Summer of Pub

CAMRA’s ‘Summer of Pub’ campaign is back this year to get as many people as possible enjoying the season of good – or at least better – weather by heading down to their local for a pint.

We will be celebrating how our nation’s pubs offer numerous benefits to people’s mental and social well-being and play an instrumental role in the communities they serve. After two years of lockdowns, restrictions and unprecedented pub closures, this is a time to celebrate being able to return to our locals and to recognise everything they have done throughout the pandemic.

Campaigning to support Britain’s pubs is something anyone can get involved in and can be as simple as stepping out the door and taking a stroll to a local. If you can encourage some friends or family to join you, then all the better. Drinking cheap supermarket booze at home does little to improve your life – but change that setting to the social environment of a pub and you can increase your happiness, make friends and connect with others in your local community, while still enjoying the tipple of your choice.

CAMRA’s National Chairman, Nik Antona, said: “We are kicking off on 2 May to coincide with the first Bank Holiday of the summer, and the celebrations will run until the last summer Bank Holiday on 29 August.

“This is the first time in two years that we’ve been able to come together and support pubs, clubs, brewers and cider makers in this way, and I urge everyone to make the most of this summer by joining in with Summer of Pub however they can.

“The financial aftershocks of the pandemic, combined with recent tax hikes mean that this is a difficult time for the trade. It is vital we give them all the support we can, so that we can continue to enjoy everything that makes our nation’s pubs so special for many summers to come.

“If your idea of a perfect summer involves a pint and a beer garden, then get involved, and start your Summer of Pub.”

As the season progresses, make sure to plan a pub visit for some of our key celebratory dates, whether it’s Pub Pride Day (27 May), the Jubilee Bank Holiday (3-5 June), Beer Day Britain, and Beer Day NI (15 June), the Women’s Euros (6-31 July), the return of the UK’s biggest beer festival at the Great British Beer Festival (4-8 August), or one of many others, leading up to the closing PUBlic Bank Holiday weekend (29 August).

So head down to the pub, make friends and memories, and – most importantly – shout about how much you love your local this Summer.

You can join the fun by supporting Summer of Pub on social media. Let us know how you’ll be celebrating by sharing photos of you and friends in the pub using the hashtag #SummerofPub. To find out more and see Summer of Pub events near you, visit camra.org.uk/summerofpub.

The Cider Hole

Locally-Produced Cider Returns to Sheffield at The Cider Hole!

Sheffield’s only cider-centric bar and urban micro-cidery has released its first three batches, produced with apples collected from 31 houses around the city of Sheffield.

In September 2021, The Cider Hole opened in Kelham Island, becoming Sheffield’s only cider-centric bar. This March, The Cider Hole fulfilled its promise of also becoming Sheffield’s only urban micro-cidery by releasing three ciders produced on-site.

The Cider Hole has begun pouring three 200-litre batches of cider – all of which contain local Sheffield apples and two of which were produced with 100% local apples collected from gardens around the area.
“As far as I am aware, no one has been producing cider using locally-sourced Sheffield apples in the city for at least a couple years,” said The Cider Hole’s owner and cidermaker Mike Pomranz who has been covering the cider industry as a journalist for seven years. “I’m excited to be salvaging fruit from people’s gardens and turning it into Sheffield’s best cider… not that I have any competition!”

This past autumn, Pomranz put out calls on Facebook and Reddit asking if anyone with extra apples would donate them in exchange for free cider. He received over 70 leads and eventually collected apples (and some pears) from 31 different houses around Sheffield – including plenty of unexpectedly interesting finds in neighbourhoods like Crookes and Pitsmoor. He then crushed, pressed, and fermented all of the fruit in his tiny shipping container bar in Krynkl on Shalesmoor.

All three ciders are being served in thirds and halves directly from the fermenters until either all of the cider has been consumed or bottling becomes required. Refillable milk bottles are also available for takeaway.

The Cider Hole also continues to be open as a bar and now stocks over 60 ciders as well as a large selection of beers and wine. For hours, check The Cider Hole’s website: istheciderholeopen.com.

The Cider Hole, Unit 1.3, Krynkl, 294 Shalesmoor, Sheffield, S3 8UL. Shalesmoor tram stop is across the road.

Welbeck Abbey Brewery

Following careful review of their existing range of beers, and listening to customer feedback, Welbeck Abbey Brewery have decided to reduce and update their core range to just four ales. The ever popular ‘Red Feather’ will be staying and will be joined by three exciting new beers, all very different from each other. This will allow for greater availability of innovative ‘monthly specials’ throughout the year.

Managing Director, Claire Monk says:

After 10 years supplying beer into pubs, restaurants, and bottle shops, we felt it was time to review our core range, and as such, our brewing team have been working hard over the last three months to hone recipes, using modern techniques to get the very best flavours from traditional malt and hops. By having a broader mix of ‘modern’ and ‘traditional’ beers in both the core range and specials on offer, we hope to appeal to a wider customer base. Having a smaller range of core beers plus more innovative specials will lend itself much better to our new bottled range, and with a joint approach across cask and bottled beer we hope to get drinkers excited about Welbeck and gain traction in areas of the market we have yet to break into.”

In a further exciting development, the brewery has had its own, in-house bottling line installed.

Brewer Tom Roe explains:

“This gives us full control over how we process our beer on site. We’ve taken the decision to move away from filtered and force-carbonated bottled beers, to the more natural process of bottle-conditioning. The benefits of this include increased flavour profile through no filtration and a slower maturation, ensuring that our bottled beer is as flavoursome as possible. It also means we can cut down on the use of plastic, transportation and externally sourced C02, improving our carbon footprint, something which is important to us here at Welbeck. Having a bottling line on-site also allows us to produce smaller, one-off batches of beer which we are very excited about.”

The new core range will include a 5% West Coast American IPA, a crisp Continental Pale at 4.4% and a 3.7% Golden English session ale. Monthly specials will always include a dark ale as porters and stouts remain popular, as well as low strength session ales, well hopped IPAs, and everything else in between.

These fabulous new beers will be in pubs from the week commencing 11th of April, and if you want to find out more, Claire will be holding a Meet The Brewer event at The Winchester in Sherwood on Thursday 21st of April, as well as tastings at Welbeck Farm Shop on Saturday 30th of April. Bottled beers are available to buy online, with free local delivery and 10% off if you spend over £45.

Chantry Brewery

Chantry Brewery recently welcomed three new 40-barrel vessels into their premises at Parkgate, Rotherham. Previously used as storage, the team made the decision to expand into their second unit due to the popularity of their award-winning ales. They found a better way to utilise the space by adding in their new vessels which each hold 12,670 pints!

Director and Co-Owner, Mick Warburton is enthralled by the expansion plans, and he puts their success down to brewing ales that are only made with the finest ingredients and no added sugars. When asked about their expansion, Mick said:

“We had no choice really; we’d outgrown our original 20-barrel capacity. We have a fantastic, loyal customer base that we’re very grateful for – we couldn’t let them down! We decided to add extra vessels so there’s enough Chantry ales to go round.”

This year, Chantry Brewery will be celebrating 10 years of brewing and what a way to mark it! The new custom-built vessels from Moeschle will enable the team to supply the nation with 38,010 extra pints of ale!

To get your share or see what the latest brews are, head over to their website or subscribe to their monthly newsletter via the links below.

Website – www.chantrybrewery.co.uk

Subscribe to the mailing list – http://eepurl.com/hGFEQT

Brothers Arms

Tuesday 8 March saw a number of Sheffield & District CAMRA members head to the Brothers Arms in Heeley, not only to have a go on their quiz but to present their Pub of the Month award.

Pictured is our chairman Glyn with Emma France, Brothers Arms General Manager and Chris Simpson, the assistant manager.

Photo by John Beardshaw

Abbeydale Brewery

We really seem to be whizzing through 2022 don’t we?! We’re keeping up with the new releases though and have plenty coming out this month for you to enjoy.

The next in our Hopback series should be released by the time we reach April, and for the first time it will be available in keg as well as cask! This time it’s 4.9% and has been dry hopped with Vic Secret for a burst of juicy freshness and a gently earthy finish.

Doctor Morton is back with Proper Gander, an easy drinking 4.1% pale ale with Columbus and Summit hops. And on the dark side, we’ve got a new version of Salvation on the way, which this time is a sumptuously fruity Raspberry & Chocolate Stout (4.8%). Smooth, sweet, rich and creamy – we’re looking forward to this one!

Also from the Brewers’ Emporium is Hinterland (4.5%), a pillowy soft New England style pale ale with Vic Secret, Mosaic and Talus Cryo. Promising a full-bodied juicy character, with a big and bold tropical aroma and low bitterness. On the palate floral notes hold their own alongside flavours of coconut and pink grapefruit.

And finally, we’re soon to launch an all-new series of single hopped IPAs. Meet your new Obsession! The first of this series will showcase Simcoe, and will be 5.8%. Packed with leaf, T90 and Cryo Simcoe hops, expect zesty grapefruit, resinous pine and a hint of fresh berries, followed by a hearty, bitter finish.

Rewild your walking boots…

Sunday Times best-selling author Nick Hayes has been on a mission to highlight and campaign for the right to access more of the UK’s countryside for everyone. Connecting to the countryside is proven to help mental health and well-being, and throughout the Covid-19 pandemic was a vital resource for folks fortunate enough to be able to access green spaces. However not everyone has access and only 8% of England, for example National Parks, is open to such rambling. In Sheffield, citizens are fortunate to have a wealth of green spaces, parks and of course direct access to the Peak District national park.

Nick Hayes has joined forces on a collaborative beer with Sheffield independent businesses, who reside on the Peak District’s border for Sheffield Beer Week this March. The project brings together a number of threads including celebrating the 90th anniversary of the Mass Kinder Trespass which happened within the Peak District. This was key in opening up the area as the first UK National Park some 50 years later, highlighting the much-needed spotlight on the work of the Right To Roam campaign to continue efforts. This also celebrates Sheffield as The Outdoor City and its citizen’s access to green, open spaces and adventure trails.

Due to considerable interest and demand the beer has been released early and will be available from Monday 28 February at Hop Hideout (City Centre in Kommune), Hop Hideout (Abbeydale Road) and hophideout.co.uk, then across Sheffield and the rest of the UK at independent sellers throughout this week. On Saturday 12 March there is a sold out ‘A Right to Roam Walking Tour’ in Sheffield with author Nick Hayes starting at Hop Hideout beer shop and finishing at Brewery of St Mars of the Desert. These celebrations kick-off a whole month of focus leading up to the April anniversary of the Mass Kinder Trespass. What better way to call for a right to roam than by ordering a pint of it in a pub, direct at the brewery or a can at your local beer shop!

A Right To Roam, Riwaka and Nectaron hopped hazy IPA, 5.4%

“On 24th April 1932, 400 young people walked up Kinder Scout to protest the lack of public access to the moors. They were beaten by gamekeepers, six were imprisoned, but ultimately they won. We now have a right to roam over 8% of England.

“But today, 97% of rivers and 92% of our land is still forbidden to us. Science has proven how urgently we need regular access to natural spaces, for our mental health and physical health and also how we care more for nature if we have a personal connection to it. The Kinder Trespass, in what is now the Peak District, was the first step towards a new relationship with the countryside, but there is still much to be done.”

Join us at rightroam.org.uk to campaign for greater access to the English countryside.

The beer launch is taking place as part of Sheffield Beer Week.

True North collaborations

True North Brew Co. have announced two new beers brewed for The Festival of the Outdoors and Sheffield Beer Week.

Peaky Climbers, a 4.3% Pale Ale, has been brewed for The Festival of the Outdoors, and celebrates the beautiful views and inspiring spaces for escape, adventure, and discovery that we’re lucky enough to have right on our doorstep in the Peak District. Head Brewer, Dean Hollingsworth, has used heaps of mosaic hops to create a bold and fruity beer with citrusy notes, making it the perfect thirst quencher for that post hike pint.

Freak Out, a 6% Red Rye IPA, has been brewed in collaboration with Gorilla Brewing for Sheffield Beer Week. Master Brewer for Gorilla, Ian Darvill, joined True North’s Head Brewer, Dean Hollingsworth, at their Eldon Street Brewery to create this beautiful Red Rye IPA using Zappa hops planted and grown by Frank Zappa’s family. This exclusive beer pours an alluring crimson amber, with notes of sweetness and spice.

Both beers are available for a limited time in True North venues throughout March.

Lost pubs of the Peak District

Andrew McCloy tells the stories of some unusual former pubs and beerhouses

High up on the Peak District moorland west of Sheffield, beyond Lodge Moor, are the three small Redmires reservoirs. They were constructed between the 1830s-50s to provide drinking water for the growing city. What looks like a memorial stone in the roadside wall between the middle and upper reservoirs is in fact the surviving sign from a beerhouse called the Grouse and Trout, which used to stand near here. The sign features a grouse and three trout, and – although it’s hard to make out – the Latin inscription Ich Dien Dinner which translates as “I serve dinner”. There was another beerhouse, called Ocean View, established nearby in the 1840s, both offering refreshments for the navvies digging the reservoirs. Ocean View closed in the 1880s, but the Grouse and Trout continued into the early years of the 20th century and was supposedly closed and later demolished after the moorland owner feared that the new influx of sightseers and tourists served by the pub would disrupt his shooting.

Grouse & Trout

Another noteworthy but long-gone beerhouse could once by found at Castleton in the Hope Valley and was located at the entrance to the gaping mouth of Peak Cavern, also known more colloquially as the Devil’s Arse. The ample space and damp conditions made it popular with rope-makers, and at the turn of 1800 the cavern’s 60ft-high mouth supported several dwellings, including a beerhouse, which in 1830 became Slack’s Mineral Shop selling Blue John and other local knick-knacks.

Heading back towards Sheffield, until around 1900 you could enjoy a drink in the Cross Daggers at High Bradfield, which because it was located near the gates of St Nicholas Church was nicknamed Heaven’s Parlour or Heaven’s Gate. It was a popular haunt of the navvies working on the local reservoirs, so much so that it ended up losing its licence because they kept fighting all the time. After this it was used as a vestry, a registry office, a school and then a post office, before finally becoming a private residence.

The former Ashopton Inn in the Upper Derwent Valley faced a more conclusive end, however. It was built in 1824 as a halt for coaches on the Sheffield to Glossop turnpike, a chance to change horses and make preparations for the long haul over the Snake Pass. But the Derwent Valley Water Board earmarked the narrow valley for giant new reservoirs and in 1943 the villages of Derwent and Ashopton, including the Ashopton Inn, were emptied and mostly demolished so that building work on the massive new Ladybower dam could begin. The Board, which had purchased the inn from the Duke of Devonshire in 1902, did look into the possibility of rebuilding Ashopton Inn on a new site, but in the end the licence was transferred to separate premises at New Mills, and Ashopton and its ruined pub were permanently submerged beneath 27,500 mega litres of water.

Andrew is author of Peak District Pubs: A Pint Sized Social History, published by Gritstone Publishing in 2020. Copies are available to buy on their website.

Steel City Brewing

After a relatively quiet year for obvious reasons, Steel City had a late resurgence in activity starting with the latest iteration of the Megacollab. This year’s concept had been kicking around for a while between Dave, Niall off of the Wellington, and McGregor off of various facey beer groups, and was brewed with Lost Industry, Bexar County, Neepsend, Doomed, Top Rope and Ramsbury, plus Lewy off of Lewis Ryan Art, who designed the epic label. Sour was the aim of the game, with a three day double pitch lacto steep and the addition of grapefruit, redcurrant and an unholy quantity of citric acid. A limited edition spin-off, Drop Acid Not Bombs, was brewed with Lemondrop hops in place of the fruit, with just one keg for the Welly and a few cans produced. Brewday was great fun though rain put paid to the usual barbecue and cricket so instead it was a big pot of curry and a nerf gun battle…

Also release in the autumn was the long-awaited Sour Wars first trilogy, with a keg launch at the Crow followed by cans at selected dealers – Hop Hideout may have a few left though maybe not by time you read this! The variants are: Episode 1 The Cranachan Menace – raspberry, mead and a touch of vanilla in a highland whisky barrel; Episode 2 Attack of the Stones – cherries in a red wine barrel; Episode 3 Orange of the Sith – hurricane sour with passion fruit, lemon, lime and orange in a rum barrel. Planning is now underway for the second trilogy to be brewed shortly and released autumn 2022. A few kegs of the first trilogy remain for future events planned in Edinburgh, Glasgow and Manchester.

The latest in the frankly ridiculous series of one-off brews with Lucienne off of the Shakespeare surpassed even the previous brews (barbecue stout and hoi sin stout) for silliness, being a Branston Pickle porter! After ‘deconstructing’ the ingredients of the pickle, Dave and Lucienne procured a load of dates, apples, tamarind, mustard seeds, molasses, brown sugar… even they drew the line at pickled onions though! It was certainly, erm, interesting! Opinion was certainly divided, as expected some low Untappd scores but also some decent scores from those who rated it for what it is – nobody could deny it tasted of pickle! Dave and Lucienne certainly proved that they could, but not necessarily that they should…

The first brews of 2022 are due for release in Sheffield Beer Week, after a twin brewday in February. On the main kit comes Astral Mariner, a first for Steel City in two ways, firstly as a music collaboration, being brewed with Sheffield black metal outfit Ethereal Shroud, and more surprisingly it’s a lager! Well, in the technical sense if not in spirit… Dave is no fan of ‘damp air’ but sees Baltic Porter as the acceptable face of lager – brewed with Pilsner malt, Carafa Spezial for darkness, and Saaz hops (plus a modern twist with some Azacca hops) and fermented cold with a bottom-fermenting yeast. Meanwhile on the minikit a stout was produced for the 200th ‘Wind Up North’, a Thursday drinking club who gather at a different pub each week, a spin-off from the original ‘Wind Up’ which has been going in the south-east for over 40 years. The venue for WUN200 is the Pangolin, and the brew ‘Rule 6’ (one for Monty Python fans…) will be available there from 10th March.

Plans are afoot for the rest of 2022 including a tonka stout I’ve Had My Fun And That’s All That Matters (and a BA version I’ve Had My Rum And That’s All That Matters), a sour NEIPA Exercises in Futility, and no doubt more crazy stuff for the Shakey…

Dave Szwejkowski