned to the RDS! For some reason it was now dubbed the Dublin Beer Festival and for others it was now in a different, smaller hall. There were 30 Irish and 10 international breweries pouring which is about half the number in attendance back in the heady mid 2010s. That said, it was an improvement on the events in Rathmines and Dun Laoghaire. I was curious to see how it would go. One comment I saw on social media bemoaned the lack of water stations and proper glassware. On arrival I was given a plastic glass but I opted to upgrade to the much nicer glass for €6. Not only did this enhance my drinking experience, it probably unconsciously made me mind it better! And there was one water station – in the farthest corner of the hall…

Lineman’s Supernature

I arrived about half an hour after the event opening and there was a bit of a buzz, it felt busy but not over crowded. My first beer was the lovely new IPA from Lineman, Supernature.

Caroline having the craic

Caroline (the famous author of cookbooks!) from Eight Degrees told me they had a new version of Cumulus Lupulus with Nelson Sauvin so I had to try that, and it didn’t disappoint!

Malty boi from Lough Gill

Lough Gill managed to fit a bar, beer and a rake of lads into a horsebox- I enjoyed their amber lager which was a festival special.

Dunkel from Hofbräuhaus Traunstein

Grand Cru had a bar from Hofbräuhaus Traunstein and I said I’d stick with the malty lagers and tried their Dunkel which was very good.

Hopfully’s Dunkel

And I have to say Hopfully’s Dunkel measured up very well after! It’s great to see some of these styles being brewed here.

Some of the international breweries

From the international breweries I tried Baxbier’s American IPA which was great, and Brewski’s Where The Hops Have No Name. They actually brewed it as a collaboration with Craft Central. Apparently they are fans of U2 and experimental hops that don’t have names yet. I am not a fan of U2 but the hops made for a tasty beer.

Rye River Round Feet

I rounded off proceedings with a beer from my old friends at Rye River, Round Feet, a collaboration with Dutch brewery Poppels. It’s a well rounded IPA. (Ok, I apologise, I’ll stop now – maybe just one more…)

So, to round up I have to say, I had a very enjoyable afternoon, despite not talking to all of the people I probably should have talked to, and not drinking all of the beers on offer! I’m glad to see the event go well and look forward to seeing it return in 2025. Sláinte!

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2 Responses to The Irish/Dublin Beer Festival returns to its roots

  1. Mike says:

    Hi Simon. As much as it was good to see festival back in the capitol there are still plenty of work to be done. One of the biggest disappointment was lack of beers on Saturday. We arrived around 4pm and some beers were already unavailable. At 6pm some breweries had NO beers available. This is pretty bad tbh. Coming over for festival understocked. We didn’t stay long but I am guessing not many beers were available after 8pm. The toilet situation was pretty dire too, not enough of them, long waiting.

    Overall it was good but I’ve honestly expected better. A lot of work to get back to a proper level.

    • Simon says:

      Well Mike, I was there a bit earlier and *most* of the beers were still available when I landed, also the toilet queues weren’t bad earlier in the afternoon. That said, when I was leaving both situations were changing so, you’re not wrong!

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