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Friday, 30 December 2022

Why?

The end of another year has me thinking. About what I'm doing. What is the point of it?

Why do I blog? I've been at it for 15 years. Most of the beer blogs that were around back then have given up. Around a dozen or so are still active. The simple answer is: because I enjoy it. Would I continue if I had no readers? Maybe. I'm perfectly happy to tootle along with a couple of hundred. Just as well, as I'm unlikely to attract many more with the sort of stuff I post.

Posting every day can be a chore. So why do it? Partly, just to make sure I keep posting. If I missed one day in a week, then maybe the next week I'd miss two. Before you know it, I'd be posting once every few weeks. (As an intrinsically bone-idle person, I'm a natural shirker.) It's also an incentive to keep working on my books. Which are my main focus. And inextricably entwined with my blog.

So I don't forget stuff is a dead important motive. That doesn't just cover historical trivia. My travels with the kid, too. Without the blog, I doubt I would have written as much about our trips. They'll be grateful I did, when they get older. And think: "Where fuck did I go with Dad on holiday?"

The first phase of my blog was writing about my research. A few years back, I'm not sure when, I moved over to mostly writing. The blog now records my progress. As I pester readers with half-written excerpts.

It may not look like it, but I do have a plan. Finishing the project I started almost two decades ago: A history of British beer 1700 to 1973. What were supposed to be chapters have ended up as books. I've polished off most of the 20th century:

1914-1920 Armistice!
1920-1940 Peace!
1939-1947 Blitzkrieg!
1945-1973 Austerity!

These are the volumes still to be written:

1700-1770
1770-1816
1817-1840
1840-1880
1880-1914 Free!

Hopefully, I'll live long enough to finish every volume.

That's enough of writing about writing. The most boring of topics. Makes a change from London Stout, though.

12 comments:

  1. Don't stop blogging!
    I check in every day, I love it all, including the trip reports. Keep it up Ron!

    Happy New Year

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  2. You can't stop it is part of my daily ritual now. I have learned so much about beer history, production and brewing. A lot of the knowledge that I acquired goes into every brew that I make. As they say in Britain "mind the gap". Those would be gaps in my knowledge.

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  3. We appreciate the effort, although I'm sure we don't know half of what you do, to bring us a little knowledge every day (well, most days). Thanks.

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  4. This stuff is great, even if I only understand a fraction.

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  5. What Mick said. Keep it up!

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  6. It's new magic in a dusty world, Ron.

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  7. I too greatly appreciate your blog. It's the only blog I read every day. As a homebrewer, your recipes have greatly improved my English ales. I have a 1.048 OG mild on tap now, 85% Fawcett Golden Promise, 15% Invert No.3, Clusters for bittering, Fuggles at the 30 minute mark, that is outstanding. Cheers to you, Ron, and your family and wishing you a safe and happy 2023!

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  8. Happy New Year and thanks for the blog.

    Really looking forward to the post War period. I grew my beer gland in the late 60s and early 70s and hope to find out all the inner workings of classics like the legendary Worthington E..

    We make E the way you like it
    E's so easy
    Goes down easy.


    Frequently came up even easier after 8 pints!!

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  9. you write them daily and this is one of the ~10 sites i have in my daily check.

    a month ago brewed a ~13% brown malt, 4% black malt porter after reading through several recipes posted here from various periods in the 19th century. frankly they need to create a name for this style and "1850s/1870s/1890s style porter" is too long and ive started saying "pattinson porter" for a porter with black malt, copious but varying quantities of brown malt and without crystal malt. often with sugar or invert.

    the 35% brown malt in the most recent post made me laugh out loud, but as always im intrigued.

    Happy new year Ron.

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  10. How many readers would like to see the saga continue after 1973, so we could follow the beers we used to drink in our younger days. I know it would be a big ask!

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  11. I always look forward to the latest post. My only complaint is I can't keep up with "let's brew Wednesday", but my liver knows I try.

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  12. Love your blog. A lot of the brewing arcana goes over my head but I love the history anyway. I doubt I'm the only lurker who reads often but never comments. So this is just more encouragement to keep going. Not that it looks like you need it :)

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