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Tempest Sir Veillance Hazy Pale Ale

Tempest Sir Veillance Hazy Pale Ale

Regular price £5.00
Regular price Sale price £5.00
Sale Sold out
Tax included. Shipping calculated at checkout.
Producer Tempest Brewing Co
Country Scotland
Region Scottish Borders, Tweedbank
ABV 4.8%

Tasting Notes

Peach Nectar, Clementine, Oat Cream and Freshly Cut Herbs

Don’t forget your bottle opener!

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Edinburgh and UK Shipping

✓ Carefully packed by our team in Edinburgh

✓ Free local delivery in Edinburgh and
Falkirk for orders over £35

✓ Free UK delivery over £90

✓ Click & Collect available

✓ Shipping to Northern Ireland and Scottish Isles available on request: orders@thebeerhive.co.uk

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More About Tempest Sir Veillance Hazy Pale Ale

Aren’t we lucky to live in a world where, but for our news feeds, we may not know of the existence of this Australian-hopped, Scottish-brewed pale ale? Sure, drones may be watching our every move and our devices are eavesdropping on every conversation, but one sip of this deliciously smooth, soft, tropically hopped hazy and, for at least a fleeting moment, everything will be right with the world. vegan

Meet the Producer, Tempest Brewing Co

Tempest Brewing Co

Style: Brewery

Tempest began with a fairly unusual route into Scottish brewing. The founders originally planned to open a brewery in New Zealand before eventually setting up shop in an old dairy building in the Scottish Borders instead. Which feels like the sort of life decision that probably requires a long explanation over a pint.

Founded in 2010, the brewery quickly built a reputation for hop-forward beer, big flavours and a willingness to experiment without completely abandoning balance. Pale ales and IPAs remain central to the range, often packed with citrus, tropical fruit and modern hop character, but there is plenty more happening beyond that. Barrel-aged beers, stouts, saisons and mixed-fermentation projects all appear regularly.

What makes Tempest stand out is that the brewery never felt tied to one particular trend. While many breweries became locked into endless cycles of haze and hype, Tempest continued brewing across a broad range of styles. The beers generally feel driven by flavour rather than category.

The move to a larger brewery and taproom in Tweedbank reflects how far the project has come. What started as a small Borders brewery has become one of the most respected names in Scottish craft beer while still keeping a fairly independent spirit intact.

Scotland has produced some excellent modern breweries over the last fifteen years. Tempest comfortably belongs in that conversation.