Zaij said:
I've probably tried about 200 different beers in the last two years...
...I've only had beers from De Koningshoeven Brewery (makers of La Trappe) and Chimay Brewery (Makers of Chimay... duh), but I'll definitely be trying more.
Have you had over 200 different versions of Koningshoeven and Chimay, or what?

By 'this kind of beer' in the first sentence, are you referring to 'awesome beer'? Aaanyway,
I really like ales like Chimay (blue, red, white), Leffe (blonde/brune), or why not the Dutch La Trappe (double/triple), etc. Ales are kick ass, and are best enjoyed in the evening, IMO. I mean, sure, during warm sunny days I prefer either weissbier such as Hoegaarden Witbier, or Weihenstephaner Hefe Weissbier - or any ol' Czech lager like Pilsner Urquell, Krusovice, Gambrinus, Kozel, Staropramen, etc. (Not so much Zlatopramen and Starobrno, but I only dislike them in comparison to their Czech rivals). But ale, now that is where it's really at, flavor wise.
I'm also a big fan of British ales. Spitfire, Bombardier, and two of my all time favorites - Old Speckled Hen, and Innis & Gunn. If I'd give you 1 tip that I really like, it would be Innis & Gunn. I don't know how easy they are to come by outside of Great Britain or Sweden. Innis & Gunn is quite popular in Sweden - at least by special ale standards, and we've had several batches of Innis & Gunn made exclusively for Great Britain and Sweden.
(Actually, I looked it up, see bottom of post.*)
The latest special edition Island Cask was 'limited' to 250 barrels, and I farking
loved that edition. Before that one there was another Island Cask of a different style, that was limited to 36.000 bottles in total, and that was truly awesome. I still have two bottles in storage, and they've really grown and developed on the bottle. Will be opening them soon, for they are 2007 edition and shouldn't be stored any longer now.
I have a pretty weak ale collection at the moment, but I'm always searching for new limited edition ales to pick up. Plus, nomally, you don't store ale for more than a year or two, unless it's a special edition that was brewed for storing longer - some can not only last but even get better after 5 years or more. (Store a regular lager for a year past the expiration date and it can go moldy and undrinkable, but some ales really grow a lot on the bottle without going bad att all - on the contrary - especially triple ales of course).
Current little collection:
4 Nils Oscar Triple from early 2008 - a
very limited edition of only 2000 bottles by the Swedish brewery Nils Oscar, which is my favorite Swedish brewery. Say what you will about Swedish lager, and whatever you say (so long as it's something bad), I will be bound to agree. Swedish lager beers generally suck - all the big brands do. Swedish beer is a disgrace all over the world. However, we have some fucking
kick ass ales. Nils Oscar makes a few of them. Anyway, this one is really awesome.
1 Nils Oscar Smoke Porter 2008 edition
1 Fullers 2008 edition
1 Fullers 500 days on oak edition (not same as above, though the above is also 2008)
2 Innis & Gunn Island Cask 2007
4 Innis & Gunn Island Cask 2008
I like the Fullers and Innis & Gunn versions since they come in nice little boxes, like fince scotch, hehe. I've had a couple of nice Belgians in the collection, but they are long since gone, which reminds me I need to stock up.
Oh yeah, Fullers is also one of my favorite beers. Fullers ESB Champion Ale is very nice, and Discovery isn't half bad either.
The Island Cask 2007 edition was fucking awesome when it was new, and I also tried one a couple of months ago, and that one had grown like *hell*.
Lots of more whisky flavor, and
lots of more woody finish. How that happened exactly I don't know, but it was quite the experience. (All Innis & Gunn ales are stored on oak barrels btw).
* Innis & Gunn (regular, mass market version) is only available in the UK, Sweden, Denmark, Finland, Canada and the USA. For a complete stocklist, see
here.