I arrived home at lunchtime on Monday, after a really
enjoyable weekend in Barcelona. The
primary objective of my visit was the Barcelona Beer Festival (BBF); an event
which is now in its fifth year, and which is growing in both popularity and
size with each passing festival.
Enjoying the Spring sunshine |
The home of the BBF for the past few years has been the Barcelona
Maritime Museum,
a magnificent building which formerly housed the Royal Shipyards. Appropriately
the museum is situated on the city’s seafront, at the foot of the Montjuic
Mountain. It proved an ideal venue,
being close to the city centre, and with sufficient space to house such an
event, together with an auditorium for presentations and professional tastings,
it is easy to see why the organisers chose the Maritime
Museum. There was also an outside
area, which was a perfect space for enjoying a spot of al fresco drinking
whilst enjoying the early spring sunshine.
Key Kegs behind the bar |
The Barcelona Beer Festival was my first experience of a
true “craft beer” festival. This might sound surprising but my festival going
in the UK has
been confined to CAMRA-run, or CAMRA-inspired beers festivals in which cask ale
is the main, and often the only feature. I have yet to experience the delights
of home-grown, “craft” events, such as IndyManBeerCon, Craft Beer Rising,
Birmingham Beer Bash or the London Craft Beer Festival; although I aim to
rectify this situation later this year.
As for foreign beer festivals, again my experiences are
confined to two traditional-type festivals held in southern Germany;
namely Annafest and Fränkisches Bierfest. The former is an annual folk-festival,
held in the small Franconian town of Forchheim, in which beer is the main
attraction, whilst the latter takes place in Nuremberg.
Fränkisches Bierfest is probably the nearest thing Germany
has to a British CAMRA festival, as it features beers from around 40 local
breweries, but like Annafest, the beers are almost exclusively traditional
styles and varieties.
Given this almost total inexperience of a craft-beer
festival, it would be wrong for me to attempt to look for common ground between
the BBF and our own GBBF, but it is still worth making the following
observations.
Interior Barcelona Maritime Museum |
The average age of attendees at BBF was a lot younger than
that at your typical CAMRA bash, and I would estimate that around 90% of those
present were in the 20-40 year age group; with probably 75% of those being
under 30. There were also a much higher proportion of women at BBF; most of whom
were in the above age groups. Here I would estimate that around 40% of
attendees were female.
Craft beer is obviously a relatively new phenomenon in
Spain, as it is in many parts of the world; Britain included, but it was good
to see so much enthusiasm for the best long drink in the world, amongst the
younger age group. It was particularly nice to see so many attractive young
ladies enjoying and appreciating the different beers, and I don’t mean to sound
patronising or sexist with this observation.
The Beer List |
There were around 350 beers on the list, but with just 70 taps
available, only a percentage were available at any one time. This meant the range
was constantly changing, so in order to keep people informed a large
chalkboard, at the far end of the hall, was used to display which beers were on
sale and at which particular tap. There were a couple of people positioned on a
gantry in front of the chalkboard, whose mission was to keep the list up to
date, and also to deafen anyone in earshot by ringing a loud bell, every time a
new or different beer came on line!
The majority of the beers were Spanish, with many sourced
locally from Catalonia. There
were quite a number of Italian beers as well. Other countries represented,
included the USA,
Belgium, the UK
and the Quebec region of Canada,
where the local brewers association have a reciprocal agreement with the
organisers of BBF. (Fellow would be separatists?).
Busy pouring |
The festival was tokens only; large plastic discs, each
worth one Euro. There were holes at conveniently spaced intervals along the bar
tops, for staff to drop the tokens into, after each beer purchase, making them
conveniently out of reach of other punters but easy to retrieve for re-use by
the festival staff. The latter, most of whom were female, all wore T-shirts
with the legend BBF Crew emblazoned across the front and back.
Beers were dispensed only into specially commissioned
festival 25 cl glasses, with beers priced at either two or three tokens a pour
(horrible American expression). There seemed little correlation between
strength and price, as there were some strong Imperial Russian Stouts (9% ABV),
selling for just two tokens, whilst other much weaker beers were costing three
tokens.
Get your tokens here |
There were a number of interesting innovations which caught
my eye, including some machines which dispensed tokens plus, CAMRA festival
organisers take note, a glass rinsing station. This was a commercially
available “hired in” piece of equipment, so it would be worth CAMRA taking a
closer look at this. The token machines were designed to beat the queues, and
spued out the appropriate number of tokens in exchange for €5, €10 or €20 notes
The only criticisms I would make were the low number of food
stands, with just three “boutique” type stalls selling a mixture of posh beef
or pork burgers, Asian food plus Asturian cheeses from Spain's northern coastal province. The queues were lengthy, and
prices slightly on the high side, so a few more basic food stalls would not
have gone amiss.
CAMRA take note- a portable glass-rinsing station |
The other criticism was the large number of overly loud,
young Americans present at the festival. Does the USA
specially train its citizens, from an early age, to talk so much louder than
any other nation on earth; and why are they totally unaware of this irritating
trait? As for the word “awesome”; surely the most over-used and least properly
understood piece of vocabulary in the entire English-American lexicon?
I attended on all three days of the Festival preferring the
Sunday afternoon session above the others, as this was the least beast and the
least crowded of them all. In contrast, when I left late on Saturday afternoon,
the queue of people waiting to get in stretched right round the building.
Queuing to get in on Saturday afternoon |
I enjoyed the festival and found it very professional and
well-organised. Because of the rotating nature of the beers, my sampling was
completely random; although I did follow the tried and tested approach of
starting each session with something
light and refreshing, before working my way up through the gravities to the
Imperial Stouts.
Were any of the beers awesome? Probably, but you know by now
that’s not a word I would entertain using! Would I go next year? Probably, but a
year is a long time, and we’ll have to wait and see what happens between now
and then.
Finally, it seemed a shame not to spend a portion of my time
in Barcelona enjoying a few of the city’s other attractions; not least of which
was a pre-booked tour of Antoni Gaudi’s magnificent, and still unfinished,
basilica, the Sagrada Familia.
Outside the Black Lab Brew Pub |
I also had a wander around the harbour on the Sunday
morning, followed by a stroll along the beach. Fourteen degrees may have been
cold, so far as the locals were concerned, but it was fine with me and double
the temperature back home! With wall to wall sunshine, it was the perfect
prelude to the final session of the festival, and was made all the better by a
decent lunch, and some equally decent beers at the Black Lab Brew Pub, in the Palau de Mar, right by the harbour.
I received my invitation to attend the festival via fellow
blogger, Joan Villar-i-Martí, who I met at both the 2014 and 2015 European Beer
Bloggers Conferences. Joan hosts his own site Blog Birraire, and has also co-authored
the first Catalonia Beer Guide. You can check out his blog here.
I bumped into Joan a couple of times during the festival,
but he was being kept very busy, being interviewed by the local media whilst at
the same time juggling with the logistics of such a large event.
Joan also acted as host, and translator, for the BBF Brewers Presentation, which I attended on the Friday evening. More on that later.
5 comments:
Really interesting post Paul, particularly your observation about the age of attendees. IndyMan, which I really do recommend, had a wide age range but plenty of 50+, showing the middle-aged like craft (or whatever you want to call it as much as the youngsters).
I did smile at the term "long drink"; several of the beers at IndyMan, and the main Manchester fest, are wine strength now !
Glad you enjoyed Barcelona.
Glad you enjoyed the post, Martin. It was an interesting festival, but I have to say I enjoyed Barcelona itself, far more. This was my second visit to the city in 15 months, and the place seemed even better second time around. The weather definitely helped, as we had strong winds and rain during our first stay in back in November 2014.
As mentioned, I had a tour of the magnificent Sagrada Familia, and a stroll along the seafront the following day. I even re-visited what was the city’s main railway station, the Estacio de França. I was last there in the summer of 1975, whilst travelling around Europe by Interrail with a friend from university.
We had to change trains in Barcelona shortly before midnight, but an over zealous conductor wouldn't let us board. We sneaked on at the last minute, and the following afternoon we were in Valencia. Franco was still in charge of Spain back then, so it might not have been the wisest thing to do, but when you’re young life’s a big adventure and you don’t really think about these things.
The station has been spruced up a bit since then!
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We will have another Beer Festival in La Farga d'l Hospitalet!
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