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26-11-2022, 05:52
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We’ve bookmarked a bunch of good writing about beer and pubs in the past week, including notes on onions and old ale.
Dark Star (Fuller’s (Asahi)) has brewed a version of Gale’s Prize Old Ale which is now, on and off, available to buy. The first batch went onto the online store this week and promptly sold out. We’re told another 1,300 bottles will be up next Friday, 2 December. Martyn Cornell explains in this blog post why you should care, and why you should join the queue (https://zythophile.co.uk/2022/11/22/rush-out-now-and-buy-as-much-gales-prize-old-ale-as-you-can/):

15 or so years ago, the appreciation of sour ales that there is today, and Fuller’s sales team simply did not understand Prize Old Ale, what it was and what it could be. Fortunately John Keeling resisted their calls to pour it away down the drain, and kept 80 hectolitres or so hidden in the Griffin brewery. Earlier this year Henry Kirk had some of that beer conveyed to Sussex, where he brewed a fresh batch of Prize Old Ale to the original Horndean recipe, carefully blended that into the old, well-travelled beer, and then waited while the aged yeasts and bacteria did their job… The result is a marvel: an amazingly complex beer for a brew in one way so young, the sort of deep and fascinating palate (and palette) that beers such as Rodenbach or lambic achieve only after years in Belgian foeders: but then, parts of this beer have been around for a century.
https://boakandbailey.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/07/dimple_mug_brown_beer.jpgJust one question, just a small question, just an easy one, from Pete Brown: what is beer (https://www.petebrown.net/2022/11/21/what-is-beer-no-seriously/)?

I’ve always had a very simple distinction. All fermented drinks are based on sugars that yeast converts to alcohol. If those sugars come from fruit, the drink is wine (real cider is, effectively, apple wine). If those sugars come from grains the drink is beer (which is why Japanese sake is technically rice beer rather than rice wine)… Ah. Says [the Beer Archaeologist Travis Rupp]. But of the starches in the Natufian beer, only 34.2% came from grasses. The rest were a mix of starches from a wide variety of plants including lentils, tubers, leaves, even flowers. Fruit was likely added not primarily for flavour, but because the yeast on the skins would have started the fermentation… So is this still beer?
https://boakandbailey.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/07/taps_at_bottles_books.jpgAlmost three years since the start of the pandemic, many people still haven’t returned to city centre workplaces, fundamentally changing the feel and flow of cities. Jeff Alworth has explored this topic before and returns to it now with more data (https://www.beervanablog.com/beervana/2022/11/18/when-places-lose-their-presence):

This summer, researchers at UC Berkeley found that of 62 cities in North America, only four saw their downtowns recover from Covid; a third still had half or less traffic than pre-pandemic… But here’s the thing—it wasn’t just downtowns. Cities as a whole were still suffering. According to that same UC Berkeley study, only 16% of cities saw life return to normal across the metro areas. People hadn’t switched from having that after-work pint downtown to heading out of the house for one at the neighborhood local… Once people were in their homes, it seems, they were less likely to go back out…Earlier this week, I met with a brewer for an article I’m working on. He told me his taproom volume came back after the pandemic, but only to about three-quarters its original level.
https://boakandbailey.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/01/onions.jpgLiam at Beer, Food, Travel is on a roll. This week, he delivers a torrent of lovely 19th century slang, from ‘crappers’ to ‘hinions’, in a post on ‘summut (https://beerfoodtravel.blogspot.com/2022/11/pub-history-summut-plain-stick-hinion.html)’:

Leaving all of that aside, the big thing here is an onion being served in a pint of porter and whiskey – or at least that is implied by the comments of Mr. Mulvey. This seems odd to the extreme and I can find no other reference to either a ‘summut’ or the practice of serving onion in a beer anywhere else – as of yet.
Reminds us of the ‘Pondicherry Pearl’ (https://boakandbailey.com/2017/04/the-strange-case-of-the-pondicherry-pearl/), which makes us think Liam might be onto something when he suggests the whole idea of summut could be a gag.
https://boakandbailey.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/11/the_island_inn.jpgFood at The Island Inn, West Bromwich.Now, a couple of pieces that echo each other. First, for Pellicle, David Jesudason writes about the role of Desi pubs in the Midlands in making football more diverse (https://www.pelliclemag.com/home/2022/11/14/please-dont-take-me-home-how-black-country-desi-pub-culture-made-football-more-diverse):

Inside the Red Cow, Bera [Mahli], who is 65 years old, is frantically running from three different sets of customers; in the room above the packed pub of football fans, he’s catering for two different parties… But the football fans are his stock and trade. So much, in fact, he charters fleets of taxis for them before the match. He did this because he used to run Redfort Social Club, which was nearer the ground, and when he moved to the Red Cow he had to come up with a novel way of keeping his Saturday customers.
And at Good Beer Hunting Amy Lo answers a question we’ve all asked from time to time: why do so many London pubs serve Thai food (https://www.goodbeerhunting.com/blog/2022/11/22/a-special-relationship-exploring-the-connection-between-pub-culture-and-east-and-southeast-asian-cooking)?

The Churchill Arms in Kensington is a Fuller’s pub, one that looks exactly like the sort of pub you probably imagine when you think of England… Unexpectedly, it is also widely considered to be the first pub in London with a Thai kitchen, thanks to a chef named “Ben” Songkot Boonyasarayon, as manager James Keogh tells me. “He was running a restaurant in Earl’s Court back in the late ’80s, and he just happened to be a customer of the pub here, and he asked us if we would try Thai food here in the pub,” Keough says.
Finally, from Twitter, a mystery…

Here's a bit of a #Steinkrug (https://twitter.com/hashtag/Steinkrug?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw) mystery: does anybody recognize this logo? It doesn't look anything like a Spatenbräu logo, so we think it's maybe from some fair, possibly interwar period? But we haven't been able to find anything whatsoever so far. pic.twitter.com/1TS2JzKLwX (https://t.co/1TS2JzKLwX)
— Andreas Krennmair (@der_ak) November 23, 2022 (https://twitter.com/der_ak/status/1595510212668039169?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw)
…and from Mastodon (https://mastodon.beer/@Braciatrix/109393323501822937), a bedtime story:
https://boakandbailey.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/11/braciatrix_toot.jpg (https://mastodon.beer/@Braciatrix/109393323501822937)For more good reading check out Stan Hieronymus’s round-up from Monday (https://appellationbeer.com/blog/twtbwtw-tree-beers-other-reasons-to-ask-what-is-beer/) and Alan McLeod’s from Thursday (http://abetterbeerblog427.com/2022/11/24/the-laziest-beery-news-notes-of-the-last-167-weeks-honestly-why/).
News, nuggets and longreads 26 November 2022: The Onion Song (https://boakandbailey.com/2022/11/news-nuggets-and-longreads-26-november-2022-the-onion-song/) originally posted at Boak & Bailey's Beer Blog (https://boakandbailey.com)


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