Sheffield Brewery Company

There’s plenty to celebrate here at The Sheffield Brewery Company, as September sees the release of the seventh beer in our Ten of the Best range.  And there’s no better way to raise a glass to the mighty city of Sheffield than to discover the Real Ale Trail. Sheffield Brewery Trail Ale In honour of the trail, which connects the city centre with Neepsend and Kelham Island – the heart of Sheffield’s brewing industry – we’ve been brewing a collaborative beer with The Sheffield Honey Company.  Trail Ale is a 4.0% Honey Amber Ale, hopped with Northern Brewer, First Gold and Calypso, and – of course – honey from local Sheffield bees. You’ll be able to sample it for yourself at our brewery Tap Room, open next on Friday 2nd and Saturday 3rd September, along with our core range, as fresh as can be! Also, whilst we’re celebrating, our last special – Festiv’ale (4% Ginger and Lemon Ale) won 2nd place out of 134 beers from across the nation in the North Norfolk Railway Beer Festival. Finally, The Sheffield Brewery Company is pleased to announce that Nick Law (brewer of Emmanuales) has recently joined the team as Brewery Manager and brewer. For further information about The Sheffield Brewery Company, visit our website at www.sheffieldbrewery.com Nick Law

Abbeydale Brewery

Firstly, a massive thank you to everyone who came down to our tenth annual Sunfest at the Rising Sun! It was a record breaking year for us and the perfect way to celebrate our 20th birthday. Not Just Jam, our charity beer brewed with Seven Hills WI in support of Light Sheffield, was the first to run out in the beer tent, and the WI themselves raised over £800 selling tasty cakes and bakes! We still have collection boxes to tot up and proceeds from the sale of the beer to add on, but expect the full total to be donated to Light to be over £2000. We hope you all enjoyed the weekend as much as we did. Abbeydale Olympic Gains Onto what’s available this month! First up, in honour of a certain sporting event happening in Rio throughout August, we have Doctor Morton’s O’Limpet Gains, sure to win a gold medal with an abundance of Simcoe, Sorachi Ace, and new TNT hops! The return of Abbey Ale follows shortly after, a firm favourite amongst the Abbeydale team…  A hop driven American style IPA coming in at 5.5%. In a first for Abbeydale, we’re also releasing a sour! Rango Mango is the brainchild of brewer Jim Rangeley and will be the juiciest yet in our Signature Series. As the name suggests, it’s going to bursting with tropical fruitiness from the mango pulp used, backed up by a “metric f***ton” (Jim’s words) of Galaxy hops, all at a thirst-quenching 4% ABV. Abbeydale dry hopped pale Deception will be getting a birthday makeover this month too, keep your eyes on our social media for further details on this one! And August is rounded off with Doctor Morton’s Myar Skikt and A-Peach-iation, another fruity one for the summer. Let’s just hope we get some beer garden worthy weather at last! Cheers, Laura

Stancill Brewery

Stancill Brewery has been working on two new summer specials: First up is a 4% summer ale and a genuine first for new brewery apprentice Jonathan Brown. Jonathan joined Stancill in April and after working closely with head brewer Dean Pleasant over the past few weeks, Dean challenged him to make a beer of his own. Magnum PA [1609647]jaxon1-01 [1609646] Jonathan’s first beer features First Gold and Styrian Golding hops, resulting in a well balanced brew with a slight orange aroma and delicate spicy notes. Jonathan was given the honour of not only brewing the beer to suit his own tastes, but to also naming it. He chose Jaxon, naming his first brew in honour of his newly born child. Stancill’s second summer special pays tribute to one of the best known detectives of the 1980s with a brand new American pale ale, brewed using magnum hops. The result is a delightfully moreish 4.5% brew called Magnum PA. We know what you’re thinking… and you’re right. Hawaiian shirt and big moustache optional!

Steel City Brewing

Wait ages for a Steel City beer then three come along at once… sort of! TMB18 Forked Tongue v2 [1511157] Three collaborations, two ‘away’ and one ‘home’. Firstly, away at Imperial in Mexborough along with Isaac from Catalan brewery Reptilian. Isaac’s favourite style is Double IPA (His IBUprofano weighs in at 9.5% and 256IBU!), so Dave and Dale were happy to indulge… As it was brewed the weekend after Britain lost its collective mind, the brew is named ‘Turkeys Voting for Xmas’, and is 8.5% and a slightly more restrained 130IBU. A base of pale malt and oats keeps the colour as light as possible, while fermenting out as far as the yeast would go means it avoids the stickiness and booziness found in many DIPAs, allowing the Centennial, Citra, Chinook and El Dorado hops to shine. EE04 Turkeys [1511165] Next day, back at ‘home’, Dave and Isaac (with cameo appearance from Steel City & Hopcraft brewer Gazza and Waen Brewster Sue) brewed Forked Tongues, a Grapefruit Transatlantic Pale Ale. Dave had been planning a grapefruit beer for some time, but as always seems to happen before he got round to it every other brewer in the country did one…! Forked Tongues is 5.5% and 120IBU, with a pale malt and wheat base, Columbus and Magnum hops for bittering, Chinook and Mosaic hops for flavour, and of course an obscene amount of grapefruit. A special one-off keg was produced for Cotteridge Wines’ 21st birthday bash with the addition of orange, and according to Untappd is one of the best-received Steel City beers ever! Forked Tongues will be harder than usual to find, as most of it is being shipped to Catalunya, but the usual suspects (Shakespeare, Devonshire Cat and Dronfield Arms) will be getting some. The beer is unfined, so is likely to be hazy, if this is successful Steel City will probably go unfined permanently – who wants fish in their beer anyway? imperial steel city raw brexit Finally, back to Mexborough for a four-way collab (originally planned as nine-way but trying to get that many brewers in one place is like herding cats…), involving Imperial, Steel City, Raw and James & Kirkman. Named If Tha’ Brexit, Tha Fixes It, the brew is a Transatlantic Pale Ale featuring a multitude of hops including Dana, Centennial, Summit, Topaz and Ahtanum. Unfortunately given the theme for the names, the guys didn’t have any European hops to hand! Dave Szwejkowski

Hopjacker

With summer well and truly here we’ve been struggling to keep up demand for our core beers, but have managed to sneak in one or two exciting specials for your enjoyment!  First off we have our Session IPA, brewed in collaboration with Stuart from North Riding brewery and heavily hopped with Comet, Cascade and Chinook for a tropical fruit aroma, an intensely citrussy flavour and a long dry finish. Hopjacker Session IPA We’ve also just racked off ALMIGHTY ZEUS, a 7.2% triple dry hopped IPA, which, as the name suggests, is packed full of Zeus hops, but with the addition of a little Comet for a more celestial feel.  Expect orange notes, followed by a big pine hit before a lightly spicy finish.  The ABV is well hidden, so treat Zeus with respect or feel his wrath! We’ve lots more exciting beers in the pipeline, including return collaborations with North Riding, Steel City and Neepsend, so watch this space! Edd Entwhistle.

Emmanuales

Before starting Emmanuales in 2014, I spent the best part of ten years trying to make it as a professional musician within the Christian music industry.  For some unknown reason, no matter how hard I tried to kick down Cliff Richard’s door to hand him my demo tape, I had little success in getting my songs ‘out there’. Emmanuale Jonah And so, I decided to call it a day and pursue my other passion – making beer – which I felt, unlike music, was more likely earn me more of a crust than the pittance of royalties from music streaming service such as Spotify and Apple Music. You’ll probably appreciate the irony then, that over the last ten years I’ve had little exposure to my music over the airwaves, and yet, seemingly within ten minutes of word getting out about Emmanuales, a researcher from Songs of Praise phones me to discuss putting ‘the Christian brewer with the Jesus beer’ on BBC One. Emmanuales, which is now brewed at and as part of The Sheffield Brewery Company, will feature on BBC’s Songs of Praise program in August (transmission date TBC). In other, less glamorous news, we have new beer hitting the shops. A revised Jonah and the Pale makes its return this month, now brewed with more hops, yet still as smooth.  In addition, we’re releasing a Rhubarb Saison (4.2%) – yet to be named, at the time of writing – to quench that thirst on a hot summer’s day, and our biggest beer yet.  Four Horsemen of the Hopocalypse is a 10% Quadruple hopped with Chinook, Saaz, and Ahtanhum. Keep a look out in August for more Oh Hoppy Day, Nothing But The Blood – a Blood Orange IPA (see what we did there!), and our Black IPA, Midnight Mass, making its first 2016 return. For more details visit www.emmanuales.co.uk Nick Law

Fuggle Bunny Brewhouse

Just a few lines to keep everyone in the loop as to what’s been happening in Fuggle land.  Since January this year Fuggle Bunny has gone National with our award winning beers selling the length and breadth of the Country and in order to continue with the growth and demand we have had to purchase yet another Fermenting Vesell (FV). As well as the usual brewing we have also been extremely busy with private functions, weddings, country fairs, and Charities. Looking ahead there are a few dates for your diary namely; a great 2 day Festival being held at the beautiful Stately Wentworth Woodhouse @Rotherham organised by Gifts & Grub on the weekend of the 16th & 17th of July, stunningly beautiful place with some cracking stalls and of course Fuggles pop up bar will be there for both of these days showcasing a selection of our finest award winning beers. Even more exciting Fuggle has been invited to the GBBF at Olympia in London between 9th-13th August 2016…… oh my, Fuggle will be preening himself to look the part in his best bib and tucker. Hope to see you at the aforementioned but in the meantime we need to hop off now to brew more fuggalicious beers but if you would like to keep up with more hoptastic news from Fuggle then please hop onto our facebook, twitter or website accounts or hop into the Brewery on Fuggletastic Fridays.  In the meantime Keep Calm and Fuggle On!

Blue Bee Brewery

As summer begins we keep ploughing forward with new specials. The first of which is brewed with the marmite hop: Sorachi Ace. We have showcased this love it or hate American hop in Sorachi Pale 4.5% which has a clean, crisp malt flavour allowing the coconut and lime flavours from this distinctive hop of Japanese origin to shine through. On top of this we have brewed Amarella Pale 3.9%.  A crisp, refreshing, session pale perfect for the summer sunshine combining American Amarillo and Australian Ella hops to give citrus and peach flavours leading to a dry bitter finish. As well as this we have re-brewed Ella IPA 5.0% as our single hopped IPA for July. This beer showcases Australian Ella hops which impart their cedar and peach hop characteristics. Finally we plan on brewing our Ginger Beer 4.5% throughout the summer season, this fiery pale ale is brewed with over 30 kg of fresh root ginger that is great for a sunny summer afternoon in the beer garden. Josh Jepson, Blue Bee Head Brewer

Wentworth Brewery

Wentworth Brewery was established in September 1999 and based in the old power station on the Wentworth estate in the village of the same name in Rotherham. In its heydey it was well respected and winning awards for beers such as WPA, Rampant Gryphon and Oatmeal Stout. More recently they won an award at Sheffield’s Steel City Beer & Cider Festival for a one off festival special – Sloe Stout. Unfortunately Wentworth ceased trading at the beginning of June 2016 and put the brewery on the market, having been unable to fulfill payments due to the tax man. It is unclear officially how Wentworth Brewery got to that position, however some off the record comments from other brewers in our area suggest there is a lot of competition for cheap beer in the Rotherham area and the price being charged to pubs may not have been profitable. Wentworth was a brewery that was very supportive of CAMRA in our area, hosting brewery tours, tasting training sessions, assisting with beer festivals and more, we are sorry to see the brewery go and wish the employees affected all the best for the future.

Thornbridge Brewery

I have just returned from the World Beer Cup in Philly with my best haul of awards there to date as a head brewer and I still cannot still quite believe I pulled it off.   We won the Gold with ‘Love among the Ruins’ and Silver for ‘Days of Creation’ in the barrel aged sour beer category.  These are two iterations of the same project; our barrel aged sours.  A friend of mine, Alex Troncoso, founder of the new Lost and Grounded brewery in Bristol, sent me a message after the win: “What an amazing achievement! It is not an easy competition to win a medal, this is simply phenomenal!” For me, this pretty much sums it up. This is my fifth time judging at the WBC and the overall quality and number of applicants has increased dramatically.  When I first started judging in the first round, it wasn’t unusual to be able to kick out at least a third of the entries because of faults. This year, whilst judging American sours, I remember sitting there being incredibly impressed by the quality of the beers and thinking that we would be very lucky to win anything. Rewind back 5 years ago.  Myself and Caolan Vaughan (now head brewer at Stone and Wood in Australia), who was my right hand man at the time, were busy trying to ramp up production and implement stringent QA systems to a good team who were not used to that way of working.  Going into any brewery and increasing production and changing the working culture can be challenging to say the least!  So, in order to relieve the stress and inject even more creativity, we decided, as a pet project, to do some barrel ageing in a small room at Thornbridge Hall.  Caolan wanted to go down the route of big dark beer in wood.  This resulted in the Heather Honey Stout – http://www.ratebeer.com/beer/thornbridge-hall-heather-honey-imperial-stout/186938/ and an Imperial Oatmeal Stout –http://www.ratebeer.com/beer/thornbridge-hall-imperial-oatmeal-stout/198462/.  I fancied trying my hands at American-style sour beers, as I had always loved the Lambic and Oud Bruin styles, but was particularity impressed when I tasted Russian River’s sour beers.  The balance and complexity of these beers was simply sublime. There are two mantras which I have when it comes to barrel aged beer:
  1. The beer should be better than when it went into the barrel.
With barrel aged beers and in particular attempts at sours, this is obviously not always the case and consumers are expected to pay a high price for the resultant ‘beer’.
  1. We shouldn’t ask our customers to pay for our mistakes.
When I discussed the sour beers with my boss, we agreed that if we weren’t 100% happy about the final beer, we would ditch it, because I didn’t want anything sub-standard going out into trade.  Give me the remit of producing a Wit beer, Weiss beer, Stout, Dunkel, Double IPA etc and I pretty much have it dialed in on the first brew. However, with barrel aged sour beers, I was extremely apprehensive of getting it right and more than aware I might make mess of it. Rob barrel age Over the next five years I produced three batches in all, including the winning beers.  Batch 1, which we brewed and matured at the Hall, was packaged into 500ml bottles and labelled as ‘Sour Brown’.  This beer was really well received and went down brilliantly.  No-one else in the UK had really produced a successful American-style Sour Brown and it was a real leap forward.  But personally, I felt there was scope for improvement, as by the time we had bottled it, I had learnt a huge amount about the process.  Each time I learnt something new and changed something, I wrote it down, whether it be the EBU, the storage temperature, the timing and pitching rates of the bacteria and wild yeasts, how often we topped up the barrels, how much fruit, what type of fruit, how much residual extract to leave, the humidity of the room…the list of details that affect the final product is endless.  Records for making barrel aged beers are so important as you don’t really get to know what the effect was of a subtle change until up to a year later, so we were fastidious about this. I think what was really key though was the blending.  Prior to packaging, we did numerous blends to get it right. There were some barrels which were really funky and I think on their own, they would have been picked out as having faults and only desirable by the real sour connoisseur.  However, blended back, they really gave the overall beer an edge; they were like the magic dust sprinkled over the blend!  We also blended back some barrels from the second batch which were a bit less sour, which reigned in the final blend and improved drinkability.  It would be wrong to think I achieved this all by reading books and trial and error.   I also had a lot of communication with Vinnie Cilurzo from Russian River, who really helped me out with so many of the questions I had.  I think anyone who has had the pleasure of his company, or even just tasted his sour beer range, can vouch for the fact he is an inspiration. Back to the World Beer Cup.  After three days of judging, I decided to move on to check out Sierra Nevada’s new brewing facility, which was simply out of this world in every respect.  To get back from Asheville, it was two flights back to NYC and I didn’t really want to travel back for the awards ceremony in Philly. Although I was hopeful we had maybe won an award, I didn’t really hold out too much hope owing to the sheer volume and quality of competition.  I think there were entries from 1907 breweries from 55 countries this year and in the barrel aged sour beer category there were something like 120 entries.  So to actually get the call from my old mate Caolan, while sat in the airport waiting to return to England, that we had won gold and silver in one of the toughest categories, just blew me away!  I did have an inkling it was a good beer and sent a few bottles to friends a month before, who were all pretty damn good brewers, but had heard nothing back, so I was assuming that they were being polite by not saying anything!  I also had a visiting Lambic blender comment when tasting one of the barrels that he thought the beer had gone too acetic.  Although he didn’t brew a Flanders style, it still sowed a seed of doubt in my mind. It’s pretty common as a craft brewer gets bigger and more successful that a certain crowd can criticise you for being no longer being craft or that your beers weren’t what they were.  So you must forgive me for having a little chuckle to myself, knowing we cleaned up in the probably the hottest beer category for hipsters!   We sold out of the first small bottling run of both beers with most going overseas, but we have bottled more of the same batches now so you can get your hands on it very soon. Rob Lovatt, Head Brewer