Before I write further about my recent trip to eastern Bavaria,
I want to pick up on a beer-related story which is much closer to home, and one
which broke the day we flew out of the country.
In case you haven’t guessed already, I am referring to the
Campaign for Real Ale’s decision to declare that canned beers, produced by
Bristol-based Moor Beer Company qualify as “real ale”. This accreditation comes
about following tests carried out at the recent Great British Beer Festival
which apparently demonstrated that the beer in the Moor cans still contained
live yeast. Additional tests also showed that the carbonation in the beer was
created by natural secondary fermentation. CAMRA thereby concluded that the
beer in these cans qualified as “real ale” under the Campaign’s own definition.
Before attempting to refute these claims I want to say that
like many other drinkers I have been aware that several of the new wave of
“craft brewers” have been selling unfiltered beer in cans for some time.
Beavertown are one company which springs to mind, as are the London Beer
Factory; but I am sure there are many others. Just what these breweries are
trying to achieve is beyond me as, if we are honest, no-one really likes cloudy
beer irrespective of whether it meets CAMRA’s definition of "real ale" or not.
As an illustration of this, during our recent holiday I drank
several bottles of Zoigl – an unfiltered “natural” beer, brewed by Regensburg’s
largest brewery, Bischofshof. This was the sole beer brand stocked in the bar
of our hotel, and whilst it was pleasant enough, it was cloudy, rather than
just slightly “hazy”. The end result was an underlying note of yeast which,
although not totally dominating the overall taste of the beer, was still there
in the background masking the much more desirable flavours expected from the
malts and the hops.
Contrast this with the much more subtle flavours of the
Original 1649 and Urhell, from the same brewery, and available in many of Regensburg’s
pubs and bars and you will get some idea of what I am talking about. Both these
beers are filtered, and are much "cleaner" in taste than the Zoigl, with aromas
and flavours derived primarily from malt and hops.
It may be heresy to some, but I can’t help thinking that
canned beers from the likes of Beavertown, Fourpure, London Beer Factory et al,
would be better without all that suspended crud in them. (I can’t really
comment on the Moor Beer Company’s cans, because I haven’t yet drunk any of them).
Surely this is just a trend started by a handful of “craft breweries”, which
many others are now blindly following?
So why exactly, has CAMRA decided to get in on the act and
endorse the canned products of one, relatively small micro-brewer as “real
ale”? And why did they select Moor Beer Company from amongst all the rest?
Returning to the results of the tests carried out by CAMRA
at their “quality control laboratory” at GBBF for a moment, I would like to
know how they distinguished between the carbonation produced by the claimed
“natural secondary fermentation”, and that already present in the beer from the
main primary fermentation. I fully understand how the presence of live, viable
yeast cells could be demonstrated, in the beer, but attempting to claim these
cells were capable of producing anything more than a minimal amount of
additional carbonation in the finished beer really is pushing the envelope and
smacks to me of desperation.
As a scientist, I would challenge CAMRA to publish the
results of their tests in the form of a proper scientific paper, rather than
just attempting to hoodwink the drinking public with this amateurish, and
rather laughable piece of “pseudo-science”.
I was going to go on and list some of the drawbacks of
trying to pour a clear beer from an opaque can, but the Pub Curmudgeon has done
an excellent job on this on his own post, which can be read here. I am certain
that we are both in agreement that CAMRA’s backing of so-called Real Ale in a
Bottle (RAIBs), or "bottle-conditioned beers", to the exclusion of many otherwise
excellent "brewery-conditioned" bottled beer, has been a prime example of dogma
triumphing over common sense and best brewing practice; something which gives
little credence to the Campaign and confuses the hell out of the average beer
drinker.
To apply the same sort of crooked thinking to cloudy,
unfiltered canned beer takes things to a whole new level; one which will only
cause yet more confusion amongst the public at large, and one which could even
backfire against CAMRA.