Regular readers of this blog will know that I am no longer a
fan of large-scale beer festivals, although by this, I mean events held in large venues, where
lots of different beers may be sampled. In the main these festivals tended to be
CAMRA organised and
CAMRA run events, and whilst this isn’t always exclusively
the case, it’s a good enough description to convey what I am referring to.
My reasons for avoiding these events are many and varied,
and also well-documented, so I won’t go into them here, but there are certain
beer festivals, such as those organised by a local pub, that I am more than
happy to attend.
Pub beer festivals tend to be relatively small scale and
combine the atmosphere of a traditional pub with the chance to sample a range
of beers that the pub wouldn’t normally stock. They invariably attract a wide
and varied crowd, which adds to their appeal, and often feature live music as
well.
Such festivals sometimes take place within the confines of
the pub, but more often than not, they are held in land adjoining it, such as
the garden or sometimes a neighbouring field. This is because they are normally
summer events, and to my mind, there is nothing finer than enjoying a few pints
in the great outdoors. The beers and the serving area will normally be located
in a marquee, or possibly an outbuilding, for both security reasons, and for
protection against the vagaries of a typical English summer.
It is to just such an event that I went this
Sunday, the day
that happened to be the final one of my recent 11-day mini break. Although I’d
enjoyed a couple of hikes over the course of the break, we hadn’t been out as
much as a couple as I originally intended. Apparently, I’d picked the
“wrong
week,” as
Mrs PBT’s was snowed under with
tax and VAT returns, all courtesy of
a motley collection of builders and tradesmen who seem to work for
last minute dot com.
As my tax affairs are controlled by the company’s pay roll
department, I don’t need to concern myself with such matters, as like it or
not, the tax is deducted at source. Like most people on
PAYE, I have little or
no say in the amount of tax I pay, the upside being I don’t have to file a
tedious tax return each year. This is not the case in the world of the
self-employed, where tax owed, is paid on account, six months in advance and
six in arrears.
To make things worse,
HMRC can levy fines for late returns and/or payments, but this doesn’t seem to
bother you average jobbing builder.
I mentioned before,
carrier bags stuffed full of crumpled invoices and receipts, all liberally
sprinkled with cement dust, being left in the front porch, just days away from
the final deadline.
Mrs PBT then has to pull out all the stops, to disentangle
the mess and get the county’s finest tradesmen off the hook, sometimes with
just hours to spare.
She does charge
appropriately for this rushed, and at times quite fraught work, but as she
points out, it feels like she is working solely for
HMRC rather than the
contractors concerned.
The long and the short of it, there was very little free
time for us to go out somewhere as a couple. I had made tentative plans for a
day trip to Salisbury, as a sort of post birthday treat to myself, but this was
scuppered when realised the gas engineer was calling on the
Friday, to service
the boiler. All boring domestic stuff, but essential too, especially as our
boiler is approaching the end of its serviceable life.
So, with time fast running out, I was determined to at least
go somewhere before the
11 days were up and a fast-looming return to work. One
idea was to knock off a further section of the
North Downs Way, but that would
have meant an early start on
Sunday morning. Also, my knee was playing up
again, the result of spending too much time out in the garden last week, and this
is where the idea of attending a local beer festival came in.
I had it in the back of my mind that the
Chequers at
Laddingford were running their regular beer festival in honour of
St George’s
Day. This annual event takes place in the pub itself and also in the extensive
garden behind. Despite the festival having run for
“years,” I had never been
before, so
Sunday was the perfect opportunity to make amends. The
Chequers is an attractive oak-beamed building dating
from the
15th Century, and it is no exaggeration to describe it as
the heart of village life. The pub hosts a variety of events, including the
aforementioned beer festival.
Matthew and I made an evening visit there, at the
beginning of
December and enjoyed a nice, home-cooked meal, but
Sunday was the
first time I have been there in daylight.
The entry in
What Pub, states that Beltring railway station
is just
20 minutes’ walk away from the pub, so deciding to put this to the
test, I boarded the
12.33 train from
Tonbridge. Beltring is the first stop
after
Paddock Wood, on the
Medway Valley Line, and is little more than a halt.
It was constructed primarily for the army of hop pickers who arrived yearly,
each autumn, to work at the nearby
Whitbread Hop Farm, but today sees very few
passengers.
There are two very basic and rather bare looking concrete
platforms – and up and a down one on either side of the tracks. The only
concession to modernity are the steel and glass shelters – one on each
platform. There is no car park, and barely any room for a vehicle to pull in and
drop someone off. To my surprise one other passenger alighted from the train,
apart from me, although having stopped to take a few photos, I didn’t see which
way he went.
After crossing the tracks, I headed off along the road, in
the direction of Yalding, with the intention of taking a cross-country footpath
to
Laddingford. The road was much busier than I anticipated, but fortunately,
in most parts, there was a verge where I could take refuge from on-coming
traffic. It was nowhere near as bad as the recent
“Hampshire experience”
described by
GBG ticker Simon, aka
BRAPA, but I still needed to keep my wits
about me. I was rather relieved therefore to reach the shady, tree-lined footpath
and branch off towards
Laddingford.
Towards the end of the path, there was a narrow concrete
footbridge, over a stream, and it wasn’t long afterwards that I could hear the
sounds of people enjoying themselves. The path enters
Laddingford at the side
of the pub and so, true to the
What Pub description, I’d arrived in the village
20 minutes after leaving
Beltring station.
The festival was in full swing, with an ample crowd of
people sat at the front of the pub, and dozens more at the rear, occupying the
extensive garden. Two women, sat at a nearby table, asked if they could help
me. I’d already twigged that the event operated on a token basis – easier for
the organisers, as the cash is concentrated in one place, but something of a
pain for punters, as you have to guess in advance, how many pints, or halves,
you are going to consume.
I opted for
£8 worth to start with, plus a
£1 charity
donation. All beers were priced at £2 per half, regardless of strength and, as
is normally the case at such events, a printed sheet giving details of beer,
brewery, style, along with tasting notes, was available to all that wanted one.
I had intended to stick with pints, but with a good
selection of interesting beers available, all good intentions were quickly, abandoned,
and I reverted to my normal beer festival habit, of drinking halves. My excuse
was, I could try double the number of beers, but can beer really be tasted by
drinking half pints?
Charles Dickens famously said that beer cannot be tasted in
a sip, and he was right, of course. The
Great American Beer Festival with its
(in)famous,
1 oz pours, begs to differ, but a twentieth of a pint amounts to
not much more than a sip, whereas a half pint equates to ten such thimbles! The
majority of the beers were stored in an old oast house, at the side of
the pub, which looked as if it may have been a stable block, back in the day.
There were 11 in total, dispensed straight from the cask, in true beer festival
fashion. For those who prefer vertical drinking and standing at the bar, three
more cask ales were available inside the pub.
There were also a couple of semi-permanent, marquee type buildings
at the rear of the pub, with a band playing country & western numbers in
one of them. I found myself a seat, plus a table at a sheltered spot, outside
one of these tents, and made myself comfortable in a position where I could
watch the goings on, whilst enjoying a few of the beers. I tried four in total,
two of which would have been preferable in pints, but all decent brews in their
own way. I also grabbed myself a cheeseburger, because it would have been rude
not to have done so!
I stayed for around an hour and a half, chilling out whilst
soaking up the atmosphere of this community-oriented beer festival. I allowed
30 minutes for the walk back to the station, arriving in plenty of time for the
train, and was the only passenger to board at
Beltring. As for the festival itself, it was a nice, friendly,
well-organised, laid-back, and chilled out event. The brief snapshot I experienced
of it, was sufficient to convince me to return next year. I had floated the
idea of attending amongst the
Beer Socials WhatsApp group I am a member of, but
no one else was free that day. The photos I posted on the group attracted some
positive feedback, so I think there might be a few of us heading over to
Laddingford
next
St George’s Day.
4 comments:
Can beer be tasted in a sip ? NO ! A pint's a taster. I think I said that. Or was it Dickens.
I have begun softly stepping back into attending beer festivals. This past Saturday, postponed from February, was the Chicago Beer Society's "Brewpub Shootout". It was held semi-indoors at Metropolitan Brwg.; semi because the day was pleasant enough that an overhead garage door was partially opened.
Interestingly though, there were only eight brewpubs participating. The most previous Brewpub Shootout (January 2020) was also @ Metropolitan, and I dare scribe there were at least twelve brewpubs then. As well, some brewpubs who many would contemplate would participate did not. Who determined the brewpubs and how many I do not know.
I took photographs. If you want to view the foodstuffs paired, and two photos of the audience, they are in a post on the Little Three Happiness Forum.
I just signed on to another outdoor beer festival at the Lincoln Park Zoo for Saturday, the 30th.
In Illinois, what typically occurs at these is each guest is issued a number of tickets, or a sheet of paper with the number of boxes for each beer to be had. It is generally three ounces. You are instructed to hand over a ticket or the sheet for the beer being had. However, many of the breweries on offer do not make the supreme effort to accept the ticket or tick a box, so a standard allotment of thirty brews may go beyond that.
In Colorado, at the Great American Beer Festival, you do get only a one-ounce pour. However, this is to accomodate the number of tasters at each session; and there is no bylaw stating you cannot go back to the same brewery and have that beer again.
A hamburger - yes. A cheeseburger - nah.
Martin, I think both you and Charles Dickens are correct. Pints make far better "tasters," although half-pints will do at a pinch - as I discovered last Sunday. It therefore never ceases to amaze me as to why our friends on the other side of the Atlantic, would want to go for such ridiculously small measures.
Steve D, you probably know where I'm coming from, in light of my comments above, but even a three-ounce pour is pretty poor show, being not much more than two or three sips. As for one-ounce pours, words fail me, customers must spend far longer queuing up to purchase their thimble full of beer, than they do drinking it!
Having said that, it's horses for courses, and please don't think that I'm having a pop at you, or the etiquette of American beer festivals. It's always good to hear from beer lovers in other countries, and it's great news too that beer festivals are taking off again, post-pandemic, in the United States.
ps. With regard to the great hamburger debate, it depends on the quality of the meat used. If it's high end, then I prefer to taste the beef on its own, but at these types of mass-catering events a cheeseburger is fine.
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