PDA

View Full Version : The Pub Curmudgeon - Shine a light



Blog Tracker
12-12-2017, 13:01
Visit The Pub Curmudgeon site (http://pubcurmudgeon.blogspot.com/2017/12/shine-light.html)


https://1.bp.blogspot.com/-PDQOZG9XwkI/Wi-0M_3mzmI/AAAAAAAAGEM/hBStYmbbfWQSw64pf9enl3hPXZe_A0RRgCLcBGAs/s320/lantern_tankard.jpg (https://1.bp.blogspot.com/-PDQOZG9XwkI/Wi-0M_3mzmI/AAAAAAAAGEM/hBStYmbbfWQSw64pf9enl3hPXZe_A0RRgCLcBGAs/s1600/lantern_tankard.jpg)
In pictures of people drinking in the 1930s, a distinctive straight, ten-sided tankard often features. Indeed, it was adopted as a symbol of British beer for the “Beer is Best” advertising campaign. However, after the war it lost popularity to the familiar dimpled mug, and the last examples were manufactured in 1978. Although I started drinking in pubs around that time, I can’t recall ever having encountered one.
The dimpled mug itself, once perceived as aspirational, has long since fallen from favour, and the vast majority of draught beer is now drunk from straight glasses of various kinds. However, Stockport-based licensed trade suppliers Stephensons have now decided to revive the traditional lantern tankard (http://www.stephensons.com/the-lantern-10-sided-tankard/327135-the-lantern-10-sided-pint-glass-tankard.html) for the 21st century, as described by Zythophile here (http://zythophile.co.uk/2017/08/10/hurrah-the-ten-sided-beer-mug-is-back/). They were kind enough to send me a sample.
It’s a handsome, solid glass with a particularly thick base, but it fits nicely in the hand, despite apparently being slightly heavier than a dimpled mug. Of course I held it in the time-honoured fashion, by gripping it round the body, with my fingers through the handle. After all, if the handle falls off, then all you lose is the handle. As the surface area at the top is greater than that of a Nonik, the room left for the head naturally appears somewhat shallower.
I deliberately chose a pale beer – Black Sheep Golden Sheep * – to show the light filtering through the glass to its best advantage, although this is always something that is difficult to catch in a photograph. It is much better in this respect than a dimpled mug as, while you still get the jewel-like effect from the multiple facets, the lack of any vertical divisions doesn’t break up the clarity and colour of the beer. This was even more pronounced when I later tried it with a bottle of Hofbrau Oktoberfestbier.
https://3.bp.blogspot.com/-D-grmQ1mSEg/Wi-zIZDnIqI/AAAAAAAAGEA/6RtrDSf04cE45MJmG5e2vjqDvBuFnAFWQCLcBGAs/s320/lantern_tankard.jpg (https://3.bp.blogspot.com/-D-grmQ1mSEg/Wi-zIZDnIqI/AAAAAAAAGEA/6RtrDSf04cE45MJmG5e2vjqDvBuFnAFWQCLcBGAs/s1600/lantern_tankard.jpg)
I liked it. It certainly brings more of a sense of occasion to drinking a pint, and it would be good to see it taken up by more pubs to give cask beer a more distinctive identity.
It has also been tested out by Pints and Pubs (https://pintsandpubs.wordpress.com/2017/11/25/lantern-tankard/).
* incidentally, examination of the bottle revealed that the strength of Golden Sheep has been surreptitiously reduced from 4.7% to 4.5% ABV :-(


More... (http://pubcurmudgeon.blogspot.com/2017/12/shine-light.html)