Armed with beard, beer belly and drinking hat it was off to
Olympia for the Great British Beer Festival 2013. The evenings are usually rammed and the beers
do tend to run out at an alarming rate so I always try and make a day of it
when it’s more relaxed and the volunteers behind the stand have a chance to
talk to you about the beers they have sampled.
Great summer beer |
I had quite a few beers in mind already from various
recommendations on Twitter and the Champion beer awards so it was good to see
that the third of a pint offering is pretty much standard at all these
festivals now. I was also pleased to see
that the festival is all on one floor now, with the organisers having abandoned the upstairs part of the hall in
favour of the second hall next door. It
meant more room to move around and no bottle necks on the stairway.
My first beer was Buntingford Brewery’s Twitchell which
picked up the Silver in this year’s Champion Beer of Britain in judging the day
before. I’m glad I did as it had sold
out within the hour. It’s a nice
unassuming delicate floral session beer with gentle undertones of hops playing
on the back of the tongue. One might
expect the judges to overlook such an understated beer but it’s to their credit
that they took notice and the award is richly justified.
Keeping it local |
Next on to a couple of London beers at the Old Empire Bar. I know they are supposed to be local but I
haven’t come across them in cask form so this was a good opportunity to catch
up with them and just for the day avoid the keg/craft beers that currently seem
to be all the rage. Moncado’s Notting
Hill Summer was a light unfined blond and cloudy beer with slight acidic notes ideal for hot summer afternoons. At 3.2% it was
a good follow up to the Twitchell before moving on to the heavier ales. East London Brewing’s Foundations Bitter was
also served hazy. I’d describe it as a
classic bitter with extre emphasis on the bitterness. This crisp beer and is definitely worth a
follow up.
It was good to see a number of old favourites still popping
up at the festival including Adnam’s Ghost Ship, Hook Norton’s Old Hooky and
Hopback’s Summer Lightning but today was a day for sampling beers I hadn’t
tried before.
From here on I was joined by a few friends so the choice of
beers started to come down to whatever caught our eye. I passed on the Lymestone Stone Cutter which
was described as a sulphuric aroma leading to a caramel sweet start and
pleasing hop and fruit balance and went for the Moor Revival which had won a
Silver in the bitter category. My
drinking buddy was braver and confirmed the description with the aroma caught
in the foam head thoroughly pleasing once it hit the mouth.
The Revival, like the Moncado and Foundation Bitter was hazy
but went down extremely well – one to look out for in the future. The bronze in this category was awarded to
Glaslyn Ale from the Purple Moose Brewery in Wales so it only seemed fair to
complete the medal table and we weren’t disappointed. This brewery also does a lot to support the Ffestiniog Railway and had a great display of a working steam engine and beer cart
in the main hall.
As it was getting close to the end of the day and I had got
round to most of the beers I’d wanted to try it was time to stick the toe into
the water and try a few different things.
This part of the session is always a hit or miss but that’s what beer
festivals are all about.
The An Gof strong Cornish Ale from Lizard Ales caught my eye
as it must be the only beer brewed in a former nuclear bunker and the beer
itself lives up to its abode with a robust malty and smokey taste dominating. The Blond Volupta from Oldeshaw beers had to
be tried just for the name and at 5% was one of the stronger blond ales that I
tried on the day. It was rather complex
and difficult to decipher what was going on and I probably would have enjoyed
it more earlier on in the day.
Next to the bottle stand where my drinking buddy and I each chose
something to tickle the taste buds. We
decided to stick with the pale ales and my bottle of St Lupulin Extra Pale Ale (6.5%)
and his Shipyard Monkey Fist IPA at 6.9% went down a treat. The bottles were all cooled and made a
refreshing change from the cask beer but the peachiness of the ale still
punched through.
Mixing things up we then threw in a few dry ciders including
a straw pressed one from Venton Cider of Devon.
I think we misjudged our palette and should have gone for slightly sweeter
variations but it was good to see the strong demand at this bar for the real
thing rather than the mass market muck thats being peddled these days.
Grapefruit surprise |
The surprising success of the day was St Peters Brewery’s
Grapefruit beer. I thought I knew their
selection of beer pretty well but had never seen this one before. It was not overpowering or acidic but an amazing
essence of grapefruit permeated the taste and aroma with amazing subtlety even
after all the other beers I’d tried. My
friend would disagree with this choice and went with an excellent Kissingate
Black Cherry mild brewed with real black cherries in Muscovado.
One I missed out on |
The American Cask selection with names such as Tricerahops
at 8.8% and Molotov Hoptail at 8.6% were inventive and strong but did not seem
to put off the punters and the casks were emptying fast. My last beer of the day was from this stand and
I went with a St George Brewing English Style IPA which at 5.5% was one of the
weakest but a good example without being outrageous.
Regrets of the day – I missed out on the Twickenham Daisy
Cutter and Brains' Aporkalypse oatmeal bacon stout and I should have tried a
few of the excellent stouts on offer including Tillingbourne’s Black Troll at a
light 3.7% (described as initial roast notes giving way to citrus hops!) and
the strong Wessex Russian Stoat at 9% described as dark strong and obvious! Oh well, there's always next year!!
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