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A place for Keg bitter?
And before the smart bottoms say, no not there
I have seen mention here about John Smith's Smooth, normally not in a positive way, I am one of the culprits I admit
However it set me thinking, back hundreds of years to my yoof and the memory of just how lovely Worthington E and Red Barrel, Drum Mild etc was at the time
Back then, when pubs were doing you a favour if they even had crisps for sale, and a stale cheese roll was considered haute cuisine by most publicans, beer from many a pub was slopped up with grubby bits floating in vinegary liquid, sometimes to rub it in you got a glass with lipstick on it as well
Now obviously this was all down to the publican not looking after the beer in the real wooden barrels, some were good but an good many were not, thus when Keg came along it was nectar in relation to the previous offerings
Since then CAMRA was born and real ale has made a comeback, but now those who serve it [or most] know they have to look after it, and many take pride in doing so. The rest stick to keg thus saving us the bother of winnowing out the chaff when making our pub selection
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I'll stay on me own
I personally think keg has a place - some pubs just can't sell real ale, be it their target customer base, their location of cellar, their skill, and so keg makes a viable offer. If only it wasn't superchilled! That's my only problem with it - I've had keg Bass and Pedigree before now, and once they've defrosted, they're not the worst thing in the world. But then I'm the same with Guinness - why would you want to freeze the flavour out of a drink? If it ain't broke...
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I started on Bass special keg , mainly because if you asked for lager or cider you wouldnt get served , but bitter drinkers were deemed over 18 !
Worthington E was available as cask , very nice it was to .
Most of these "smooth beers" give me indigestion and a raging headache due to the nitrogen rich gas they are served with (old keg was straight co2 , new keg is up to 5o/50 co2/nitrogen
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Originally Posted by
Farway
And before the smart bottoms say, no not there
However it set me thinking, back hundreds of years to my yoof and the memory of just how lovely Worthington E and Red Barrel, Drum Mild etc was at the time
Not my experience, for me Red Barrel was only surpassed in its horribleness by Watney's Starlight Bitter, even Whitbread Trophy was better, that's why I drank Guinness until someone pointed me at Gales Ales. Yes many pubs were uniquely grotty and the beer foul in the 70s but then lots still are. I don't know if "ping and fling" is any better than the manky sarnies of yesteryear.
Originally Posted by
Eddie86
I personally think keg has a place - some pubs just can't sell real ale, be it their target customer base, their location of cellar, their skill, and so keg makes a viable offer.
Yes absolutely right, if they can't look after it they shouldn't bother, there's too many places that appear to be trying to get on a "Real Ale" bandwagon simply because it's the one sector that's growing or the brewery/pubco says they must sell it.
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Now you all mention it I find many kegs, and ciders, all seem to be served too cold for me, which is why I now avoid them
Over chilled seems to be a modern trait, just because they can, and presumably like too much salt / sugar in food, being very cold can hide the naff taste of the product
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Originally Posted by
Eddie86
I personally think keg has a place - some pubs just can't sell real ale, be it their target customer base, their location of cellar, their skill, and so keg makes a viable offer.
Eddie,I think another alternative would be to have a small range of bottle conditioned ales. I'd certainly buy them.
Originally Posted by
oldboots
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Yes absolutely right, if they can't look after it they shouldn't bother, there's too many places that appear to be trying to get on a "Real Ale" bandwagon simply because it's the one sector that's growing or the brewery/pubco says they must sell it.
My big fear about everyone jumping on the real ale bandwagon is a potential backlash if supply exceeds demand and quality falls due to lack of turnover.
Originally Posted by
Farway
Over chilled seems to be a modern trait, just because they can, and presumably like too much salt / sugar in food, being very cold can hide the naff taste of the product
A decent beer should be palatable at any temperature. Try letting cheap eurofizz warm up even a few degrees, not even tepid, and try drinking it then.
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This Space For Hire
I find the more you chill beer or lager the less taste you get but if lager reaches a good beer temp the taste really goes off. I can drink a slow pint of beer but feel rushed once a glass of lager begins to warm up.Over chilled beer I leave to warm up.
The worst cases I came across were in Florida where they poured super chilled beer ( ? ) into glasses straight from freezers.The result was a huge chunk of ice formed in the glass. The subtle nuances of taste are completely lost. Bottles or cans from the liquor store I found a far better bet. But you cannot beat them for barbecued baby back ribs because in this country we use pork. Yeah rubbish joke.
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If you get the chance try Cotswold Lager , its not like what us Brits call Lager as its full of flavour , refreshing and got a bit of body to it , also its not served virtually frozen .
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Former Pubs Galore Coder
I'll keep an eye out for them, they do sound interesting. Surprised to see no mention of Bristol on their pubs page as I would have said we were fairly local.
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