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There’s been plenty of good reading this week from intelligence on the latest AB-InBev manoeuvring *to memories of 1970s Sheffield via a Sober Island.

First, the news headlines: AB-InBev have taken over Spanish brewery Cervezas La Virgen, as reported by*Joan Villar-i-Martí*at*Birraire:
A rather peculiar move, in my opinion, if we compare it to the Belgian brewing giant’s recent operations, especially in Europe…*La Virgen was born as a product designed for the Madrid market, and until a year ago it was basically focused on it. As a company, it has never quite been in the circles of the national craft movement, appearing in few festivals and without a significant presence in specialised bars. On the contrary, it has successfully penetrated the market with a craft-labelled product that delivers a similar experience to the ‘usual’ beers.

‘Sober Island’ By Dennis Jarvis from Flickr under Creative Commons. For*Mel*magazine*Angela Chapin gives an account of the dispute over the name and location of Sober Island brewery, which is not currently brewing on Sober Island, Nova Scotia, Canada, as the name might suggest:
One of the locals most excited about her plan was [Rebecca Atkinson’s] friend Trevor Munroe. He and his wife run an oyster farm on Sober Island, and the 43-year-old thought the brewery would be great for the community. Not to mention, it was to be a mutually beneficial relationship: Munroe wanted to help Atkinson find land; she wanted to use his oysters in her beer. Better yet, they planned to team up to attract tourists to the island with tours that would end with cold beer and fresh oysters… But the relationship began to sour when Atkinson delayed the construction of the brewery and started brewing beer at her mom’s place instead.
The story highlights all kinds of issues around provenance, marketing, and the meaning of local — is Atkinson exploiting the island’s quirky name or is she sincere in her stated intent to eventually move production there?
(Via @PivniFilosof.)


We haven’t bothered with a dedicated predictions post this New Year but Richard Taylor‘s for*The Beercast look pretty smart to us: bigger cans, packs of beer designed for blending and hops in drinks other than beer all sound highly likely, and not at all unappealing.


Meanwhile, still looking back to 2016,*Phil Cook provides an interesting summary of what’s been going on in the New Zealand beer scene:
I don’t believe for a minute that we have ‘too many breweries’ — but I often suspect we do have too many companies with a shortage of anything-much interesting to offer and an oversupply of confident opportunism that leads them to gracelessly try to run before they know how to walk. Birkenhead started out by shamelessly lifting the logotype of the more-familiar-BBC and awkwardly dressed their beers in Māori imagery before equally-awkwardly removing it. The labels are full of clunky historical and geographical irrelevancies that talk up a heritage they don’t have and only mention the beer itself in agonisingly shallow terms. The whole business model seems to hinge hugely on leveraging ‘brand NZ’ and flogging beer in China…


A real highlight of the week for us was*Frank Curtis’s*memoir of drinking and working in Sheffield pubs in the 1970s, written for*Total Ales. It’s full of small details and vignettes and makes us wish everyone would take a minute to record their memories, even if they might not seem significant in the bigger picture. This is the kind of thing that too easily gets forgotten:
I still remember my very first shift in the lounge bar of The Beehive. The landlord had spent hours teaching me how to serve a full pint with a tight, creamy head, forced through a sparkler – the only way his customers would accept it he assured me. He then made me practice on the other students in the saloon bar for days before I was exposed to the elite customers next door. My first order in the lounge bar came from a group of seven ‘middle managers’ – all wearing collar and tie – from the Sheffield steel works. ‘Seven pints o’ Tetley’s please’ was the order. My serving technique was scrutinised closely and rewarded with the comment ‘not bad for a student’. The group then proceeded to order a further six rounds of seven pints each, over the course of about an hour, then all left together.


For*The Malting Floor*Claudia Asch reflects on beer styles, awards programmes and the dialogue between brewer and customer:
One of my favourite style-related stories is perhaps the tale of Fuller’s Extra Special Bitter. Introduced in 1971, it has since won many accolades, including a Gold medal at the 2006 World Beer Cup. Four years later, at that very same competition, the same beer was ‘disqualified… as not being to style (p. 134).’ The mind boggles. Fullers is ESB, ESB is Fullers. A glimpse into the absurdity of style management.


It turns out, as Jeff Alworth at*Beervana*reports, that market analysts are already distinguishing between beers that are ‘true craft’ and*‘mass craft’:
*Within the craft segment (however you define it), there are emerging sub-segments. The vast majority of craft beer is still just a few brands–Lagunitas IPA, Sierra Nevada Pale, Sam Adams Boston Lager, Blue Moon and so on… There are millions of barrels of interest in what beer geeks now deem boring beer. If a brewery wants to appeal to this, ahem, mass market within the craft segment, they can’t hope to do it with a brett-aged saison.


Just as UK bottle shops and bars have started to install growler-filling machines for takeaway draught beer comes news from Zach Fowle at*Draft that in the*US that trend is, like,*so*totally over:
‘A growler is just a big glass, essentially, and I don’t think drinkers know that,’ [Chris] Quinn says. ‘Brewers can put a tag on the glass saying ‘drink within 48 hours’ and so on, which I think is good, but I think that people still consider growlers to be as good as bottles—and maybe even better, since they got them right from the source. But if you think there’s no difference, open up five bottles or cans of a beer, put them in your fridge, and just drink through them one by one. That’s essentially what you’re doing with a growler. Is that fifth beer going to be as good as the first, even if it’s kept in a fridge?’

And, finally, here’s one of the best of this week’s #PubPhotos as provided by Nicci Peet who set us off on this train of thought in the first place:
@BoakandBailey probably this one at the Mussel Inn (NZ) but I'm biased cos its one of my all time favourite pubs #PubPhotos pic.twitter.com/LBkBhKGMgh
— Nicci Peet (@niccipeet) January 11, 2017
News, Nuggets & Longreads 14 January 2017: Spain, Sheffield and Sober Island originally posted at Boak & Bailey's Beer Blog


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