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18-04-2020, 09:40
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Here’s all the beer and pub related writing that grabbed our attention in the past week, including a bumper crop of notes on pubs and beer festivals in the North West of England.We’ve been asking people one question for years: “Yes, but why is cask better? What’s actually different about it?” That CO2 is CO2 has made it difficult to understand why cask-conditioned ale should feel different and more subtle than keg – which we think it does, though we’re not by any means anti-keg, they added as if it was 2012. In fact, one of the people we asked about this while researching*Brew Britannia was*Ed Wray who did his best to come up with a sensible answer all those years ago. Now, he’s back with another plausible answer (http://edsbeer.blogspot.com/2020/04/a-german-view-on-extraneous-co2.html), via the IBD magazine:

Dr Frank Müller, Brewmaster at Riegele brewery…. “describes fermentation derived carbonation as a more delicate, more integrated effervescence than the coarse bubbles that result from CO2 delivered by gas suppliers and injected in-line. One theory briefly mentioned in the course of this conversation dealt with saturation aspects of CO2 around haze particles, visibly perceived or not evident. Arguably, a slow evolution of CO2 leads to a more gradual saturation and better mouthfeel properties in the final beer.”
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Steve Marland, AKA The Modern Moocher, provides another photographic dispatch from the weed-strewn yard of a former Manchester pub, this time reporting from outside what was once the Lorimer’s Arms at Collyhurst (https://manchesterestatepubs.wordpress.com/2020/04/14/the-lorimers-arms-collyhurst/):

Typical of its time, developed to meet the needs of the new estates which replaced the slum clearance of the Sixties, in an area surrounded by industry… Once home to the Osborne Street Baths and Wash House, and a pub of an earlier age – The Osborne, still standing – ceased trading…. The pub had briefly become the centre for a telephone chatline service, prior to its current use as a place of worship – for the Christ Temple International Church.
There’s also a bonus mention of The Vine, AKA The Valley, which was the one pub we chickened out of going into during our*20th Century Pub research tour of England in 2016-17.
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Kirsty Walker has posted twice this week, noting with sadness that now she has time to blog, there’s nothing to blog about. Her piece on Liverpool Beer Festival (https://ladysinksthebooze.wordpress.com/2020/02/24/liverpool-beer-festival-2020/) was as entertaining as usual, though:

When you’ve been to as many beer festivals as I have (roughly 4000), it is possible to get to saturation point. I had never been to a beer festival in the metropolitan cathedral, and I wanted to go, but I knew it would be a CAMRA festival quite similar to most. How to shake things up? Simply, to take someone who has never been to a beer festival before and has only been drinking real or craft ale for about six months. Step up Vinnie, your time is now.
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After a pause,*Tandleman has returned to his series of reports from Samuel Smith pubs in his neck of the woods, this time popping into The Engineer’s Arms and The Grapes in Heywood (http://tandlemanbeerblog.blogspot.com/2020/04/treading-grapes.html), AKA ‘Monkey Town’:

I turn to Heywood’s History site for enlightenment and two explanations are offered. I rather like the one with a pub connotation of course, whereby folklore had it that Heywood men used to have tails, and so the stools and benches in the town’s pubs had holes in them for the tails to fit through. The reality, the article concludes, is that the holes were there for carrying the stools. Hmm. I’ll reluctantly rule that one out then, but the same piece surmises that the nickname ‘Monkey Town’ is derived from the pronunciation of Heap Bridge – a local area – as ‘Ape’ Bridge, and probably dates from the 1840s-50s. Not quite so much fun, but let’s go with that.
Tandleman*has also provided this relic from c.2000 which might or might not mean we need to rewrite our history of hazy beer in the UK:

Today's breweriana comes under the heading "Things I didn't know I had". A spirited defence of hazy beer by @marblebrewers (https://twitter.com/marblebrewers?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw) Not dated, but I'm guessing around Year 2000. Happy to be corrected. pic.twitter.com/GuJxW0aPSO (https://t.co/GuJxW0aPSO)
— Tandleman (@tandleman) April 12, 2020 (https://twitter.com/tandleman/status/1249329954430599172?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw)

At Beervana, Jeff Alworth offers reflections on the interpretation of beer history (https://www.beervanablog.com/beervana/2020/3/8/nuances-in-interpreting-the-history-of-beer), tackling what has become a thorny topic: does Belgian Lambic beer have a long history, or is it a recent marketing gimmick? Jeff respectfully disagrees with some recent scholarship on the subject:

Raf Meert has devoted a website to revisiting the history of lambic, and has discovered some interesting material. Much of it is quite helpful. After what looks like a fairly comprehensive search, for example, he can find no reference to the word “lambic” before the early 19th century. Interesting! But many of the conclusions he draws seem unsupported by the data… He has helped refine my understanding of some of the history, particularly the development of the various lambic products after the 19th century. But some of his arguments seem faulty to me, and since I know his work has influenced people who care about these things, I’d like to point out where I think he erred.
https://boakandbailey.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/04/young_oatmeal_stout.jpg
A nameless archivist at Wandsworth Heritage Service has put together an interesting piece on Young & Co branding (https://wandswortharchives.wordpress.com/2020/03/20/youngs-branding-label-design/) over the decades illustrated with some lovely historic labels.
And finally, from Twitter, there’s this:

My wife and I miss going to bars so much that we created a beer menu for our house. We open at 4:30 every afternoon to watch @Jeopardy (https://twitter.com/Jeopardy?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw). pic.twitter.com/i7tiNB6M3v (https://t.co/i7tiNB6M3v)
— John Harry (@historyhappyhr) April 15, 2020 (https://twitter.com/historyhappyhr/status/1250539699577462789?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw)

For more good reading, check out Alan McLeod’s Thursday round-up (http://abetterbeerblog427.com/2020/04/16/these-are-the-mid-april-thursday-beery-news-notes/).
News, nuggets and longreads 18 April 2020: Liverpool, Collyhurst, Heywood (https://boakandbailey.com/2020/04/beer-pubs-news-links-18-april-2020/) originally posted at Boak & Bailey's Beer Blog (https://boakandbailey.com)


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