In August I returned to the Great British Beer Festival for the first time in ten years. I hadn't realised that it's also a full ten since I went to my local CAMRA festival in Belfast, although it hasn't taken place for a number of those. Last year it returned but I had a scheduling conflict, so I was determined to make it along this time, heading up north a day after returning from Belgium.Gone are the days of the grandly-appointed Ulster Hall, and indeed the cavernous and draughty King's Hall. Now the venue is Banana Block, a bohemian entertainment space in the east of the city, within the same repurposed industrial complex as Boundary Brewing. Mercifully, gone too are the too-warm casks, with a properly effective stillage cooling system now in operation, and likewise no more antisocially loud live music. That made it much easier to concentrate on the beer.
The first one to catch my eye as I perused the list was Boddington's. Much has been written about AB InBev's revival of the classic Manchester bitter, now brewed at JW Lee's. Here's my chance to join the discourse. And... it's a disappointment. I never drank the classic Boddington's, only the nitrokeg version which survived into the noughties, but my understanding of this beer is that it was a) very pale, and b) very bitter. I further understood that Marble's Manchester Bitter is intended as a close recreation, and it is indeed both those things. What I received in Belfast was distinctly amber coloured and fruity flavoured, with noticeable strawberry and peach notes on a lightly tannic base. The texture is soft, not spiky. Above all, it isn't especially bitter. I mean, as a bitter it's fine, but is suspiciously close to what I remember about the JW Lees flagship. My theory is that this only works as a revival of Boddington's when it's poured beneath the distinctive canary-yellow pumpclip: that's an essential ingredient which was absent from the offer in Belfast.
I wasn't going to miss a rare opportunity to catch up with beers from Otterbank, and especially since The Magic Road took third prize in the festival competition, against two much stronger beers. It's only 4.1% ABV and is a rose-gold sour ale brewed with strawberries. There's a lot more complexity than that suggests, beginning with a technicolor aroma of peach and pineapple. There was lots of condition from the cask, meaning both aroma and flavour in spades. The sourness manifests in the latter as gooseberry with a softer touch of white grape and then a modest degree of sweet strawberry jam in the finish. It's easy drinking without being at all thin or sharp, and the multidimensional flavour makes for highly entertaining drinking. Definitely a deserving prize winner.
Otterbank also brought a session IPA called Grianán Gold, light even by the style's standards at 3.6% ABV. "Gold" suggests a paleness it doesn't have, being red again, and a little murky with it. The mouthfeel is on the thin side, which is perhaps to be expected, though it's another beer with excellent sparkling condition. I suspect there's been some wild microbial goings-on in this, whether intended or not. The aroma sparks with bonfires and gunpowder, while the flavour chooses bold peppercorns and oaky Rioja over hops. That makes it a little intense for the session, and not really an IPA, so you really need to leave questions of style fidelity aside. I still thought it was an excellent beer, however.
Top prize in the judging went to local outfit Bullhouse, collaborating with Lacada on a double IPA called Big Nellie. It immediately looked odd: an opaque pinkish shade, out of keeping for even the most deliberately murky of IPAs. Despite this, it's not in the least bit dreggy and has a superbly serious hop aroma, all citrus pith and weedy dank. The flavour goes big on juice, in the New England way: lots of jaffa orange, and then a fun hint of tropical coconut in the finish. Served on keg, it was especially cold, and I think that helps when the ABV is up at 8.4%. There was no heat or soupiness, just big hops followed by a clean finish. I'm not sure I would have ranked it higher than the third-place Otterbank, but it is fully deserving of a rosette of some sort.
I could have done better at exploring Norn Irish beers from breweries I didn't know, since the selection was superb, but my only new producer tick was Rough Brothers, their IPA. This is a clear amber colour and 5.6% ABV, drawing an immediate parallel with Sierra Nevada Pale Ale. And it does have a certain amount of that one's resinous quality, but really not enough of it. A big IPA like this needs a matching punch of hops, and this didn't deliver, being clean and simple, but very unexciting. Had it been a point or two lower in ABV I would have let it pass, but I think I was within my rights to expect more. So, yes, you can make hoppy beer in the cask format, but you have to work a lot harder at it than this.
Time for more English beers next. I like a bit of rye now and then, and it seems to have gone somewhat out of fashion, so for old time's sake I picked Yomp!, an amber rye ale from The Park Brewery in Kingston-upon-Thames. It's certainly amber: a deep and luxurious shade of red. If that was supposed to convey a malty richness, it didn't: it's only 4.1% ABV and a little watery on it. Still, they've had fun with the hops, which say nothing in the aroma but explode on the palate with colourful flourishes of rosewater and lavender. The finish is dry and thirst-quenching, but arrives annoyingly quickly. I liked the basics of what they've done here, but subtlety doesn't suit it. I'd like to try a beefed up version; one with at least some discernible rye character, for one thing.
A Green Hop pale ale from Burning Sky? Well that's not something any sane person would pass up. Gimme. This is 4.2% ABV, a pin-bright clear golden, and... well... maybe it hasn't been the best year for hops or something. There's not much aroma, only the biscuit base for something else which never arrived. In the flavour there's a certain amount of flowers and grass, making it taste more like a basic Czech lager than an English ale, with a similar sort of quick finish. It's simple and inoffensive, but I found it rather characterless. I think this is another situation where cask demands more hops, especially if they're bespoke rather than industrially farmed and processed for maximum impact. It was worth a try, though.
Old ale is another rarity, and Sussex brewery Hand had one at the festival, called Kora. This is 5.8% ABV and a proper dark teak colour; lacking head but that's part of the character. The aroma is an enticing wintery mix of dark chocolate and red wine, while the flavour features espresso, toffee and honeycomb, on an appropriately chewy texture, very much designed for slow sipping. It would have been excellent were it not for the foretaste which is highly autolytic: a savoury soy sauce effect that clashes badly with the sweeter aspects. I guess that's acceptable within the style parameters; that if you're going to make a beer old, it is going to autolyse. I think it needs cleaning up, however. Enjoyment of the finished product is far more important than the process of making it.That's all I had time for, and it was back to the station next. Luckily, John had nipped around to Boundary for some cans before we left, and was kind enough to share them on the train.
Monkey Tennis is a hazy pale ale of 4.5% ABV. There's little here which doesn't feature in a million similar beers, starting with the garlic aroma and hint of dankness. In the flavour, there's not much, but it has body enough to carry some vanilla up front and a kick of lime bitterness on the end. The lack of plasterboard grit was a bonus, but honestly I don't think haze works well at low gravity, and needs the big silky mouthfeel to function properly.
And finally a west coast IPA called The Best Kind of Correct, though I'm not sure that 5% ABV is any kind of correct for authenticity. It is at least clear and golden, and has a wonderful fresh and leafy hop spice aroma, suggesting resinous bitterness to come. Unfortunately, it fluffs the landing, and instead of pine and grapefruit there's a massive kick of raw white onion. That's sharp and clean in its own way, but rather savoury and sweaty at the same time. Maybe this, too, needs to be a bit less Irish about its ABV and go all in for the heft. Is stronger than 5% really so much of a hard sell for a brewery like Boundary?I will leave the day's proceedings on that question. It was a fun day out. Thanks especially to Ruth and the squad of volunteers from CAMRA NI, as well as those who came from further afield for the event. I've been hearing nothing but doom and ruin regarding CAMRA since the summer, and this event was a reminder of what it does well and why it's worth rescuing.






































