It was, although I didn't realise it was for a half, I missed the small print. Fortunately although I wanted to try it, I wasn't sure I'd want a whole pint and so only ordered a half. I was just a bit surprised when my bill was £6.80 rather than £3.40.
Although it rather pales in to insignificance anyway when compared to the £17.70 per pint for another of the same brewer's "Donut Series", this time the Dark Chocolate With Candied Pecans And Coffee Glaze in BrewDog Bath
Got charged £5.90 for Dark Star - green hop in a Fullers pub.I did ask the price before I bought it and considering I started the thread complaining about the same beer being £5 a pint in 2017 its not too bad considering.Not as good a beer this year but still great. I then went across to the Sussex arms but didn't check the price of my beer as they are now usually £4.80.Oakham -obsidian order 6.2 cost me £6.50 slightly more than the £2.69 I paid in Mc spoons about 4 months ago.
£3.00 for a half of Fuller's Red Fox (4.3%) in West Ealing last Friday.
£2.65 for a half of Moor Stout (5%) in Belgravia two days earlier.
Yes. But why £3.00 for a half of a 4.3% beer in West Ealing then £2.65 for a 5% beer in Belgravia, where property prices are, pro rata, about ten times more expensive. Surely the weaker beer in an unaffluent area should cost less than the stronger beer in an area of enormous wealth?