… because I was recently asked to name a new beer! Seaforth is the latest release fromThornbridge, an ‘English’ India Pale Ale. 
Category: Uncategorised
Beer and marketing
I didn’t mean to sound too critical of the multinational I mentioned yesterday – it’s what I expected them to do. At that scale, it is about branding first, brewing second. And when your brewing all takes place inside shiny sealed closed tanks and happens at the push of a button, there’s not so much you can talk about anyway. Small brewers undoubtedly have an advantage when there’s a sense of a guy who brews the beer, who has a sort of marriage to it, and who can show you the insides of how it’s made if you talk to him or, even better, visit his brewery.
An interesting observation
Another thing keeping me busy is that I’m writing up thirty beers for a new coffee table book on great beers from around the world. This involves phoning the brewery to check a few facts and see if there are any nuggets of trivia that will make my (very late) copy more interesting.
Normal service about to be resumed.
Busy Weekend
Forgive the completely self-promotional nature of this post. However:
- Tomorrow (Saturday 13th June) at 10am I’m the lead item on Excess Baggage on Radio 4. If you’re not sitting by a radio in the UK at 10am GMT you can probably listen to it here after transmission.
- Tomorrow’s Guardian also carries a long piece by me about life on Europa, the fantastic tall ship I took as part of my voyage to India. Not only that, but the guide to summer pubs, free in tomorrow’s paper, also features (hopefully) several of my reviews of my favourite pubs.
- And if you’re around the Midlands, come to the BBC Good Food Show. Beers of the World Live is part of it. The Worthington White Shield stand is part of that. And I’m part of that – signing books.
Hangover on tour
Great launch event in Burton last night for Hops and Glory – going to put photos up tomorrow.
Finally recovered the use of my hands and head


Wicked Wikio!
Every month, Wikio compile rankings of UK blogs by subject, one of which is Gastronomy. Wikio explain that the position of a blog in the rankings is determined by the number and weight of incoming links from other blogs. Then there’s some stuff about RSS feeds and algorithms which many of you probably understand but which to me is just a noise. But the result is what they can authoritatively describe as the ‘most referenced’ blogs in a particular subject area.
Er… what’s happening to the off-trade bottled ale revolution?
Bottled ales in supermarkets – brilliant! OK, they have no idea whatsoever how to categorise and arrange beers, but they stock an incredibly diverse range at reasonable prices. Or at least, they did.
























