Is your beer LocAle?

LocAle is a CAMRA initiative aiming to recognise and promote those pubs who support local brewers by selling locally brewed beers. Any pub that has at least one good quality locally-produced real ale available at all times can be accredited by its local CAMRA branch. Our branch defines “LocAle” as beer brewed within 20 miles of the pub by road. Currently we have 117 LocAle accredited pubs in the Sheffield & District region, but our recent Beer Census indicated that there could be at least 44 more eligible pubs out there. We are looking to make sure that every pub that could be LocAle accredited is so, so that we can maximise support for local ale and the people who make and sell it. If your local always has at least one local real ale available, we encourage you to urge the licensee to get in touch with the branch committee. Contact details can be found on our website or at the back of the magazine.

Beer Scoring

With the popularity of beer scoring apps such as Ratebeer and Untappd on the rise, you may or may not be aware that CAMRA has its own scoring system specifically for real ales that members can access through the WhatPub website at www.whatpub.com/beerscoring. CAMRA developed the National Beer Scoring System (NBSS) to give ale drinkers an easy-to-use, consistent scoring scheme. The NBSS scores are as follows: 0: No cask ale available. 1: Poor – Beer that is anything from barely drinkable to drinkable with considerable resentment. 2: Average – Competently kept, drinkable pint but doesn’t inspire in any way, not worth moving to another pub but you drink the beer without really noticing. 3: Good – Good beer in good form. You may cancel plans to move to the next pub. You want to stay for another pint and may seek out the beer again. 4: Very Good – Excellent beer in excellent condition. 5: Perfect – Probably the best you are ever likely to find. A seasoned drinker will award this score very rarely. Between 1 September 2016 and 31 August 2017, 222 of the 329 pubs in the Sheffield & District region serving cask ales were scored at least once, so there is evidence that the system is being used. However, out of the 2,036 scores input into the system in the past year, only 123 (just over 6%) of these were from Sheffield & District CAMRA members, with the vast majority coming from visitors from other branches (particularly Rotherham, Nottingham and Stockport). We are encouraging our branch members to make more use of the beer scoring system. The main reason for this is that we are hoping to start using these scores to help us select our Good Beer Guide nominees and to draw up our shortlist for the Pub of the Year award. So, if you think your favourite local deserves more recognition, get scoring and it could be in with a chance!

Thornbridge Peakender

Some of the world’s best breweries and their beers in the beautiful Peak District countryside all with free entry – just some of the reasons for attending Peakender 2017 at the Bakewell Showground from 18-20 August. peakender Thornbridge’s Peakender Festival has moved for 2017 to the Bakewell Showground enabling much better access to previous years. As in past years an array of great breweries including Tiny Rebel, Beavertown, Cloudwater and Wild Beer will have their beers on the bar and a number of breweries will be presenting tasting and talks. Music, magic and kids’ entertainment will also feature. Full information, including how to pre-register for your free day ticket or how to book a camping pitch is available at www.peakender.co.uk.

Tour de Yorkshire in Sheffield

On Sunday April 30, the 2017 Tour de Yorkshire cycling race finished in Stocksbridge. The final 20 km included 4 top category climbs, but also passed a number of local pubs in our area. They all reported good business on the day, extending opening hours and utilising extra serving space. The Friendship, for example, had an extra bar to the rear of the pub and was involved in an all-day extravaganza on the precinct opposite. The Castle Inn (Bolsterstone) had a marquee and the pubs in Deepcar (King and Miller and the Royal Oak) both put on a show. However, the prize for ‘best-dressed pub’ went to the Castle in Bolsterstone.
Bolsterstone - 3rd.May 2017
The Castle Inn, Bolsterstone – 3 May 2017
We expect to see the Tour de Yorkshire return to Sheffield in the future and hope that the Tour de France is back before too long! Dave Pickersgill

Music in the Gardens

One of Sheffield’s biggest open air concerts has teamed up with Bradfield Brewery to offer four day summer spectacular which will bring together, beers, bands and much more! Taking place between 29 June – 2 July, Music in the Gardens is organised by the Rotary Clubs of South Yorkshire and will feature a diverse entertainment line-up including headliners The Zombies, famous for hits such as “She’s Not There” and “Tell Her No” (Thursday 29 June); the best known Beatles tribute band in the business The Bootleg Beatles (Friday 30 June) and Classic 70s Rock outfit 10cc (Saturday 1 July). The event will culminate on Sunday 2 July when Sheffield Philharmonic Orchestra and Unite the Union band come together to perform a “Night at the Movies” as well as brass band favourites, proms and fireworks spectacular. To celebrate the twelfth anniversary of Music in the Gardens, organisers have teamed up with Bradfield Brewery, who also celebrate their twelfth anniversary in 2017, to host a mini beer festival during the event. Set to feature a variety of Bradfield Brewery’s popular farmers ales range, a special MitG Blonde will also be available exclusively during the event. For non-ale lovers, a range of wines, spirits, Pimms and soft drinks can also be purchased at the Bradfield Brewery bar, as well as a selection of hot drinks available from Café Carte. To soak up the abundance of alcohol on offer, food stalls including Spoilt For Choice Catering, Rotherham Hog Roast Company, Whirlow Hall Farm Trust and Our Cow Molly, will also take up residence at the four day festival. Music in the Gardens organiser Phil Sherriff said: “We first started working with Bradfield Brewery five years ago and the beer and since then, the food and drink offering for Music in the Gardens has really grown. I think when most people think of visiting a music festival, they automatically assume that it is going to mean paying exorbitant prices for a pint of flat lager and a cold hot dog. Instead we have teamed up with some great local food and drink producers which will all be available at sensible prices.” Josie Gill, Director of Bradfield Brewery said: “2005 saw Bradfield Brewery open its doors for the first time, and coincidentally it was also the same year that Music in the Gardens was first held. To mark this year’s anniversary we will be selling MitG Blonde, a beer available exclusively during the festival. We were thrilled to support Music in the Gardens once again this year, the music line-up is always fantastic and there’s always a really pleasant and friendly crowd, resulting in a true party atmosphere. and we are delighted to be a part of this wonderful event once again.” Tickets for Music In The Gardens are on sale now and can be purchased by calling 0114 22 33 777 (Monday – Friday 9am to 8pm), visiting www.sivtickets.com, from Sheffield City Hall Box Office (Monday – Thursday 9am to 2pm and Friday and Saturday 9am to 5pm) or from selected outlets across Sheffield, including Design Studio and Spoilt for Choice Catering (both on Ecclesall Road) and The Curator’s House Bistro in Sheffield Botanical Gardens.

Annual Beer Census 2017

Saturday 10 June sees the return of the Annual Beer Census for 2017. As many of you will be aware, Sheffield & District CAMRA organises this city-wide survey to collect information on which beers are available in the city on a particular day. We have been doing this for a few years now, and we are pleased to say that despite various claims from other cities such as Norwich, Derby and Nottingham, the information on the number of beers on sale usually shows that Sheffield can rightly claim to be Beer Capital of the UK. This claim was given further weight after the findings of the recent Beer Report, commissioned by Sheffield University and written by well-known author Pete Brown. It is now time to undertake the census again, and we are looking to enlist more volunteers to help collect the information. There are several daytime crawls, starting in various suburbs and working into the centre, followed by a number of city centre crawls in the evening. Each crawl will be led by a designated leader who will have the survey forms and a planned route through the various pubs. Daytime crawls will start at 12 noon, and eventually arrive at the Red Deer on Pitt street by early evening to hand in the completed forms. Evening crawls then start from the Red Deer moving out through the center and regrouping in the Kelham Island area. The crawls are a sociable way to try different pubs and clubs from your usuals, as well as helping to further the beer scene in Sheffield. Most of the routes will involve public transport at some point, but your route leader will have details and can advise on costs etc. If you would like to join on one of the crawls simply be at the start point for midday and look out for someone carrying survey forms, and a copy of Beer Matters. If you can’t make the start, simply email us at social@sheffieldcamra.org.uk and we will pass on the mobile number of the appropriate leader so you can arrange directly with them where you can join on the crawl. If you are unable to join on a crawl, but would still like to help with collecting information, we will have an interactive survey section on the Sheffield CAMRA website where you will be able to enter details on the day. It will be updated in real time so you will be able to see which pubs still need surveying. We will need the name of the pub, and then for each cask ale on sale that day we need the name of the beer; the brewery; % strength; and price of a pint. There will be a Notes section where you can add if the pub serves real cider and keg beer. It would be great to see a few more faces on the crawls, and even better if we can prove yet again that Sheffield is unrivalled in it’s range and quality of beer on sale. The routes this year (and how to get to the starting points) are as follows: Route A – Dore, Totley, Abbeydale Rd. Starting at Devonshire Arms, Dore. Route Leader: Mick Saxton. Buses 81, 82, 181, 272 and M17. Route B – Norton Lees, Woodseats, Heeley, London Rd. Starting at The Abbey, Woodseats. Route Leader: Dom Nelson. Buses 18a, 24, 25, 43, 43a, 44, 44a, 75 and 76. Route C – Ecclesall Rd. Starting at Hammer & Pincers. Route Leader: Alan Gibbons. Buses 4 and 88. Route D – Deepcar, Bradfield, Stocksbridge. Starting at Rawson Spring, Hillsborough. Route Leader: Dave Pickersgill. Buses 31, 52, 57, 61, 62, 81, 82, 85, 97, 98 and the Blue tram. Route E – Attercliffe, Meadowhall, Chapeltown. Starting at The Wagon & Horses, Chapeltown. Route Leader: Patrick Johnson. Buses 1, 1a, 29, 86, 265 or train to Chapeltown station. Route F – Walkley, Commonside, Crookes, Broomhill. Starting at Walkley Cottage. Route Leader: Paul Crofts. Buses 31, 52 and 95. Route G – Lodge Moor, Nether Green, Ranmoor. Starting at The Three Merry Lads. Route Leader: John Beardshaw. Bus 51. Routes H, I, J – City Centre (afternoon). Starting at Sheffield Tap, Sheffield Station. Route Leader: John Bratley and others. Buses 1, 1a, 4, 4a, 6, 7, 8, 8a, 18, 43, 43a, 44, 53, 56, 65, 71, 85, 95, 181, 215, 218, 271, 272, 273, 274, 275, X1, X17 or Tram or Train. Routes K, L, M will be done in the evening after all volunteers meet at the Red Deer around 7pm.

Closing Times

About twenty years ago my father, Michael Liversidge, produced a book entitled The A-Z of Sheffield Public Houses. The book was well received by the people of Sheffield and sold reasonably well for a small print run, local interest, book. This book is now a collectors item. Albeit disinterested at the time, I have come to notice that the book which included over 600 images and small profiles or simple addresses has seen closures of around 400 of the hostelries that were still serving when my father was a frequent pub-goer.

Using over 100 of his original colour images (the A-Z book was printed in black and white only, so some of these images will be seen in colour for the first time) I have tried to find the exact locations of some of these now demolished drinking establishments to produce a then-and-now format book. Places like the Broughton Inn which was sited where the corner of the Sheffield Motorpoint Arena car park now stands, The Hole in the Wall now literally, itself, a hole in the wall just before the Wicker, The Hare and Hounds Nursery Street where, at the time just before going to press, I took an image of the rubble of the demolished pub with just the letter H of the pub sign still on view. The Beehive in Wadsley is now a Tesco supermarket which the last landlady stated was the very reason for the closure, cheap alcohol. Other now defunct old pubs are being used as businesses, turned into apartments, flats and houses. A prime example is the Haychatter Inn in Bradfield which is now a private dwelling known as Haychatter House. The Furnival on Verdon Street has been re-launched as a religious establishment The Methodist Church of Sheffield.

I hope you are reminded of some of the good times you had in these old Sheffield public houses and hopefully go out and take some photographs yourself of the places that are there one minute and gone the next. Go on, get your cameras out.

The list within the book is in alphabetical order A to L of Sheffield public houses. List M to Y will be in volume two.

Mark Liversidge

Introducing your new Sheffield & District CAMRA Committee

As we mentioned in our last issue, there were several changes to the committee following the recent AGM, with a existing members changing roles and a few new faces entering the fray. Together, we are hoping to continue working hard for the real ale drinkers of Sheffield and the surrounding areas. We thought we would introduce ourselves, so here goes… Jpeg Chair, Mick Saxton: Beer has been an important part of my life for over forty years and, although I brew beer at home, I love the life and atmosphere of a good British pub. In many respects I am a traditionalist, and I have strong views on the directions in which the British beer brewing and drinking scenes are being pulled. I also believe in encouraging as many CAMRA members as possible to get involved in branch activities and decision-making, so that we can say with confidence that we are a representative campaigning body. Therefore, I feel very privileged to have the chair of CAMRA’s Sheffield & District branch at this interesting time, to help promote and support cask conditioned beers, real ciders and perries, and British pubs. LOUISE SINGLETON Vice Chair and Beer Festival Organiser, Louise Singleton: I became involved with Sheffield CAMRA when I volunteered to help at the 2011 AGM. Following that I volunteered at the festival at Ponds Forge, and was soon given the task of Staffing Officer. I became Chair of the Festival Organising Committee for the 41st festival, and again this year. I am not from a Beer Industry background as I work in Pensions Administration, and although working 60+ hours on the festival week I really enjoy it, though at times through the tiredness it doesn’t seem that way! It is a long 11 months organising the festival with many obstacles to overcome, but I do enjoy working with the other volunteers and am very proud of what we achieve together. PAUL CROFTS Secretary, Press Officer and Deputy Festival Organiser, Paul Crofts: I joined the committee 2 years ago, after many years of appreciating CAMRA’s work in promoting good beer and pubs. I work in the furniture industry for a local manufacturer and am a big music fan, particularly live music. As a born and bred Sheffielder, I’m keen to help promote Sheffield’s breweries and pubs and I believe that is something the committee will build on in the coming year. I am involved with the Steel City Beer & Cider Festival, which is something I really enjoy and have taken on the role of Deputy Organiser for this year. (Spare time is so last year!) If you see me out and about, feel free to stop me for a chat and we can lower a couple for the tonsils (one of my favourite phrases, courtesy of P. G. Wodehouse). Treasurer, Andy Cullen: Andy has been actively involved in CAMRA for over 15 years after being recruited to sit on a national younger members task group, since holding roles locally including secretary, membership secretary and Chairman; also editing Beer Matters magazine for many years up until last month – this is the first issue with new editors Dom and Poppy! Andy has also been staffing officer at the Steel City Beer & Cider Festival for almost every one held since becoming active in the branch, except from 2012 to 2015 when responsible for the beer order! DP 21 02 2016 Pub Heritage Officer, Dave Pickersgill: CAMRA member since the late 1970’s: SCBF43 will be the 36th. Sheffield CAMRA festival at which he’s worked. Leads on Pub Heritage and associated issues within the branch. His e-book on Worksop and Retford Brewery has now sold over 100 copies! Bio picture1 Social Secretary, Patrick Johnson: I moved to Sheffield from Newcastle 5.5 years ago and straight into the Kelham Island area to partake of its many glorious pubs and myriad pale ales. While I’ve been a member for almost 11 years, I was ‘activated’ only last year and am continuing in the same committee position again this year; it must have been good! IMG_3578 Beer Matters Editor, Dominic Nelson: I first came to Sheffield as a student seven years ago, and the beer is one of the things I really like about this city. I’ve been drinking real ale and going to beer festivals for a few years now although I only joined CAMRA in December last year. I enjoy writing, so this is a perfect role for me really! I’m looking forward to getting the news out there about the great breweries and beers that Sheffield has to offer. I’ll be working closely with our Social Media Coordinator, Poppy, to try and reach as many people as possible. If there’s anything you would like to see in the magazine, you could just send me an email, but why not try and find me in the pub? IMG_3575 Social Media Coordinator, Poppy Hayhurst: I didn’t really think I was into real ale, but I downloaded a beer scoring app a couple of years ago and have checked in over 500 different beers since then (not all full pints, don’t worry!) so I guess I’m a convert. I spent a year exploring all the microbreweries and beer festivals in South London, and having moved to Sheffield earlier this year joined CAMRA as a way of meeting people with similar beery interests. My background is in marketing so I’m looking forward to growing Sheffield & District CAMRA’s social media presence and I’m sure you’ll be hearing a lot more from me in the run-up to the Steel City Beer & Cider festival. committee man Committee Member, Glyn Mansell: After a number of years as a draught Guinness drinker (I still enjoy one occasionally) Graham my brother cajoled me to start drinking real ale. I remember many years ago going with friends to a new pub called the Fat Cat (originally called The Alma?), apparently a “Real Ale Pub”. That was the start of my idea of a really good pub, now supported with many others in Sheffield and elsewhere. Graham and I are to be found most Thursday evenings exploring other pubs in Sheffield. I joined CAMRA a few years ago having an interest in real ale issues and started attending Sheffield and District Branch Meetings just over a year ago. So far I’ve really enjoyed the Peak District Pub Trips and a RambAle walk. Currently my position is a Committee Member and at branch/committee meetings I raise issues and ask questions. My interest is supporting all Sheffield real ale pubs and how to encourage more CAMRA members to vote for their local pub. My other interests are walking in the countryside (staggering if on a pub crawl), travelling, cycling, conservation work and having fun with our grandchildren. SARAH MILLS Real Cider Champion, Sarah Mills:  Hi, my name is Sarah Mills. I have been a member of CAMRA for about seven years. I was encouraged to join because I wanted to get involved with the beer festival. I joined at the time when cider was a small sideline and since I have been joint cider bar manager I have seen it go from strength to strength. I enjoy talking about the ciders we sell and like to encourage customers to try the new things we have on offer. Also on the committee: Pub of the Year and Good Beer Guide Coordinator, Alan Gibbons; Pubs Campaign Coordinator, Mark Boardley.

Volunteers’ Week 2017

Volunteers’ Week is an annual UK-wide initiative organised each year by the National Council for Voluntary Organisations (NCVO), and this year it runs from 1–7 June. The week is an opportunity to celebrate, thank and inspire the thousands of CAMRA members who give their time to the Campaign in a variety of roles. There are many ways CAMRA members can get involved with their local branch as a volunteer. As well as the committee positions, members can help out by distributing magazines, working at festivals, scoring beer online, lobbying your local politicians or simply promoting the Campaign on social media. There’s something to suit everyone! If you would like to join CAMRA, simply go to join.camra.org.uk for more information. If you’re already a member and want to get more involved, why not come along to our monthly branch meeting? June’s meeting will be held at the Greystones on Tuesday 6 June at 8pm.

Great British Home Brew Challenge

Thornbridge Brewery have once again teamed up with Waitrose and Brew UK for the 2017 edition of the Great British Home Brew Challenge. If you are a dedicated homebrewer, or you would like to try your hand at making a good beer from the comfort of your own home, then this is the competition for you! All you have to do is create your own brew and submit it so that it can be judged by some of the most discerning palates in the world of beer. If you’re successful, your beer will be brewed at the Thornbridge brewery and sold across the country in Waitrose supermarkets. Past winners of the challenge include 2014’s Vienna IPA, 2015’s Rhubarbe de Saison and last year’s Raindrops on Roses. Entry is free and more details can be found at www.gbhomebrew.co.uk. Good luck and happy (or should that be hoppy?) brewing! thornbridge