One thing that's struck me as I've been going through the breweries is how many regional breweries closed in the 1980s. And how many of the really small breweries are still open. I suppose brewers owning fewer than 20 pubs weren't the most attractive takeover targets. Not being public companies probably helped some.
We're still on the letter "B".
Belhaven
Dunbar,
Lothian.
Founded: 1719
Closed: still open
Tied houses: 25
One of a handful of surviving independent Scottish breweries in the 1979s, Belhaven is the only one to still survive. They brewed the classic three Scottish Pale Ale type of 60/-, 70/- and 80/-. And pretty good examples of the styles they were, too. Theirs was one of the few 60/- still available in cask form.
beer | style | format | OG | description |
60/- Light | Pale Ale | draught | 1031 | dark and fruity |
70/- Heavy | Pale Ale | draught | 1036 | well balanced |
80/- Export | Pale Ale | draught | 1042 | distinctive |
Strong Alle | Strong Alle | draught | 1070 | Scotch Alle |
Pale Ale | Pale Ale | bottled | ||
Export Pale Ale | Pale Ale | bottled | ||
Strong Ale | Strong Ale | bottled | 1070 | |
No. 1 Stout | Stout | bottled | medium sweet | |
Dunbar Sweet Stout | Stout | bottled | ||
Trinidad Stout | Stout | bottled | dryish; exported to Anguilla, Jamaica, St. Kitts, Tahiti and Trinidad |
Brakspear
Henley-on-Thames,
Oxfordshire.
Founded: 1779
Closed: 2002
Tied houses: 130
A much-loved brewery, which was located in a quaint riverside town. Their tied estate was mostly in the town of Henley itself and the surrounding villages. Their beers had a well-deserved reputation for quality. They were amongst my favourite southern beers.
beer | style | format | OG | description |
Pale Ale | Pale Ale | draught | 1035 | well hopped |
Special Bitter Ale | Pale Ale | draught | 1043 | slightly sweet |
XXX Mild | Mild | draught | 1031 | thin and hoppy Dark Mild |
XXXX | Old Ale | draught | 1043 | |
Beehive Keg | Pale Ale | keg | filtered but unpasteurised | |
Light Ale | Pale Ale | bottled | ||
Pale Ale | Pale Ale | bottled | ||
Henley Strong Ale | Strong Ale | bottled | ||
Brown Ale | Brown Ale | bottled | ||
Henley Lager | Lager | bottled |
Matthew Brown
Blackburn,
Lancashire.
Founded: 1830
Closed: 1991
Tied houses: 600
A major regional brewery in the Northwest, Matthew Brown’s tied estate was spread across all of Lancashire and most of Cumbria. Outside of this area, their beers only really turned up at beer festivals. They were genuinely regional, despite their size. I found their beer pretty decent and really well conditioned in the cask. It was bought by Scottish & Newcastle in 1987 and closed a few years later.
beer | style | format | OG | description |
Bitter | Pale Ale | draught | 1036 | well balanced and malty |
Mild | Mild | draught | 1031 | dark and nutty |
Keg Bitter | Pale Ale | keg | 1039 | |
Lion Lager | Lager | keg | 1037.2 | |
Light Ale | Pale Ale | bottled | ||
Crystal | Pale Ale | bottled | A stronger Light Ale | |
Export IPA | IPA | bottled | A strong Light Ale | |
Kings Ale | Barley Wine | bottled | ||
Brown Ale | Brown Ale | bottled | The Dark Mild bottled | |
Lion Stout | Stout | bottled | medium sweet | |
Lion Lager | Lager | bottled |
6 comments:
I used to regularly enjoy Brakspear's bottle conditioned beers, Triple and Oxford Gold, which were widely available in supermarkets round here fifteen to twenty years ago. I think they were bottled by Fuller's after the Henley brewery shut and brewing moved elsewhere. Then Marston's took over and decided to turn them into unremarkable and much inferior filtered bottles, and I lost interest in them after that.
Ah well, I've got the back 9 of the alphabet to look forward to in my retirement I guess.
Sad to hear of the demise of Brakspears.
I'm visiting Dunbar and the brewery here in a few weeks, I'm incredibly excited. I only rarely get the "Scottish Ale" in bottles and cans near me in the US. Really happy to try it from the source.
Don't expect too much from Dunbar. I have never been anywhere else where it was more difficult to find the local beer. However there is one decent pub, the Volunteers, and the brewery tour is the main attraction.
Matthew Brown's Lion Ales supplied the pub adjacent the camp site in Horton in Ribblesdale which fuelled (or provided sustenance after) many an attempt on the Three Peaks walk over Pen-y-ghent, Whernside and Ingleborough.
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