Monday 2 September 2013

The Exciting Times of Beer



Finally beer is changing its credentials, from being depicted a masculine, boozy, beardy man drink to a much loved and crafted tipple for everyone.
I’m not ashamed to say that I love beer and would feel extremely lost without it in my life.
For anyone who has met me they have always been surprised by how I am the complete opposite from what a beer drinker/lover would be described as. For one I am not a man, I am not old (well not quite) and I do not have a beer belly.
For my love of beer is for why I started this blog and I’m extremely happy to have met like-minded beer loving ladies, female beer sommeliers and plenty of incredible female brewers.
From start to finish the whole process of beer is almost magical and now with so many micro breweries, craft beer establishments and beer festivals popping up all over the UK we must all feel very proud and privileged that we are now a nation of some of the best beers world wide.
Of course I am not saying that we are using pure British ingredients to create pure British beer as many modern brewers are now using new world hops from the likes of America, Australia and New Zealand, but they are also turning these hops into something completely new and exciting.

I’m very proud to say that I’m originally from Derby a small city in the midlands, which was once maybe forgotten about as a city of good beer, but now some delightful little breweries are putting Derby back on the beer map.
In fact some of my favourite beers of choice at the moment are from Derby.
I was lucky enough to be invited to The Dancing Duck Brewery in a warehouse just a little out the town centre of Derby.
The very lovely husband and wife (Ian and Rachel) founded the brewery in 2010 and have grown from strength to strength ever since.


I have persuaded my beer supplier to get in a good selection from them and now they have at least 6 of their brews, which are heading to London each week.
My favourites from Dancing Duck have to be AY UP (a delicious well hopped PA 3.9%) and Abduction (a well rounded IPA 5.5%) both great beers, with exciting flavours using new world hops. I took my dad on the tour with me and it was really inspiring for us both to see what they have achieved and dedicated their lives too. They also have a couple of pubs near by The New Zealand Arms and the Exeter Arms both proudly representing a wide array of Dancing Duck Beer.
My dad wanted to add that his favourites were also Abduction and the Dark Drake (4.5% Oatmeal Stout). My dad is now a regular at the New Zealand Arms and is enjoying supporting the brewery and enjoys a manly pint or three every week.
But Seriously if you haven’t had the pleasure of trying a beer from these guys then please make it your next pint. Places that are bringing Dancing Duck to their pumps are, all good boozers in Derby, Burton, Leicester, Effra Social in Brixton, London, Westow House Crystal Palace London and many more to come.     Find out more about them here. www.dancingduckbrewery.com
Just to name a few of my other favourite beers and breweries creeping in from Derbyshire are as follows
·      Buxton Brewery (Moor Top, 3.6%, they use the American Chinook Hops, citrus, hoppy bitter flavours). www.buxtonbrewery.co.uk

  Thornbridge in Bakewell (Jaipur 5.9%, rather a head blower, but citrus, hoppy, dominant, with a taste of honey) Ladies love this one.  www.thornbridgebrewery.co.uk
  Why not try a beer from the Black Iris Brewery, which is based in a live music pub called the Flower Pot just out the centre of town. (Iron Gate Stout, 5.5%, mega rich flavours, with Pacific Gem hops from NZ).
'North vs South'...
So moving swiftly on to another part of the country I will be forever loyal too… London!
London is now home to so many fantastic microbreweries and these breweries are really taking the lead in craft beer production and creating a new, trendy cool scene for all who welcomes it.  Craft beers are still rather new and experimental to us Brits, with it only being 3-4 years ago before these started to hit our taps.
London beer especially has never created such a stir as it has in recent years with an impressive array of cool, laid back bars and restaurants, with a very further West influence who are not only pouring perfect pints of local beer but are producing their own out the back.
Britain's real ales have often had a whiff of Middle Earth about them: a dated, hobbit-y appeal unredeemed by packaging emblazoned with Viz-style cartoons and crummy puns. The beers may have been delicious but dodgy branding and lackluster marketing limited their appeal’
I have now had the chance to hit up some of these bars/pubs/restaurants and taste some very impressive beers that I just can’t stop talking about.
The top of my Brews would have to come from these London Breweries mainly dotted around the back streets of North and East London.

The Kernel Brewery, Bermondsey

The Kernel brewery was founded by Hackney resident Evin O'Riordain, now 37, who started brewing in 2009. Evin had a background in food and drink, including three years at Neal's Yard, and a little home-brewing experience, but it was a trip to an American microbrewery that spurred him to start brewing on a larger scale. The Kernel's base under the railway arches in Bermondsey is as simple and unassuming as their packaging and they are wary of the hype that has built around craft beer. A self-described 'beer fascist', Evin will not sell beer that is more than eight weeks old because it loses its fresh, hoppy aroma.

Beavertown Brewery at Duke’s Brew & Que

‘Byron Knight, 43, and Logan Plant, 34, joined forces in November 2010 with the aim of converting Dalston pub The Duke into a beer and barbecue joint; the result is Duke's Brew and Que and it's home to Beavertown Brewery. It was 18 months in the making, and they've only been brewing since December last year. Byron, a former wine sommelier and life coach from LA, handles the restaurant side of the business while Logan from Stourbridge looks after the brewing’.

Camden Town Brewery

‘Jasper Cuppaidge, the 37-year-old founder of Camden Town Brewery, came to London from Australia on his gap year 15 years ago, but got drunk and missed his flight home. He decided to stay and eventually bought his own pub - the Horseshoe in Hampstead. Dismayed by London's dismal range of locally brewed beers, he vowed to make his own, and the first batch was brewed under Camden's railway arches in September 2010. Since then Camden Town Brewery has gone from strength to strength’.

Crate, Hackney Wick


Crate Brewery was founded by Tom and Jess Seaton and Neil Hinchley, three long-term residents of Hackney Wick. By a canal, it's an airy pizza restaurant with an attached microbrewery. It's only been open a month, but with few pubs in the area it's become a welcome local for the growing number of artists and creative’s that are moving into this part of London’.
and now some hoppy sop...
It really is so good to see that the beer scene has completely done a 360, not only is it inspiring to hear that so many young worldly individuals are creating incredible brews but that they have made beer drinking cool again and not only for men but finally…finally for women. Let’s give these talented and inspiring brewers from all over the world a big cheer!
I could indeed waffle on for hours and hours about how amazingly delightful beer is and how it deserves respect as a leading brand and product, but I will let you head down to your nearest finest pint pouring establishment and let you decide for yourself.
The face and taste of beer is changing and with the help of a multi culture society and our over seas friends there really is know better time to experience some of the best beers ever made.