Some of you may remember that at the end of my piece about
Saltaire Brewery, published at the end of September, I mentioned that after leaving Saltaire, the
family and I called in at another brewery, on our way to Skipton.
We never actually made it to Skipton, for reasons I won’t
bother explaining now, but we did make a very brief visit to Naylor’s Brewery
and Beer Emporium, at Cross Hills, near Keighley.
The brewery is housed in an industrial unit, a short
distance from the village of Cross Hills. Adjacent to the brewery is the
company’s Brewery Bar & Emporium, and whilst this was closed at the time of
our visit, the adjoining brewery office was open, and the very nice young lady
in charge sold me a few of bottles of beer, and also allowed me to take a few
photos of the bar.
The brewery began life in 2001 at the Old White Bear public
house in Cross Hills. It was started by the pub’s owners, brothers’ Stephen and
Robert Naylor, initially to brew beer for the Old White Bear. The brothers soon
realised that their future lay in brewing, so in 2006 they made the
decision to follow their passion and concentrate soley on producing quality,
hand-crafted beers.
Naylor’s beers are brewed from British barley, supplemented
by small amounts of wheat and rye and bittered using several varieties of hops,
sourced from around the world. The brewing water used is pure and soft, and
drawn straight from the Yorkshire Dales, with a traditional top-fermenting ale
yeast used to produce the finished product.
The company brew a wide range of both cask and bottles
beers, details of which can be found on their website. One thing which does
puzzle me though, is the “rider” on the website which states that the Brewery Bar
is now under “old management”, with the Naylor’s back in charge. I’m not sure
what might have gone on there, so I won’t speculate further, but the bar did
seem a nice little place to enjoy a few of the company’s beers, along with a
bite to eat.
As I hinted at in the Saltaire article, we weren’t primarily
in the region for a beer hunt, but after Google notified us of the proximity of
Naylor’s, it seemed rude not to stop by and take a look. Ryedale Brewing and Beer
Monkey were also quite nearby, but as we had a family meal planned, with Mrs
PBT’s cousin and her family for later in the evening, we decided that two
breweries were enough for one day.
Now, nearly two months after our visit, I have finally got
round to drinking two of the three Naylor’s beers I brought back with me. Here’s
what I thought.
There is little I would disagree with in that description. Basically this is a very decent drop of beer, with a pleasant and refreshing bitterness, balanced by just the right amount of malt.
Naylor’s Brewery IPA 4.5. There is a nice plain-looking label, with some attractive-looking Celtic artwork on the bottle, and this sets the tone for what is a very good and very drinkable IPA.
The label states, “Our IPA is strong enough to last the journey and bold enough to stand out. Good bitterness and a pronounced aroma are supplied by the generous amount of hops”. It also informs the drinker that as well as wheat malt, the beer contains lactose, dark chocolate and natural chocolate flavouring.
I didn’t pick up the last three ingredients in the taste, but what did find is a very satisfying and thirst quenching beer, with lots of juicy malt, complemented by a real fruity background.
The beer is very pale in colour, and pours with a nice fluffy head. I would like to have sampled this beer in cask form, but as mentioned earlier, the brewery tap was closed at the time of our visit.
I still have a bottle of the 5.9% Old Ale, kicking around somewhere, but that can be a treat for another day.
5 comments:
Interesting that you mention the Celtic artwork, Paul.
Geneticists have discovered that the folk of Elmet, West Yorkshire, are in fact a Celtic tribe, and the most isolated in Britain, oddly enough. But then, would you marry someone from Leeds?
Cheers,
E
Etu, I remember seeing a TV programme a while back, which revealed that the indigenous Celts (Ancient Britains), weren't all totally displaced to the western extremities of Britain, by the invading Angles and Saxons, as originally thought.
Instead many stayed put and either existed side by side with the Germanic invaders/settlers, or mingled with them. Some even inter-married.
There were no over-zealous Home Office officials to deal with in those days of course!
Haha! No indeed there weren't Paul.
The recent stats are interesting though. Net migration to the UK has remained pretty constant, despite numbers from the EU having understandably plummeted. The German engineers, Dutch doctors, French designers and the like have been replaced by people from Pakistan, from Bangladesh, from Nigeria and so on.
Still, it's what people voted for, the "will of the people" and all that eh?
I'm sure that they must be skipping about at the news, what?
Etu, it's become increasingly apparent that what the uneducated masses voted for is impossible to deliver; at least in the shape and form the various cheer-leaders promised.
16.14 million of us already knew this, and that number has been growing by the day!
"Best drunk wearing a flat cap, "
That would be perfect for me then:
https://preview.tinyurl.com/ycko4n44
“Our IPA is strong enough to last the journey and bold enough to stand out"
As I've stated before it would be nice if some of the brewers over here did that. Our IPAs start at 6% and work their way up. We have Session IPAs (anywhere from 4% to 4.5%) but I don't think the taste is the same as a regular IPA. I have to leave the IPAs till after supper as I'm usually not keen on starting off with a 6%er at 11am. ;)
Cheers
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