Sunday, 2 March 2025

Beer Guide to the 1970s (part fifty-four)

The end of this series is finally coming into view. The longest series of posts, by far, that I've ever written. Four of the Big Six finished now. Just three more to go.

The last two Courage breweries today. Both originally part of John Smiths. In the 1970s, Tadcaster phased out cask beer. And I'm pretty sure I didn't drink any beer from there. Though I did drink plenty of it in Newwark in the 1980s, after Holes had closed and cask was produced in Tadcaster again.

I drank plenty of Barnsley Bitter in the 1970s. While it was still available. Pretty much all of it in the Wing Tavern. The last pub in Newark to sell it. And the only Courage pub in town that sold cask.

Guinness? Well I drank plenty of bottled Guinness. Usually in pubs that sold no cask. Or, mixed with cask Bitter, when it was a bit dodgy. For example, in the Tenterden where the Trumans Tap Bitter wasn't the greatest beer. A bottle of Guinness livened it up a treat.


John Smith
Tadcaster,
North Yorkshire.
Founded:    1847
Closed:            still open
Tied houses:    1,800

Bought by Courage in 1970.

beer style format OG description
Magnet Bitter Pale Ale draught 1034.8  
Best Bitter Pale Ale draught 1036  
Magnet Pale Ale Pale Ale draught 1043.5  
Mild Ale Mild draught 1030.9  
Golden Keg Pale Ale keg 1039.1  
Magnet Pale Ale Pale Ale bottled 1043.5  
Magnet Old Ale Old Ale bottled   strong and dark
Light Ale Light Ale bottled 1031.9  
Milk Maid Stout Stout bottled 1042.2  



Barnsley
Barnsley,
South Yorkshire.
Founded:    
Closed:            1976
Tied houses:    250

Bought by John Smith in 1961. Their Bitter was wonderful The first great beer I ever drank.

beer style format OG description
Barnsley Bitter Pale Ale draught    
Mild Mild draught    


Guinness (Park Royal)
Park Royal,
London.
Founded:    
Closed:    
Tied houses:    2

When the newly- independent Ireland was having trade problems with the UK, Guinness decided to build a new brewery in London. Though it never served the whole of the UK. The North and Scotland were supplied from Dublin. Despite not really having a tied estate, bottled Guinness Extra Stout was the most widely-available beer in the UK. And wonderful stuff.

beer style format OG description
Draught Guinness Stout keg   nitrokeg
Extra Stout Stout bottled 1044 Winter
Extra Stout Stout bottled 1042 Summer


Until enough of you have bought it, I'm going to keep on plugging my latest book, "Keg!". From which the above is an extract.

Get your copy of "Keg!" now!

 

2 comments:

Matt said...

I count myself very lucky to have drunk bottle-conditioned Guinness in pubs as a young man in the late eighties and early nineties, which in Manchester would have been supplied from Dublin, usually as a final drink of the night after a few pints of cask beer. One of the many things which I took for granted at the time but now sorely miss, although Foreign Extra Stout is a pretty good substitute.

Anonymous said...

Are there any beers around today that are reminiscent of Barnsley Bitter