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Burning Sky

Burning Sky x Westwell Parcelle Blanc

Burning Sky x Westwell Parcelle Blanc

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A unique collaboration between Sussex brewery Burning Sky and Kent’s Westwell Wines, Parcelle Blanc sits at the crossroads of beer and wine. Built on a mixed-fermentation farmhouse base and refermented with white wine grapes (primarily Ortago), it draws on Westwell’s sustainably farmed fruit and Burning Sky’s wild fermentation approach.

Fresh and expressive, it shows citrus, green apple and white peach with hints of floral notes, light funk and soft oak spice. The palate is dry, lightly sparkling and zippy, with bright acidity, gentle texture and a clean, mineral finish.

 

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Tasting Notes

Gooseberry Skin, White Peach, Wine Lees and Chalk Dust

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Delivery Days Monday- Wednesday- Friday

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Burning Sky

Style: Brewery

Country: England

Region: Sussex

Burning Sky approaches brewing with the sort of obsessive attention usually associated with winemakers quietly ageing bottles in ancient stone cellars while discussing soil composition for several uninterrupted hours. Founded by former Dark Star brewer Mark Tranter in rural Sussex, the brewery became hugely respected for saisons, mixed fermentation beers and beautifully balanced modern British brewing.

The farmhouse beers sit right at the heart of the project. Saison à la Provision and the wider barrel-aged range bring together rustic yeast character, citrus, pepper, soft funk and beautiful dryness in ways that feel heavily inspired by Belgium while still remaining unmistakably English. The mixed fermentation programme is especially impressive, producing beers with subtle acidity and complexity rather than full-scale vinegar warfare.

Burning Sky also handles hop-forward beer brilliantly too. Pale ales and IPAs carry loads of freshness and aroma but always stay clean and restrained underneath. There’s very little unnecessary shouting in any of the beers.

What makes the brewery especially respected is the consistency and precision running through everything. Even the wildest barrel projects feel polished and intentional rather than chaotic. The whole thing has a calm confidence to it that makes a lot of modern craft beer seem slightly hyperactive by comparison.

Sussex has quietly become an incredibly exciting region for fermentation generally, from natural wine to farmhouse beer, and Burning Sky fits perfectly into that landscape. Elegant, thoughtful and ridiculously drinkable.