Tag Archives: Wetherspoons

JD Wetherspoon launches new Real Ale Festival website

Yesterday I spotted Tandleman’s sneak preview of this year’s Wetherspoon Real Ale & Cider Festival, which runs from October 27th to November 14th. Then five minutes later, in one of those odd moments of synchronicity, I spotted an @UKPubs tweet pointing out that Wetherspoon’s have launched a new website to promote the festival. Which, it turns out, looks a little like this [click for a larger screenshot] :

JDW Real Ale & Cider Festival website

(more…)

Around the Beerblogosphere #4

Here we go with another round-up of beery blog posts and news items that have caught my eye in the last couple of weeks:

(more…)

Tasting Notes: Moorhouse Black Panther

Moorhouse'sBrewery: Moorhouse’s
Location: Burnley, Lancashire, England
ABV: 4.8%
Version: Cask
Source: Wetherspoons, Belfast

The 30th Anniversary Wetherspoons Real Festival kicked off on Wednesday, so I popped in to see what the Belfast branch had to offer. And as I expected it was a predictable not much. With only 4 ale pumps (even though there are nearly 30 others dedicated to the usual lagers, cider and Guinness) I didn’t expect too many of the 50 featured festival beers to be present, but 2 is just not trying. Surely for the duration of the festival they could have ditched the other two more regular ales, which are currently Ruddle’s Best and Hobgoblin.

I didn’t fancy the Greene King Boss Hogg, a 4.1% best bitter brewed specially for the festival, and one of 31 bitter beer styles featured. So instead I went for the Moorhouse’s Black Panther, another one brewed for the event. At 4.8%, this is basically their award winning Black Cat, only stronger. Pouring black, with a slightly fruity chocolatey aroma, it certainly starts off very enticing. And it follows through in the taste as well. Dark chocolate at the start, with touches of dried fruit, plums, raisins and liquorice also present, a bit toasty, and a lingering slightly dry finish. Very nice indeed. I would quite happily have had another of these, but getting back to work unfortunately had to get in the way.

Wetherspoons Real Ale Festival Spring '09 – Bury

Jo and I were up in Bury on Saturday lunchtime, so we nipped into the Robert Peel for a microwaved ready-meal (I know, I know, but the liver & mash wasn’t too bad…) and to give their Festival pumps the once-over. They had a reasonable showing of five Festival beers on offer, although one of them was stickered up ‘available soon’. Brains Dark was there again, alongside John Smith’s Heritage Ale, which didn’t grab my attention. But I did try the two others on offer.

Not being a big fruit beer fan at all, I wasn’t really sure what to expect from Sharp’s Red Sloe Ale but what I got was a fresh, bitter, dark-amber ale that wasn’t at all fruity in the usual sense. The sloe (a small, astringent, plum-like fruit of the blackthorn, in case you were wondering) adds tartness rather than sweetness to an already hoppy brew, so the overall effect is closer to a citrus tang than a strawberry or raspberry sugariness. In conclusion: a quite palatable easy-drinker (at 4.0% abv) and one that I was happy to have tried it after all.

Wild Blue Yonder Oregon Amber AleThe second beer was – at last – one of the overseas guest ales: Wild Blue Yonder Oregon Amber Ale. This beer was brewed especially for the Wetherspoon’s festival by Bend Brewing Company‘s Head Brewmaster Tonya Cornett. There’s an interview with Tonya in the festival booklet which, once you get past all the completely unnecessary “that’s right, she’s a woman, get used to it fellas” schtick, makes Bend Brewing – and particularly their Imperial IPAs – sound rather interesting indeed.

Wild Blue Yonder itself is extremely tasty: a light, fresh, hoppy ale with a smooth mouth-feel and a nutty, caramel finish. At 4.8% it’s a definite easy-drinking indeed and it was certainly good enough to send me back to the bar for another on (and at £1.49 for a Festival pint up in Bury, why the hell not?) Again, I’m very glad I tried this one.

All in all then, my two visits to Wetherspoon’s for this particular Festival didn’t amount to a scooper’s triumph. I only got to try half a dozen of the 50 beers that were in the booklet, although to be fair, three of them were well worth the effort: Wild Blue Yonder and the previously mentioned Wooden Hand Cornish Mutiny and Thwaite’s Double Century. But generally speaking, it sounds like I need to get out more at Festival time…

Wetherspoons Real Ale Festival Spring '09 – Manchester

Wetherspoons International Real Ale Festival April '09

Wetherspoon’s International Real Ale Festival time again, which means another selection of 50 beers to (hopefully) sample. This time around I hoped to improve on the mis-timing that marred my last Festival experience, so following a tip from Simon J – see comment #7 on that post – Jo and I headed to The Paramount instead of The Waterhouse, where it turned out they had 8 pumps dedicated to the beer fest brews.

Of course, these things are always going to be a bit hit and miss: you turn up and take your chances, hoping that the more interesting beers in the festival booklet will be the ones they have on tap when you’re there. Alas, it was not to be on this occasion, either. None of the six headline International beers were on and only one of the European imports. Ah, well. C’est la vie. Determined not to be too disappointed, I perused the selection on offer and got stuck in to a few half-pints:

Brains DarkBrains Dark – First up: a dark mild from Wales. Jo had a couple of halves of this one whilst I was sampling my way along the pumps, but she very kindly let me have a sip or two. Dark, nutty and very mild indeed (although almost to the point of having no real distinguishing flavours at all) this is one of the more palatable milds I’ve tried recently – the other two (Holt’s and one other I can’t remember the name of) being sour as under-ripe cherries and not in a good way – and at 3.5% ABV you could happily drink this one all night. You might wonder why you didn’t try something more interesting instead, though…

Wooden Hand Cornish MutinyWooden Hand Cornish MutinyTim often extols the virtues of good Cornish ale, so I made a point of trying this one right off the bat. It turned out to be a very fresh, very refreshing malty ale with a zesty citrus tang. At 4.8% it would make for a good session beer as well, I reckon. Good stuff, highly drinkable.

Thwaites Double Century bottleThwaites Double Century – This one ought to be familiar to anyone who’s browsed the shelves of Tesco’s bottled ale section. It’s impressive in bottles and I’m happy to say even more so on draught: A 4.8% ABV golden ale with a lovely, fresh, bitter-sweet tang of grapefruit and fruity hops (Jo suggested it was like a bitter orange sorbet) with an extremely smooth finish and a bitter after-taste that’s just about right. One of the Blackburn brewery’s very best, and no doubt about it.

Rhymney ExportRhymney Export – A golden brown bitter ale from Welsh brewer Rhymney, Export was another fresh-tasting beer; a good, smooth mouth-feel and just a hint of fresh strawberry made this one another easy-drinker, although at 5% it might just creep up and mug you by the end of the night. Worth the risk, though, I reckon.

St Georgen Brau Keller BierSt Georgen Brau Keller Bier – This Bavarian import poured a slightly cloudy golden amber colour, had zero aroma (even Jo, whose nose is much better than mine, was hard-pressed to detect anything) and despite a distinct, green-apple-sour tang, with a very bitter hoppy after-taste, wasn’t huge on flavour either. It wasn’t unpleasant, but I certainly wouldn’t have gone back to the bar for another.

Speaking of going back to the bar, at that point I wandered over and perused my way up and down the pumps, but just couldn’t see anything else that grabbed my attention. If memory serves they had the JW Lees Hopping Mad, Caldonian Raspberry Fool (fruit beer, hmmm…), Bateman’s Dragon’s Den and Mauldons Silver Adder, but none of those really stood out (although on reflection the Hopping Mad might have been worth a try…)

So Jo and I decided to wander up to The Waterhouse (the other Wetherspoon’s pub in that part of Manchester city centre) on the off-chance that they had a more interesting selection on offer. But instead we found an almost identical range: at least four cross-overs, with Okell’s Red and Sharp’s Red Sloe (fruit beer, hmmm…) the only differences that I could spot. Well, apart from one other: they did have Palm Steenbrugge Blond on as well, but after over-hearing two gents discussing it (“bit bland this, isn’t it?” “aye, you’d expect more from a 6% beer”) I decided to pass. So we decamped to the City Arms next door (where, let’s face it, every day is beer festival day) and had one more in there before calling it a night.

Which brings me to something that’s been bothering me about the whole International Real Ale Festival experience. For the record: I think it’s great that a huge pub chain like Wetherspoon’s is supporting real ale with this sort of national promotion. And surely giving regular drinkers the opportunity to try the good stuff for £1.69 a pint (or the regional price equivalent) is one of the best possible ways to convert them from swilling fizzy cooking lager to sampling (and hopefully enjoying) something with more flavour and genuine character. But setting that noble goal aside for a moment… would it hurt to put a little more variety into the festival selection for those of us who already sing in the choir?

I ran a quick tally of the types of beer listed in the Festival booklet and – discounting the ‘speciality’ categorisation, which they seem to be using to cover a range of miscellaneous styles – here’s what I reckon was on offer: 2 milds, 1 stout, 2 porters, 1 Belgian blonde, 1 wheat beer, 1 rauchbier, 3 fruit beers, 2 flavoured (1 coriander, 1 rum), 10 ‘golden’ (pale) ales and then no fewer than 26 varieties of bitter (I’m lumping the booklet’s ‘bitter’, ‘best bitter’ and ‘strong bitter’ labels into one category here). Oh, and there was 1 lager, wasn’t there? I mean, the aforementioned St Georgen Brau Keller Bier was listed as a ‘speciality’ beer in the booklet, but according to the website, it’s bottom-fermented and is left to “mature unbunged in deep vaults”… so that makes it a lager, right? Not that I’m getting prissy about a lager being included in a real ale festival or anything. But if it’s a lager, then call it a lager, that’s all I’m saying…

And yes, I realise it’s a Spring beer festival and so naturally a lot of breweries will be keen to showcase their Spring seasonal beers. But given that the vast majority of those bitters and pale ales on offer didn’t seem to have any particularly Spring-specific seasonal ingredients – assuming of course that dried hops and malted barley aren’t particularly seasonal – would it really have been difficult to reduce the number of bitter / pale ales and make a bit more effort elsewhere? A couple more stouts, perhaps? One or two more Milds or Porters? And how about a few genuinely strong (6%+) ales, which IMHO is where the really impressive flavours tend to be found? Surely they don’t stop brewing the stuff just because the average temperature has finally risen above freezing?

Okay, I’m probably grumbling and grousing for no good reason. Apologies to the Festival organisers, who I’m sure must have put in terrifically long hours to source and sample the selection of beers on offer, particularly the International Guests. And hey, all I have to do is wait until October and Wetherspoon’s will trot out the autumn / winter beers for their next festival and I’ll be happy again, right? Of course I will. In the meantime, I’m attempting to drum up a drinking buddy or two for another Festival session on Friday night, hoping for a new selection to launch into. And if all else fails, I still have a cupboard full of choice stouts and strong ales to keep me entertained all summer long. I’ll shut up and get me coat, shall I?

Beer Festivals Ahoy (and also Full Steam Ahead)

There are always plenty of real ale festivals going on up and down the UK if you know where to look for them and the imminent Bank Holiday break is particularly festival-rich with the couple of weeks afterwards not looking too shabby, either.

National Cask Ale Week 2009For a start, National Cask Ale Week kicks off on Monday April 6th and runs through to the 13th. With some heavyweight support from the likes of CAMRA, Cask Marque and the IFBB, this one will hopefully grab a few headlines and help raise the general profile of our tipple of choice. Hundreds of pubs are taking part in a code number text-in prize sweepstake (for those who can remember how to send a text message after a few pints of the good stuff).

There will also be a Beer Festival during the Chester Food and Drink Festival over the weekend of April 9th – 11th. Over 40 lagers and beers (no list on the website as yet) will be on offer at Boughton Hall Cricket Club.

No sooner does NCAW end than the UK’s near-ubiquitous pub chain, Wetherspoon’s, kicks off its own International Real Ale Festival which runs from April 15th through to May 4th.

Wetherspoons International Real Ale Festival April '09

Say what you like about JDW’s impact on the pub trade and their recent 99p pint shenanigans, it’s still good to see a choice of (potentially) 50 beers on offer, especially at their generally very reasonable prices. After the vague disappointment of back in October I plan to follow the sage advice offered at the time (see comment #7) and make sure I head for a better Manchester outlet this time around. I’ll be scouring the beer list and picking out a few choice targets nearer the time.

Rail Ale Festival 2009Although if you’d prefer something a little quieter and rather more eclectic, then a little further down the line you could try the Welsh Highland Railway’s Rail Ale Festival instead. (My Dad would love this one – a chance to sup real ale whilst riding on a steam train and snapping photos of the Welsh mountains? Heaven!) Not sure how many different beers will be offer, but they’re promising even more than last year, so that’s got to be good.

More info on all the above via the embedded links.

Tasting Notes: Tom Woods Jolly Ploughman

Brewery: Tom Woods
Location: Grimsby, England
ABV: 5.0%
Version: Cask
Source: Wetherspoons, Belfast

So I finally found time to visit the Belfast Wetherspoons to see what was on offer in the Beerfest. As this branch is part of the Lloyd’s Number 1 branding and usually only has a few taps set aside for guest ales I wasn’t expecting much selection and they certainly didn’t surprise me. There were four taps purporting to be dedicated to the festival but there was no sign of the brochure mentioned by Darren in his Manchester report so I can’t really be sure if they were. No shortage of supply of Tennent’s Ice Cold though, they’ve five pumps dedicated to that one alone. Why I’ve no idea, surely it would be better just to fill a glass with water and stick some ice in it.

Anyway, on offer was Tom Woods Jolly Ploughman, Badger Toad’s Croak and Okells Mac Lir. There was also one for Banks Winter Ale but that had a “Coming Soon” sign on it. Obviously, going by the title of the post I decided to start with the Jolly Ploughmans. And that was it. While this was being poured somebody else ordered a Toad’s Croak and it ran out halfway through the pour. The same happened with the Okells a short time later, and this was a not particularly busy Friday lunchtime.

But enough rambling, on with the review. The beer is a lovely rich chestnut/mahogany brown with a slight head. The aroma is very subtle, other than some maltiness I was hard pushed to detect anything else notable. However, the flavour isn’t so shy. First up is loads of malt, then some dried fruit hop flavours come through, all ending with a dry yeasty alcohol finish. It’s quite moreish but the aftertaste is perhaps just a bit too dry and heavy for a session, better to move onto something else. But of course I couldn’t, as they’d run out.

Wetherspoons Real-Ale Festival Autumn '08 – Manchester

Wetherspoons Real-Ale Festival 2008

The Wetherspoon‘s mega-chain is currently running their 2008 Real Ale Festival and so last Friday evening, Jo and I thought we’d nip along and see what they had to offer.

The branch we went along to was the Waterhouse on Princess Street in Manchester City Centre – a former solicitors’ office (if I remember correctly) which has retained most of its internal dividing walls, making for a more intimate and secluded venue than its cross-city partner The Moon Under Water. The latter was previously a cinema and is now a cavernous, riotous open space, usually packed to the rafters on a weekend night and extremely noisy.

Wetherspoons' Waterhouse, ManchesterOf course, the smaller venue has a smaller number of pumps / taps and so the range of festival ales on offer was limited to a rather narrow selection from the 50 in the full festival range. Mind you, I don’t think it helped that last Friday was Hallowe’en, because they still had a couple of spooky-themed beers on, along with a couple more that, whilst displayed with Festival clips on the taps, weren’t actually part of the Festival… unless they’re allowed a couple of local additions to the range? Anyhow, just a case of poor timing on our part, I guess. Next weekend might have been a better bet.

All of which meant that I didn’t get the chance to try (or reacquaint myself with) a number of beers from the Festival brochure that I really would have liked to have a go at, such as: Triple FFF Alton’s Pride (CAMRA Champion Beer of Britain 2008, no less), Hilden Molly’s Stout, Caledonian Smokey Pete, Exmoor Wild Cat, Banks’s Winter Ale, St Austell Proper Job, Harviestoun Thistle Do, Woodforde’s Norfolk Nog, Baron’s Black Wattle Original Ale, Meantime Coffee Porter (enjoyed the bottled version, would have loved to been able to sample the draught), Robinson’s Old Tom Chocolate Ale, Titanic Iron Curtain Russian Stout and York Centurion’s Ghost (any excuse to drink one of my all-time favourites…)

In the end, Jo and I managed to sample six beers – Festival or otherwise and all in half pint sampler-sizes – between the two of us us and then, having pretty much exhausted the possibilities, we went next door to the City Arms for a couple more, so I suppose I shouldn’t grumble. And those beers were:

Yo-Ho Yona Yona – A new beer brewed especially for the Festival by Japanese brewer Toshi Ishii at Banks’s brewery in Wolverhampton, Yona Yona Real Ale is a 5% American-style pale ale that poured a dark amber colour with a light head. It was quite hoppy, with a distinct grapefruit flavour that became more and more pronounced as the glass went on. In fact, I’d say it was probably a bit too pronounced for my taste, with the sourness and acidity over-powering the sweeter, maltier notes to the point where I wasn’t actually enjoying it all that much by the end. Which was a shame, because it seems as though the rest of the Yo-Ho range is meant to be somewhat legendary, by all accounts…

Moorhouses Black WitchMoorhouses Black Witch – Part of the Moorhouses seasonal range, Jo decided to try a half and ended up having a couple more. It’s a 4.2%, dark, chestnut-brown ale with a nutty, coffee-toned flavour and a chocolately after-taste. Quite sweet, very easy-drinking. Not one of the Festival ales but probably the most enjoyable beer we sampled on the evening. So there you go.

George Wright Skeleton – I think this has to be one of the most aptly-named beers I’ve encountered to-date, because this 4.1% light ale had almost no body and very little meat on its bones at all. Almost devoid of any sort of flavour or even a notable leaning towards either dryness or sweetness, it was bland and watery throughout. Caveat emptor.

Outlaw Wrangler – I think this is brewed by Knaresborough-based Roosters under their Outlaw Brewing Co label, but it wasn’t an official Festival beer and I couldn’t get close enough to the cask-clip to double-check (it was a Friday night and two or three deep at that part of the bar…) Anyhow, Wrangler is a very pale ale with a frothy, bubbly head, which I assume has been brewed American-style, seeing as it was very dry with lots of hops. Quite pleasant and refreshing, just not the sort of style I usually make a point of seeking out.

Hydes Mumbo Jumbo clipHydes Mumbo Jumbo – This locally-brewed, 4.9% Hydes seasonal ale is an interesting little number. Pouring a deep, stout-black with just a hint of chestnut, the impression I got on first tasting was a tannin-rich, wine-like character, backed up with coffee and chicory and then raisins, with lots of malt throughout. It was pleasant enough, but let down slightly by its mouth-feel, which just wasn’t as rich and thick as the rest of its characteristics would seem to suggest it ought to be.

Stateside IPA – Again, I failed in my research and couldn’t get close enough to make out the name of the brewery, but I’m going to assume this was Mikkeller‘s Stateside IPA that I was drinking [Edit 08.11.08 - maieb tells me it was actually from the Thwaites Nutty Black clipThwaite’s Nutty Black – By this point Jo and I had de-camped to the City Arms, where we actually found one of Wetherspoon’s Festival beers that Wetherspoon’s didn’t have. Nutty Black (formerly “dark mild”) has been named CAMRA Champion Beer of Britain more than once, and made for a very pleasant counter-point to the previous uber-hopped monster IPA. Mild, slightly sweet, weighing in at a slight 3.3% and, yes, quite nutty, this is the sort of session easy-drinker you could easily keep going on all-night long, which probably would have been a good idea, seeing as I was back on full pints by this point…

Everards Original – …but instead, I decided to stray and for my last pint of the night I went for the strongest beer on the blackboard (one of those 10.45 p.m. decisions that you pay for with a fuzzy head all the next day). Everard’s Original poured a lovely mid-brown colour with a creamy head. I found it quite sweet, with a hint of cinder toffee and a definite almond tang (as Jo suggested: strong hints of bakewell tart) and I think if I’d been drinking it earlier in the night I would have enjoyed it more than I ended up doing… in the end it was just a bit much on top of everything else I’d sampled.

But still, a good night out – Jo and I thoroughly enjoyed ourselves and if we weren’t booked up next Friday and Saturday then we’d probably be back down to the ‘Spoons again for another stab at the Festival selection. But I guess those missed beers will just have to be added to the ever-growing wish-list, for now…

Wetherspoons / CAMRA new members' offer

CAMRA - The Campaign for Real AleI don’t know if this is standard practice or a special offer that’s on at the moment, but I joined CAMRA last week (£25 for an annual joint membership for Jo and I) and in the welcome pack that arrived in the post, they sent vouchers. Lots of vouchers…

No fewer than 40 of them, in fact, each one promising to knock 50p off a pint of beer at any participating Wetherspoons (or Lloyds No.1) pub. So that’s a £20 beer discount, just for joining CAMRA. Which is nice.

And seeing as I live in Manchester, that means at least three decent-sized Wetherspoons venues to choose from (and those are just the ones I’m aware of off the top of my head) including The Moon Under Water (which if I remember correctly is the largest pub in Europe) so I reckon I ought to be able to make good use of those before too long.

Full membership information over at www.camra.org.uk.