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21-05-2016, 10:00
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These are all the blog posts and articles touching on beer and pubs that have given us pause for thought, or told us something we didn’t know, in the last week, from Pilsner to pubs.→ We somehow missed this one last week so it gets top billing today: Evan Rail’s blog is back from whatever Internet wormhole it got lost in (this is great news, generally) and his latest post is about the influence of the Czech influence on European lager brewing in the 19th and early 20th centuries (http://www.beerculture.org/2016/05/12/a-czech-influence-on-belgian-brewing/). It makes a strong case,*with reference to some lovely primary sources, for Czech brewing getting more credit than it has tended to in the past:
For its*low-grade Bavière, the brewery used German hops (generally Hallertau, Wolnzach and a less-expensive cultivar,*Bavière Montagne), which it bought from J. Tüchmann &*Söhne*and Bernard Bing in Nuremberg. But for the higher-grade Munich and the Bock that was later renamed*Pilsner, the brewery generally used 100% Saaz, purchased from hop vendors like the Kellner brothers and Sonnenschein & Landesmann, both in Žatec (aka Saaz), right here in Bohemia.
http://i1.wp.com/boakandbailey.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/10/whitbread_food_1937_detail_09.jpg?resize=465%2C326
→ For*Eater Matthew Sedacca ponders how ‘foodie culture’ (which includes craft beer) survived, and even thrived during, the Great Recession (http://www.eater.com/2016/5/19/11705966/foodie-millennials-recession). We don’t necessarily agree with all of his conclusions but it’s a great question:
A large driver behind the sustainability of the “foodie” ideology during and post-recession has been linked to the millennial generation’s shift in attitude towards material goods —€” namely, they don’t really want them. Several reports have highlighted the phenomenon that, unlike the baby boomers and several members of Gen X, millennials prefer consumption of ‘experiences.’
→ Alec Latham considers the various ways in which pubs in St Albans, where he lives, have mutated, changed or otherwise been reinvented (http://mostlyaboutbeer.blogspot.co.uk/2016/05/the-ghost-in-shell-st-albans-part-2.html):
Some pubs come back from the dead, others change the orientation of their ‘swing’…*Though Mokoko’s isn’t a beery place, it’s still a great bar. After all, cocktails are people too.

http://i2.wp.com/boakandbailey.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/06/greene_king_90s_sign_640.jpg?resize=467%2C302
→ In an interview with Australian Brews News*the venerable brewing professor Charles Bamforth has railed against gimmicks in brewing (http://www.brewsnews.com.au/2016/05/gimmicks-bad-for-beer-charlie-bamforth/), like a Dogfish Head beer made with chewed-up and spat-out grains:*‘Come on! You’re only going to do it once aren’t you?’ It’s not all grumping, though: he thinks black IPA, for example, is the right kind of boundary pushing.
→ Ed visited Greene King (http://edsbeer.blogspot.co.uk/2016/05/a-visit-to-greene-king-brewery.html)*and brings us this interesting nugget, among others:
I also got to try their XX mild at last…*Having various milds in the portfolio from the breweries they’ve taken over they rationalised it to just one recipe, and had tasting trials to decide on the best one. Despite the name it’s sold under it was actually the Hardys and Hansons mild that won.
→ Gary Gillman continues to*dig up tasting notes and opinions on Belgian beer from the 19th century like this 1836 diary entry mentioning Westmalle (http://www.beeretseq.com/an-english-visitor-renders-high-praise-to-westmalles-beer-1847/). (The makings of a longer article or e-book here, perhaps?)
→ Not reading but listening: on the Robert Elms show on BBC Radio London this week a listener asked if anyone remembered an estate pub in South London called The Apples & Pears. People did (@ 2h 20m) (http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/p03tpx16):
It was a very modern pub… Myself and my three girlfriends used to drive up on a Saturday night in our Austin A40… We used to go around ’72, ’73… We used to dress to match the era of the car, lots of long beads, headbands, flouncy frocks, sort of 1920s flappers was our style…
→ Carlisle is getting a State Management Scheme museum with Heritage Lottery funding — fantastic new!*Let’s generally have more brewing, beer and pub museums and exhibitions, please. (There’s no website that we can find so this Tweet with a screenshot of a Word document will have to do.)

Great opportunity: @StateManagement (https://twitter.com/StateManagement) would like to hear from DSN'ers interested in becoming involved in their work.. pic.twitter.com/hAyVJerngA (https://t.co/hAyVJerngA)
— Drinking Studies (@DrinkingStudies) May 20, 2016 (https://twitter.com/DrinkingStudies/status/733630585919406080)

News, Nuggets & Longreads 21 May 2016: Pilsner, Mild and Pubs (http://boakandbailey.com/2016/05/news-nuggets-longreads-21-may-2016-pilsner-mild-and-pubs/) from Boak & Bailey's Beer Blog - Beer blogging since 2007, covering real ale, craft beer, pubs and British beer history. (http://boakandbailey.com)


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