Showing posts with label Beer. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Beer. Show all posts

27 November 2021

NAO, Lanzarote

 A guest post by Richard Scullion, Campaigns Officer South East Sussex CAMRA.

Lanzarote, in the Canary Islands, is a great place to visit in November! Apart from warmth, blue skies, dramatic volcanic scenery, and the amazing architecture of Cesar Manrique, craft beer can be found with a little effort. At the main resorts most bars serve international brands but a little sleuthing will reveal the strong Estrella Galicia 1906 Reserva Especial from mainland Spain, and the Canarian brewed Dorada - a perfectly acceptable lager with a pleasant sweetness.

To my knowledge there are just three independent brewers on Lanzarote: Malpeis which produces three beers, Jable, a 5.3% golden ale, Bermeja, a 6.7% double malt pale, and Rofe (the local name for the black volcanic ash which covers much of the island and is actually spread over fertile soil to retain moisture), a dark beer at 7%. Whilst available in bottles in shops and some bars, I didn’t track any down on draft.

The second brewery, Los Aljibes, was the first craft outfit on the island with two bars serving their two draft beers. Aguita is a dark American pale at 4.8% and TEA is a 4.8% red ale. Despite bus trips out from our base in the capitol, Arrecife, to first, Costa Tequise, and second, Puerto del Carmen, both their establishments were closed and looked unlikely to open any day soon!

Success was achieved however at the island’s star show! Located in a former fishing net workshop and hardware store in the harbour area of Naos, El Camarote is the Nao Brewery taproom (at 5 Calle Foque, Arrecife). 

Established by Miquel Lasso and his partner Loreto about five years ago their operation began with just two beers, La Gloria, a 3.5% Berliner Weisse, and Capitan, a 4.8% copper American pale ale. My son Paul and I started gently with the Berliner Weisse in draft form.



We then shared a bottle of the excellent Black Patron, a 7.6% beer described as a black APA, but in my book a first rate porter. This was followed by a draft Mucho, a 6.5% malty copper IPA (delicious), and a Marinera, their 4.8% blonde. 

All these were served efficiently with charm and complimentary peanuts by our host, Aida. 

Our final beer was a bit special! 

Many decades after the destruction of most of the island by volcanoes between 1730 and 1736, agriculture in a basic form began to return, and it was discovered that, with a clever system of rock-built windbreaks, the land could support vines. A Portuguese grape, Malvasia, was brought in from (relatively) nearby Madeira, and this has formed the basis of the island’s wine production. To those who may be interested the reds are probably best ignored, the whites are quite good, but the sweet, dessert style whites - a tempting golden colour – are exceptional. 

All this to say that our final beer was a shared bottle of their Maresia. This is an 8% limited edition full bodied grape ale, using the malvasia and served from an a suitably elegant blue corked bottle – is it a beer, is it a wine? It’s for you to decide when you visit this delightful and welcoming island!

Richard Scullion - 25 November 2021

Richard Scullion is a real ale (and more recently craft beer) enthusiast, born and brought up in Horsham, Sussex, where his first pint was King and Barnes, probably in the Dog and Bacon. Work took him to the West Midlands where he particularly enjoyed Batham’s and Holden’s. Moving to Newbury, he rejoined CAMRA and became first Social Secretary and then Chair of the West Berkshire branch. He has always believed that since the demise of K and B, Harvey’s Sussex Best Bitter, is the gold standard for that beer style. Helpfully he now lives on the Sussex coast which has a plentiful supply of Harvey’s outlets, and where he greets each seasonal beer with enthusiasm. Recently he has become Campaigns Officer with the South East Sussex CAMRA Branch, and is on the organising committee for the April 2022 CAMRA AGM and Members’ Weekend.  


27 December 2019

Brakspear brewery tour with Reading CAMRA

Thanks to Reading CAMRA, Quinten Taylor and the Clifton Arms in Caversham for the opportunity to join a trip to Witney for a Brakspear /Wychwood Brewery tour on Saturday 23 November, 2019.

Quinno's joining instructions mention 'We will be departing from the car park at the Clifton Arms in Caversham at 12 noon sharp - we won't wait around for stragglers, so make every effort to be a few minutes early. The pub will be open to prior to departure from 11am. As they have been instrumental in helping us secure this tour, please consider getting drink before or after the trip to show your appreciation.'


Following these instructions gave me a chance to drink a half pint of Brakspear Gravity (recently rebadged Brakspear Bitter), before boarding the minibus in the pub's car park.
Departure was delayed until 11.10am but one missing member failed to arrive. About 20 minutes later Quinno received a phone call to say that the latecomer had seen our minibus driving off from a short distance away. An otherwise uneventful journey, via Swinford toll bridge, resulted in our arrival at the brewery by 12.15pm.
An iconic, carved Hobgoblin figure stands at the public entrance to the brewery and taproom.
We entered and ordered beers from the bar in the cellar taproom. The bar prices charged here are reasonable eg £1.70 for half pint of Brakspear Gravity.
Chris, our tour guide, would later tell us that the taproom has been open to the public for 9 months and that the circular floor of the original Brakspear mash tun is now repurposed as a feature of the taproom floor (photo above).
The taproom was busy but I found a stool to sit on facing Quinno (photo).
When it was time for our tour, we headed for the bar reserved for tour groups, passing some members who would rejoin the main group after finding space in the overflow seating area for the taproom.
The passage leading to the tour group bar passes some framed original pastel artwork used for subtly advertising Brakspear beer.
As part of the tour, Chris poured us our choice of beer before giving an introductory talk about the history of the brewery.
Brewing started at the Eagle Brewery premises in Witney in 1831 as Clinch & Co.. In those days there was also a maltings and a stables associated with the brewery. In 1961 Courage bought Clinch & Co for its pub estate and closed down the brewery. In 1983 Paddy Glenny rented part of the site and established Glenny Brewery. Chris Moss took over and changed the name to Wychwood Brewery in 1989. Beers were named after Wychwood Forest myths and legends with Hobgoblin as the best known ruby beer.
The brewery was taken over by Refresh UK, a subsidiary of Marston's in 2002. Marston's bought Refresh and Wychwood Brewery outright in 2008. Jon Tillson was appointed Head Brewer in 2018.

The Cross Keys, Witney, was the original home of Brakspear Brewery. In 1769, Robert Brakspear became the pub landlord and this is where Brakspear Bitter was first brewed. In 1779, Robert and his uncle Richard Hayward moved to the Bell Street brewery in Henley-on-Thames. in 1812, the brewery moved to New Street in Henley.
In 2002, Brakspear moved away from direct brewing and its beers were brewed under licence at Wychwood Brewery in Witney. Vessels including the top of the copper and the double drop fermenting vessels were moved from Henley to Witney.
Chris mentioned that bottling and kegging for Wychwood and Brakspear beers has been done at Marston's in Burton-upon-Trent for some years but that more recently casking has also moved there. A tanker takes beer from the brewery to Burton leaving at 4am.
Chris led us into the brewery for the tour.
Standing in front of the white grist cage, Chris pointed out some other equipment including the red roller mill. The whirlpool is on the left of the photo above. He explained that separate yeast strains are used for Wychwood and Brakspear beers which are stored separately.
We walked to the other side of the building and Chris showed us some Isinglass from Brazilian lumpfish that is used for fining beer. There is a framed poster, showing the layout of the brewery. Chris also passed round small containers of different malts to taste and hops to sniff.
We were standing near the wooden steps to a platform around the Copper which has an open chimney above. The next stage was to climb the steps for a view of the rest of the brewery.
A large square shaped vessel at the back on the left is the Hot Liquor Tank. The nearer, circular vessel is the mash tun. Chris explained the brewing process and mentioned that the capacity of the Copper is 29,000 pints and that there are 10 brews per week.
The final stage was to see the Double Drop fermentation system used exclusively for Brakspear beers.
Chris explained that the wort is fed from the copper to the whirlpool and then via a heat exchanger to the circular top fermenting vessel where it rests for four hours. It is then allowed to drop, by gravity, into the square vessels below for the final fermentation period. The drop process adds some oxygen and also allows some sediment to be left behind in the top vessel.
The final part of our visit was an opportunity to taste a variety of bottled beers produced at Wychwood brewery. Chris opened a pair of bottles which were passed around our group to pour and then taste and offer comments about the flavours and ingredients. On this occasion, we tasted Arrowaine (3.6% ABV Mild), Brakspear Oxford Gold (4.6% ABV), Imperial Red (4.7% ABV brewed with Scottish rolled oats), King Goblin (6.6% ABV brewed with chocolate, crystal and pale malts), Black Wych (5% ABV also brewed with Scottish rolled oats) and Bah Humbug! (5% ABV spiced with cinnamon and cloves).
We learned that many of the distinctive label designs for Wychwood beers like Hobgoblin and Black Wych are the work of artist Ed Org.
There are various historic mementos in the brewery tour bar.
Chris told us about Piledriver, a beer named after Status Quo's fifth album. The giant label is signed by members of the band.
We also heard about the framed photo of the occasion when David Cameron presented Barack Obama with a bottle of Hobgoblin in 2011.
Our guide Chris had plenty of other interesting tales and some good jokes and earned our thanks after answering remaining questions before it was time to leave, nearly two hours after the start of the tour. Before leaving we were each given a souvenir half pint Wychwood beer glass.
Finally, there was a chance to visit the store which has merchandise and a large range of bottled beers at reasonable prices.

Details from 2019 Wychwood Brewery taproom, store & tours leaflet:
Brewery Store: Mon - Sat 10am - 5pm
Wychwood Brewery Tap: Wed, Thu 5pm - 10pm; Fri 2pm - 10pm; Sat 12pm - 10pm, Sun 12pm - 6pm
Tours: (£12 per person): Thu, Fri 3pm, 6pm; Sat 11am, 11.30am, 1.30pm, 2pm, 4pm & 4.30pm; Sun 2pm & 2.30pm
Check availability and book at www.wychwood.co.uk

Wychwood Brewery, Eagle Maltings, The Crofts, Witney.  OX28 4DB
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22 May 2019

Real Bohemian Lager

If you can't sample real Bohemian lager in the Czech Republic itself then surely the next best place must be the Embassy of the Czech Republic in London?
I was lucky to be invited by CzechTrade to attend a Real Bohemian Lager workshop at the embassy on 16 May 2019. The event was organised in conjunction with Euroboozer, a leading UK importer of fine speciality craft brewed beers.
My preparation for the event involved a look at Evan Rail's Good Beer Guide Prague & the Czech Republic (2007) which I had last used on my first and only trip to Prague in 2008.
The Czech Republic has the highest per capita consumption of beer in the world according to Wikipedia 143.3 litres (2016). In contrast, 25th placed UK beer consumption is 67.7 litres (2016).
Situated east of Notting Hill Gate and west of the embassy of the Russian Federation, the 1970 building of the Czech embassy was designed as a tribute to the avant-garde Brutalist style. A lot of concrete and glass was used in its construction! After a major remodelling, the Czech embassy reopened in November 2017.
On arrival it was nice to be welcomed by Eva Provot of CzechTrade and Mitch Adams of Euroboozer and find myself in the company of Britain's best beer writers and judges. A useful welcome pack included a map showing industrial and craft breweries (above) and a Beer Guide to Prague which can also be found online.
OnTheWorld map shows Bohemia in west of Czech Republic
Ushered into the cinema we were welcomed by Martin Macourek of CzechTrade. He introduced Czech master brewer Jan / Honza Kočka linked with Kocour brewery and now involved with the Nomád project, a 'flying brewery' that brews on the equipment of others. 
We were informed that there would soon be a new website for the Czech Beer Alliance of eight breweries including Cvikov. Two representatives from Cvikov brewery had flown to London to join us for the workshop. 
page from Pivovar Cvikov website showing tanks and brewing vessels
A video was screened showing scenes from Cvikov brewery that included the 22 horizontal lager / maturation tanks and a healthy young man carrying a sack of malted barley over his shoulders up a flight of stairs. It was surprising that a lift or hoist did not exist for this task?!
Martyn Railton, the 'Austrian Londoner' of Euroboozer, mentioned his lifelong interest in collecting beer glasses. Martyn also provided a useful modern history of Czech brewing. A key date was the fall of the Berlin wall in 1989 after which Heineken moved in and breweries were consolidated. More recently business people have been buying up old disused brewery buildings and remaining equipment to set up new independent breweries. Many of the independent breweries have adopted the double or triple decoction mashing style which involves extra time and effort.

Katarina Hobbs, from Czech Tourism, admitted that Czech beer was her favourite drink. She mentioned that cycle and hiking trails to breweries have been developed and that there are beer festivals like the Brno festival (31/7/-3/8/2019) and the Sun in the Glass festival at Purkmistr brewery, Plzeň (Pilsen) which feature smaller breweries.
Czech master brewer Jan / Honza Kočka of Nomád brewing project was the final speaker. Jan said it was a visit to CAMRA's Great British Beer Festival in 2000 that opened his eyes to the wide realm of beer. After visiting the Great American Beer Festival later that year he was 'totally into beer'.
He mentioned that prior to 2000 it was difficult for microbreweries in the Czech Republic to succeed but afterwards the concept began to catch on.
Real Bohemian Lager is brewed with Czech malt and the Saaz hop producing a quaffable and thirst quenching pilsner in the 4%-5.2% ABV range. However, if dry hopping is involved it should not be called pilsner but rather lager or IPL.
Although many traditional and some new independent breweries use double or triple decoction, his Nomád brewing uses the simpler single decoction which is good enough for pilsner.
Jan recommended visiting the Czech Republic as it is a small country, with relatively short distances to travel around and visit breweries and historic towns.
He particularly recommended visiting the beer festivals that feature small breweries. The festival at Prague castle gardens 14-15 June 2019 includes over 60 breweries. The Sun in the Glass festival at the Purkmistr brewery on the outskirts of Pilsen 20-21 September 2019 includes 70 breweries.
The afternoon continued with a beer tasting led by Jan / Honza Kočka. Our tables were set with glasses and a sheet listing the beers to be tasted.
Without any previous experience of a serious beer tasting exercise I was lucky to be sitting at the back, near Jeff Evans, Chairman of the International Beer Challenge, who I could follow without any major breach of etiquette. Key points are not to fill your glass to the brim and not to drink all the beer in the glass.
Relevant details for each beer on the sheet were projected on a screen e.g. Cvikov 12° / Draught / Style: Premium pale lager / Malts: Pilsener / Hops: Saaz hops, Premiant / ABV 4.9% / IBU 32.
We started with shared bottles of Holba 11°, Bohemia Regent 12° (with CzechTrade Export Special label) and Kutna Hora 12° poured into straight glasses.
The draught beers served in stemmed glasses were Muflon 11°, Cvikov 12°, Albrecht 11°, Kanec 12°, Kanec 12° Vienna.
Large bottles with flip tops from Frýdlant brewery were for different styles. We enjoyed Albrecht Philipp 13° (American Pale Ale with Victoria Secret and Enigma hops) and Albrecht Katerina 12° (Czech Dark Premium Lager with Czech Light, Munich, Caramel, Chocolate and Black malts).
Finally we reverted to a draught Real Bohemian Lager - Cvikov 10° to finish the tasting on a lighter note.
A useful tip from Jan / Honza for roughly converting degrees Plato (or Balling) to ABV is to subtract 2 and then divide by 2 so that 12° becomes 5% ABV.
Jan / Honza could now relax with a lager! 
The lagers I was keen to taste again were Albrecht 11° and Cvikov 12°.

My thanks go to all involved with the workshop. I look forward to the next event and to visiting beer festivals, breweries and bars in the Czech Republic! 






04 April 2019

Het Anker Brewery - Mechelen


We arrived at Het Anker brewery shortly before 1pm on Saturday 23 March, 2019.
The building on the left of the entrance gates is now the brewery's hotel. The doorway on the right leads to the shop where we needed to pay for the brewery tour places booked online via www.hetanker.be/en/visit-the-brewery. Having paid 9 euros each we were directed to the starting point of the 1pm tour in English. Our group included Spanish students and an American couple. After an introductory talk with some film, Marc De Knijf, our genial host, led us up the first stairway to an area of the old maltings.
Marc described the main beer ingredients: water, malted grain e.g. barley, hops and yeast. Taken from a rear table, dishes of malted barley were handed round so that tour members could take a few grains for tasting. Six other ingredients used by Het Anker for brewing were also introduced. From right to left on the front table in the photo above, these were: Licorice, Anis, Chamomile, Dried peel of Curacao oranges (sourced from Spain), cumin and coriander. Marc mentioned that Licorice and Anis are only used for Het Anker's strong, dark ruby red Christmas beer. Chamomile has the effect of softening the flavours from the other ingredients.
From here we were led through to the main brewing hall which has large windows and is next to the the old maltings building.
The top parts of three copper kettles are visible in this area. Marc explained that these were installed in 1946 and that nowadays one of the two smaller ones is not used, the second is used for introducing hot water to the malt and after filtering this wort is transferred to the larger kettle, on the left of the photo, for boiling and the introduction of bittering hops.
After further filtering, the wort is cooled by the modern heat exchanger, on the left of the photo, to 22-25 degrees centigrade before transfer to 'yeasting tanks' for 6-7 days. The yeast is then removed and the beer is transferred to storage tanks. The new bottling hall is in Mechelen's industrial zone and beer is transferred there by tanker vehicles. Each brew is 12,0000 litres and there are two or three brews a day (Monday - Friday).
In a nearby area with a timeline display, Marc discussed the history of Brouwerij Het Anker, situated in the Beguinage, which began as a brewery for the beguines but was later purchased by the family Van Breedam. It is still an independent family firm.
Marc showed us an earlier 'open' heat exchanger which was once used as the second stage of a cooling process.
He then led us up more steps to look at the cooling tank on the roof which was once used as the first stage of a cooling process taking the temperature down to 72 degrees centigrade.
Note that unlike Lambic breweries, this tank was not used as part of a wild fermentation process. From here we could look east above the rooftops to the centre of Mechelen.
We took a different route on the way down passing several floors of Gouden Carolus single malt maturing whisky. Marc explained that there was not enough room for storage at the whisky distillery on the family's farm in Blasveld.
The final stage of the brewery tour was a tasting in a first floor room with a bar at one end.
Tim with Gouden Carolus Tripel
Our first 15cl glass was of blonde Gouden Carolus Tripel (9% ABV, EBU 22). Marc challenged us to identify the ingredients which included coriander, chamomile, cumin and orange peel.
The second sample was dark Gouden Carolus Classic (8.5% ABV, EBU 16).
There was an opportunity to give Marc a copy of West Berkshire CAMRA magazine 'Ullage' which he was interested to read.
It was after 2.30pm when we left the tasting room to visit the brewery shop and then some of the best pubs and bars in Mechelen.
We did not visit the brasserie at the brewery but this is open daily from 10am.
Thanks to Marc and Het Anker Brewery. A visit to the brewery is recommended.