Stout & Porter

4 products


  • Last stock! Puhaste The Black Eye Porter

    Puhaste Puhaste The Black Eye Porter

    2 in stock

    Puhaste The Black Eye - Coffee Porter / 6.5% vol / 33 cl. The Puhaste The Black Eye Porter is a porter brewed with Guatemala Nueva Era coffee and lactose. Untappd 3.84

    2 in stock

    €4,50

  • Puhaste Brewery Linnutee Stout

    Puhaste Brewery Puhaste Brewery Linnutee Stout

    9 in stock

    Puhaste Brewery Linnutee - Coffee Stout / 6% vol / 33 cl. Stout brewed with Kenya Zawadi Peaberry coffee and condensed milk. Untapp 3.96

    9 in stock

    €4,35

  • Brouwerij Kees It's a Sin Imperial Stout

    Brouwerij Kees Brouwerij Kees It's a Sin Imperial Stout

    21 in stock

    Brouwerij Kees It's a Sin - Imperial Stout / 13,8% vol / 33 cl. De Brouwerij Kees It's a Sin Imperial Stout is een collab samen met Puhaste uit Estland. Het resultaat is een dikke, vette Imperial Stout, met tonen van koffie en chocolade, gevolgd door mooie kruidigheid. Gebrouwen door Brouwerij Kees uit Middelburg, Nederland. Untappd 3.94

    21 in stock

    €4,90

  • Puhaste Brewery Avellana Bourbon BA Silver Series BA Stout

    Puhaste Brewery Puhaste Brewery Avellana Bourbon BA Silver Series BA Stout

    16 in stock

    Puhaste Brewery Avellana Bourbon BA Silver Series - BA Stout / 13% vol / 33 cl. De Puhaste Brewery Avellana Bourbon BA Silver Series is een Imperial Stout, gebrouwen met hazelnoten, en gelagerd op bourbon vaten.  Gebrouwen door Puhaste Brewery uit Tartu, Estland.  Untappd 4.36

    16 in stock

    €9,95

Stout & Porter

Stout & Porter

Stout and porter beers are related. In fact, the stout is a beer style that evolved from the porter, and is actually also an abbreviation of 'stout porter', or, in other words, a strong porter.

Let's start with the porter: this is originally a dark beer, which was mainly drunk by the porters in the English ports (as tradition states). The exact history is rather unclear. It is certain that the 'porter' as beer was already being discussed early in the 18th century. You can imagine that the porters from this time are difficult to compare with modern porters.

Porters are dark beers, but certainly not opaque. If you look through it (with the help of a light, for example) you can actually see that a porter is not black, but a deep dark red or brown. The taste is characterized by dark notes, such as coffee and chocolate, but also flavors of grain, caramel, bread, and sometimes even somewhat fruity (think red and blue berries). The beer can also be a bit hoppy, which is historically appropriate, but does not always happen. The alcohol percentage is (usually) between 4.5 and 6.5%.

The Stout can be seen as the 'big brother' of the porter. Thick, full and rich, with a good alcohol percentage.

Stouts are really dark beers. You can try to see through your glass, but you won't succeed. Black, black, jet black in color, with big flavors. Coffee, chocolate, licorice/salmiac, roasted, roasted, sweet, dry, intense, but also layered and subtle. You can also have fruity notes in stouts, such as dark red fruit, berries, figs, etc., but that is certainly not always the case. Expect an alcohol content of between 8 and 12%, but outliers (certainly upwards) are not rare. Above 10% alcohol you call it a Russian Imperial Stout. The term 'Russian Imperial' is said to refer to the popularity of (very heavy) stouts at the Russian imperial court, although there is no tangible evidence of this. It is known that the Imperial Stout was extremely popular with the Tsars and that it was seen as a noble drink.

Stouts are also often used to mature in wooden barrels that previously held another spirit such as whiskey, bourbon or something else. We are talking about the 'barrel aged' stout.

View all the stouts and porters we have in our range here.

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