A Trip to the Euston Tap Last Tuesday
The Euston Tap is my favourite London pub. Not, I hasten to add, because London isn’t blessed with a number of very fine pubs indeed (The Rake, The Gunmakers and The Porterhouse are my three other faves to-date) but this is the one I get to call in at, usually once a fortnight or so, on my way back to Manchester after a day at my employers’ London HQ.
Last Tuesday was the latest such occasion. London was muggy that day; muggy, musty and dank. A couple of pints of something to chase away the heat were most definitely in order. Scanning the boards at the Euston Tap – with eight cask ales and no fewer than nineteen keg beers, ales, lagers and stouts to choose from – rarely makes for a quick or easy decision-making process. Not so last Tuesday. I spotted Fyne Avalanche and knew it had to be done. Crisp, fresh, dry, hoppy, golden, cool, grassy and floral; it tastes how I’d imagine it feels to stand in the middle of a Scotttish heather meadow on a cool spring morning. Just the ticket. It didn’t last long, but it took the edge off my thirst a treat.
Suspecting this might be the case, I’d already got my next one in, and at 6.2% ABV, this was one I was going to savour. A new stout / porter from Thornbridge y’say? Oh, I think so. Evenlode is a full-bodied dark mocha coffee stout (or porter) and a beer of two halves. It starts out smooth and rich with a slightly sticky mouth-feel and a distinctly coffee-dry finish. But half-way down the pint it flipped: suddenly it was a sweet strong stout with a lot more chocolate and more than a hint of treacle, as if the sugars were all hiding down at the bottom. And odd effect, but it didn’t detract from a generally excellent pint. What with the Evenlode and the Marble Ginger Stout the weekend before, it had turned out to be be an excellent few days for top-quality stout.
Reaching the end of that one with a soft sigh, I realised I still had ten minutes to kill. Another half of Evenlode? Tempting, but perhaps a little heady. So instead I asked for a half of Buxton Black Rocks – an intriguing-looking Black IPA – but it had just run out. I went for a half of Thornbridge Chiron instead. A fresh, malty ale; very lively with a caramel sweetness, a hint of lemon and a long, lingering hop finish. Another refreshing and satisfying summery ale, just what I needed to fortify me for the two hour train ride. And I’m looking forward to my next London trip already.

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