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03-06-2019, 16:57
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https://1.bp.blogspot.com/-xlrxnqXOip0/XPVAFPl9YqI/AAAAAAAAGvI/A93gZuCZYokS8U99LgYQmW2gQuDQkd2rQCLcBGAs/s200/highland%2Bgate.jpg (https://1.bp.blogspot.com/-xlrxnqXOip0/XPVAFPl9YqI/AAAAAAAAGvI/A93gZuCZYokS8U99LgYQmW2gQuDQkd2rQCLcBGAs/s1600/highland%2Bgate.jpg)
Last Autumn, I argued in a post entitled Something’s Got to Give (http://pubcurmudgeon.blogspot.com/2018/10/somethings-got-to-give.html) that the steady decline in cask beer volumes would inevitably lead to reductions in availability, which might manifest themselves in sudden and unexpected ways. And it now seems that something has given, with the news that Marston’s are going to withdraw cask (https://www.morningadvertiser.co.uk/Article/2019/05/30/Marston-s-pulls-cask-ale-from-Scotland-pubs#.XPEvKhAIWro.twitter) from 21 of their 22 managed pubs in Scotland.
The initial reaction to this is some quarters was one of dismay at the reduction in cask availability. Surely Marston’s could have done more to promote it? However, as Britain’s leading cask ale brewer, they’re hardly going to abandon it lightly: it’s not like they’re some trendy craft brewer trying to make a point. It seems clear that, despite their best efforts, they simply can’t achieve the throughput necessary to keep it in good condition and, given this, it has to be regarded as a sensible and pragmatic, if disappointing decision.
These pubs are mostly family dining venues, not urban boozers, and so are probably never going to achieve big beer volumes, especially in view of the cut in the Scottish drink-driving limit. The photo shows the Highland Gate (https://whatpub.com/pubs/FOV/112/highland-gate-stirling) on the outskirts of Stirling, still shown on WhatPub with real ale, which is probably typical.
When CAMRA was formed in the 1970s, real ale had pretty much entirely disappeared from the country, so there was no established tradition of cask drinking. Since then, there has been a substantial increase in availability, and some city-centre pubs do shift a lot of it, but outside the major population centres it has always struggled, and often gives the impression of having been just put on for the tourists.
Good Beer Guide tickers such as Martin Taylor (https://retiredmartin.com/) and Simon Everitt (https://brapa-4500.blogspot.com/) have often reported poor cask beer in Scottish entries, which probably wouldn’t get anywhere near inclusion south of the Border. This even extends to Wetherspoon’s branches, and realistically it might make sense for Spoons to do the same in the some of the smaller towns, even though it would undermine their reputation for serving cask in every pub.
I have earlier written about the Cask Crisis (http://pubcurmudgeon.blogspot.com/2018/08/the-cask-crisis.html), where I made the point that cask needs a certain amount of commitment from a pub’s management to thrive. It can’t just be another tick-box option on the bar at the end of a row of keg taps, only there because you suppose you ought to stock it. Poor, ill-kept, stale beer is cask’s worst enemy. While this decision may seem like a retrograde step, in the longer term it would probably benefit cask if it was removed from marginal outlets which lack either the demand or the enthusiasm to present it at its best.


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