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08-11-2011, 14:21
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In the ongoing discussions (http://boakandbailey.com/2011/07/31/yet-more-thoughts-on-camra/) about whether CAMRA (http://blogs.independent.co.uk/2011/09/23/the-birth-of-camra-we-knew-next-to-nothing/) should or should not do more to support (http://zythophile.wordpress.com/2011/05/28/beer-bloggers-want-you-to-drink-keg-says-camra-chairman/) quality kegged and bottled British beer (http://www.camrgb.org/), one of the key sticking points is this: what makes the kegged beer of today any better than the bland kegged beer of the 1960s and 70s which provoke the campaign’s founding?
Or, to put that another way, is ‘new keg’ just the same shite as ‘old keg’?
Having read Martyn Cornell’s (http://zythophile.wordpress.com/) marvellous Beer: the Story of the Pint (http://www.amazon.co.uk/Beer-Story-History-Britains-Popular/dp/0755311647/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1320760577&sr=8-1) recently, we were prompted to contrast the motives of the makers of ‘old keg’ — big conglomerated breweries like Watneys — with those of the new breed of keg brewers.
Old keg: post-World War II, cask ale got weaker and became more temperamental until, to paraphrase Beer, a change of landlord or barmaid could be enough to push punters towards less exciting but more reliable bottled beer. Sales were dropping alarmingly. Kegged beer was the breweries’ response to that — a way of ensuring consistently adequate quality (less vinegar) but at the cost of excellence. The cask versions of their beer at the time were hardly earth-shatteringly brilliant either.
New keg: some smaller brewers, with a focus on flavour and quality, whether you agree with them or not, believe their beer tastes as good if not better without cask or bottle conditioning. (“Too fizzy” and “too cold” are subjective complaints). Others might prefer to cask-condition but, to expand their business, as an expression or beervangelism (http://boakandbailey.com/2008/04/09/beervangelism/), or a bit of both, want to get their beer into as many venues as possible, and believe kegging will help them achieve that. Many of these beers are stronger, more intensely flavoured and much more varied than the cask conditioned beers commonly seen in the average pub.
What do you think? Are they the same thing?


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