My two most recent posts touched on the related subjects of
beer quality and beer choice, and these are areas I want to explore further. In
this post I will look at quality, whilst in the subsequent one I will examine
the issue of choice.
Those of us who enjoy the odd pint or three of
cask-conditioned ale (commonly known as “Real Ale”), will be only too aware of
just how important quality can be. Most beers consumed in the pub environment,
are brewery-conditioned, and as such require little in the way of further
attention once they arrive at the pub. Cask-conditioned beer, on the other
hand, are “living” beers in so much as they reach the pub in an immature state
and require a further period of fermentation (conditioning) in the pub cellar
before they can be served. This
maturation allows condition to develop in the beer. By condition I mean
dissolved carbon-dioxide gas, which when present at the correct level, gives
the beer that pleasant slightly prickly feel on the tongue. Without it, the
beer would be flat and lifeless.
The conditioning period also allows the remaining yeast
distributed throughout the beer to drop out of suspension, so that the beer
ends up bright and sparkling. Get this process right, and the beer can be
amongst the best you have ever tasted. Get it wrong and the end result is a
flat, stale, cloudy pint which not only reeks of old socks but is also
sufficient to put a novice off ever trying a pint of real ale again!
Seasoned real ale drinkers know this, and given the often
unknown factors which come into play here, reluctantly accept it. Brewers also
know that despite their best efforts in the brewery to produce a first class
pint, the final part of the process is outside of their control. This is why
brewers both large and small, have invested a lot of time and money by running
courses in cellarmanship for pub landlords and landladies.
Unfortunately, a lot of pubs these days are not owned by
breweries, but by Pub Companies instead, and many of these organisations are
not so much interested in teaching their tenants about looking after beer, as
they are in screwing every last penny out of them. It also has to be said that
many new entrants to the licensed trade are rather wet behind the ears when it
comes to looking after beer, and as some don’t even drink the stuff, how can
they possibly know whether they are letting a good, a bad or an indifferent
pint over the bar when you the customer walk into their pub and order a beer?
Fortunately there are industry-led organisations such as
Cask Marque, who provide training and advice to publicans and bar staff, so all
is not lost. Cask Marque, and individual breweries, not only teach licensees
how to look after cask-beer properly, but also stress the importance of fast
turnover. Because traditional casks are open to the air, it is essential that
the beer within them is consumed within a few days. Three days is ideal, five
will just about be ok, but anything above this and there is a serious risk of
flat, oxidised, off-flavoured beer which is sufficient reason for a seasoned
drinker to hand his or her pint back and, as I said above, enough to put a newbie off
real ale for life!
That’s cask beer dealt with, so what about
brewery-conditioned “keg” beers? Surely these are foolproof? Well, not always.
True they are much more robust compared to cask-conditioned beers; there is no
“live” yeast to worry about, and as they are stored in sealed containers under
a blanket of CO2 gas at all times, they are not exposed to the oxidising
effects of the air. Even so they can still be spoilt by careless handling and
sloppy hygiene practices. The pipes, which deliver the beer from the keg to the
bar tap, still require cleaning as despite keg beers being both filtered and
pasteurised, there is still a tiny amount of residual yeast present which can,
over time, lodge in the beer lines and associated fittings, and multiply so
that eventually off-tastes and even haziness can appear within the beer.
Then there’s the vexed question of temperature. The
Australians and, to a lesser extent, the Americans have a lot to answer for in
this respect. Nobody likes a warm beer, and the myth that the English drink
warm beer is one which thankfully has now been well and truly laid to rest.
However, whilst a warm beer is an unpleasant drink, an ice-cold beer is equally
repellent. Although lager-style beers are designed to be drunk cold, they
should not be drunk at a temperature that is so cold it makes one’s teeth
rattle. On a visit to the historic Pilsner Urquell Brewery, in the city of
Pilsen last summer, I was surprised to see on the wall of the brewery
restaurant a prominent illuminated digital thermometer, displaying the temperature
of 7°C with a notice underneath proclaiming that all beer served on the
premises, was stored and served at a constant temperature of 7°C. This
apparently, is the optimum temperature for the enjoyment of Pilsner-style
beers. Go much above this figure and the beer starts to taste flabby and warm,
but go too far in the opposite direction and the beer loses its subtle flavours
as well as its aroma. Try telling that to the clowns who came up with the
concept of “Extra Cold”! Actually they are probably the same people responsible
for the daft adverts for Fosters, think - “Well you wouldn’t want a warm one
would you?”
My answer is “No, of course I wouldn’t want a warm lager,
but then neither would I want one which is so icy cold and close to freezing
that it sets my teeth on edge, and is totally devoid of any flavour!”
Fortunately this daft fad, which in JDW outlets at least, also involved a digital
thermometer showing the temperature hovering around freezing point, seems to
have died a death. I don’t recall seeing it Wetherspoons recently, but I may be
mistaken.
Cask-conditioned, real ales should be served at a slightly
higher temperature than lagers. Being top-fermented, they need to be kept and
served at a temperature that reflects the slightly warmer conditions they were
fermented at. It used to be said that the optimum temperature for serving top-fermented,
cask-conditioned beers was 10° -15° C, with 13° C the ideal. In recent years,
especially with the advent of the paler, hoppy Golden Ale style of beer, the
optimum temperature seems to have dropped to 11° C. Again, Wetherspoons seem to
have led the way here, with not only adequate cellar cooling, now virtually de
rigueur for pub cellars, but also with insulated cellar pipes and jacketed
cooling around the hand pump cylinder at the point of dispense.
I must admit that being a little “old school”, and being
brought up on beer which was served at the older, slightly higher temperature,
chilled cask beer took a bit of getting used to, but now it is something I
welcome, especially during the summer months.
To sum up then, in order to satisfy even the most discerning
of consumers, the beer must be bright and clear so to look appealing in the
glass. It must be served at the correct temperature, with the correct amount of
condition and must not have any off-flavours or nasty tastes and smells. In
short, it should be presented and served to the customer in the condition its
creator (in this instance the brewer), intended. It’s not hard is it??
3 comments:
A point I'd add us that the warmer a cask beer gets, the more condition it loses. It is therefore essential to start off at the right temperature or the beer will never be right.
We can also think of how much over venting affects cask beer.
There are still licensees, (and CAMRA members!), who don't know the difference between a hard and a soft spile!
You are spot on (and you, too, Tandleman). I am seriously considering a motion at teh CAMRA AGM in Scarborough to get a commitment to address the quality issue one and for all. Every poor pint served is a potential member lost. I get fed up working at beer festivals and being told that "this beer is lovely, it tastes nothing like this in my local so I drink lager there". It isn't rocket science, many pubs do it well, and there is so much more we can do to guide those that don't.
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