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Adelaide Hills lager crowned Australia’s best craft beer

Adelaide Hills brewery Mismatch has bucked the trend of heavy, hop-driven craft beers to win the Champion Trophy at the Australian Independent Brewers Association Awards with a lager.

Jun 29, 2018, updated Jun 29, 2018

Mismatch Lager came out on top of 114 entrants in the lager category before beating the trophy winners in the other nine categories to be named champion in Sydney last night.

The win caps a meteoric rise for the Mismatch Brewing Company, which was founded by head brewer Ewan Brewerton in 2013.

Described as a smooth, drinkable beer, Mismatch Lager is inspired by the helles-style beers of Munich. With an ABV of 4.5 per cent, the lager uses Hallertau hops and a yeast from Weihenstephan, also in Germany.

Brewerton said it was an honour to be recognised for producing the champion Australian independent beer.

Ewan Brewerton.

“Winning an award with our Lager is the most exciting result possible,” he said. 

“The time, effort and precision in brewing a beer of quality consistently interrupts my sleep at night.”

The inaugural “Indies” awards follow on from the Australian Craft Beer Awards and are open to independent brewers producing less than 40 million litres per annum and which are not more than 20 per cent owned by any other brewer that produces more than 40 million litres.

 The criteria changes took place in the wake of several high-profile independent brewery sales in the past year, including Adelaide’s Pirate Life, to major commercial breweries.

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 The Mismatch Lager, which sells for about $22 for a six-pack of 375ml cans, was released less than a year ago and sits alongside its Session Ale and Pale Ale as the mainstays of the range.

Mismatch began as a “gypsy brewer” in 2013, meaning it made its beer at other breweries, until its new 35-hectolitre brewery near Nairne began production at the start of this year.

The Hay Valley brewery is co-located with Adelaide Hills Distillery. The two businesses have also partnered with The Hills Cider Company and Ashton Valley Fresh and will open a cellar door for all four companies this spring.

The brewery uses a sustainable water supply that is put through a reverse osmosis system before being used to make the beer. Wastewater from the brewing process – about five litres for every litre of beer produced – is treated on-site and used to irrigate the surrounding orchards.

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