Last night I had my first proper session on English ale
since my return from Japan, just
over a week ago. This followed a layoff of several days whilst I allowed my
body to adjust itself back to a new time zone, and to catch up on some much
needed sleep. True, I did enjoy a very welcome pint of Hog’s Back Hop Garden
Gold on Saturday, plus a bottle of Goose Island India Pale Ale the following
day, but up until then I’d been quite abstemious.
Last night I attended a meeting of the sub-committee formed
by West Kent CAMRA, to organise the beer festival we’ll be holding later in the
year (October), in conjunction with local preserved railway, Spa Valley. The
festival will be our third collaboration with the Heritage Railway, and
promises to be the biggest and best yet. One of the main attractions of the event
is that it allows drinkers to travel up and down the line between Tunbridge
Wells West and Eridge where, not only can they enjoy a drink or two on the
train, but they can also find a selection of different ales awaiting them at
each of the three stations.
The largest selection will be at Spa Valley’s Headquarters,
the engine shed at Tunbridge Wells West, but this year we hope to have an
enhanced selection at both Eridge (the other end of the line, where there are
connections to mainline services to London), and the intermediate halt of
Groombridge (once an important junction on the rail network in this border area of Kent and Sussex). As well as the beer selection, there are a whole range of
logistical and associated issues to sort out, but with Spa Valley’s General
Manager in attendance we made good progress last night, and now have plenty to
build on.
So what about the English Ale I referred to earlier? Well
the meeting took place in the Good Beer Guide listed Royal Oak, in Tunbridge
Wells, and on the bar alongside Best Bitter and Knots of May Mild from Harvey’s
were Dark Star Hophead and Gadd’s No. 3 from Ramsgate Brewery. Leaving the
Harvey’s to one side, I started on the Hophead and then graduated on to the No.
3 when the former ran out.
Both beers were pale in colour and well-hopped. The Hophead
had the edge with regard to hoppiness, but the No. 3 weighed in a lot stronger
at 5.0% which probably accounts for the fuzzy head I had this morning, (either
that or having lost my tolerance for beer, following my six day layoff). Both
though, provided a welcome return to the delights of English Ale.
As an aside, Ramsgate assign numbers to several of their regular brews,
but strangely enough the stronger the beer the lower the number. Thus we have
Gadd’s No 7 at 3.8% and No.3 at 5.0%. In between is No. 5 at 4.4%. The idea
behind this apparently is that one could drink seven pints of No. 7, but only 3
of No. 3 without falling over, or otherwise feeling the after effects. I don’t
know how true this is, but it makes a good story, and is a good advertisement
for some fine beers which we don’t often see in this neck of the woods.