Tuesday, 10 December 2024

Beer Guide to the 1970s (part twenty-eight)

Another trio of brewers. With only one still properly open. Which I guess is about par for the course.

Include is one of my favourite breweries when I was a youth: Shipstone. Who suffered a terrile fate. Being bought by Greenall Whitley, There's also Selby, a weird off and on brewery. Which came back from the dead, then went a bit zombie.


Selby
Selby (Middlebrough),
North Yorkshire.

Founded:    1870
Closed:            still brewing occasionally
Tied houses:    1

Selby was a slightly odd brewery, in that they stopped brewing in 1954 and operated as a bottler of Guinness and beer distributor. However, unlike most brewers who made such a move, they restarted brewing in 1972. I can’t remember trying their draught beer, though I did drink their bottle-conditioned beer in the Brahms & Liszt in Leeds.

beer style format OG description
Special Pale Ale Pale Ale draught 1036 strong with an agreeable flavour
Strong Ale Strong Ale draught 1048 dark and rich
Brahms & Liszt Special Pale Ale Pale Ale bottled 1048 bottle-conditioned



Shepherd Neame
Faversham,
Kent.

Founded:    1698
Closed:            still open
Tied houses:    235

In the 1970s, Shepherd Neame was the last independent brewery in Kent. With all but a handful of their pubs selling cask beer, they were well liked by CAMRA. Their tied estate stretched across all of Kent and there were a few pubs in London. I thought their beers were pretty good. Though it was difficult to find the Mild.

beer style format OG description
Bitter Pale Ale draught 1036 well hopped
Best Bitter Pale Ale draught 1039  
Light Mild Mild draught   similar to the Bitter, only in clubs and on the Isle of Sheppey
Mild Mild draught 1031 dark and sweet
Old English Stock Ale Old Ale draught 1038 well  hopped butt thin
Draught Abbey Pale Ale keg    
Hurlimann Swiss Lager Lager keg 1045 imported
Light Ale Pale Ale bottled    
Abbey Ale Pale Ale bottled   medium-strength
Bishop's Finger Strong Ale bottled   pale
Christmas Ale Old Ale bottled   very strong
Brown Ale Brown Ale bottled    



Shipstone

New Basford,
Nottinghamshire.

Founded:    1852
Closed:            1990
Tied houses:    280

Shipstone was one of three independent breweries in Nottingham. Their tied estate spread across the East Midlands in the counties Nottinghamshire, Leicestershire, Derbyshire, Lincolnshire and also Yorkshire. My personal favourite of the Nottingham breweries. Especially the Mild. Bought by Greenall Whitley in 1978 and fucked. 

beer style format OG description
Bitter Pale Ale draught Bitter well hopped
Mild Mild draught Mild Dark Mild, well hopped
Keg Bitter Pale Ale keg    
India Pale Ale IPA bottled    
Gold Star Ale Pale Ale bottled   light gravity
Strong Ale Old Ale bottled   dark
Nut Brown Ale Brown Ale bottled    
Ship Stout Stout bottled 1044 medium sweet

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

I did a brewery tour here many years ago. We were shown round the brewery and then taken to the hospitality room which was an old pub reconstructured .We were given a pint glass and invited to help ourselves in the cellar which had a row of bitter on one side and a row of mild on the other. All of different brewing dates. There was a table groaning with food including a side of beef.
We were invited to "Help yourselves and stay as long as you like"
We stayed for hours , the directors and staff joined us.
All this for absolutely no charge.
My wife found me in the middle of West Bridgford , I still have no idea how I got there.

And what lovely beer they brewed.

Ron Pattinson said...

I remember a similar trip to Shipstone not long after Greenalls took them over. No side of beef, though.

Anonymous said...

Shepard Neame’s dark mild sounds like Ballykilcavan’s dark mild.
Oscar