Yukon Gold
Style: English Pale Ale
ABV: 5%
Presentation: 6 packs of 341 ml brown bottles
Brewery: Yukon Brewing Company
Country: Whitehorse, Yukon Territory, Canada
Since the inception of the Yukon Brewing Company over a decade ago now their Yukon Gold Ale has been one of their two flagship beers, and since then has remained their top selling brand. Perhaps the key to this comes from several factors: while it remains uncannily approachable and quenching it also possesses a subtle complexity to it, belying more than meets the eye upon an initial introduction.
Coming from the only brewery to be found north of the 60th parallel in this country, several sources refer to Yukon Gold as “the perfect example of a Canadian beer.” Perhaps this is the result of not trying to emulate or compete toe to toe with any other type of beer in particular, but being versatile enough to woo in both the commercial lager crowd as well as the more discerning craft beer type, who tends to frequent ales in general. The numbers don’t lie, on its home turf 1 in 3 kegs consumed in the Yukon is Yukon Gold. And considering that Alberta is the brewery’s primary outside market, this beer still tends to hold its own amongst the plethora of offerings we have to choose from.
For a decade now Yukon Gold has been a favourite session beer of mine. What’s a session beer you ask? Chances you already know the answer but may not be familiar with the term itself. Generally as session beer is of low to average alcohol percentage (4-5%), quenching, satisfying, with enough character to crave another in succession yet not so complex that your palate becomes fatigued and overwhelmed after only one glass. You have a few of these with friends on a sunny patio, watching the game, sitting around playing cards or a board game, kicking butt on Wii Bowling, or practically most kitchen parties. A friendly and casual beer that you want to hang out with on a regular basis, but not get blitzed on.
A clean and crisp beer, it’s one you still don’t want to drink ice cold. Let it warm at least 5-10 minutes after pulling from the fridge, there are some nice subtle nuances waiting for you within. I’d choose a pint or similar style glass for it, a wider glass such as a mug (unless it’s a thin rimmed mug) will disperse a lot of that subtle goodness if you choose to go exploring for it.
A deep gold, light amber in appearance, with striking clarity, and a tall creamy white head, things already get off to a good start. The nose picks up on a sweet bready malt at first, more caramel and toasted malt follows, with faint traces of floral hops. This continues in the flavour with predominant clean malt, bready caramel notes up front, a toasty character combined with light wheat graininess in the middle, it finishes dry with subtle floral, grassy hops with practically no bitterness, and the most curious hint of chocolate in the aftertaste. A mild, medium-bodied mouthfeel with low carbonation helps to easily deliver this session ale.
If you choose to go beyond enjoying Yukon Gold as a session ale and have a bite to eat with it, fairly light fare would be the key. Fish and chips are the ideal pairing that first comes to mind, although it would compliment a lone serving of sweet potato fries as well. Pan fried or lightly breaded calamari will also find a thoughtful dance partner with this ale. If your tastes are a bit more posh I’d recommend lobster or crab, the maltiness will not overwhelm the shellfish and will even compliment any additional garlic butter for dipping served alongside. Or for a more common meal, roasted chicken or turkey would be delighted to be paired some Yukon Gold, don’t forget a side of potatoes of the same name!
The next steps in the cooler:
From This Brewery:
Yukon Red
Chilkoot Lager
Lead Dog Ale
Yukon Cranberry Wheat
Discovery Ale
Ice Fog IPA
Midnight Sun Espresso Stout
In-Style:
Boddingtons Pub Ale
Fuller’s London Pride
St-Ambroise Pale Ale
Lateral Steps:
Innis and Gunn Oak Aged Beer
Duvel
Hacker-Pschorr Münchner Gold
For The Adventurous:
Lagunitas Censored
Anchor Liberty Ale
Maudite - Unibroue


