PDA

View Full Version : The Pub Curmudgeon - Curate's keg



Blog Tracker
07-04-2017, 12:28
Visit The Pub Curmudgeon site (http://pubcurmudgeon.blogspot.com/2017/04/curates-keg.html)



https://1.bp.blogspot.com/-WaWniBh-9Q4/WOdzgYlWKeI/AAAAAAAAFm4/x_zW9LF47mA3A38A-K0TgrebZZ__LfqogCLcB/s200/craft%2Bkeg%2Btaps.jpg (https://1.bp.blogspot.com/-WaWniBh-9Q4/WOdzgYlWKeI/AAAAAAAAFm4/x_zW9LF47mA3A38A-K0TgrebZZ__LfqogCLcB/s1600/craft%2Bkeg%2Btaps.jpg)
It’s long been the received wisdom that keg beer, while it will never scale the heights that cask can, at least offers consistency. You’re much less likely to get a seriously duff pint. However, that doesn’t mean that the odds are zero, and keg beer, while it will keep longer than cask, is not immune from the constraint of shelf life and the need to keep lines cleaned. Indeed, the recently-published Beer Quality Report (http://www.morningadvertiser.co.uk/Drinks/Beer/Where-are-the-dirtiest-pints-in-the-UK) showed that keg beers were significantly more likely to be dispensed from dirty lines than cask.
Substandard keg beer is less likely to exhibit the glaring faults that poor cask does, such as being cloudy or vinegary. It will probably be just a bit flat, stale-tasting and possibly slightly hazy when you would expect it to be crystal-clear. This makes it rather more difficult to have the courage of your convictions and return it to the bar. Girl Meets Pint reports here (https://girlmeetspint.wordpress.com/2017/04/01/fox-and-hounds-clapham/) that she received a substandard pint of Charles Wells Dry Hopped Lager – possibly not the pub’s best seller – but, understandably enough, demurred.

As it turns out, the lager was distinctly past its best, and to be honest I really should have taken it back, but I’m afraid to say I didn’t.Incidentally, that’s a blog well worth following for its superb, detailed observation of everyday pub life.
I have to say I very rarely drink keg beer in pubs, so don’t have much personal experience to draw on. However, a few months ago, I was at a CAMRA Pub of the Month presentation at the Old Cock in Didsbury and thought I would try a half of Camden Hells lager, which was on tap there. It came out as described above – flat, stale-tasting and hazy – and, after about two seconds’ thought, I went back to the bar and asked for it to be changed which, to be fair, was done willingly and the difference in cost between that and the replacement refunded. Serves me right for swerving the cask, some might say. I assume it had been stocked on the instructions of the area manager, but in practice just didn’t sell.
With the growth in craft keg offerings, many of which by definition will be low-turnover, niche products, the risk of getting sub-standard keg beer is only going to increase. A further factor is that craft kegs are likely to be unpasteurised, and may still contain live yeast, so the shelf life will be less and the risk of something going wrong increased. As with cask, drinkers need to grasp the nettle and return what appears to be faulty beer rather than just grimly struggling through it. But, if something is designed to be a murky sour in style, how are you expected to know if it’s off?


More... (http://pubcurmudgeon.blogspot.com/2017/04/curates-keg.html)