After the excitement of last
Friday's day trip to
Manchester,
this week ended on a much quieter note. As hinted at, in a couple of previous
posts, I've been playing catch up in the garden and am pleased to report that
with the planting out of the sweetcorn and the sunflowers, carefully nurtured
from seed, my outstanding outdoor tasks are more or less complete. There’s
obviously routine maintenance to be carried out, but by and large everything in
the garden is under control.
I've been catching up too with a few of the beers I brought
back from last month’s visit to
Yorkshire. When all lined up, there were eight
in total, all of them brewed locally in the county, and some from breweries
that many of you will recognise. All of them were purchased
Asda, and what's
more there are two lots of
“four beers for the price of three.” They obviously
like their
Asda in that part of
West Yorkshire, as after visiting the chain’s
large store in
Shipley, we discovered an even larger superstore in
Keighley.
I'd called in at the store to top up the car, with cut
price diesel for the journey home, but it seemed rude not to take a look inside
the store, and as well as the beers, I managed to pick up couple of summer
T-shirts. Again, these were on offer, this time priced at £5 each, or two for £8.
That's my summer wardrobe sorted, as these garments will go with the others
I've been accumulating, in readiness for this autumn’s
Mediterranean cruise.
More about that another time as what I want to do here, is
ask if two of
Asda's Yorkshire stores can not only offer a good deal on bottled
beers, but promote local ones as well, why can't their outlets here in
Kent do
the same? I say this because on
Friday, Eileen and I called in at
Asda at
King’s
Hill, near
West Malling ostensibly to stock up on boring stuff such as
household cleaners and washing liquid (
Mrs PBT's reckons
Asda are the cheapest supermarket
for these items). Whilst there I took a look at the beers, and guess what, I
didn't see any locally brewed beers. The same applies to the company’s
Tunbridge Wells outlet.
I'm not sure why this anomaly should come about, although I'm
probably not wrong in thinking price plays an important role here. So whether
Kent breweries are slower that their
Yorkshire counterparts, when it comes to offering discounts, or whether the
decision to buy local is left up to individual stores, isn’t clear. All very strange
but come to think of it I haven't seen any local beers recently in
Waitrose either.
At one time their
Tonbridge store was a regular stockist of both
Westerham and
Whitstable beers, but now, in common with most of the other local supermarkets
it's national brands or nothing in the
PBA (Premium Bottled Ales) sector.
There’s also a load of garish looking cans filled with hazy,
“citrus bombs” from
the likes of
Beavertown, Tiny Rebel, Northern Monk, and
Brew Dog.
The canned craft sector is another mystery, and thinking
back to visit I made earlier in the year, with
West Kent CAMRA to the brand
spanking new
By the Horns brewery, at
Salfords near
Redhill, I still haven't
seen any of that brewery’s cans on sale locally. This is despite the new plant
churning out umpteen varieties of different beers, all packed in gaudy-looking
can, by the caseload
. I said at the time, and I shall say it again,
“Where
is all this beer going?” More to the point where is it being sold? Export
perhaps, because beers from
By the Horns have been conspicuous by their absence
in local supermarkets and off-licenses.
It’s my opinion that the brewing industry has definitely
reached the stage where capacity is way in excess of actual demand, and
somewhat ironically, we're back to the situation that existed in the final
quarter of the last century. This was when a number of large, red brick,
Victorian brew houses, many dominating the towns where they were located, were operating
at a level way below their actual capacity, as the demand for traditional top
fermented ales, began to plummet. Driving this change was a change in public
tastes, as drinkers switched to lager. The latter were often brewed in gleaming,
modern looking, energy efficient plants, close to the motorway network, leaving
many of these lovely old
Victorian breweries as surplus to requirements.
When I think back of some of the breweries I visited, over
the past half century, places such as
Wethered’s at
Marlow, Morland at Abingdon,
Fremlin’s at
Faversham, Caledonian in
Edinburgh, Hall & Woodhouse at
Blandford, Dorset, and even
Young’s of
Wandsworth. All of these breweries were
massive undertakings, and I would lay money on them all operating well below
their potential capacity. With the explosion in numbers of new small, independent brewers,
in the first quarter of the new century, we are seeing the exact same issue of overcapacity,
and this has led to a significant squeeze on the remaining family-owned brewers.
These are the firms that survived the lean years of the
“keg revolution” of the
60’s and
70’s, and whilst a resurgent demand for locally brewed cask ale,
driven in the main by
CAMRA, led to a reversal of their fortunes, at least for
a while, some are still feeling the pinch. Furthermore, although the merges and
takeovers, that had led to the formation of the
Big Six brewers abated, during
the early years of
CAMRA, they soon started picking up pace again. Along with out and out takeovers, there were several instances
of a falling out between family members, with some wanting to cash in their
chips, whilst others from the family wanted to keep going.
Oxford brewer Morrell’s
is one example, where a family feud led to the brewery and its pubs being sold
off, and there were several others as well.
Ridleys, King & Barnes, Gales,
and
Young's spring to mind, and
Lincolnshire brewer
Batemans, nearly suffered
the same fate. Fortunately, in that instance, company chairman
George Bateman
and his family were able to raise sufficient cash to buy out the shares of his remaining
siblings and the brewery was saved.
There has obviously been a significant change in people's
drinking habits, and the way in which they interact and socialise. Today, far
more drinking is done in the home rather than in pubs and bars, and it's
difficult to know where it's all going to end. It's one thing to have such a
wide choice of different beers, although as
the number of choices increases, so does the
difficulty of knowing what is best. Many of us are creatures of
habit, so does seeing supermarket shelves stacked high with arrays of garishly coloured
cans of beer, often from breweries that only the most devoted of
beer geeks
will have heard of, improve our lives in any way?
Instead of increasing our freedom to have what we want, the paradox of
choice suggests that having too many choices actually limits our freedom. Known
as choice overload, choice paralysis, or the paradox of choice, people become
overwhelmed when presented with too many options to choose from, and end up
playing it safe, by sticking with brands they know and feel comfortable with. Attempting
to overcome this paradox is one of the major issues facing new entrants to the
beer market, and before going any further, let me say there are already far too
many brewers trying to compete in a diminishing market.
I’m sure that I will be pilloried in CAMRA circles for saying so, but too
much choice really is killing the beer market. Furthermore, when that choice is
driven, by poorly formulated, un-balanced cloudy murk, brewed by the proverbial
“man in a shed” it really is time to wake up and smell the coffee – or should
that be the malt and hops!
7 comments:
It's only those who buy such beers that sustain the 'Choice Overload' problem.
Just buying pints of well known beers in Proper Pubs is what we ALL should be doing to resolve it !
I fully agree, Paul. The trouble is the people buying all this “man in a shed” craft murk, are diluting sales of proper beer, in proper pubs to detriment of all lovers of decent beer, and devotees of traditional pubs.
CAMRA still seems to be applauding every new brewery that appears on the scene, regardless of the quality of its beers, or the damage it causes to an already bloated brewing sector.
The 'man in a shed' producing craft beer is a myth,to produce and package craft beer requires a considerable amount of capital investment. The 'man in a shed' is more likely to be found producing cask beer where investment can be less and selling it at a discount which undermines other brewers until the business folds. The impact of craft beer has widened the beer market overall by attracting consumers from a different demographic and benefits all lovers of beer.
Whilst I agree in principle with what you are saying John, you can't make a silk purse out of a sow's ear. By that, I mean you can have the most sophisticated and up to date brewing plant in the world, but if your ingredients are poor quality, your recipes badly formulated and not thought out properly, and your quality control lacking where it matters, then you will still be turning out a substandard product.
I also don't hold with the argument that craft beer attracts consumers from a different demographic. Boak & Bailey attempted to advance that one, but they didn't convince many people. Looking back, they didn't even bother responding to any of the criticisms raised against their original premise. https://boakandbailey.com/2023/05/do-fruit-juice-sours-get-people-into-beer/#comments
I was struggling to put my thoughts into words and then I find that, as so often, t'other Paul has done it for me.
As someone who hardly ever drinks at home, I've practically zero interest in the bottle and cans that make up most of the dialogue about beer on Twitter (honestly, it's all people raving about exotic "pours"). Tim Webb, whose books I rate, is a prime advocate for CAMRA to take a deeper interest in the off trade.
I don't go to pubs primarily for the beer, so that is of no interest to me at all.
Paul,in my experience the poorer quality recipes and quality control tend to be found with cask brewers including large producers such as the makers of bland and tasteless products such as Doombar. A visit to ost tap rooms will show that craft beer is attracting younger consumers than those which are often found in so called 'proper pubs'
John, "proper pubs" need to attract younger people, as well. They might find that they actually like them!
Post a Comment