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Tuesday, 4 March 2025

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

This is so much fun. Well, I'll be having fun as this is published. As I'll be in Brazil. Hopefully, sitting on a beach with a cocktail in my hand.

We've now got as far as Scottish & Newcastle. Who operated the fewest breweries of any of the Big Six. Just four of them. Two of which were in Edinburgh.

I drank a reasonable amount of Younger's 70/- and 80/-, which were both perfectly decent beers, in cask form. Which, unfortunately, wasn't all that common. And I always had a very soft spot for No. 3. A bit of an oddity. But a tasty one.

Other than the occasional bottle of Newcatle Brown, I don't think I ever tried any beer from the Tyne Brewer. Simply because most of the time they produced no cask beer. And why the hell would I bother to drink keg.


William McEwan
Edinburgh,
Scotland.
Founded:    1856
Closed:            2005
Tied houses:    

One half of Scottish Brewers, McEwan had long been one of the largest brewers north of the border.

beer style format OG description
70/- Pale Ale draught 1036.5 smooth and malty
80/- Pale Ale draught 1043.3 heavy, full-flavoured
60/- Pale Ale tank    
70/- Pale Ale tank 1036.5  
80/- Pale Ale tank 1043.3  
Harp Lager Lager keg 1032.4  
McEwans Cavalier Lager keg 1030 Superb rich flavour.
McEwan's Special (80/-) Pale Ale keg 1039.6 Full-bodied rich flavour
McEwans Scotch (70/-) Pale Ale keg 1035.3 good value
Mc Ewans Export Pale Ale bottled 1042.2  
Mc Ewans Pale Pale Ale bottled    
Mc Ewans Blue Label Pale Ale bottled    
Mc Ewans Strong Strong Ale bottled    




William Younger
Edinburgh,
Scotland.
Founded:    1778
Closed:            1986
Tied houses:    

The other half of Scottish brewers. They ran two breweries, Holyrood and Abbey, close to each other at the bottom of the Royal Mile. In the 1970s only Holyrood was in operation.

beer style format OG description
IPA IPA draught 1043.2 smooth
XXPS or Scotch Bitter Pale Ale draught 1036.2 well-balanced
No. 3 Ale Strong Ale draught 1042  
60/- or XXP Pale Ale keg    
Tartan Keg Pale Ale keg 1035.3  
Scotch Pale Ale keg 1036.2  
Best Scotch Pale Ale keg 1036.7  
IPA IPA keg 1043.5  
Tartan Special Pale Ale keg 1029.6  
Tartan Mild Mild keg 1029.6  
Monk Export Pale Ale Pale Ale bottled 1046.3  
No.3 Scotch Ale Scotch Ale bottled 1044.8  
Wee Willie L.P.A. Pale Ale bottled 1030.9  
Sweet Stout Stout bottled 1034  
Brown Ale Brown Ale bottled    
Double Century Ale Brown Ale bottled    
Harp Lager Lager bottled 1032.4  



Newcastle Breweries
Newcastle,
Tyne and Wear.
Founded:    1890
Closed:            2005
Tied houses:    

Formed by the merger of six northeast breweries. Brewed no cask beer in the 1970s.

beer style format OG description
Newcastle Exhibition Pale Ale keg 1041.8 crisp, nutty flavour
Newcastle Amber Pale Ale keg 1032.1 party beer
Four Star Pale Ale keg 1037.6  
Scotch Ale Pale Ale keg 1032.3  
IPA IPA keg 1032.2  
Starbrite Pale Ale keg   light
Newcastle Amber Ale Pale Ale bottled 1033.4  
Newcastle Brown Ale Brown Ale bottled 1045.9  



Still plugging away my latest book, "Keg!". If you want me to stop, buy a copy.

Get your copy of "Keg!" now!

 

5 comments:

  1. I've been watching reruns of Whatever Happened to the Likely Lads recently. They drink bottles of Newcastle Brown Ale at home, but when they go to the pub it still seems to be cask through handpumps, and there's also a scene at a birthday party with a wooden pin of beer they've bought for it served on gravity through a tap. I'm not sure how realistic any of that is for the early seventies on Tyneside.

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    Replies
    1. Living in Newcastle in the mid 70s the only cask beer in pubs was a couple serving Sam Smith's Old Brewery Bitter, but on electric pump and a single pub in Sunderland selling Old Peculier on gravity.
      Everything else was tank or keg, including Camerons which now has gone back to cask. To get Theakstons on cask and hand pump you had to go into the wilds of North Yorkshire!!

      However earlier, around 1967 and underage I was at a birthday party with a stainless steel cask of Federation ale, they still ran off casks for small occasions and it was dry hopped. Dad was a home brewer and I recognised the green leaves when we tipped up the cask to get the last out of it!!

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    2. S&N pubs had some of the McEwens beers in cask notably 80bob and Youngers No3. Most cask was breweries like Cameron’s , Dryboroughs, Tetley (made in Scotland I suspect at Arrols) but very rare. Mostly keg and tank beer. In the early 80s Newcastle breweries started to serve Exhibition in cask. Big lamp was the main micro cask startup I remember from early 80s.

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  2. Newcastle Exhibition was almost exclusively tank, not keg.
    Later, in the 1980s there was a fizzy version of keg ex but only in a few smaller pubs.

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  3. Weren’t some ales labelled as sixty shillings mild ales?
    Oscar

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