PDA

View Full Version : Tandleman's Beer Blog - Back to a Grim and Unwelcome Reality



Blog Tracker
21-07-2015, 12:18
Visit the Tandleman's Beer Blog site (http://tandlemanbeerblog.blogspot.com/2015/07/back-to-grim-and-unwelcome-reality.html)


Readers will probably know I don't like murky beer and since Rob Pickering first coined the term, I've become an avid fan of the descriptor "London Murky", though it equally applies to Manchester - or for that matter, Anywhere Murky.

http://4.bp.blogspot.com/-Kw5IpHl6puk/Va0JGIqUg6I/AAAAAAAAGLU/hGgjrjt_U4g/s320/byhorns.jpg (http://4.bp.blogspot.com/-Kw5IpHl6puk/Va0JGIqUg6I/AAAAAAAAGLU/hGgjrjt_U4g/s1600/byhorns.jpg)On my return to London from our Spanish holiday, we were both knackered. Handy for our London flat is our local JDW, the Goodman Fields, so we headed along for a quick meal. Our skinny steaks were delicious - surprisingly so perhaps - and the place was rammed. I remember when it opened and for some years after, it used to be empty, so Timbo saw its potential, now clearly fulfilled. I ordered a pint of By the Horns Stiff Upper Lip, though it isn't a beer I'm at all familiar with. Bloody thing was cloudy. Now here's the problem. How do I know if it is meant to be cloudy, or if it on the other hand, has been slung together by some numpty who doesn't now how to brew beer. Or, possibly, put on too early by a dopey cellarman before it has dropped bright. I don't and can't know of course is the answer. Now you may say "What does that matter if it tastes all right?" Well it won't taste all right to me and it is me that is buying it. It will likely taste of yeast and protein trub, because that's what causes it. Now of course it is a matter of personal taste whether you like this kind of flavour, but I don't. I like clear, clean, precise flavours in my beer. To my mind if brewers wish to sell the unsuspecting public beer, they should at least have the decency to warn us and hence the pubs that sell it, that it might be cloudy (hazy in murkyspeak). Then at least you have a choice.

When this first became a "thing" like many I'm sure, I thought to myself, "It won't last", but in fact it has. It has actually become more common, widened and deepened. It is particularly common in London and not only there. It is slowly undermining public confidence in cask beer.

It is also very, very depressing.

I did get in touch with the brewery who said "It is meant to be fined". They also said something else but that's for another post.

More... (http://tandlemanbeerblog.blogspot.com/2015/07/back-to-grim-and-unwelcome-reality.html)