The rest of my time in Grodzisk. Where I do some more judging, have another brewery tour and hang around at a beer festival.
The rest of my time in Grodzisk. Where I do some more judging, have another brewery tour and hang around at a beer festival.
I manage to drag myself out of bed around 8:00. As planned. There’s a win to start the day. It’s going to be a busy one.
Breakfast is a pretty decent buffet. With fried eggs and bacon. Though the bacon is rather undercooked. I accompany my fried egg with cheese and tomato instead. Probably healthier.
At 9:30 a bus takes us to an estate on the edge of the village of Wąsowo. Where, in addition to the numerous other activities, a small brewery recently opened on the site. Called, logically enough, Browar Wąsowo.
After a quick tour around the various former farm buildings, we dive into the brewery. Housed in a red brick structure. It’s all very new and shiny inside. As you would expect for a brewery that only opened in 2025.
We’re taken around the various rooms in the brewery, which is two storeys with cellars. Before returning to the fermentation room for samples. Beginning with a Grodziskie which has only just finished primary fermentation. “A bit raw still.” We’re told. It takes perfectly fine to me. With the smoke and hops in good balance.
Next is a Pilsner. Which is clean and decently bitter. Very drinkable.
We roll over to the onsite restaurant. Which is also a sort of taproom for the brewery, serving seven of their beers on draught. Today, that’s: Berliner Weisse, APA, Witbier, Lager, Black IPA, Hazy IPA and Saison. A pretty decent variety of styles. Not just IPA variants.
There are bits of food for us. And samples of the draught beers. Which, just as they were in the brewery, are very good. I kick off with a Black IPA. Mostly because you never see them anymore. Maybe a bit on the roasty side, but pleasant enough. The Hazy IPA I follow it up with is also fine.
It’s getting on for 13:00 when we drive off in the bus to return to Grodzisk. For a bit more judging. The second round. But there’s time for a quick beer outside. It is pretty hot, after all. I wouldn’t want to dehydrate.
Yesterday I judged “straight” Grodziskie. Today it’s the category for beers with additional ingredients. Some interesting ideas, not all of which work for me. But a couple where they really do.
Only eleven beers. No need to fill out score sheets, either. I just scribble a few notes. I really mean scribble. I struggle to read them a few minutes later. There’s a lively discussion. Which is resolved without resorting to physical violence.
Our table is one of the last to finish. And the lunch buffet is running a little thin. Just about enough left for a decent meal. I wash it down with some Grodziskie. I’m not missing any chance I get to drink it here in Grodzisk.
Once lunch is chomped and Grodziskie has been drunk. we return to the malt house for a tour. Working from the bottom up. Much of it hasn’t been fully renovated. Some isn’t even slightly done up. With the top floor not being safe to enter.
The brew house is just across the yard. It has a pretty traditional layout. Though the equipment is all shiny stainless steel. There’s even a baudelot cooler. Which seems to be in use.
The open fermenters are hard to see, with their tops far overhead. They look pretty big.
It’s about a 15-minute walk from the brewery to the festival,
Grodziskie Piwobranie. I’m glad that the sun isn’t out. On the way, we
walk past some random old Soviet military equipment parked next to a
building.
The festival is quite a modest affair, held in a town park. With lots of families. There are half a dozen brewery stands, each selling a range of beers. At pretty reasonable prices: 3 to 4 euros for a half litre.
I get myself a half-litre of Lager. Well, someone else gets it for me as my credit card won’t work. It’s a pleasant enough beer.
All the judges climb onto the stage for the competition results. Which I don’t understand, as they’re in Polish. Once that’s done, we trail off the stage again. To make way for a Queen cover band.
As a storm is forecast, I find a seat under an umbrella. I wouldn’t want to get drenched. Noticing a stall with an old bloke selling what look like bottles of spirits, I wander over there.
I buy a half litre of some fruit-based spirit. It’s little rough. Let’s be honest, it’s very rough. I mix it with some beer to make it more palatable. Which is successful to some degree.
I chat for a while with the Finnish judge. And share s shot of my dodgy fruit stuff. He seems perfectly normal. 30 minutes later, he’s flat on his back. I didn’t think the fruit stuff was that strong. But his legs seem to have stopped working.
As everyone is feeling a bit tired, we arrange to be collected by the bus an hour earlier at 21:30. Of which I’m mightily pleased. I’m feeling pretty knacked.
Raindrops start to fall when we’re halfway to the bus. I’m a bit wet when I climb aboard. It’s a bit of a drive back to Grodzisk. But it’s not straight to bed back at the hotel.
A gaggle of judges crowd into a room. Where football is watched and beer is drunk. Though I’m not drinking beer. I’ve brought myself a stiff whiskey down from my room.
Germany are surprisingly losing. Though have pulled things back by the time I retire to my room. I’m too old to stay up past midnight. And don’t.
Browar Wąsowo
Poznańska 2,
64-314 Wąsowo,
Poland.
Folwark Wąsowo
ul. Poznańska 2,
64-316 Wąsowo,
Poland.
http://folwarkwasowo.pl/
Browar w Grodzisku Wielkopolskim
Poznańska 16B,
62-065 Grodzisk Wielkopolski,
Poland.
http://browargrodzisk.com/
Here's a video of the day:
| Scottish & Newcastle beers in 1996 | ||||||||
| Brewer | Beer | Style | OG | FG | ABV | App. Atten-uation | IBU | colour |
| Wm. Younger | Brown Ale | Brown Ale | 1030.5 | 1006.5 | 3.18 | 78.69% | 85 | |
| Wm. Younger | Double Century Ale | Brown Ale | 1053.0 | 1009.6 | 5.74 | 81.89% | 70 | |
| McEwan | IPA | IPA | 1030.5 | 1006.8 | 3.14 | 77.70% | 17 | 24 |
| McEwan | Pale Ale | Pale Ale | 1030.5 | 1009.1 | 2.83 | 70.16% | 17 | 48 |
| Wm. Younger | Pale Ale | Pale Ale | 1030.5 | 1006.8 | 3.14 | 77.70% | 17 | 24 |
| Wm. Younger | XXPS Btg | Pale Ale | 1036.5 | 1007.6 | 3.82 | 79.18% | 24 | 25 |
| McEwan | Export | Pale Ale | 1043.5 | 1009.2 | 4.54 | 78.85% | 27 | 25 |
| McEwan | Scotch Ale | Pale Ale | 1044.5 | 1010.2 | 4.54 | 77.08% | 26 | 26 |
| McEwan | Sweet Stout | Stout | 1030.5 | 1011.5 | 2.51 | 62.30% | 270 | |
| McEwan | Milk Stout | Stout | 1058.5 | 1020.0 | 5.09 | 65.81% | 270 | |
| McEwan | Strong Ale | Strong Ale | 1088.5 | 1022.0 | 8.80 | 75.14% | 30 | 85 |
| Source: | ||||||||
| Holyrood and Fountain beer specifications held at the Scottish Brewing Archive, document number WY/6/1/8/1. | ||||||||
The short answer is: pretty much dead. Look at this short video if you want to learn more.
| 1894 Cannon KKK | ||
| pale malt | 14.50 lb | 100.00% |
| Goldings 90 min | 2.00 oz | |
| Goldings 30 min | 2.00 oz | |
| Goldings dry hops | 0.50 oz | |
| OG | 1062 | |
| FG | 1015.5 | |
| ABV | 6.15 | |
| Apparent attenuation | 75.00% | |
| IBU | 46 | |
| SRM | 5 | |
| Mash at | 150º F | |
| Sparge at | 163º F | |
| Boil time | 90 minutes | |
| pitching temp | 59º F | |
| Yeast | Wyeast 1099 Whitbread ale | |
23rd June 2001
Dear Alma
Pleas find enclosed the specifications of the fountain and Holyrood Beers. These would be about five years old and I think that they would be correct lor the previous fifteen years. I hesc are Photostats taken from Gordon Buchanan's own note book and I hope that you can cut them up a bit as I have no access to a guillotine and the notes were back to back. I now have them in the correct order. I lope to see you soon
Kind Regards
Holyrood and Fountain beer specifications held at the Scottish Brewing Archive, document number WY/6/1/8/1.
The loose sheets contain colour specifications for all the beers. Plus individual sheet for some beers. Which include things like OG, FG, IBUs, colour and CO2 content. But no details of ingredients or process.
At the very end, there's an interesting note.
The query relating to McEwans Pale Ale was related to the market for "low" gravity beers. Many of the customers were involved in the coal industry and they requested higher colours. Pale Ale was brewed at 1030 and blended with fairly large quantities of yeast pressings. The bottled Pale Ale was sold as Blue Label mostly in small screw tops and the darker Pale Ale as larger Green Label screw tops. The principal beer sold in the fifties and sixties was 5/A which was 25 Lovibond and for the Glasgow and Lanarkshire market 46 Lovibond. It was strange that the miners market changed to lager and paler beers at a later date.
Holyrood and Fountain beer specifications held at the Scottish Brewing Archive, document number WY/6/1/8/1.
5/A was the brew house name for McEwans Pale Ale. And pretty watery stuff it was. This is from the specs, so the 1990s version of the beer:
| McEwans Pale Ale | |
| OG | 1030.5 |
| FG | 1009.1 |
| ABV | 2.83 |
| App. Attenuation | 70.16% |
| colour EBC | 48 |
| IBU | 17 |
| Source: | |
| Holyrood and Fountain beer specifications held at the Scottish Brewing Archive, document number WY/6/1/8/1. | |
I'm sure all those yeast pressings added character to the beer.
I already knew about the Scots colouring up the same beer in different colours for different markets. You'll note that the 1990s version was brewed at the darker colour. The pale version seems to have disappeared. Though the spec is for the keg version. An earlier sheet has these two bottled beers:
| Beer | EBC |
| XXP (P5/A) | 30° |
| G5/A (D5/A) | 80º |
| Source: | |
| Holyrood and Fountain beer specifications held at the Scottish Brewing Archive, document number WY/6/1/8/1. | |
Where P5/A stands for Pale 5/A and D5/A stands for Dark 5/A. G/5A is Glasgow 5/A. Which shows the Glasgow version as being even darker. As dark as Dark Mild.
Wasn't that fun. All from a few little bits of text.
A quick report of a short trip I made last weekend.
I trail over to Schiphol a little after 09:00. Which leaves me time to warm up for the flight a little in the lounge.
The food isn't too bad in the lounge this time. It's the non-Schengen one that I don't visit often. Not been impressed with the food in the past. The rostis are really nice. Scrambled egg could do with some seasoning.
But there's free-pour whisky. Of which I take advantage. Though don't abuse. It's a thin line that you need to walk when you're an enthusiastic drinker like me.
I bump into Ferry at the gate. He's judging in Grodzisk, too. Though we both live in Holland, we first met in Brazil.
When my boarding pass is checked before getting on the bus, there's a beep and I'm given a slip of paper. I've been upgraded to business class. I guess because the flight is overbooked. Now there's a win.
After waiting on the tarmac for a while the bus return to the gate. Two vehicles have collided close to our plane. We have to wait for that to be sorted out. We depart quite late.
The food is definitely better than the usual KLM slop. And I get a couple of whiskies to wash it down. Which also helps.
After landing in Poznan, we're whisked off in a bus to our hotel Along with other just-arrived judges. It takes a while to get to Nowy Tomyśl. After just about enough time to drop of our bags, it's back on the bus to go to Grodzisk.
Where we're judging in the former malt house of the last brewery to make Grodziskie before the style's extinction in the early 1990s. Which is pretty cool. And it's right next to the brewhouse of Browar Grodzisk. Current brewer of Grodziskie
We don't have to judge a stupid number of beers - my table has 17. Just as well, as the judging kicks off in the early evening. There are some pretty good examples in the ones we judge. And a few not so good ones. But there are always a few duds, whenever you judge.
I'm judging with two Polish men, Michal Kopik and Jan Lepek and a German/Greek woman, Dafne Peppa_boy. We have some robust discussions about some beers. Which is part of the fun of judging. If everyone 100% agreed, int would be a pretty dull process.
For those of you that haven't experienced the Grodziskie style, here's an overview of its characteristics.
colour: very pale
grist: 100% oak-smoked wheat malt
hops: Polish varieties
yeast: top fermenting
OG: 7.7º Plato
ABV: 3.1%
The last two I've taken from the Classic version brewed by Browar Grodzisk. It's also usually bottle-conditioned.
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I like versions where the hops and smoke are in balance. Combined with a light body, making them very drinkable. Quite a few of the beers I judge fit those parameters perfectly. And are a pleasure to drink.
I already know quite a few of the other judges. Which makes things easier. Catching up with Evan Rail after many years is fun. Great to learn that U Rotundy remains a s wonderful as ever. Plus lots of other great stuff about beer in Czechia.
Judging is scheduled to end at 21:00. It's a while after that when all the tables are done And it's pushing 10:00 when we hit the restaurant Schabowy & Salata.
Our, quite late, evening meal is very decent. What I expect in Poland, where the food is usually pretty good. I do like a good Schnitzel. One made out of actual meat. Unlike the shttty ones made from reconstituted gunk they sell in the supermarkets in Holland.
(I was wondering about the name of the restaurant: Schbowy & Salata. I could get the second bit But what about the first? Kotlet schabowy turns out to be what I called a Schnitzel. It's the Polish version of a fried, thin, breaded piece of pork. Like I said earlier, it was excellent.)
Of course, there's also Grodziskie to drink. From the beautifully elegant, slender glasses.
It's after midnight when I get my head down Aiming for an 8:00 start tomorrow. A gulp or two of hotel whisky whisks me off rapidly to sleep.
Browar Grodzisk
Poznańska 16B,
62-065 Grodzisk Wielkopolski,
Poland.
https://browargrodzisk.com
Schabowy & Salata
Osiedle Wojska Polskiego 18D,
62-065 Grodzisk Wielkopolski,
Poland.
Here's a video report of my trip:
By popular demand, (ell, I think one person said they liked them), here's another travel video.
Where I fly to Poznan and am whisked away to judge in the malthouse of the last brewer in Grodzisk when the style died out in the early 1990s. Then eat a Kotlet schabowy. Which was dead good.
| 1897 Fremlin Double Stout | ||
| pale malt | 9.75 lb | 66.87% |
| brown malt | 0.75 lb | 5.14% |
| chocolate malt | 0.50 lb | 3.43% |
| oat malt | 0.50 lb | 3.43% |
| brown sugar | 2.75 lb | 18.86% |
| caramel 1000 SRM | 0.33 lb | 2.26% |
| Fuggles 120 mins | 2.00 oz | |
| Fuggles 60 mins | 2.00 oz | |
| Goldings 30 mins | 2.00 oz | |
| OG | 1072 | |
| FG | 1017.5 | |
| ABV | 7.21 | |
| Apparent attenuation | 75.69% | |
| IBU | 71 | |
| SRM | 38 | |
| Mash at | 154º F | |
| Sparge at | 175º F | |
| Boil time | 120 minutes | |
| pitching temp | 58º F | |
| Yeast | Wyeast 1099 Whitbread Ale | |
Another little video, this time looking at the strongest type of English Beer, Barley Wine. And, of course, I mention Whitbread Gold Label, a minor obsession of mine.
Now there's another bucket list item crossed off. I finally got to drink Grodziskie in Grodzisk.
Last weekend I was in Grodzisk to judge, well, Grodziskie. And what fun it was.
One of my big regrets, beer-wise, at least, was not getting tro try Grodzisk when I was in Poland in the early 1990s. When the original Grodzisk brewery was still active. And I assumed that was my chance gone to experience the style.
Thankfully, the style has been brought back to life in its home town. And is even brewed in the building as the original. How cool is that? And the judging was in the malthouse of original brewery.\
It was quite a short trip for me. Only a short hop of a flight. And just two days away. Almost no effort at all, really.
Lots of fun people there, too. Some I already knew. Some I was meeting for the same time. It's great to still be meeting new people at my age. Which is why I'm going to continue to travel as long as I can.
| Youngs PA fermentation 10th July 1939 | ||||
| hours | FV | heat | gravity | action |
| 0 | 5 | 60º F | 1034.6 | pitched |
| 13 | 61.5º F | 1032.1 | ||
| 23 | 63º F | 1027.7 | ||
| 28 | 64º F | 1024.4 | ||
| 37 | 66.5º F | 1019.4 | ||
| 42 | 5 | 67.5º F | 1016.1 | dropped |
| 47 | 68.5º F | 1013.9 | ||
| 52 | 68.25º F | 1011.1 | ||
| 60 | 69.5º F | 1009.4 | ||
| 157 | 59º F | 1008.3 | racked | |
| Source: | ||||
| Young's brewing record held at Battersea Library, document number YO/RE/1/29. | ||||
| Youngs boiling and fermentation in 1939 | ||||||
| Beer | Style | boil time (hours) | Pitch temp | max. fermentation temp | length of fermentation (days) | |
| A | Mild | 1.75 | 1.75 | 61º F | 69º F | 9 |
| X | Mild | 1.75 | 1.75 | 60º F | 68º F | 8 |
| PA | Pale Ale | 2 | 2 | 60º F | 71.75º F | 8 |
| PAB | Pale Ale | 2 | 2 | 60º F | 70.5º F | 8 |
| P | Porter | 2 | 59º F | 68.5º F | 8 | |
| S | Stout | 2 | 59º F | 74.25º F | 8 | |
| XXX | Strong Ale | 2 | 2 | 60º F | 71.25º F | 4 |
| XXXX | Strong Ale | 2 | 2 | 59º F | 75.5º F | 6 |
| Average | 1.94 | 1.92 | 59.75º F | 71.09º F | 7.4 | |
| Source: | ||||||
| Young's brewing record held at Battersea Library, document number YO/RE/1/8. | ||||||
| 1897 Fremlin Porter | ||
| pale malt | 4.25 lb | 41.98% |
| brown malt | 1.25 lb | 12.35% |
| chocolate malt | 0.875 lb | 8.64% |
| oat malt | 0.75 lb | 7.41% |
| brown sugar | 2.75 lb | 27.16% |
| caramel 1000 SRM | 0.25 lb | 2.47% |
| Fuggles 145 mins | 1.00 oz | |
| Fuggles 60 mins | 1.00 oz | |
| Goldings 30 mins | 1.00 oz | |
| OG | 1052 | |
| FG | 1015 | |
| ABV | 4.89 | |
| Apparent attenuation | 71.15% | |
| IBU | 41 | |
| SRM | 41 | |
| Mash at | 152º F | |
| Sparge at | 180º F | |
| Boil time | 145 minutes | |
| pitching temp | 60º F | |
| Yeast | Wyeast 1099 Whitbread Ale | |
| Youngs hops in 1939 | |||
| Beer | hop 1 | hop 2 | hop 3 |
| A | Kent 1937 CS | Kent 1938 | |
| X | Kent 1937 CS | Kent 1938 | |
| PA | Kent 1937 | Worcs. 1938 | Kent 1938 |
| PAB | Kent 1938 CS | Kent 1938 | |
| P | Kent 1938 CS | Kent 1938 | |
| S | Kent 1938 CS | Kent 1938 | |
| XXX | Kent 1938 CS | Kent 1938 | |
| XXXX | Kent 1938 CS | Kent 1938 | |
| Source: | |||
| Young's brewing record held at Battersea Library, document number YO/RE/1/8. | |||
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