Category: Uncategorised
Over-hopped and over here?
There’s never been a better time to drink American craft beer in the UK than next week. The Beer San Frontieres bar at the Great British Beer Festival, form Tuesday to Saturday, is bigger than it’s ever been and received some good coverage in the Independent recently.
And this Friday, 6th August, The White Horse at Parsons Green is hosting the American craft brewers for an evening with an amazing range of beers. The list is below. Break out the milk thistle.
Back Garden Bliss
OK while the weather holds, this is too good not to share.
A couple of people picked up on the reference to beer brined chicken in my Garrett Oliver post. Now your barbecue has seen some sausage and burger action, it’s time to raise it to the next level.
The following recipe is adapted from this book, which has changed my life:
It looks like a novelty book. It looks like it should be rubbish. But it contains secrets, such joyful secrets.
The problem with bbq food is that it gets burnt and dry. Now this might be common knowledge in the States, where barbecuing gets taken much more seriously, but we tend not to know it over here because bbq weather is so rare – the secret to moist, flavoursome barbecue meet is brining. Marinade the meat in a herby, spicy solution with lots of salt and brown sugar, which tenderises and keeps it moist.
If you just did that, it would be pretty good. But you can go further – once your meat is marinaded, about half an hour before putting it on the grill, just as the coals are flaming and you’re waiting for them burn down into embers, dry off your chicken/lamb/pork/beef and coat it in a salty, sugary rub. This caramelises very quickly, giving you a tasty burnt layer on the outside but protecting the meat inside and locking in the moisture and flavour.
With these principles you can’t go wrong. The following recipe is the one form the book that I’ve cooked six times in the last few weeks, but with the principle established, you can mess around with different seasonings.
First you do the brine:
Half cup of firmly packed brown sugar
Half cup sea salt
1 cup hot water
1 tsp chopped/grated lemon zest
2 tsp chopped fresh thyme
2 tsp chopped fresh rosemary
3 bay leaves
2 tsp ground black pepper
2 bottles beer – I think anything works, but something quite fruity and mid-brown has worked best for me.
Dissolve the sugar and salt in the water, then add everything else. Marinade the chicken for as long as you can – four or five hours is perfect.
Then you’ve got the rub:
2tsp fennel seeds (it says ground but I use them whole)
Pinch of chilli flakes to taste
2 tsp chopped lemon zest
1 tsp brown sugar
3 tsp salt
Drain the marinade off the chicken, coat in the rub, stick it on the barbie! Simple.
Bavaria versus AB-Inbev/FIFA: a postscript
I’m not going to rant again about the whole ambush marketing/erosion of human rights in favour of commercial gain fiasco of this year’s World Cup, but I received an interesting press release yesterday from Hall & Partners, who were always the most intelligent and useful research agency we used back in my advertising days.
Their – ahem – WebWordTM tracker has revealed that during the World Cup, in the blogosphere (not the beer blogosphere, the whole kit and caboodle) Bavaria trounced Budweiser.
WebWord is a “social media listening tool” that tracks online conversations in real time. Following the expulsion and detention of the 32 women wearing unbranded orange dresses at Holland’s game on 14th June, H&P tracked “Budweiser AND (FIFA or World Cup)” versus “Bavaria AND (FIFA or World Cup)” to see which combination of terms got the most mentions online for the duration of the tournament.
They found that Bavaria gained 371% more blog buzz than Budwesiser. Interestingly, it also beat every other World Cup sponsor – Adidas, Coca-Cola, Emirates, Hyundai, Sony and Visa.
But who needs expensive research to prove this? Simply Google ‘World Cup Beer’, and see how many stories come up about Bavaria before you get any mention of the official sponsors.
FIFA has shown itself to have an extraordinarily aggressive attitude to ambush marketing. But these figures show that the more they fight against it, the more powerful they make it. Big, ugly corporations still have much to learn about marketing in social media.
Mr Oliver comes to London
ROSARY GOATS CHEESE WITH BROOKLYN SORACHI ACE
BRILLAT SAVARIN WITH BROOKLYN LOCAL 1
HEREFORD HOP WITH BROOKLYN LAGER
OSSAU IRATY WITH BROOKLYN BROWN ALE
SOME OTHER CHEESE WITH BROOKLYN DARK MATTER
MONTGOMERY’S CHEDDAR WITH BROOKLYN EAST INDIA PALE ALE
COLSTON-BASSET STILTON WITH BROOKLYN CHOCOLATE STOUT
The Big Boys
Wikio Rankings for June 2010
Yes, it’s that time of the month again, that time when people get grouchy and irritable and are prone to sudden mood swings, when something inconsequential gets blown up into an object of genuine anger… no I’m not talking about pre-menstrual tension, I’m talking about the Wikio blog rankings!
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Hurrah! Another new “innovation” from A-B Inbev!
Yep, the innovation that is Stella Artois Black is, in fact – golden! Just like all their other beers!! Hey, that squirrel just talked to me!!!
According to the press release: “Matured for longer, Stella Artois Black is a golden beer, offering a rounded, full-bodied flavour and a refreshing aftertaste at 4.9% abv. Brewed in and imported from Belgium, the home of Stella Artois, Stella Artois Black will be available in limited distribution and is perfect for those special occasions when consumers want to try something new and different.”
Yes, Stella Black is in fact a 4.9% premium golden lager for when consumers – not beer fans mind, not even beer drinkers, but consumers – fancy “something new and different” from Stella Artois a 5% ‘premium’ golden lager.
It’s all rather wonderful, like when someone explains to you their absolute firm belief that fairies exist, or the Matrix is real.
The reason I’m late with this is because I replied to the PR agency who sent me the release, asking why it was called Black, when it wasn’t, and why it was any different from Stella.
I just got a reply – here’s what they said.
“The name Stella Artois Black denotes premium quality to our customers and consumers – as opposed to being a descriptor in terms of the beer’s colour.”
and on the second point:
“Stella Artois Black is matured for longer, to develop a rounded, full-bodied flavour, and has a rich, golden colour.”
OK.
Now I’ve got the sarkiness out of my system, when you stare at it for a bit, it becomes clear what A-B Inbev are trying to do with this launch. Stella has lost its premiumness. Black does indeed connote premiumness in a general branding sense. People think (not necessarily accurately) that imported lagers are better than those brewed here. And more discerning drinkers value flavour a little more.
But here’s why this is in fact a disastrous brand extension.
Black may denote quality in a general sense. But in beer, it denotes colour. That’s been established by previous brands. I’m sure someone somewhere has produced focus group evidence suggesting that this isn’t an issue. But it is. This will cause huge confusion, upsetting people who want a black lager, driving away those who don’t like the idea.
The problem with the product specifics of this beer is that, by launching it, A-B Inbev have drawn attention to all the flaws in the parent brand:
- Ten years ago there wouldn’t have been a need to launch a richer, fuller flavoured version of Stella, because Stella itself was richer and more fully flavoured than other lagers.
- For much of its history there was no need to mature Stella for longer, because Stella was matured longer than other lagers. I’m trying to find out how long ‘longer’ is, but it would be temporally impossible to mature Black for any shorter length of time if rumours of Stella Artois’ current maturation time are to be believed.
- Even back when it was good, ‘proper imported Stella’ was seen as superior to the stuff brewed here (even though blind taste tests proved this was not the case). Black is reminding us that the main Stella brand is brewed in a shed just off the M4.
As they list each selling point of Stella Artois Black, they remind the drinker of what Stella used to be, and how inferior the present version is. That’s why a brand launch intended to raise the premium credentials of the Artois ‘family’ overall will in fact do the direct opposite, actively making it painfully clear how un-premium the parent brand – the most important member in that family – has become.
Stella Black also falls between two stools in targeting terms. The premium beer drinker who has moved on from Stella has already found other brands that are fully flavoured and genuinely imported. The worrying lack of any product information surrounding this release – I even had to write and ask if it was an ale or a lager – shows a desire to remain vague about specifics that will not satisfy the discerning drinker. What reason would a Budvar drinker, for example, have to switch to this? And the silent majority who like Stella how it is now – why would they be interested in this? It’s lower in alcohol, looks expensive, and sounds like it tastes too strong.
It’s fascinating to watch, like a slow motion car crash.
I once summarised the expert thinking on brand extensions for a brand manager on Stella. That brand manager is now president of A-B Inbev UK. I wish he’d kept hold of my powerpoint presentation – he’d have saved his company several million pounds. Because anyone who knows the first thing about brand extensions can see that in this case, black is most appropriate as a colour of mourning.
IPAs in (OK, near) Brighton this Saturday!
It’s my IPA event where Dark Star meets Hops and Glory tomorrow, in the Duke of Wellington pub, Shoreham on Sea, near Brighton, 4pm:
Thornbridge, Jaipur IPA 5.9%
Nethergate, IPA 3.5%
Mighty Oak, IPA 3.5%
Rebellion, IPA 3.7%
Green Jack, Mahseer IPA 5%
Hopdaemon, Skrimshander 4.5%
RCH, Hewish IPA 3.6%
Stringers, Paint it Black IPA 5.5%
Boggarts, Rum Porter 4.6%
Crouch Vale, Blackwater Mild 3.7%
Whitstable, Oyster Stout 4.5%
Salopian, Ironbridge Stout 5%
To be confirmed:
Brewdog, Punk IPA 6.2%
And from Dark Star themselves:
IPA 6.2%
Six Hop 6.5%




































