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27-10-2015, 08:41
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Batsford published a whole series of guides to pubs in the South and East of England in the 1960s. Vincent Jones wrote the guide to East Anglia and here are some nuggets that caught our eye.→ Introduction: ‘Houses owned by all sorts of brewers are here; but there is a preference for those which belong to East Anglian breweries and sell East Anglian beer. This choice is purely personal.’*Buying local, resisting monopoly —*the SPBW-CAMRA tendency?
→ Sorrel Horse, Barham, Suffolk: ‘Those who fear that the bread and cheese and pickles pub has altogether disappeared may take courage for here one is and a very fine one too.’*We can’t recall the last time we found a pub like this though we remember them from childhood.
→*Queen’s Head, Blyford, Suffolk: ‘Among the snacks he is noted for his Scotch eggs.’
→ Lord Nelson, Burnham Thorpe, Norfolk:*‘They are mainly drinkers of mild ale in this area: it is drawn from the cask.’*More evidence of the East Country as mild territory; interesting to note cask, draught and ‘drawn from the wood’ are used interchangeably throughout. (More on the development of the language around cask/keg here. (http://boakandbailey.com/2012/09/draught-keg-cask/))
→ The Snowcat, Cambridge:*‘This is a modern house, with a modern name, built in 1959 to serve a modern community.’ That is a good modern name — shame they chickened out and eventually renamed it ‘The Grove’. ‘It is unusual among public houses… in having its cellar on the first floor, giving gravity feed of the beer to the bars through glass tubes. Traditionalists need not flinch: the beer is just as good and it keeps better; the probability is that it will arrive in your glass in better condition than in many older pubs.‘*We’d like to see a photo of this setup.
→*Ye Olde George, Chatteris, Cambs: ‘In the dining-room the house specialties are curried mutton and curried prawns.’*There are lots of exotic dishes like this mentioned throughout the book suggesting that, in this part of the country at least, the food in many pubs had moved beyond the primitive by the mid-1960s.
→*Queen Victoria, Dunmow, Essex: ‘Behind the bar is a true country servery in the manner of a traditional farm dairy, a massive beam supporting the roof with beneath it a long line of casks full of the local beer, produced by one of the smallest breweries in the country.’*The brewery was Dunmow; we’d never heard of it; it was acquired by Charrington in 1965.
http://i2.wp.com/boakandbailey.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/10/never_turn_back_1965.jpg?resize=400%2C343One of the many Leo Gibbons-Smith illustrations from the book.→*Red Lion, East Bergholt, Suffolk: ‘You may put the children in the garden, where there is a swing and a slide, and in either of the commodious bars take your beer drawn from the wood.’ Between us, we spent a lot of time playing on slides in pub gardens. The author is generally in favour of outside facilities for kids.
→*Eight Bells, Hadleigh, Suffolk: ‘[A] pub which still has its snug is one to treasure.’
→*Angel, Heckfordbridge, Essex: ‘The draught beer here always come up in beautiful condition, which is not surprising, apart from the skill of the landlord, since two streams from spring which rise in the car park flow underneath the cellar…’*It’s unusual to read about beer condition in books from this period; as you’ll discover at the end of this post, Mr Jones had a thing about the temperature of beer.
→*Manning’s (Victoria Inn), Ipswich, Suffolk:*‘It is a popular place for lunch among business-men and offers a variety of cold meats and salads, with in the winter soups, hamburgers and the like.’*Burgers are a pub staple now — this must be one of the earliest appearances.
→ Margaret Catchpole Hotel, Ipswich:*‘[In] the winter… the [Tollemache Cobbold] Old Strong from the cask should certainly be tried.’*This reads as if it’s come from a CAMRA guide book published a decade later.
→*The Prince Albert, Lowestoft, Suffolk:*‘This is a bold effort by a small country brewery [Adnams] to provide something outstanding in modern pubs and it comes off. It was built in 1960 and has been justly praised both by architects and pub-users… Altogether it is a great success and certainly worth a visit by all save the most confirmed anti-modernists.’*Adnams as pioneers of modernist pub architecture! It now looks like vaguely Victorian (via Google Street View):

→ The*Dolphin, Norwich, Norfolk:*‘And yet it is just a local pub — a notable act of civic responsibility.’*An asset of community value, you might say?
→ Jolly Sailor, Orford, Suffolk:*‘Below in one of the bars there is a glass case of stuffed Chinese muff dogs bred in the reign of Henry VIII. It’s that sort of pub.’ Like something from The League of Gentlemen?
→ The Dolphin, Stisted, Essex:*‘The present licensee keeps three aviaries of ornamental pheasants, Barbary doves, bantams, Guinea fowl and budgerigars.’*And why not?
→ The*Swan Hotel, Thaxted, Essex: ‘One specialty of the house is its unusual offering of eight different draught and keg beers…’ That’s an early beer exhibition, then.* The beers were: ‘Cask beers: Rayments Bitter, Worthington E; Keg beers: Bass, Charrington Toby, Flower’s, Ind Coope Double Diamond, Watney Red Barrel, Whitbread Tankard’. All the keg bitter, basically.*Was Worthington E ever a cask beer, or has our author been tricked?
→ The*Ship, Wells Next the Sea, Norfolk:*‘It is a true fisherman’s pub. Long may it resist all modernisation.’*It didn’t and now seems to be a holiday cottage (http://www.reallynicehouses.net/shipinn.htm).
→ The*Cock, West Winch, Norfolk: ‘Here is a bold attempt to provide a really modern pub, built in 1963. The plastic sign is rather brash but the building itself is interesting and pleasing. The technically minded will, perhaps, like to know that it has a hyperbolic parabaloid roof construction.’*The roof is less exciting than it sounds and the pub is now a Chinese restaurant:

→*End note — ‘Chill Follies’:*‘Heresies and vandalisms are rife… We are even being advised to chill our stout… These are fads for those who frequent hot lands. Kick drinks may be as ice-cubed as you please. No drink you want to taste should ever be so treated. This is no snobbism but a matter of fact… English beer is a drink of subtle and complex flavours which you can lose if you treat it ill. It is brewed to be drunk at cellar temperature. The ideal for draught bitter is*± 55°F. Keg and light bottled beer may be taken a degree or two cooler. Strong beer should never be ruined by chilling… In these things let tradition be your guide. Do not suffer the PR gents to befog you with foreign snobberies.’*That*probably wouldn’t seem out of place copied-and-pasted as a comment on a blog post about cask vs. keg, craft beer vs. real ale.
We bought our copy of this book for £2.81, delivered. It barely looks to have been read though it does smell pleasingly of woodsmoke.
East Anglian Pubs, 1965 (http://boakandbailey.com/2015/10/east-anglian-pubs-1965/) from Boak & Bailey's Beer Blog - Over-thinking beer, pubs and the meaning of craft since 2007 (http://boakandbailey.com)


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