I was recently introduced by someone I have a lot of respect
for as Stuart Howe, a brewer who used to make great beer at Sharp’s in
Cornwall. I asked him what had changed and he said “well, you work for Molson Coors now”. Molson Coors have made a few changes since acquiring Sharp’s but
one of them has not been to put up posters saying “Make Shit Beer”. They have
also not changed any of the brewing team, raw materials, recipes or anything
which has an impact on the flavour of the beer. Nor do they want to and nor shall they on my watch.
I can see to a degree where he was coming from. I have known
a few brands which have been commercialised into banality. Chimay beers, in my opinion, are now good when once they were once great. That said historical precedents
do not provide a crystal ball into the future.
To dismiss a beer because it is not brewed by a small
brewery or because it not felt to be a craft beer is to me as obscene as going
into a brewpub and dismissing the opportunity to try sample their wares in favour
of a major brand, while defending this choice with “I only drink lager”. Any
form of closed mind when it comes to food or drink is objectionable. Is there
anyone on the blogosphere who is up for a row and wants to defend dismissing
all beers brewed above a small scale? As always my mind is open but my
convictions strong.
All organisations that make beer do so to make money, some
are more honest about this than others. This is done in the context of the
market. If you want to sell beer you need a market for it. In the last 10 years
the market for drinks has become much more sophisticated. Beer writers, CAMRA,
and bloggers should feel proud that their enthusiasm for and promotion of a
great drink has changed what the market is looking for in a beer. Supermarkets
and multimedia have also been instrumental. People who run large global brewers
are clever. They understand that a sophisticated market where people seek
exciting flavour and provenance in a beer isn’t going to fall for mass produced
soulless brands, with a nice story and fancy branding. They realise that they
need to make sophisticated drinks to sell beer to people with sophisticated
palates.
So I am not Stuart Howe who used to make great beer in
Cornwall, I am Stuart Howe the brewer who strives to make the best beer
possible in Cornwall and will do for a good many years, with the support of
Molson Coors.
This brings me nicely on to a bit of exciting insider
information for you on some new bottled beers Sharp’s have on the horizon. A couple
of the beers which under the last management I had to brew at the weekend and
bottle after work, are making their first appearance at a full commercial
scale. Massive Ale and Honey Spice Tripel will finally be brewed at a scale
which means everyone who wants the beer will be able to get it. I hope to
include an apology on the label to all the people who have asked for Massive
and Honey Spice only to be disappointed. Also Sharp’s imperial double IPA and a
single hop varietal strong golden ale will become a reality this year. None of
this is official yet (and Ms McCready will probably punch me for revealing it)
but they are firmly on my brewing programme.
11 comments:
That's good news on the new bottles, especially the honey spice. The guy in your shop teased me by showing a bottle, declaring it the best beer EVER and then told me he had none left to sell me!
As for that guy, what an arse. Whatever he believes to say it to your face is just plain rude.
*sighs* there are few job as thankless as PR.
Given you've just publicly blown my next headline grabber I would suggest punching is the least of your worries.......
GET IN!
Be very careful stuart
the men in black have a track record of putting to death great beers. Global brands need volume and volume requires lower cost, what suffers is quality, and in the end the customers walk away. Toyota have found this to their cost.
The bigger you get the less control you will have and the product will suffer.
We have all seen it before.
I really hope that you at sharp's are able to handle the pressure that will come as rock produces great beer.
Ps any idea if a great 2.8 abv% beer can be produced.
beer duty drops 50% from 1 oct.
My customers are asking if I am able to get some for my pub, shrewd lot, they are looking to save 50p a pint
A challenge for the autumn then,brew a 2.8% special beer that is a world beater!.
big col
I recall hearing some folk in our pub declaring that Thornbridge Jaipur and Lord Marples (after pints of both) just weren't the same now that we'd gone from our small brewery to the bigger brewery. I was fortuitously behind the bar at the time, so could let them know that both batches were in fact brewed at the original brewery.
Interestingly, their opinions changed straight away and the beers tasted a lot better to the both of them.
How strange...
Kelly
Awesome news, loved both of those beers!
as for the dickheads that reject your beers because of MC then stuff them, they dont know what they are missing.
Thanks Arn and Zak,
A great tasting 2.8% beer is quite an easy one Col. You have to play around with fermentables through using special malts and high mash temp and also be generous with hops. When I worked for Brakspear we brewed a 2.5% beer which tasted great but didn't sell because strangely it didn't get people drunk. We only sold half a brew in cask and half of that came back as ullage. Two pallets of bottles also needed to be destroyed as it went out of date.
I may be wrong but I can't see the 2.8% ABV category catching fire especially on cask as beer under 3% does not tolerate the unsympathetic handling or being broached for more than a couple of days (I'm sure your cellar is a paragon of cleanliness and good management). If it does I'll be glad to proven wrong and get brewing!
I have had a similar experience with perception with an old boss Kelly. I changed malt supply and he said that he had tasted a difference in the beer so I sent him home with two samples of the beer brewed from the old malt. He came back the next day and told me to throw the sacks of new malt away because one of the samples was nearly undrinkable. He was even less pleased when I told him the truth!
I am glad you said that so I didn't have to Andy!
Entirely off topic question - how did the Imperial Dampfrauchbier turn out?
HI stuart
Thanks for the feedback and advice.
The only beer I can think of at that strength is manns brown ale!
May be I will give it a go only have a small brewery 3 bbls so not much will be lost. I like a challenge. I presume the brakspear run was considerably more.
ps I thank the sharps' rep for the deal, I can now sell more of sharps wonderful beer!
Velky hi, The Imperial Dampfrauchbier like a lot of the 52 brews towards the end of the year are still in cask awaiting me getting the time to bottle. It was "interesting" when it was racked is all I will say. When I've got it bottled I'll send you some.
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