Beerblefish HQ News

We are a Work In Progress Brewery

We are a Work In Progress Brewery

This week we learned from our friends at Brewgooder in Glasgow that they, along with Mondo Brewing Company, are setting up an initiative to try to help make the brewing industry more inclusive. It’s called “Work in Progress” and as soon as I read about it, I knew we had to sign up.

What is it?

‘Work In Progress’ is an open, de-centralised group of breweries that aspire to a more inclusive and representative beer industry, committed to taking action in our businesses and forging links with communities to increase opportunities and promote collaboration between brewers and under-represented groups in our society.

Why sign up?

Since we are already a social enterprise brewery with aims that include helping military veterans into civilian work and supporting educational charities, these ideals fit in with our business values and we want our involvement in this group to help us to think about more ways that we can be inclusive and serve the various communities we operate in.

What are we doing?

To start with, we’ll be doing a lot of thinking and discussing! As a member of Work in Progress, we’ve committed to act on the following core areas of inclusion: Anti-Racism and Black Asian and Minority Ethnic Representation – LGBT+ Representation – Female Representation – Disabled Persons Representation.

However, the group leaves it up to each brewery to develop their own unique approaches to inclusion, put them into action, and then report on them – sharing successes and failures with other members and the wider world. The group doesn’t believe there is a right or wrong way to begin a Work In Progress journey. All that is asked is that we hold ourselves and others to account, and support other members on their own journeys.

We believe that all the core areas listed above are important, but we also realise that we can’t change the world overnight, so over the coming weeks and months, we’ll be developing an inclusion strategy that focuses on what we think are realistic and achievable aims for our (very small) business, along with some aspirational ideas that we’d like to take on some day in the future.

What will we be focusing on?

All of the core areas of representation are important, and we can think of quite a few more that we want to look into as well. However, there are a few things that we’re particularly interested in:

  • As our founder and Managing Director, James, is dyslexic, inclusion relating to invisible disabilities is a key focus. We would like to explore the inclusivity of our branding, labelling and marketing in this regard, and we already have a number of ideas we’re mulling over.
  • We’ll be thinking about gender representation in a slightly less binary way. While female representation is extremely important, women are not the only underrepresented group in this category.
  • As one of our social enterprise aims is to help ex-military personnel to get back into work, we’re also interested in social inclusion and helping people to reach their potential.
  • One of the ways in which we’re already proud of being inclusive is that all of our beer and gin is vegan, allowing more people to get involved and enjoy our products.

What are the challenges?

The main challenge is our size – there are only three (soon to be four) of us working in the business and only half of the team is full time. This somewhat limits the amount we can do, and spend, on inclusion initiatives. But we really believe in doing what we can, so our strategy will include lots of little things that individually may have a small impact, but will add up to making a difference.

We’re also limited by the size and layout of our brewery – we’re not in a position, for example, to install a ground floor loo, which limits how disabled-friendly we can be (for now – but not necessarily for ever).

Another thing we’ll need to work through is balancing the different core areas against each other. There may be times when making a decision that benefits one underrepresented group means that another group is relatively disadvantaged or there is a delay to their inclusion – we’ll need to work through that as we go, but I think being conscious of the issue gets us a long way towards addressing it.

How will we stay accountable?

We’re planning to be transparent about this whole process. We’ve committed to reporting at least annually, but I’m going to add a page to this website with details of our inclusion strategy, which I’ll update as we make progress. I’ll also be reporting on the things that haven’t worked so well and looking into ways that we can measure the impact of the inclusion steps we take, so that we can report in a holistic way once a year.

How can you help?

Talk to us! If you have ideas or suggestions for things we could explore, please let us know using our Contact form or via social media. We’ll also solicit feedback after we’ve implemented something, to help us work out whether it’s had a positive inclusion impact.

We’re in this for the long haul – we can’t promise that everything we do will be perfect straight away, and we’re bound to make some mistakes along the way – but we believe that the brewing industry and the beer-drinking community can and will be more inclusive and we want to be a part of that change.

Posted by Bethany in Beerblefish HQ News, Brewed for Good
Thanks for all the love!

Thanks for all the love!

The last few months have been a really hard slog for loads of small businesses and we’ve had moments, like many other small business owners, where we’ve been disheartened and wondered whether there would ever be a road out of the shutdown. As we’ve mentioned before, we’ve been fortunate in many ways, but the uncertainty can really take its toll. 

However, the love we’ve been shown by customers old and new has been phenomenal! Yesterday, I took another look through all the messages we’ve received through the Contact Us form in the last couple of months and, apart from the odd marketing blurb, they were all from customers or potential customers asking how they could get hold of our beer and support us during the difficult times. “I want to support local businesses,” was the gist of most of them.

This has given us a great boost and helps us to know that there is a place for micro breweries, independent businesses and small enterprises despite the stranglehold that bigger operators sometimes seem to have over our industry.

So, we want to say thank you to all of you for sticking with us or even seeking us out for the first time while the world has been at a standstill – we really appreciate it, not just financially, but also in what you’ve done to help us see hope and a way forward. We’ve got some really exciting plans for the future, including our upcoming fifth birthday celebrations, so watch this space for some announcements in the next few weeks!

Posted by Bethany in Beerblefish HQ News
Support your Local Pub with the Campaign for Pubs

Support your Local Pub with the Campaign for Pubs

As brewers, our business is heavily reliant on pubs that serve their local communities. Whether they are traditional buildings with brass fittings and original Victorian tables or new micropubs slotted into unlikely spaces, pubs were already suffering before the COVID-19 crisis hit and the last three months have hastened what for some has been an inevitable swansong. 

As drinkers, we also love our pubs! While having a beer at home or a friend’s house is a great pleasure, for us, nothing beats the hustle and bustle, social interaction and experience of having a good pint in a pub, especially a pub where the landlord or landlady knows how to keep the beer in tip-top condition and the highly-trained, customer-oriented bar staff know how to pour it.

We are really fortunate to count many such great pubs among our brewery customers and also to have them close to where we live so we can enjoy a drink in comfortable (even comforting) surroundings.

But the pub’s future is at a dangerous juncture – the combination of our change in drinking habits and the COVID-19 closures has put many pubs (a lot of which are small businesses) in jeopardy, so a group of interested parties has started up a new grassroots Campaign for Pubs to try to protect the British pub trade and the group has published 10 points to save pubs – calls to government and the pub trade sector to help pubs and publicans and prevent pub closures.

We support this initiative and we are particularly aligned with the Campaign on needing a firm date for pubs to be allowed to reopen – while pubs can’t plan their reopening, breweries can’t plan their brewing schedules and there’s a real risk that pubs that would otherwise be able to open won’t be able to because they can’t get beer, or that pubs will open, but with mass-market beer that they wouldn’t otherwise serve, pushing out the independent breweries who may struggle to regain their foothold.

The 10 Points include the call for an immediate announcement confirming July 4th as reopening day, for clear guidance to be published next week, and for an announcement that social distancing will be set at 1 and not 2 metres.

The 10 Points to Save Pubs calls for a mandatory Covid-19 rent code for to stop the exploitation of (all) tenants not the weak voluntary code produced by the Government, and also calls for a statutory right to a rent review for all pub tenants, all of whom will be facing restrictions on their ability to trade.

It also calls for 5% VAT for 12 months, to help pubs and the hospitality and tourism sectors get back on their feet.  It also calls for the Government to announce hugely overdue business rates reform to commence by April 2021, and for business rate relief for pubs until a new system comes in.

In addition, with pubs now facing the very real threat that property owners and large pubcos will look to close and redevelop many pubs at this difficult time, a 12-month moratorium on all change of use for pubs is called for to protect and preserve valued community locals up and down the country. This is especially vital considering the very worrying recent news that the Government is considering moving to a “zonal” planning system where key decisions are taken away from local councils and handed to development corporations, something which is absolutely opposed by the Campaign for Pubs. There have even been suggestions that developers could be given “complete flexibility” by Government over changes of use, a decision which would be truly catastrophic as it would open the floodgates for mass pub losses with communities unable to stop them.

The Campaign welcomes the financial support given to many pubs so far, but much of it is not going where it needs to go. Some pub-owners, including regulated pubcos, have relentlessly demanded that publicans hand over Government COVID-19 support grants in full or partial rent, denying those pubs a vital financial lifeline whilst closed and with zero revenue. In addition, many larger pubs were excluded from receiving any grant at all. The Campaign for Pubs backs the #RaisetheBar campaign which advocates grants for pubs of all sizes, and also the #NoPubNoRent campaign which highlights the continued scandal of punitive rent demands for closed pubs.

The full list of the 10 Points to Save Pubs is:

  1. A definite date for opening NOW! (by Friday 19th June)
  2. Social distancing of 1 metre – not 2 metres (or most pubs simply cannot open)
  3. Clear full guidance for pubs and insurance companies to be issued by Friday 26th June – pubs need real clarity about any physical infrastructure requirements, and also about specific responsibilities and liability issues, so that they can be properly insured under fair policies which will be honoured
  4. Relaxation of licensing restrictions where extra spaces would help smaller pubs operate more viably and safely
  5. A strong mandatory Covid-19 rent code of conduct including a statutory right to a rent review for all pub tenants
  6. A rent-free period for all pubs, and an extended period of protection from landlords if rent cannot be paid
  7. Continued financial support for staff – extended fully-paid furlough where pubs are unable to viably/safely trade due to continued Government restrictions
  8. VAT to 5% for at least 12 months – the only sensible way to help with reduced margins, as any price increases would reduce trade even further
  9. Business rates reform – announced now and implemented in April 2021 – and rates relief for all pubs until a reformed system comes in
  10. A 12 month ban on all change of use for pubs – pubs need protection in the planning system now even more than eve

The Campaign for Pubs is urging all pub lovers to back the #10PointstoSavePubs to stop many pub closures – and to call on their MPs and the Government to back them too – and save pubs.

The Campaign for Pubs is a dynamic mass membership group, open to all who love and care about pubs.  Unlike any other sector organisation, it unites publicans, pub campaigners, customers and suppliers, including some of the UK’s leading smaller brewers. The Campaign for Pubs exists to provide a #realvoiceforpubs and to campaign for a better, freer and fairer, more sustainable pub sector. The Campaign for Pubs’ mission statement lays out this powerful vision.

The Campaign for Pubs costs £25 a year to join, or £40 for a couple and members become part of a national network of those who care about pubs and their future.

Commenting, Paul Crossman, Chair of the Campaign for Pubs said:

“We need Government and others to really acknowledge and address very real threat currently facing thousands of much-loved community pubs up and down the country. We need urgent action to support and save pubs that have already incurred huge losses due to the COVID-19 crisis and that are still facing the dire prospect of hugely reduced trade going forward. We urge the Government to listen and act and back the Campaign for Pubs 10 Points to Save Pubs. We also urge all who value pubs to join the Campaign for Pubs and to help us get the message to Whitehall that we need real action now in order to save the UK’s hugely important and beloved community locals”.

Commenting, Campaign Director of the Campaign for Pubs, Greg Mulholland said:

“The Campaign for Pubs is hearing from many licensee members how worried they are with an uncertain future and ongoing restrictions. Already publicans are being forced out of pubs through rent demands, and soon unscrupulous developers and pubcos will inevitably be looking to develop and convert pubs. This must be stopped via a 12-month ban on any change of use. We now need concerted action from the Government and from the pub sector to save pubs and preserve a hugely important part of our country’s history and heritage. The Campaign for Pubs 10 Points to Save Pubs is the way to do this”.

Commenting, Dawn Hopkins, Vice-Chair of the Campaign for Pubs said:

“Pubs have been closed since mid-March and most pubs and publicans have had no trade and no income, yet costs have continued and worse still, pub-owning companies, including regulated pubcos, have continued to charge commercial rent which is outrageous. We need real action now to stop publicans being forced out of their pubs and to stop pubs being developed and converted. So we urge everyone who loves pubs, publicans and their customers, to back the 10 Points to Save Pubs!”

Posted by Bethany in Beerblefish HQ News
Business as Usual. Sort of.

Business as Usual. Sort of.

Hello everyone and welcome back to our blog. We’d put it on hold for a little while – it was difficult to know what to say at first and then we became extremely busy with preparations to reopen the brewery.

While we felt we had to close the brewery temporarily at the start of the lockdown, we made sure to put the time to good use by applying for a premises licence so that we can open more often than once a month. This probably completely confused the local council – someone applying to be able to open more, just as all the pubs had shut – but they were extremely helpful and we got our licence through in late April.

Many of you will know that we’ve been opening for takeaways three days a week since early May. It was a slow start because we didn’t have much stock that was ready to go out, so we only had our larger bottles and gin available, but now that the brewery is properly up and running again, we’ve been able to package the beer that was in tank and, now those tanks are freed up, start brewing again. We consider ourselves extremely lucky that our focus on heritage beer styles means that beer sitting for a bit longer in the tank is actually a good thing, not a bad one, and we haven’t had to ditch any beer so far.

We’ve found this period really challenging, as have so many businesses during the lockdown, but we’re keen to make the most of the opportunities it presents too. We’d been planning to get a premises licence for ages, but this forced the issue and we’re thrilled that we can see our lovely customers more often, albeit in a socially distanced way. It’s also made us think about packaging in a new way, and moving into mini-kegs so that you can have a draught beer experience at home has been fantastic. Please let us know if there’s anything more you’d like us to do that we aren’t yet doing – we’re always open to new ideas!

Our taproom and bottle shop (at the brewery) is open for takeaways on Thursday, Friday and Saturday every week, from 12 noon to 5 p.m. We prefer cards, but will take cash. We publish our weekly menu midweek on social media, and usually have a range of 5 litre mini-kegs, 500ml and 750ml bottles and a cask or keg for bring your own growler/sealable bottle (or you can use one of our 2 pint cartons) – plus our award-winning Limited Edition Hopped Gin. Please observe social distancing measures when you visit – there’s a sign on the door showing the process for getting your beer and gin.

Finally, in a couple of weeks we’re planning to do a “your questions answered” blog post – so, if you have any burning questions you’d like to ask us about our products, our brand, the brewery, the awards we’ve won or beer and brewing in general, please contact us and we’ll include as many as we can!

Posted by Bethany in Beerblefish HQ News, Taproom and Bottle Shop
Always Look on the Bright Side of Life

Always Look on the Bright Side of Life

As many of you will have seen, this week we took the heartbreaking decision to temporarily close the brewery because of the Coronavirus outbreak. It’s horrible, it really is, for many reasons. However, we’re determined to stay positive and here’s a few things that we’re excited about, looking forward to or thankful for, regardless of what the world’s throwing at us right now.

We have time to ourselves. Running a business alongside other careers and interests is hard. Well, running a business is hard. So now we have some time to genuinely relax, as well as catching up on paperwork and those other bits and pieces we never quite get around to doing. We also have time to dream and plan, meaning we’re really looking forward to when we open again and we can start to put those dreams and plans into action!

We’re hoping to open a delivery and/or takeout service… soon-ish! The main reason we haven’t done this already is licensing – the brewery doesn’t have a permanent premises licence and we rely on temporary event notices for our monthly tap room events. We’ve taken advantage of our little bit of downtime to become possibly the only people to apply for a premises licence in March 2020! We’re guessing it completely confused the council. Anyway, if it all goes well, we should be able to partially reopen in the nearish future – keep your eyes peeled for news.

Our house is probably the tidiest it’s been for years! We had some work done on our house last year and even though it’s nearly a year since it finished, we still have some stuff that’s not been moved back to its normal place. Mrs Beerblefish found the potato peeler in the (converted) loft today – a genuine win, both because we can now peel potatoes safely and because it’s one more item towards the loft being a properly usable space again.

Brett is great in sourdough. We’ve had many brewing-related baking accidents over the years, mostly before the brewery was commercial and James was still homebrewing. We’ll never forget the mince pies that rose or the gingerbread people that looked pregnant because of the amount of yeast floating around in our kitchen. However, we very intentionally added a small amount of brett to our sourdough starter (named Barry) and it gives a wonderful, almost meaty flavour to the bread. Definitely one to try at home!

We’ll be back again next week with some proper beer and/or gin news, but in the meantime, keep yourselves well, wash your hands and REMAIN INDOORS!

Posted by Bethany in Beer & Food, Beerblefish HQ News
Weathering the Storm

Weathering the Storm

Somewhat ironically, today’s blog post was supposed to be about holding parties at the brewery! We’ll be saving that one for another time but this is merely a blip in our blog planning and it will pass.

We’re living in uncertain times all of a sudden, and this week’s closure of pubs, bars, clubs and restaurants has a great impact on many people who work hard to provide quality beers to the general public. The owners and staff of those venues are, of course, at the front line of that impact, but there are many other links in the supply chain that will be feeling the pinch right now, from the breweries to the yeast manufacturers and from the distributors to the farms that rely on spent grain as animal feed.

We think we’re in a reasonably good place overall – our unique business model and social enterprise aims give us a bit of wiggle room to weather this kind of storm. We’re looking at ways to get our beer out there even though the pubs are shut. We’re unlikely to be brewing as much in the near future as we had planned, but we’ve got some stock of our best beers and our Limited Edition Hopped Gin, and we’re hoping to be able to find retail outlets for it very soon.

In the meantime, if you want to help us to keep going (not just financially, but motivationally!), now would be a really good time to buy a tshirt from our online tshirt store – we know that our fulfilment partner, Teemill is looking after its staff at its factory on the Isle of Wight, but many of their processes are automated, so they’re able to keep going when others might not be able to.

We’re really looking forward to what the future holds for the brewery, so keep an eye out here on our blog and on our social media for all the latest on what we’re up to.

Posted by Bethany in Beerblefish HQ News, Merchandise
Tryanuary – why you should drink beer this month!

Tryanuary – why you should drink beer this month!

In the dark days of the new year there’s often an innate urge to do something different from last year. A new year, a new you. We’re bombarded with media exhorting us to give this up or abstain from that to begin the new revolution around the sun in a healthier, fitter and more prosperous way than we ended the last one.

When it comes to beer, though, giving up drinking altogether for a month could have an impact on your ability to drink beer when February comes. We’re not talking about the health impacts here – we agree that alcohol should be consumed in moderation and that everyone who chooses to drink should drink responsibly – we’re talking about the brewing and licensed retail industries.

Breweries, bottle shops, pubs and bars typically have a field day in the run up to the festive season. Family get togethers, office parties and general joyousness lead to good sales figures and happy bank managers. However, once the Christmas decorations are back in the attic, these businesses’ sales often fall off a cliff. After the turn of the year, a combination of customers’ lack of funds and general new year’s resolve can cause small, independent businesses real damage. If we then add in pledges to not drink for a month, it can make an already bleak outlook seem even worse.

In 2015, a group of volunteers set up Tryanuary to help support the beer industry through the challenges brought by this leanest of months. The idea is to try new beers throughout the month, with special events posted on the Tryanuary website to help beer enthusiasts find their way to new brews.

With pub closure figures still increasing, it’s a case of use it or lose it. If you really want to give up alcohol for a month, then the Tryanuary campaign suggests you still visit your local and have a non-alcoholic beer, a soft drink or a bite to eat instead of your usual tipple.

As for us, we’ll be offering up something interesting for our customers to try at our Tryanuary Tap Room and Bottle Shop on Saturday, 25 January and at Stroud Green Market on Sunday, 26 January.

Remember, a pub (or a brewery) is not just for Christmas!

Posted by Bethany in Beerblefish HQ News, Brewing, Stockists
It’s a New Year’s Revolution! Veganuary and Beer

It’s a New Year’s Revolution! Veganuary and Beer

We’ve all been there. Feeling a bit overwhelmed by Christmas pudding, we crawl towards the leftover chocolates and vow that the New Year will signal a new start – no more rubbish food, no more excess. These days, many people are taking their resolutions to a new level and pledging to go vegan for the month of January – or Veganuary.

While eating a plant-based diet can seem challenging, when it comes to beer, we’ve got you covered. All Beerblefish beers are vegan and we pledge to keep them that way.

People are often confused at first when we say our beers are vegan – they often ask why they wouldn’t be, as it isn’t that obvious why animal products would be used in beer production. The answer is isinglass, a kind of gelatin derived from fish that is added to the beer as finings. The finings help any small particles to drop to the bottom of the beer, leaving it clear.

Isinglass has only been used for the last few centuries (initially in wine), and the start of its popularity coincided with people beginning to drink beer from clear glasses instead of ceramic or pewter cups. No-one cares if the beer is cloudy if they don’t have the means to try to see through it!

The finings, then, are a cosmetic addition that just isn’t needed, and we leave them out so that people following a vegan or vegetarian diet can drink our products in the happy knowledge that the fish is in our name and not in our beer!

Posted by Bethany in Beerblefish HQ News, Brewing
Merry Christmas and Happy New Year!

Merry Christmas and Happy New Year!

We’re calling it a year here at the Beerblefish Brewhouse, and we’d like to take the opportunity to thank everyone who has supported us in 2019 – customers, suppliers and fans, along with all our friends and family who continue to put up with incessant beer-talk!

We hope you all have a fantastic Christmas and a very Happy New Year, and we’ll be back in January for more fun and frolics in the worlds of beer and gin.

Posted by Bethany in Beerblefish HQ News
Beerblefish wins three Great Taste Awards!

Beerblefish wins three Great Taste Awards!

Great Taste, the world’s most coveted food and drink awards, has announced its stars of 2019. Out of 12,772 products sent in from over 100 different countries, The Beerblefish Brewing Company Limited was awarded 2-star Great Taste awards, which means judges dubbed the product above and beyond delicious, for each of its 1820 Porter and 1892 IPA, and a 1-star Great Taste award, which means judges dubbed it a drink that delivers fantastic flavour, for its Pangalactic Pale Ale.

Judged by over 500 of the most demanding palates, belonging to food critics, chefs, cooks, restaurateurs, buyers, retailers and producers, as well as a whole host of food writers and journalists, Great Taste is widely acknowledged as the most respected food accreditation scheme for artisan and speciality food producers. As well as a badge of honour, the unmistakeable black and gold Great Taste label is a signpost to a wonderful tasting product, which has been discovered through hours and hours of blind tasting by hundreds of judges. 

James Atherton, Managing Director, explains: “This was our first time entering the Great Taste Awards and we’re absolutely thrilled to have achieved such success in our inaugural outing. It’s a great honour to receive this recognition for our products – we’re really proud of the beer we create, so it’s wonderful to know that such esteemed judges value it, too. My first brewing love will always be heritage beers, so for two of our bretted ales based on 19th Century recipes to be recognised in this way is a badge of honour for me, and the award for our modern pale ale shows the versatility our brewery has.”

Recognised as a stamp of excellence among consumers and retailers alike, Great Taste values taste above all else, with no regard for branding and packaging. Whether it is vinegar, granola, bacon or cheese being judged, all products are removed from their wrapper, jar, box or bottle before being tasted. The judges then savour, confer and re-taste to decide which products are worthy of a 1-, 2- or 3-star award.

There were 12,772 entries into Great Taste this year and of those products, 208 have been awarded a 3-star, 1,326 received a 2-star and 3,409 were awarded a 1-star accolade. The panel of judges this year included; cook, writer and champion of sustainable food, Melissa Hemsley, Kenny Tutt, MasterChef 2018 champion, author, Olia Hercules, chef and food writer, Gill Meller, Kavi Thakar from Dishoom, food writer and stylist, Georgina Hayden and author and chef, Zoe Adjonyoh, as well as food buyers from Selfridges, Fortnum & Mason, Sourced Market and Partridges. These esteemed palates have together tasted and re-judged the 3-star winners to finally agree on the Golden Fork Trophy winners and the Great Taste 2019 Supreme Champion.  

Local Press Coverage

Posted by James in Awards, Beer Styles and Recipes, Beerblefish HQ News
Everything is New! (nearly)

Everything is New! (nearly)

New beers, new website, new pump clips, new staff, new equipment; simply put, everything is new apart from me, I am still here writing your blog posts that I know are read by millions around the world! OK, that may be pushing it. My cat and I are likely the only ones doing any reading, but we are ready and waiting for you all to come.

Posted by James in Beer Launch, Beerblefish HQ News
New Website

New Website

The last few days have been spent putting the finishing touches to the new look website, I hope you like the look and feel.

There is still a lot more to do but now we have a website that works nicely on mobile as well as desktop and tablets. If you see any issues please drop me a line and I will get on fixing it ASAP.

Posted by James in Beerblefish HQ News