I picked up a couple of these bad boys at our local
Sainsbury’s, the other weekend. On sale
at the heavily discounted price of just 80p each, the beers were too good a bargain
to miss. Somewhat predictably, there were none left on the shelves when I
popped in yesterday to grab a few groceries, but why were these bottles so ridiculously
cheap, and what was the beer itself actually like?
I wrote at the time that I could certainly discern the dark
fruit, sweet plum, and chocolate, described on the label, so perhaps members of
the beer-buying public, felt the same? The Winter Warmer Ale is still quite drinkable, and given the recent fall in temperatures, drinking the beer didn’t exactly
feel out of place.
None of this explains why Sainsbury’s are so keen to shift this beer unless their buyers caught a cold and over-ordered. There is still six months’ shelf life remaining on this particular batch, admittedly not quite sufficient to see them past this coming December, but should you come across these 80p bottles, the buyers’ extravagance becomes the consumers’ late-spring bonus.
See if you can spot any of this heavily discounted winter beer at your local Sainsbury’s, because at 80p a pop, you can’t really go wrong!


Looks like a rebadged version of Young's Winter Warmer, which is, of course, brewed in the same place (the now Marston's-owned Eagle brewery, Bedford). I'd have said that BBE date could happily be ignored.
ReplyDeleteI hadn't thought of the Young's-Wells connection Martyn, but it would make sense. Although it's a long time since I last drank Young's Winter Warmer, the colour and flavour profile appear to match.
ReplyDeleteI imagine, Sainsbury's over-ordered, hence the rather dramatic price reduction, but I agree the BBE could quite readily be ignored.