My beer history has not included a trip to Burton on Trent, so with free entry for CAMRA members currently, a visit to the Burton Beer Festival seemed like an ideal opportunity.

Additionally for convoluted reasons involving a tombola win at Chesterfield Beer festival, I know Jeff Henderson, head brewer of Airline brewing in Maine USA. Jeff spends a two week holiday in Burton around the festival every year, so we had a chance to meet up.
My wife and I arrived on Wednesday afternoon, and went on a walk around Burton. It’s immediately obvious that despite being able to see brewery buildings all around things are not what they used to be. We pass the entrance to Molson Coors Burton Brewery, with no reference to a cask ale, and a sign that “celebrates” Carling!
Across the road there is plenty of evidence of closed up brewery buildings, and around the corner we saw one of the iconic ‘Burton Union System’ sets sat on the edge of the site, unused and unloved. At this point I was feeling a bit disheartened about Burton, so time for a beer!

We went to the Burton Bridge Inn and things started to look up. A classic old school pub that has been tastefully modernised with an excellent choice. The pub is both next door to, and owned by the Burton Bridge Brewery, who also brew the Heritage Brewing Co beers. Sat in the small sun trap beer garden overlooking the brewery I thoroughly enjoyed the Burton Bridge Bitter and Stairway to Heaven.

In the evening we went to the Roebuck Inn to meet up with Jeff. Again the Roebuck is a classic old school pub, with 6 out of 8 hand-pulls on. What followed was a delightful evening with Jeff, who it turned out stays in the Roebuck when he visits, and is essentially an honorary regular. Talking to Jeff it became clear that he has a real love for classic UK cask beer, waxing lyrical on the beautiful balance of flavours in a pint of Bass. He also had nothing but good things to say about Burton Bridge Brewery, Gates, and Tower brewery.

While I had been upset by the obvious decline in the status of Burton as a cask ale producer Jeff was eager to point out the smaller operations that are now producing classic cask styles at high quality, of which the Gates ‘Reservoir’ was an excellent example.
The next day was Festival time, but first a quick trip to the National Brewery Heritage trust that since the closure of the National Brewery Centre is trying to develop a National Hub for Britain’s Brewery and pub heritage in Burton on Trent. They have grand plans in motion, and are worth supporting ( www.breweryheritage.com )

So to the festival where we meet up again. I started steadily as normal with the Burton Bridge Sunshine Pale (3.4%), Jeff went straight for the Thornbridge Imperial Stout (7.7%) as he couldn’t wait to try it! Inspired by talking to Jeff I stayed on beers from local breweries throughout the festival, Burton Bridge, Heritage Brewing, Outwoods, Gates and Tower, and didn’t have a beer I didn’t like, a highpoint being Tower, Ale to the King (5.5%).
A quick thanks to Andy Morton who we met, and took the picture, and joined us in taking some of the large brewery name signs on offer, including his namesakes “Morton”. The Burton Festival was very enjoyable, with an afternoon of live organ music to drink to.

Late afternoon and the call of new pubs to try was too strong so we left. Not far away was the Outwoods taproom was a brilliant railway arch operation, which for a small operation had their own 3 cask and 6 keg beers on, plus 6 others. Cask Hop into the abyss was a fabulous 4.9% black IPA.
Next the Coopers Tavern that several people had recommended, and quite rightly it turned out, for the Bass on gravity if nothing else. A quick beer in the Last Heretic just before they closed, Tower, Gone for a Burton, alongside the hottest pickled onion ever, that couldn’t be finished between us! Jeff told us he loves English food, not something you hear everyday, with a soft spot for Pork Scratchings, Bacon, Sunday roasts and a crumble with custard.
Final drink with Jeff back in the Roebuck Inn, which was Gates, Reservoir Gold, a 7.5% barley wine style beer, and again a classic old school English beer.
By the end of the trip we had exchanged beermats, badges, t-shirts (Airline for me, SMOD for Jeff) and I had some Airline Brewery beer cans he’d brought over in his luggage. More importantly an exchange of appreciation for English beers and pubs, and Burton on Trent for what it is now, never mind the past. I highly recommend a trip to Burton on Trent, and like Jeff I intend the Festival visit to be an annual event in the future
PAUL RUGG






























































