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Beer

Spoons have “gone to far” with their price rises this time & Christmas Ales

Popped in the Gatekeeper to keep warm today and notice this outrageous promotional poster 😉

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on the plus side they are still doing their great selection of Christmas Ales and terrible but very British Puns

“Full of Christmas Cheer from Daniel Thwaites” Was the quaintly names Santa’s Sack a gorgeous Dark full falvoured ale at a easy drinking 4.2 ABV

Santa's Sack

and the other week I had these great ones as well

Exmoor EXMAS “There’s NOALE LIKE IT” a nice full bodied with a fruity hint

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And the excellent Adnams Yuletide

Adnams Yuletide

the downside to these ales is their lower ABV then I would really want from an Christmas ale, but I suppose they are going for general drinkers, but they are very drinkable.

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Beer

Beer of the Week Brewdog Abstrakt AB:03

Ok I do like brewdog beers and yes I do believe the hype and yes they do make bloody great beers.

So as its St Andrews day I thought I would open one of my Brewdog Abstrakt 03, its the only Abstrakt I bought more than one of..

Brewdog Abstrakt AB:03

The blurb

Imperial Ale Aged over 2 years in whisky casks with raspberries and strawberries 10.5%

Its not as dark as I would have expected – must be the fruit – there is not an overpowering alcohol aroma but great fruity burst , just enough hops but a nice fruity aftertaste, seems to be slightly fizzy which is nice and tingly (you can tell I don’t review beer properly what the hell is tingly) – compared to the awesome Paradox I had last week if 03 was not so expensive (£9.99 a bottle) & in little supply, I could easily drink a few bottle of this (now if only Martin and James would sell it in 750ml bottles for the same price)

Reminds me of a weekend in Antwerp a few years back, beers that excite your taste buds and make you want to try more.

Brewdog Abstrakt AB:03

Brewdog Abstrakt AB:03

Wish I had bought more than 1 of the AB:01 AB:02 now, but have I few bottles of AB:04 coming which has Coffee, loads Cacao and Chilli so expecting something very different.. thanks to Rob for getting those..

Of course with the expected raise in taxation on 7.5 percent ABV and higher beers – hopefully the scottish boys will not stop making great beers like this, as Iam sure many people will still want to buy these great craft beers..

If you have a great selection of craft beers why not show off your Beer Cupboard on my new site.

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Beer

Bunch of Grapes American Beer Festival and a Brewdog Paradox

I had to pleasure of going to the Bunch of Grapes American Beer festival – on thanksgiving as well! result

I got there about 6.30 but the American beers were not coming on until 7ish, so as it was bloody freezing walking to the pub from Ponty station I decided to have a half of Brewdog Paradox Smokehead which they had on tap along with the excellent 5am saint.

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Wow what a beer I have had a bottle of it at home, but from the barrel it was slighly different, lovely – quite sweet (but I have sweet tooth) but you just got hit by the whisky & mega smokyness of it… of course at 10% ABV its not a session beer and my half was sipped waiting for my mate Rob from Travelswitbeer & his dad John.

They had a good selection of American beers on, of course Rob had tried most of them 😉 at the Great American Beer festival and had his recommendations, some of the beers looked like they were on cask but in fact they were from the keg, and the bar staff had a few issues especially with my halfs – but once they were pulled they were great.

Bunch of Grapes Thanksgiving Beer Menu

The winner for me was the Left hand brewing company – Black Jack Porter -6.4% a lovely roasted example – I need to get some of this in bottles!

Left hand brewing company - Black Jack Porter

Iam a fan of Sierra Nevada Pale ale (as most people are) but never had more of their beers but this Sierra Nevada Harvest Fresh Hop ale at 6.7, apparently it’s the first Amercian beer brewed with fresh-picked hops from the southern hemisphere (ie new Zealand ) another one to find in a bottle I think as its quite fresh but you do get the hops…and its has a nice bitter edge.

Sierra Nevada Harvest Fresh Hop ale

another hard hitter in terms of ABV was Hercules Double IPA at 10% lucky I was on the halfs, an amazing beer, with a great hoppyness.

Hercules Double IPA

It was not just great American beers on they also did a Thanksgiving menu.

Bunch of Grapes Thanksgiving Food menu

I went for the Friend Chicken & Sweet Potato Chips – a revelation as surprisingly I have never had Southern Fried Chicken before – the Sweet Potato Chips were lovely and even the fresh coleslaw was great!

I ended with a brewdog 5am saint a beer I could quite easily drink all night.

As I said I was on the halfs mainly due to the strength of these beers but partly for the price.. but they were worth the trip (ironically I live about 4 miles from this great pub but only visit on the odd occasion) but the roaring fire will bring me back very soon, maybe even for News years eve if Mrsunclewilco agrees 😉

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Beer

How do you Store/display you beer – show me your cupboard

Iam in need of some help, currently I store my ever increasing collection of beer (thanks Brewdog) in two wine racks and on a shelf but its not the best option, beer is laying down which I think is not great.

Brewdog beers

so I thought i would ask twitter, and got a good response so decided to create a blog and get the lovely beer drinking people of Britain and the world to Share their Beer Cupboards.

some great Beer Cupboards so far, so I can get some ideas for my own beer storage – but looking at some of the brill efforts I think this may run and run.

My Mate Rob showing off

Cardiff “Lager” Blogger Pint of 45

Real-Ale-Reviews

So if you have a great way of storing your beer, then please add your beer cupboard/shelf/fridge/table/shed over here.

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Beer

Is the best Real Ale pub in Cardiff now the City Arms?

The City Arms reopened in Cardiff this weekend in time for the first Autumn international as a proper Real Ale pub!

The City Arms was built in the 1880’s – the same decade Brains was founded – but was known then as the Cattle Market. It was later renamed Dovers Arms, but became the City Arms in 1905 in celebration of the new ‘City’ status.

The Real Ale fans of Cardiff are rejoicing to the news (well I am), as apart from Spoons, there are not a lot of pubs with more than one Guest Ale on in the City Centre, especially Brains pubs, the Goat Major was doing the business for a while, but has slowed down recently in it’s selection.

I had a great time on Friday evening when I was lucky enough to sample a good selection what was on offer, thanks to the people from Brains for the invite to the opening.. the beer bottle selection was great as well and Duvel (green) on tap is a great addition.

Here are a selection of the beers that I had, the good news is that Otley brewery are providing the casks ales, so will look forward to a great range of Welsh Beers and some from further afield.

From Brains:

After reworking the bar area and giving the interior and exterior a lick of paint, the pub’s manager, Chris Partridge, is looking forward to welcoming new and returning customers: “The biggest change has happened behind the bar. Every day there will be up to eight cask (or real) ales on draught, two of which will be served direct from the cask, a range of draught imported beers and more than 20 different bottled beers and ciders.”

The City Arms can now boast to housing the biggest selection of beers in Brains’ entire pub estate. And, as Philip Lay, Retail Director at Brains explains, cask ale is a big part of that offer: “Cask ale is becoming something of a star performer in the beer market so we’re confident the City Arms will be a big draw. Last year overall cask ale sales increased by 5% and the number of 18-24 year old drinkers grew by 17%*, which suggests that the traditional ‘old man in a flat cap’ image is finally being shed.

“This is a pub rich in tradition, with a fantastic atmosphere and an unrivalled range of beers and we hope to attract customers of all ages.”

It’s the old Brains pub on Quay St just opposite the Millennium Stadium, they have not made many changes to the pub just cleaned it up a bit (which it needed) – the City Arms may have been a traditional pub and popular when a game was on, but the times I went there, it was not a haven for good real ale to be honest the welcome was not that, well welcome!

But a pub in this position needs some love and its good to see Brains doing it and upping its Real Ale game, wonder if they have plans for the model Inn, just round the corner.

The cask ales list for the launch are from some great Welsh Breweries and some excellent English ones, so looks like a good start..

10 cask ales, Otley, Breconshire, VOG, St Austell, Wickwar, Rhymney and of course Brains – IPA, SA, Dark & Rev

source with 4 direct from the cask!!

Beers on are

CASK ALES AND CIDERS

IPA
Brains (Wales)
Fresh and hoppy, very quaffable!
3.4%

Dark
Brains (Wales)
The legendary Dark, with chocolate & malt flavours
3.5%

S.A
Brains (Wales)
The Famous S.A.! Nutty, rich and satisfyingly dry
4.2%

The Rev. James
Brains (Wales)
Full bodied, rich and warming, with a hint of spice
4.5%

Addlestones Cider
Addlestones (Somerset)
Traditional cloudy cider with full-bodied flavour
5.2%

GUEST ALES

O-Garden
Otley Brewery (Pontypridd)
Clear wheat beer with orange, coriander & cloves
4.8%

Tribute
St. Austell (Cornwall)
Rich, juicy, malty & hoppy
4.2%

Rite Flanker
Wickwar (Gloucestershire)
Chestnut ale with hints of malt & fruit
4.3%

Grog Y Vog
Vale of Glamorgan Brewery (Barry)
Fresh flavoured golden ale
4.3%

Export
Rhymney Brewery (Merthyr Tydfil)
Full bodied mixed malts, well rounded and easy drinking
5%

Red Dragon
Breconshire Brewery (Brecon)
Smooth and easy drinking with biscuity malt flavours
4.7%

Bread of Heaven
Brains (Cardiff)
Ale with a reddish hue and a moreish fruit finish
4%

also for the non real ale fan – 7 draught imported beers and 24 different bottled beers and ciders from all over the shop (as posted on twitter by @Brains_Ian)

I hope Brains let us know what ales are on every week – using the power of the webs.

I think it may become my Cardiff local (after the Goat) of course depending on price;)

I can see the City Arms becoming a mecca for Real lovers people visiting Cardiff, Well done Brains – you have used yours.

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Beer

J D Wetherspoons now on foursquare 20% off food – mayor beware

Oh no not another spoons post you say.

Wetherspoons, the budget pub chain (which I frequent) has decided to jump on the foursquare bandwagon.

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Check in and get 20% off your food order!

All you need is your phone and the Foursquare App! Then as soon as you walk into your local Wetherspoon, search for it on your phone and check-in! If you are the person who checks into our pub the most then you will become the mayor of your local Wetherspoon. As mayor of this pub, enjoy 20% off your food order (excluding drinks). Simply show your phone to a member of our staff (remember it has to be the screen which says you’re the mayor), when paying for your meal, to redeem this offer.

So get checking in- battle with your friends, your colleagues and with people you don’t even know but soon will! Let the battle commence!

I am the mayor of the Prince of Wales (Wetherspoons) on foursquare so was expecting my 20% off my egg,ham and chips (£1.99)

but when you look on the foursquare app there are now two Prince of Wales pubs.

but Iam not the mayor of “new” Prince of Wales which has just appeared so probably wont get my discount, ok I don’t want a discount but its the principle.!!! 😉

UPDATE Iam now the mayor of both Prince of Wales entrys on foursq -but its confusing

Are there any other Foursquare users who have seen their local spoons joined by the official ones and they have to start again drinking cheap beer to become the mayor?

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Beer

Beer List for Wetherspoon Real Ale Festival – 27 Oct to 14 Nov 2010

Latest List for their March 2011 festival is here.

The list for the next Wetherspoon Real Ale Festival ( 27 Oct to 14 Nov 2010) has been announced and some great beers this year – looking forward to

  • Sam Adams Brewery Blonde Ambition brewed at Shepherd Neame Brewery.
  • Chocoholic from JW Lees
  • Edinburgh Strong Ale from Caledonian
  • Lumford from Thornbridge
  • New York Wheat Porter from Titanic
  • Wild hop ipa from Harviestoun

They also have a special new website for the occasion with interviews & blogs from brewers involved including Kelly Ryan from Thornbridge Brewery and James Watt from Brewdog.

Anyway here is the beer list if you are interested

Aurora Weissbier

5 | speciality

This new, naturally cloudy wheat beer has been brewed exclusively for this Wetherspoon real-ale festival. It is created using pale Pilsener malts and wheat, with hops exclusively from the Savinja Valley, producing a continental-style beer with a floral nose and herbal, spicy undertones.

Autumn Dawn

4.2 | best bitter

This light golden, seasonal ale is fairly lightly hopped, yet has a distinctive citric aroma and full-bodied flavour, leading to pronounced fruity hop notes.

Black Squirrel

3.9 | bitter

This rich, dark beer was last brewed in 1998 and makes its return especially for this Wetherspoon real-ale festival. It has a medium-bodied character, with hints of blackcurrant and chocolate in the flavour, leading through to a smooth, fruity finish.

Blonde Ambition

5.5 | strong bitter

Bert Boyce and Dan Melideo, from Sam Adams Brewery, have travelled to Shepherd Neame Brewery, in Kent, to create this beer especially for this Wetherspoon real-ale festival. This very pale beer incorporates American intensity and English balance, showcasing East Kent-grown American Cascade hops – picked fresh from the field and in the brewery in a matter of hours. The result is an intense (yet soft) hop impression, moderate bitterness and fruity, complex character.

Bretwalda

4.1 | best bitter

This beer has previously been available only in bottles and makes its cask début exclusively at this Wetherspoon real-ale festival. It is deep red in colour, with a distinctive aroma and a flavour which is full of spicy and fruity characteristics.
Castagnale

4.4 | speciality

Leonardo di Vincenzo has travelled from Birra Del Borgo brewery to Everards brewery in Leicestershire to re-create this beer especially for this Wetherspoon real-ale festival. It is deep amber in colour, with an aroma combining spicy malt with caramel and ripe-fruit notes, leading to a flavour of smooth malt, soft chestnuts and delicate honey hints, plus a long aftertaste of roasted chestnuts.

Chocoholic

3.6 | speciality

This new beer makes its début at this Wetherspoon real-ale festival and is a rich, dark brew, made with chocolate and a fine blend of malt and hops, to create a flavour which is definitely addictive.

Cinque Ale

4.1 | best bitter

This new beer’s name celebrates the historic Cinque Port Confederation, which dates from Norman times, and has been brewed especially for this Wetherspoon real-ale festival. It is deep chestnut in colour and has been hopped, appropriately, five times throughout the brewing process, resulting in a distinctly hoppy nose and fruity palate throughout.

Coppernob

4.5 | best bitter

This beer has been brewed only twice before, solely for the brewery’s own pubs, so makes its national début at this Wetherspoon real-ale festival. It is a rich copper-coloured brew and has a floral, spicy aroma, with a smooth, fruity character (balanced with malty notes) and a long, dry, satisfying finish.

Coriander 1879

4.9 | speciality

This new, mid brown beer is a modern take on an old recipe, brewed using coriander seeds to create an orange-like flavour, with a citrus aroma and bitter finish combining to create the ideal overall balance.
Coxswain’s Special

4 | best bitter

This occasionally brewed, mid-coloured and robust ale has a solid keel of Maris Otter malt and is fitted out with a sweet and toasty, lightly roasted grain flavour, before the powerful hop flavours take command to deliver the decisive action on the taste buds.

Dark

4.2 | best bitter

This beer, last brewed in 1990, is making its return especially for this Wetherspoon real-ale festival. It is a well-balanced dark beer with an enticing, spicy aroma and malty, slightly sweet, biscuity flavour, leading to a fruity aftertaste.

Double Espresso Wild Oat Stout

4.8 | speciality/stout

This stunning wild-oat stout is brewed with double-strength coffee beans, delivering the buzz of coffee and a toasted oatmeal flavour, while light hopping helps to balance and complement the smooth, silky character.

Dragon Boat

4.5 | best bitter

This new, amber-coloured beer has been brewed exclusively for this Wetherspoon real-ale festival. The floral aroma, with hints of fruit and caramel, leads to a delicate palate, with a subtle balance of refreshment and body, plus loads of hop character throughout.

Easy Weasel

4.5 | best bitter

This new beer has been brewed exclusively for this Wetherspoon real-ale festival. It is a golden-brown bitter, with a fruity, refreshing hop aroma and flavour, plus a refreshing, crisp character.
Edge

3.2 | mild

This rarely brewed, chestnut-brown mild has a beautiful plum fruit aroma which gives way to a wave of cascading malt, enveloping the palate throughout, with only the slightest hop background haze emerging late in the finish.

Edinburgh Strong Ale

6.4 | strong bitter

This beer was last available in cask in 1995 and has been brewed again exclusively for this Wetherspoon real-ale festival. It is a deep-amber-coloured Scotch ale, with a smooth, rounded body and delicious, deep malty and fruity flavours, leading to hints of liquorice toffee in the finish.

Ettaler Cask Lager

4.8 | speciality

Ettaler Monastery was founded in Bavaria over 400 years ago and produces several ales and lagers, including this beer – now brewed under licence by Cotleigh Brewery. Using Ettaler yeast, this is a Bavarian-style lager, tawny in colour, with a typical haze to the appearance, with hints of lemon on the nose, a sweet, hoppy taste on the palate and a smooth, creamy character.

Ghost Ship

4.5 | golden ale

This new beer is a very light, pale ale with a spicy aroma, imparting hints of lime and a slightly nutty sweetness in the flavour, leading to a pleasing, citrus finish.

Ginger Hare

3.9 | speciality

This new, speciality beer has been brewed exclusively for this Wetherspoon real-ale festival. It is created using traditionally fermented root ginger, with the malt and hops mingling to provide a full-bodied flavour and lingering spiciness.
Hairway To Steaven

5 | strong bitter

This is the 2010 remix of this brewery’s classic ‘Stairway To Heaven’, brewed especially for this Wetherspoon real-ale festival. The hops used are evident in both the aroma and flavour, combining with top-quality malts to give an intense drinking experience which will change musical preferences.

Junibier

4.3 | speciality

Henk has over thirty years’ experience in brewing lager and working on research and innovation at the Heineken Brewery. He’s returned to the Caledonian Brewery, in Edinburgh, after his first visit in spring 2009, to brew this beer especially for this Wetherspoon real-ale festival. This golden ale is an interpretation of a rustic, Finnish style, brewed since the Middle Ages and containing the traditional spice of fresh juniper berries. An enticing herbal aroma, with hints of pine, leads to a malty flavour, with the tanginess of the juniper balanced by a delicate bitterness and smooth, spicy finish.

King Goblin

6 | strong bitter

This new beer has previously been available in bottles only, so makes its cask début exclusively at this Wetherspoon real-ale festival. Allegedly only ever brewed under a full moon, this deep-brown-coloured beer has a full, rich (yet smooth) flavour and a long, satisfying finish.

Liberation Ale

4 | golden ale

This award-winning golden ale is brewed using a unique blend of English and Continental hops, giving a pronounced citrus character, balanced by the Maris Otter and crystal malt flavours, resulting in a well-balanced and easy-drinking character.

Lumford

3.9 | golden ale

This beer takes its name from Lumford Mill, an historic mill built, by the famous Richard Arkwright, on the site on which the brewery now stands. Described as a ‘New World pale ale’, this golden beer is brewed using a wealth of New World hops, giving aromas packed with tropical fruits and berries, a clean and crisp flavour, with a subtle malt character, and a smooth, dry finish.
New York Wheat Porter

4.2 | porter/speciality

This new, deep-ruby-coloured beer has been brewed exclusively for this Wetherspoon real-ale festival. The use of dark chocolate and black malts creates a powerful, dark flavour, while the generous quantities of wheat malt give a smooth, biscuity note. A gentle hop bitterness completes the rich, opulent character.

Once Bittern

4.1 | best bitter

This copper-coloured ale has a distinctive aroma of rich spice and citrus fruits, along with a palate which blends sweet malt, fruit and warm spice flavours, before developing into a pleasing, dry finish.

Pendlewitches Brew

5.1 | strong bitter

This beer featured in the first Wetherspoon real-ale festival back in October 1990, so we thought it a good idea to have it back to mark this 20th anniversary. This light golden, award-winning beer has a full, malty flavour which is soft and crisp, leading to a sweet, fruity aftertaste and soft, citrus nose.

Phoenix Rising

4.5 | golden ale

This new beer has been brewed exclusively for this Wetherspoon real-ale festival, with the help of Kay Masson, manager of The Job Bulman, in Gosforth, who helped to both formulate the recipe and brew the beer. It is a full-flavoured, golden ale with a light, floral aroma, easy-drinking character and slightly sweet aftertaste.

Pixley Black

6 | speciality/stout

This exciting, special brew is based on an original 1900 Wadworth double-stout recipe. It is a rich, dark beer, with a big chocolate aroma and flavour ‘up front’. The addition of pure blackcurrant juice, from the Pixley Black variety, imparts an intriguing fruit finish.
Purple Haze

4.4 | best bitter

This beer is named to celebrate the autumnal shade of the heather moorlands local to the brewery. Having last been brewed in 2002, it’s been brewed again especially for this Wetherspoon real-ale festival. It is light amber in colour with an inviting floral aroma and a crisp, bitter finish.

Ram Rod

5 | strong bitter

This beer was last brewed in 2006 at the now-closed Young’s brewery and has been re-created exclusively for this Wetherspoon real-ale festival. It is a light-brown-coloured beer, packed full of fruity, vinous and hoppy flavours, with a full-bodied character which strikes an excellent balance between malt and hops.

Red Kite

4.3 | best bitter

This new, chestnut-red beer has a blackcurrant hedgerow aroma and a rich malt flavour, balanced by a bitter, hoppy undertone and pleasing, bitter finish.

Regency Best Bitter

4 | bitter

This new beer has been brewed exclusively for this Wetherspoon real-ale festival. It is a golden-coloured ale, created using Maris Otter and crystal malts, with the late addition of the whole-leaf Chinook hops making for a subtle grapefruit nose.

Ribble Rouser

4.2 | best bitter

This new beer has been brewed exclusively for this Wetherspoon real-ale festival. It is an amber-coloured beer and uses a fine blend of English hops to create a hoppy aroma and character, complemented by a bitter, malty flavour, leading to a lasting, crisp, fruity aftertaste.
Rye Humour

4.5 | best bitter

This amber-coloured beer has been brewed only once before (in January 2009), so is making its return especially for this Wetherspoon real-ale festival. It is brewed using a blend of American and English hops, with malted rye, to create a flavour which is predominantly dry, balanced by biscuity notes and an impressive spicy finish.

Scullion’s Single X Plain Porter

4.2 | porter

This deep black porter has an initial, full, dry flavour from the roasted barley used, complemented by a judicious blend of hops emerging to add depth and character to the flavour.

Signal Box Brown Ale

4.1 | best bitter

This beer, brewed earlier this year for the first time, has been brought back especially for this Wetherspoon real-ale festival. It has been brewed as a traditional brown ale and so has a full flavour which is predominantly malty in character, with a full body and sweeter palate, balanced by a very gentle bitterness and late hop aroma.

Snivelllers Corner

4.7 | strong bitter

This new beer has been brewed exclusively for this Wetherspoon real-ale festival and takes its unusual name from the area of a burial chamber. It is dark amber in colour, with spicy hop aromas and a growing bitterness, creating an ideal balance with the malt flavours and biscuity overtones.

Steenhuffel Blond

4.6 | best bitter

This new beer (just called ‘4.6’, on the continent) is a brew out of the norm for this celebrated brewery, not only at a lower-than-usual strength, but also using hops from New Zealand. It is light in colour, with sauvignon grape, grapefruit and pineapple notes in the aroma, plus a clean, dry bitterness in the flavour, completed with an exotic fruit aftertaste and the delicate notes of the palm
Stout

5 | stout

Chandraratne Talpe Liyanage has travelled from Lion Brewery to Marston’s, in Staffordshire, to re-create a lower-strength version of this world-famous beer, now usually called ‘Dark’. This very dark beer has a complex aroma of chocolate, coffee and liquorice, leading to a smooth, rich palate and full flavour, with hints of chocolate, coffee and roast malt, resulting in a silky character and long finish.

Straight Flush

4 | golden ale

This new beer has been brewed exclusively for this Wetherspoon real-ale festival. It is a pale beer with hints of citrus on the nose and a delicate fruit flavour, leading to a lingering, tangerine hop finish.

Strawberry Line

5 | speciality

This beer is named after the famous Strawberry Line railway which used to pass close by this brewery’s location. It is a golden bitter, with a hint of real Cheddar strawberries, complementing the fruity blackcurrant flavour from the English hops used.

Ucb

5.3 | strong bitter

This beer is enjoying its first return in cask form, having originally been brewed for the 1998 Beauty of Hops Awards, where it was voted the best beer to accompany a curry, hence the ‘ultimate curry beer’ acronym. The exotic blend of hop varieties delivers a rich, full-flavoured beer, with a delicious, clean, bitter finish to cut through and cleanse the palate.

Vanilla Orchid

4.8 | speciality

This new beer has been brewed exclusively for this Wetherspoon real-ale festival. It is a mid-coloured beer with a strong vanilla aroma and smooth character, while the hops used balance the sweetness of the vanilla, leaving a rich, woody, creamy finish.
Voyager

4.4 | best bitter

This light brown ale has been brewed again especially for this Wetherspoon real-ale festival, having been available only once before, in summer 2009. It has citrus and floral aromas and a strong flavour, with a delicate finish, creating a superb, easy-drinking ale.

Wether’s Original

4.8 | strong bitter

This beer makes its national début at this festival, having previously been a special brew available only to those Wetherspoon pubs local to the brewery. It is golden amber in colour, with an initial hoppiness in the aroma, leading to a light, sweet maltiness, with a long, bitter finish.

Wheat Dreams

4.6 | speciality

This new clear wheat beer has been brewed exclusively for this Wetherspoon real-ale festival. It is golden in colour with a floral aroma, refreshing flavour and a pleasing lemon and grapefruit bitterness on the palate.

Wild Hop Ipa

4.9 | golden ale

This new beer has been brewed exclusively for this Wetherspoon real-ale festival. It is an extremely well-hopped golden-coloured brew, creating a beer which has an enticing floral aroma which leads to a clean, refreshing character and a lingering, pleasingly dry aftertaste.

Winter Glory

4.3 | best bitter

This is a new seasonal brew for this year and is mid brown in colour, with an inviting aroma and distinctive and full-bodied, yet quaffable, flavour, leading to a lasting finish.

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Beer

Got myself one of those Leica m6 rangefinder cameras

I have always wanted one of these Leica m6 rangefinder cameras, but could never justify the price –

The M6 combines the silhouette of the Leica M3 with a modern, off-the-shutter light meter with no moving parts and LED arrows in the viewfinder. Informally referred to as the M6 “Classic” to distinguish it from the “M6 TTL” models, and to indicate its “Classic” M3 dimensions.

But I have managed to get a Leica within my budget this is a dolls size one 1/6 Scale Camera 🙂

leica-rangefinder

Its tiny and can’t be used of course – but the lens does rotate!

The next camera and lenses on my list are these 1/6 Scale Canons!

mini-canon

So for the time being I will have to keep using my lowly Canon 400D

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Beer

The Good beer guide 2011 – now you can get it for your Android phone

The 2011 Good beer guide came out yesterday – and its now available for the Android mobile operating system.

The mobile version costs £4.99 from the andriod market

It’s a small download and quite basic and goes to the web to pick up the info (be good if local copy of data was there for speed)

You can find pubs by

  1. Near me – used the GPS option of the phone – works fine
  2. Address – put a town in.
  3. Postcode – if you know one
  4. Tube Station – only useful in London 🙂 but could see it being handy for trips away.

When you click on the pub info you are given the option of reading the review of the pub, list of features and List of standard Beers.

The info is the same as in the book, but be good to maybe to see a picture of the pub – or link to other reviews – yelp/google and the like.

And a map (using google maps but calling it within the app) which crashed the phone 🙁

Its quite an ugly app (and looks like the iphone version) and forced closed a few times on my Wildfire, but it seems to work even when I could not get a full 3G signal.

The down side is that you have to buy it all over again after a year

(iPhone/iPod Touch/iPad/Android versions cost £4.99 for access to the 2011 data then £4.99 for access to future editions data when it is available)

Here its the Camra bumpf about it

Good Beer Guide Mobile makes the ideal companion to the printed Good Beer Guide. Wherever you are, or wherever you are going, get information on local Good Beer Guide pubs and beers sent direct to your mobile phone.

This indispensible service costs just £5 (or £4.99 for the iPhone/ iPad/ iPod Touch version).

Good Beer Guide Mobile allows users to search by postcode, place name or London tube stations – or it can even locate your current position using GPS.

Search results contain full information and descriptions for local pubs and include tasting notes for their regular beers. Interactive maps help you navigate to your destination.

This unique service is compatible with most mobile phones with Internet access and support for Java applications, the Apple iPhone/iPod Touch and now AndroidTM devices.

For a full list of compatible devices please visit m.camra.org.uk.

Categories
Beer

Brewdog Edge

Surprisingly I have not had this brewdog before.

[flickr]photo:4986483743[/flickr]

I was drinking it in my favourite Cardiff Pub the Goat Major, where I normally go for the lovely Brains Dark if they don’t have a guest on.

Brewdog Edge is a “dark” like beer – being a mild with a low ABR 3.2% but with a nuttier taste than it’s Welsh cousin – a definite winner, now if brewdog do Edge in bottles I would get a crate in for the shed- this one would be a keeper.

I have a few of their stronger bottles, but they always pack some great flavor into any brew they do.

Brewdog beers