Saturday 30 June 2012

Hops, glorious Hops. & pt4 guess the brewer


Hop to it Boys.
                A recent visit to Kirkstall Brewery got me thinking about the change in our taste for beer and more specifically the massive change in flavour profile we've been accustomed to through the use of non native Hops. There was a stack of newly delivered boxes containing no less than eight varieties of Hops which Dave would be using in his excellent beers. Varieties that a few years ago many of us would probably not have heard of; Mounthood, Simcoe, Citra, Apollo, Marynka, Cascade, Dana... 
                To me, it seems that the biggest change for beer drinkers in the last twenty years or so has been  in the choice of Hops used in our beers. Having been a Real Ale drinker before CAMRA was formed I drank what some now dismissively call 'Brown Beer', beers from Local Breweries like Robinsons, Holts, Hydes and Wilsons. Those brewers used British Hops like Goldings, Fuggles, Northern Brewer and Bramling Cross and it is fairly evident that those Hops are no longer the choice of the new breed of Brewer. 
                We've undergone a revolution and it's not all down to American Brewers as some seem to believe. Brendan Dobbin and Sean Franklin were the pioneers in using American Hops in the early 90's. Their inspiration was in the use of the new 'exotic' Hops as an alternative to the traditional Hops to achieve a well balanced beer that offered something new. Brendan's West Coast Brewing produced one of those beers that just made you sit up and take notice. Sierra Nevada Pale Ale/Yakima Grande brought those wonderful new Hop flavours we've become familiar with to our notice. And Rooster's Yankee again opened our eyes and tickled our tastebuds with the fresh taste Cascade.
                Yet it took quite a few more years before the UK Hop revolution took off, in the mid 90's, encouraged by Michael Jackson Bières Sans Frontières started to bring Cask Conditioned Ales over from America for GBBF (the first was brought over as 'luggage' by the late BertGrant) and the Brewers came over as well to see what was happening, Pete Schlosberg, Garrett Oliver and the late Jeff Charnick were all regular visitors. For the first time we were getting the chance to try the new beers that were putting America Brewing clearly on the UK beer drinkers map. Big IPA's, full bodied Stouts and everywhere Hops and more Hops. Visitors to GBBF had found something that excited them, and as American beers became more easily available and beer lovers were planning holidays around beer a new market emerged in the UK. A move away from traditional UK Hops to the increasingly available American Hops.
                But, much as I love the flavours of American Hops I have to admit that I miss the UK Hop. I know they're still there, where they've always been, where they always will as long as our long established Breweries continue to produce excellent beers. What I'd like to see, what I'd like to taste is what some of the newer Breweries, who it seems almost exclusively use American or New Zealand Hops, can do with UK Hops. Is it possible for Magic Rock to make a new beer using Bramling Cross, can Kernel do something exciting with Northern Brewer, can Thornbridge turn Challenger into next years trendy Hop? It's not a case of sentimentality but a desire to see these Brewers step outside their comfort zone, it's often a criticism levelled at the Big Brewers, that they don't step out of their comfort zone. But with the installation of an increasing number of 'Pilot Plants', see Pete's recent Blog , it appears they are taking that step. Fuller's have just released their Wild River American Beer and John has brewed a couple of collaboration brews.

                So let's see some new English Beers with English Hops lads, I know you can do it.


And now for Part 4 of name the Brewer. Here's someone who has brewed his fair share of beer.


Which Brewer do you admire...? 
Favourite British Brewery...?
Favourite overseas Brewery...?
What's the next big thing...? 
England winning the Webb Ellis trophy
If you weren't a brewer you'd be a...? 
Gigolo
Does consistency of flavour matter...? 
Too right it does
Michael Jackson always denied that he had a favourite beer, but said if you asked him wha8       his final beer would be as he faced the firing squad it would be...? 
Abbot Reserve
And what would your final beer be...?
If it were possible, which Brewery/Brewer would you consider doing a collaboration beer with...? 
If you were to give one piece of advice to an aspiring Brewer it would be...? 
do it your way

And a few more personal questions;
What do you do to relax...? 
cooking, squash, pub
Favourite musicians...? 
Queen
TV,Concert or Theatre...? 
Theatre
Favourite holiday destination...? 
Barcelona 

Get a free beer from me at GBBF for the first correct answer.

Monday 18 June 2012

Vintage Beer & name the Brewer pt3


What's so fascinating about old beer?

   I can trace my interest in Vintage Beer back to an article written in The Readers Digest some time back in the late 60's, an odd place I know but it was something that caught my eye at the time and was quickly forgotten. Now I don't know where the magazine came from and I can't remember how old the edition was or even why I'd picked it up, but the article that said you could lay some beers down and that they would improve with age, just like fine Wine. And somehow that article was laid down in my memory to surface a few years later.
   I was a young beer drinker just getting my taste for beer and being spoilt for choice, the pubs I'd started to visit were a mix of Robinsons, Wilsons, Hydes, Burtonwood, Ansells, Joseph Holt, Boddingtons and when I went to University I swiftly added Tetley's, Webster's, Timothy Taylor and Theakston, and that was after discovering the magnificent Barnsley Bitter whilst on an Industrial placement in Peterborough. 
   Bottled beer was something I rarely drank but, possibly taking the lead from my father, I enjoyed the odd bottle of Barley Wine. Visits home always meant a trip to The Hatters 
with the fearsome Landlady Sadie, and a few pints of the best kept Robinsons you could find. In the Winter months a Pin of Old Tom would be put on the bar and the traditional final beer was a pint of Best Bitter followed by a nip of Old Tom. Bells started ringing one evening when out of the depths of my memory came that Readers Digest article, yes Old Tom was definitely one of the beers mentioned. Old Tom could, the article had informed me, be kept for 5, 10, 15 or possibly 20 years. But what were the others? Courage Russian Imperial Stout, Eldridge Pope Thomas Hardy Ale, slowly they came back to me and I started to buy them when I could. Most strong bottle conditioned beers can improve with age, some need only a couple of years whilst others seem to be slow burners steadily changing, and improving, over many years.
No journey back home was complete without adding a few more bottles of Old Tom, and yes it comfortably aged for five years, and ten years but was a bit ropey at fifteen. I only wish I'd been able to afford to buy more of the Thomas Hardy   when it was relatively easy to find, and sadly the Courage Russian Imperial Stout disappeared all too soon (but shortly to make a comeback on these shores). 
The worst thing you can do to a beer that you intend to lay down is mistreat it, it has to be looked after and the best place for it is in a cellar. I've been lucky, or maybe I planned it that way, but each house I've lived in for the past thirty odd years has had a cellar and the beers have beer put away and forgotten. 
   Having a Vintage Beer is a treat, it's something I savour and that I try to share, partaking in a Vertical Tasting is an experience that should not be missed. My first Vertical tasting was one of the tutored tastings at GBBF back in 2006, John Keeling presented ten years of Fuller's Vintage Ale. Although I'd organised a few tutored tastings at GBBF this was the first I'd actually joined in with and it was glorious. In 2009 I tried to replicate the tasting with the help of friends on Bières Sans Frontières, we were missing just one year!
   The opportunity to taste year against year enables the changes to be tracked, whether they be subtle or dramatic, but a single tasting can also be satisfying when you find that magic bottle. I'll admit there have been some disappointments when oxidation has ruined a beer resulting in a drain pour. Then there are those beers that seem to improve, then decline only to come storming back a couple of years later, something that one gets used to. But it's not just bottle conditioned beers that can be laid down, Lees Vintage Harvest Ale is probably the widest available and should not be drunk until at least three years old.
   In the cellar is an unopened case containing six bottles of Whitbread Celebration Ale,   there's a sheet of A4 in there on which Michael Jackson said this beer can be laid down for twenty years. It's twenty years old this year so it's accompanying me down to GBBF where I'm sure there will be a few people who will be keen to sample it.
   It takes patience to keep a beer so long and it's time now to make inroads into the stash in the cellar, but where to begin? For so long I've limited my consumption of these fine beers, I'm down to my last three bottles of Courage RIS, a dozen or so original Thomas Hardy. Once they're gone that's it, I can't get them back and I'll be sad to see them go. But I've steadily built a collection of the more easily accessible Vintage Ales from Fuller's and Lee's so I'll be OK for a good few years. But I won't stop adding to the collection, but it may, just may, start to shrink.
   I know I'm not alone in having a fascination with the effect of age on beer and I'd encourage anyone with the patience to think ahead, you may be in for a real treat in five or ten years time.

And now for the continuing guess the Brewer slot, still no responses for the second in the series so it looks like nobody wants any free beer at GBBF!

Which Brewer do you admire...? 
Eric Toft, Schonrahmer Brauerei, Petting, Bavaria.
Favourite British Brewery...? 
Harveys…if anyone has perfected Tradition, they have…hats off to Miles Jenner.
Favourite overseas Brewery...? 
Schneider, Sierra Nevada…building huge breweries based on State of the Art technology and maximum taste and flavor in the beer
What's the next big thing...? 
Craft Keg Beer
If you weren't a brewer you'd be a...? 
Weather Man!
Does consistency of flavour matter...?
its everything in beer…it enables you to build a strong bond with the consumer who is keen to learn and enjoy more
Michael Jackson always denied that he had a favourite beer, but said if you asked him wha8     his final beer would be as he faced the firing squad it would be...? 
a mature Orval
 And what would your final beer be...? 
If it were possible, which Brewery/Brewer would you consider doing a collaboration beer with...? 
Hans Peter Drechsler at Schneider.. 
If you were to give one piece of advice to an aspiring Brewer it would be...? 
Air is the enemy of great beer.

And a few more personal questions;

What do you do to relax...? 
golf…and watch the weather..some say at the same time.
Favourite musicians...? 
Bob Dylan, Grateful Dead
TV, Cinema, Concert or Theatre...? 
Cinema…..or cricket on TV!
Favourite holiday destination...? 
Syria..seriously, nicest people I have ever met travelling…not now though, what a international outrage.

So, if you think you know who the Brewer is just add a comment and maybe you'll be getting a free beer at GBBF.


Did I mention the free beer?

Tuesday 5 June 2012

Confessions of an underage drinker


                It's interesting to look back and consider what were our earliest influences when it come to our love of beer. Like many others I was not averse to underage drinking, and I don't think that I abused alcohol as a teenage toper.
                I remember the first time I bought a pint, it was Robinsons Best Bitter, at The Queens Arms in New Mills. I was sixteen. What makes it particularly memorable was that I was in full stage make up following the dress rehearsal for the School production of Anthony & Cleopatra. I guess it was a good job I wasn't wearing the PCV Roman Centurion outfit!
The Pineapple, venue for A level Art classes
                Over the year or so of underage drinking my visits to pubs slowly increased, the trick was never to draw attention to yourself or upset the locals. Luckily we had many pubs to choose from, in a 15 minute circular walk from School we would pass at least ten pubs. Several turned a blind eye, especially to the Friday afternoon A Level Art class spent in the Pineapple.
Sadly I didn't take A Level Art!
                As A Levels approached we had a few 'educational' trips to various Industries, a Paper Mill, a Margarine Factory, and a Brewery! Yes we lucky science students were off to see how beer is made, sadly seats are limited so tough luck for those not taking sciences.
Wilsons Brewery
                The first thing that struck me about Wilsons Brewery was the size, it seemed gigantic, a big red brick edifice on the outskirts of Manchester. The coach parked by a large open shed which was littered with broken wooden casks and shattered pub mirrors. If only they'd known that a few years later genuine pub mirrors were highly sought after. 
                We were taken round by a man in a white coat, he seemed to know what he was talking about but we had no idea what he was talking about, it all seemed to be very technical. However, he did get us tasting various malts and asking us what they reminded us of, biscuits, Horlicks etc. And then our first encounter with Hops, I have to admit I thought they smelt wonderful and on the rest of the trip round the brewery the aroma lingered on my hands. We saw the large open fermenters with great rocky heads and we were warned not to lean over because of the high level of CO2. But of course the thing about the visit was that it ended up in the hospitality room where several tables were weighted down with plates of food. And the bar was open. We were to be allowed two halves. We had more than two halves, but we were well behaved and we thanked our hosts, and we especially thanked the teacher who had the gumption to organise such a worthwhile educational visit.
                Can you remember buying your first pint? Can you remember your first Brewery visit? For me many pints and Brewery visits have passed, but my firsts were particularly memorable.

And now another Brewer for you to identify from his responses. This one may be a bit harder.

 Which Brewer do you admire...?
Garrett Oliver - he's melded together the beer and food worlds in an amazing way.

Favourite Brewery...?
Sierra Nevada - incredible quality and amazing beers. 

Favourite British Brewery...?

What's the next big thing...?
It's already happening, but the next step in the UK has to be a proliferation of sour beers. Worldwide, I reckon we'll be getting more sessionable beers in the craft scene.

If you weren't a brewer you'd be a...?
Brewing scientist! Either that or a perfumer... can't waste this nose!


Does consistency of flavour matter...?
Both! Though the more beers I drink, the more that consistent quality matters. I'm not bothered about consistency in flavour, seasonality can be a good thing!

Michael Jackson always denied that he had a favourite beer, but said if you asked him wha8 his final beer would be as he faced the firing squad it would be...?
Hmmm, a tough question... Let's just say Orval for arguments sake

And what would your final beer be...?
Westvleteren 12 - every time I've had it, the complexity has impressed me. It's a thinking beer...

If it were possible, which Brewery/Brewer would you consider doing a collaboration beer with...?

If you were to give one piece of advice to an aspiring Brewer it would be...?
Taste and smell everything

And a few more personal questions;

What do you do to relax...?
Go fishing, play guitar, drink beer, head to the hills for some hiking

Favourite musicians...?
Pink Floyd, The Beatles, Tool

TV, Cinema, Concert or Theatre...?
Concert

Favourite holiday destination...?
Scotland

First one to get the identity of our mystery Brewer gets a beer at GBBF from me.