Last
Friday, I visited the
London Craft Beer Festival, held
at
Tobacco Dock, Wapping, on the edge of
London’s’ East End. I don’t know how
many years the festival has been running, but this was my first visit, and I only
went along on a whim after seeing a spare ticket advertised on one of the local
CAMRA WhatsApp groups. I was at work, and in the middle of something,
so by the time I’d considered whether or not I wanted to go, someone else had snapped up the ticket.
Undeterred, I rather cheekily applied for a ticket in my own
name, citing my
Beer & Travel Blog as professional interest. To my surprise
I qualified for a
Press Pass for
Friday’s opening session, and what's more, as
well as admission to the event, the pass entitled me to free beer. If I’d had
to pay for the ticket, it would have cost me
£58, so what not to like!
Friday is one of my non-working days, and with
Mrs PBT's engaged
on exciting stuff such as VAT and income tax returns, CIS payments etc, I was
free to hit the big city. I was not in a hurry, and with a bit of business to
conclude down in
Tonbridge, I called in at my local building society, before
walking along to the station. Instead of my usual travel card I just bought an
off-peak return to London, the idea being to use my
Senior Citizens Bus Pass
for return travel to and from
Tobacco Dock, and see an area of
London from street
level, rather than being stuck underground in a metal tube.
I said I wasn't in a hurry, but I still found it annoying when
my train was held outside
London Bridge for about
10 minutes, due to congestion.
Eventually we reached the station, where I embarked and made my way outside to one
of the bus stops in
Tooley Street. I'd carried out a spot of online research during
the journey up, to establish which buses would get me to
Tobacco Dock, and although
I could probably have walked it in
20-25 minutes, it was enjoyable just to sit
on the bus watching the various stops flash up on the indicator, whilst the
world sailed by outside.
I changed buses at
Aldgate Bus Station catching the
No.100 bus in the direction of
Shadwell. The app I was using directed me to get
off at the third stop, which I did, and it took me through a very pleasant,
mixed development primarily of new housing that was not at all like the
Wapping
of old. Switching to
Google Maps, I reached a small canal that I hadn't been
aware of before, and after following this waterway for a short distance, I
arrived at
Tobacco Dock. Looking at the map,
Tobacco Dock is just a short distance
from the much better-known
St Katherine’s Dock, and within easy walking
distance of the
Tower of London. Built in
1812 as a hub for tobacco and other
luxury commodities from the
New World, the
19th Century Grade 1
listed buildings were sensitively restored in
2012. Today the complex is one of
the most versatile events spaces in the capital, although the people that run
the building really need to expand the totally inadequate toilet facilities, especially
when contemplating a beer festival!
I found the entrance, showed my pre-printed
QR Entrance Pass
to the security people, and was admitted – complete with the obligatory wristband.
I was handed a
½ pint, “balloon-style” glass, marked with lines indicating
⅓
pint or
“sample”, along with a floor plan showing both ground and upper floor
levels, and off I sent. All beers were free but dispensed solely in
“sample”
size “pours”, as the
Americans would say! If you wanted, you could keep going
back to the same stand, and the same beer, but the staff still wouldn’t serve
you more than a sample, each time.
I estimated the number of different breweries represented at
around
30, but this was way off the mark, as according to the
LCBF website,
there were over
100! Nearly all the beer was pressurised, either from
“Key-Kegs” or from more traditional, industry containers, but there was some
cask
available, and what there was turned out to be very good. Leading the charge
for cask was
Timothy Taylor’s, who had a good selection available at their
stand, including
Knowle Spring, Dark Mild and
Dark Landlord. This was the first
time I’ve come across this beer on draught, as it is normally only available in
bottles. Another fine cask ale was
Bostin’ Dark Mild from
Green Duck Brewery,
who are a small outfit based at
Stourbridge in the
West Midlands.
A handful of
European brewers were also represented,
including
O’Hara’s from
Ireland. Budvar from
Czechia, ABK from
Bavaria and
La Chouffe
from
Belgium. The latter’s stall was easy to find, as brewery staff were
handing out red
“gnome” hats, as worn by the company’s well-known, gnome mascot.
I tucked mine away, inside my rucksack, as it’s not the type of headgear to be
seen wearing on the train home.
One other highlight was the stand run by Braybrooke Beer Co, and I mention this because I have
recently signed up to the brewery’s Lager Club, a monthly subscription service
whereby subscribers receive 12 bottles of the brewery’s classic core beers
(including their famous Keller Lager), along with specials and guest lagers
each month. Visiting their stand was an opportunity of previewing a couple of
Braybrooke beers, including the aforementioned Keller Lager and their excellent
Smoked Bier.
The
Braybrooke, the
cask and the
European beers were the ones
which, for me, really stood out, with most of the rest being a sea of pale ales,
IPA’s, Pilsners, DIPA’s and just about every other sort of blonde coloured
beers imaginable. I was probably one of the oldest visitors at the festival,
not that it bothered me particularly. I met up briefly, with
Nick a relatively
new member of
West Kent CAMRA, and someone who I have been friends with, for
some time, on
Untappd. He had left a group of friends to come and say hello, as we both thought it
good to put faces to each other's names.
I was starting to feel hungry after all that free beer, even
if it was only
“sips,” so I ventured out onto the terrace, overlooking the
canal, where there were a number of food stands. The various offerings were on
the pricey side, but seeing as I hadn’t paid for any of the beer, I didn’t feel
too bad forking out
£11 for a hot dog. It was a
“gourmet” hot dog, mind you,
but judge for yourselves from the photo whether or not it was worth the double
figure price.
It was an interesting day out, although if I hadn’t qualified
for the press pass, then I wouldn’t have gone to
LCBF. With hindsight, perhaps
I shouldn’t have attended, because mingling with all those people in a crowded
event space, was probably where I contracted
COVID for the third time! I didn’t
feel that brilliant on
Monday but put it down to a rather nasty summer cold,
but overnight my symptoms worsened, and I feared I might have contracted the
dreaded lurgy. We had a couple of
Lateral Flow Tests left over from the end
of last year, so I took a test, and unfortunately, and as feared, it returned a
big fat positive red line.
Yes folks, COVID hasn’t gone away, and despite the initial two-shot,
vaccination, two boosters and two occasions where I actually contracted the disease,
I have discovered I am not immune to what, I imagine, must be this latest
strain of the virus. Mrs PBT’s is not
very happy about it, and I have also had the embarrassment of phoning in sick
to work and apologising in advance for potentially spreading COVID about the
workplace.
On a more personal note, I am slightly concerned at
having caught
COVID for the third time, because if the science is to be
believed, each recurring infection increases one’s risk of complications or more
serious illness. Still, as a colleague of mine is fond of saying,
“It is, what it
is,” but with an eye towards self-preservation, I shall try and take a little
more care in future, particularly in crowded situations.
9 comments:
All beers were free but dispensed solely in “sample” size - so probably illegal and probably denying you the chance of properly tasting any of the beers.
You've probably had Landlord Dark as Ram Tam.
Looks like you didn't fully explore the exhibition complex - there is a lot of it, including multiple courtyards and halls. I only found one whole area with about 20 minutes left, and then the bars all closed 10 minutes before time!
Sorry to see you got the lurgy. Thankfully I didn't feel ill, although now you have me worried... There's a new and nasty variant circulating now, apparently.
Stafford Paul, I hadn't thought about legality issues, so yes "sample" sizes would have been illegal IF visitors had to pay for the beer! If anything, the event confirmed, what I should have already known, that beer can't be tasted in a sip - as said by Charles Dickens, Retired Martin, and a host of many other people.
It was still an interesting day out, but also extremely annoying, especially as the unwanted virus I picked up, scuppered our imminent Black Country walkabout.
Yes, I have drank Ram Tam, in the distant past - Landlord with added caramel, if my memory is correct. So, the beer has now been cleverly re-branded as Landlord Dark.
Tricky on, this, as I'm not sure how you avoid the risk of Covid except by avoiding crowds completely, and presumably the train itself remains the biggest risk.
Hope there's no long lasting effects, anyway.
Sorry I missed you, Bryan. I thought you might be there, and I did keep an eye out for you, but the place was rather crowded. I took another look at the floor-plan the organisers were handing out and it's quite possible that I missed the section at the rear of the Quayside Level (upstairs), as I don't recall seeing the likes of Magic Rock or Fourpure, to name but a few.
I also wasn't aware of the toilets on that level, as the ones downstairs were woefully inadequate, as I said in the post, with just two urinals and two stalls. It was a standing joke that the adjacent queue for the ladies facilities, was moving faster than ours!
With luck you've probably escaped COVID's latest manifestation. The symptoms first manifested themselves on Monday morning, although it wasn't until later that evening that I became concerned.
Definitely tricky, Martin, as there's no real telling where I picked it up. The train back from London was crowded, but then so was Tobacco Dock.
I don't like wearing them, but a mask might be a worthwhile precaution in crowded situations - although obviously not much good a beer festival where you've got to remove it to "sip" your sample!
I've been in contact today, with the owner of a company which sold us a forklift truck. He's out in Malta at the moment, at his holiday home, and he told me COVID is quite rife out there.
Sounds interesting. Dark Landlord was Ram Tam until the end of 2019. Re the legalities of the 'sample' measures, they weren't selling the beer - the law is specific about sale vs dispense - and you were at a private, trade-only session anyway, so perfectly legal.
ElectricPics, I suppose Dark Landlord is a much more readily marketable name than Ram Tam, even though there must be a reason behind that name. (An old Yorkshire term, possibly?)
The session was "Trade Only," but I wonder what happens when they open up the event to the general public?
I noticed another festival LBA (London Brewers Association), that is due to take place next month at Fuller's Brewery. This is another all inclusive event, but it doesn't state what the measure are (pours, as the Americans like to call them).
I shall be giving the event a miss, partially in the interests of marital harmony, but more because, as others have said, "Beer cannot be tasted in a sip!"
What happens when the festival opens up to the public is that sample serves are no longer available.
I think you're probably spot on about the renaming of Ram Tam. It was an obscure name for a rare beer and it's now more widely available.
Yes, a sip is pretty much pointless unless you're perhaps going to commit to a pint. It takes several swallows for the flavour of decent beer to fully make itself known.
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