Meet the brewer – Twickenham Fine Ales

twickenhamI was taken to a Wetherspoons for my birthday treat. No, really. But the sympathy vote is not required because it was great. It was a Meet the Brewer evening with Twickenham Fine Ales at The Wrong ‘Un in Bexleyheath.

I’m not going into the big ‘Spoons debate here because this isn’t your ordinary JDW outlet. Sure, it looks the same, but manager Rob is trying to make this a proper beer destination pub with evenings like this in the neatly divided back area.

Stuart Medcalf was present from Twickenham Fine Ales. Apart from a wealth of experience Stu has also acted as consultant to several new breweries in the London area. This was friendly chat not a formal presentation and all the better for it. After a brief history of the brewery it was straight into the beers, a short introduction and then walking the individual tables to discuss the beers and ask questions. Relaxed, friendly, knowledgeable and professional.

What sets Twickenham Fine Ales apart from many other small brewers is their excellent brewing technique. The beer is particularly clear and consistent. (Technical bit, the clarity is particularly impressive because of the relatively high wheat tariff.) Listening to Stu I was also surprised at the number and type of hops used, mainly US varieties.

Twickenham clips

4 core, 1 seasonal and 1 monthly usually available

We tried the four core beers, Naked Ladies, Grandstand, Sundancer and Heavenly Red plus the current seasonal Spring Ale. Naked Ladies is their flagship and is a pleasant hoppy bitter, hoppy by British cask ale standards. Grandstand is a session bitter that we were able to try in bottle as well as cask. I and several others thought the bottle better, maybe slightly less character but more vibrant. Sundancer and Spring Ale were both hoppy golden ales, well made but unexciting. Heavenly Red is a red ale, who’d have guessed it, getting some spiciness from the roasted barley and English/German hop mix (but no rye, as far as I am aware).

Heavenly Red was my favourite. I predict that red or rye ales could become the next drinking man’s bitter. The slight spiciness that characterises these beers is just interesting enough but doesn’t get people out of their comfort zone – you read it here first.

As always it doesn’t matter what you know but who you know. Me, I don’t know many

Really must take better pics

Really must take better pics

people but some of the ones I do know know lots of other people. And so a bottle of Oud Bruin arrived. It is a barrel aged, sour stout (Bass for short?) made as a collaboration with de Struise and Alvinne. I could spend another 500 words, mainly adjectives, describing this. But I won’t. Suffice to say if you like the sound of it then you will not be disappointed. If the thought doesn’t appeal don’t waste your money on it. I think it is absolutely, phenomenally good. It’s running out – get to the brewery shop before I do. Why do Twickenham Fine Ales keep this quiet? It won’t appeal to the core drinkers but it is a great showcase of their innate talent.

So, what a lovely evening! A genial mein host, a friendly knowledgeable brewer, excellent company (including the rebel faction of Bexley CAMRA), cheap as chips and a 5* ‘guest bottle’.

Date:                        Wednesday, 21 May 2014
Venue:                      7/10
Beer selection:         7/10
Beer quality:             8/10
Atmosphere:             8/10
A good night out:      9/10
Total score:              39/50, 78%

Dorking Beer Festival

Dorking Beer FestivalA new event from a new player, Surrey Craft Beer, a new ‘beer events’ company. A sparkly new website suggests that they don’t quite understand the craft vs cask issues and are simply going to go for the craft beer = small breweries equation (and like every rule Hog’s Back are the exception to the small). Continue reading

Siren tap takeover at Brewdog Camden

On the plus side I have enjoyed everything I have tried from Siren Craft and have great respect for them. On the debit side I am deeply cynical about everything Brewdog does. Both opinions were reinforced during an enjoyable evening with my new ‘meet-up’ chums. It was my first time at Brewdog Camden and I was somewhat surprised at how small it was. Brewdog relentlessly market Brewdog and only Brewdog, the pumps carry no clips, lens or fisheyes except the Brewdog logo, it is everywhere else too. If, say, Budweiser did this there would be uproar. Anyway before I go too far with this rant let’s talk about beer.

Sound Wave IPA and Broken Dream ‘breakfast’ stout I had tried before and are both excellent benchmarks for their style. Undercurrent and Liquid Mistress make up their core four.

Undercurrent, 4.5% is a pleasant entry level pale ale, a good thirst quencher.

Liquid Mistress is among the growing band of red IPA’s and red ales which I predict could become the next drinking man’s bitter. Like most of Siren’s offering this is not shy of hops and definitely falls into the red IPA category.

Seven Seas is a black wheat IPA, 6% and full marks to anyone who names the seven US and German hops beginning with C. I am a big fan of black IPA but I’m not sure a black wheat IPA adds anything to equation.

White Tips (4.7%) was my first ever wit IPA, brilliant, why has nobody done this before? All the refreshing, citrus notes of a witbier topped up with plenty of hops for the IPA lover.

I should have tried the Calypso first off. It is a Berliner Weiss style, as Kernel have recently been brewing – but at 4% this is stronger, if you haven’t tried it before, think fresh gueuze – it is a sour. It’s Marmite and I love it. Too thin and they can be just acidic but this had the Amarillo hop to give it some body (and a decent ABV). It’s a must try, if you haven’t done so before.

Heavyweights always come last on the bill, so time to move on to 10 Finger Discount, a collaboration with To Øl, cedar spirals being the novelty ingredient. At 7.3% with hops to match this tastes as what I would describe as a double IPA, hoppy but with that rich marmalade-y thing going on. My fave IPA of the evening.

Americano, is a brand new ‘coffee IPA’. At 9.2% it was good but for me the Seven Seas delivered more for less.

Caribbean Chocolate Cake (Jerk edition) is Cigar City collaboration. Tropical stout, 7.4% contains experimental hops, cacao nibs and ‘Cyprus wood’ (Cypress?). As full as you’d expect, big choc flavour, what’s not to like?

Odyssey 001 is from the barrel aged range and boy, was it worth waiting for! For once I could actually taste all the flavours in the description, complex, boozy, warming sipper. Delightful. For the purists here is the website description “An imperial stout brewed with liquorice root and dark muscovado sugars rest in 3 different barrel types ready for blending together to create a unique flavour profile. The coming together of Banyuls, Brandy & Bourbon with a dash of Liquid Mistrress will make this complex beer a keeper.”

Date:                         Tuesday, 13 May 2014
Venue:                       6/10
Beer selection:           7.5/10
Beer quality:               8/10
Atmosphere:               7/10
A good night out:        6/10
Total score:                34.5/50, 69%

Hop Stuff Brewery open evening

Hop Stuff Brewery

Nice logo with a nod to history

Eight months into commercial brewing Hop Stuff is by no means the newest brewer in London but it is still the only crowdfunded one. The brewery is on the historic Woolwich arsenal site now a trendy redevelopment. The enterprise is almost literally one man and his dog (or puppy actually), the man in question being James Yeomans. But behind every man…and in this case it is Emma, shrewd judges think that she is the brains, he’s just the brewer. Continue reading

Signature Brew at The Long Room

Does Picasso inspire your paella? Does Wordsworth inspire winemakers? Well, in the past Signature Brew beers were all inspired by and brewed with their favourite bands. Honestly I don’t get it. Trying too hard with the marketing?

Betcha Meat Loaf and Jim Steinman would make a stonking Imperial Russian Stout though.

Wanting something good to drink at gigs I understand. So I was rather glad to see that Signature Brew were launching their ‘own’ beers with a musical theme, nice. Nicer still, it was at The Long Room (lovely Reuben sandwiches) in Smithfield and not in hippest Hackney. Nicest, it was free beer in the afternoon! Continue reading