Brewing

Coming Soon: Vegan Oyster Mushroom Stout!

Coming Soon: Vegan Oyster Mushroom Stout!

GOTCHA! Hope you didn’t fall too hard for our April Fool (we’ve kept it below in case you missed it)!

But we do have real new beer news and our little joke wasn’t too far from the truth. We have indeed always wanted to make an oyster stout and, as a brewery committed to only producing vegan beers, that’s been a no-no. So we’ve worked around it and made a stout using oyster mushrooms!

Our oyster mushroom stout really is in tank right now and it will be available for drinking in the next couple of weeks, so keep an eye out for news. The word on the streets of Walthamstow’s most glamorous industrial estate is that it’s tasting amazing!


The original post…

At Beerblefish we’re really proud of our commitment to keep our beers vegan, always. We’ve written much before about how we achieve this, and it means that some styles of beer are off-limits to us, or very difficult to make – no milkshake IPAs or honey beers for us!

However, we’ve always wanted to make an oyster stout and now, finally, we’ve found a way to do it – by using entirely vegan oysters grown specifically for the purpose right here in the Lea Valley. These oysters have never touched an animal product; no bacon butties for breakfast, no milk in their tea.

After a tense and meticulous growing program, our brewer, Michaela, put on her waders and carefully harvested enough to put in one small brew. She likes to call the oyster beds her “water allotment” – an extension of the land-based allotment she lovingly tends throughout the year.

One of the benefits of using vegan oysters is that they are less likely to produce pearls, meaning there’s less chance of breaking your tooth on one if it slips into your pint. Our oyster stout is in the tank now and should be ready to drink in the next couple of weeks – keep an eye on our social media for a launch date!

Posted by James in Beer Launch, Beer Styles and Recipes, Brewing
Cashmere Brut IPA is Gluten Free!

Cashmere Brut IPA is Gluten Free!

For quite some time, we’ve thought it likely that our Cashmere Brut IPA would be gluten free, but as with all things that could be harmful to anyone, we had to make sure. Along with many of our other beers, Cashmere is treated with Brewer’s Clarity, which contains a highly specific fungal endopeptidase enzyme to help remove haze from beer. One of the things that is cleared out by the enzyme is gluten – reducing the residual gluten in the beer is effectively a side effect of reducing the haze and trying to make our beer clearer.

As all our beer is vegan, we don’t use isinglass finings in our beers, meaning we have to find other ways to make them clear. We use Brewer’s Clarity as part of that process meaning that a beer being both gluten free and vegan is no coincidence.

We recently sent off a sample of our bottled Cashmere Brut IPA to Murphy & Son for testing and today we received the results: the beer has less than 10 parts per million gluten, meaning it’s well within the 20 ppm legal limit to call it gluten free.

We’re always looking for ways to make our beers more accessible. Making them all vegan was an easy first step, but we’ve been dragging our heels on taking on the gluten free world because we’ve had so much else going on – but now we’re proud to say that our Cashmere Brut IPA is gluten free and we’re thrilled that this means that even more people will be able to enjoy it!

Posted by Bethany in Beer Styles and Recipes, Beerblefish HQ News, Brewed for Good, Brewing
Keeping Mumme

Keeping Mumme

Right now, Mumme is in fact the word. No, not the sparkling grape-derived drink with a similar brand name, but rather our new-but-old-but-new historically-inspired ale that hailed originally from Germany.

As you’ll know by now, we love a heritage beer at Beerblefish – our range based on nineteenth century recipes has been around for a few years and we’ve just decided to make our Viking Ale a permanent fixture (with a shiny new label – more to come on that) – and the latest style to take our fancy is from the German city of Braunschweig (or Brunswick in English). This style was called Mumme in Braunschweig, but was often written Mum in England.

In common with many more recent brews, there were two types of Mumme brewed – one was made for the home market and was low in alcohol, while the other was exported – known as Schiffsmumme because it was for shipping.

The people of Braunschweig had started brewing Mumme by the time it was first recorded in the late fifteenth century and it remained popular until the late eighteenth century, at which time its popularity started to wane – helped along in Britain by a high import duty no doubt designed to protect the British brewing industry. An ale called Mum continued to be brewed in Ireland (then part of the UK) but other beers took over and the style was consigned to the beer history books.

Braunschweiger Mumme’s demise predates the national adoption of the German beer purity law, but it is thought that this kind of ale brewed in northern Germany was part of the reason that Bavaria, in the south, introduced the law in the early sixteenth century, in order to protect Bavaria’s own beers from competition – Mumme used ingredients that fell outside the beer purity law, including herbs, spices and stone fruits (usually plums or prunes).

Our Mumme includes prunes, cardamom, cinnamon, camomile and orange peel, which are made into a kind of tea before being added to the wort. It took Michaela and Glenn a few tries to get the combinations and proportions right and they found it was better to brew a tea with each ingredient and then combine them, rather than starting with a mixture of ingredients.

The malt bill for our Mumme includes three types of malted barley (extra pale, crystal 150 and Munich malt) along with dark malted wheat. The only hop is Hallertauer Mittelfruh, which is used for bittering, while the spiced tea does all the work for the flavour and aroma.

The result is a dark, slightly smoky ale with a spicy and fruity edge to it and a silky mouthfeel. At 6.9% ABV, it’s quite robust, but still very drinkable and very different from anything we’ve brewed before.

You’ll find it now in our online shop and it will be available from our stockists very soon. Tried it? Let us know what you think!

Posted by Bethany in Beer Launch, Beer Styles and Recipes, Brewing, Research and Trips
New Beer! Tezamen – Together

New Beer! Tezamen – Together

In September, we reached a milestone in our story – our 100th brew. We wanted to brew something really special, so we decided to mark the occasion by inviting our friends at Pope’s Yard Brewery (Hertfordshire) over for the return leg of our collaboration.

The result of that brew is a beautiful Flanders Winter Ale that we’ve called “Tezamen”, which means “Together” in Flemish Dutch and symbolises both the collaboration itself and the togetherness that we’re all striving to create in these uncertain times.

Tezamen Flanders Winter Ale

In designing the label, we’ve taken inspiration from the art nouveau heritage of Belgian architecture and typography, with the background hinting at socially distanced people all linked together despite how far apart they are.

The beer itself, at 6% ABV, is a dark reddish-brown ale with a full body and the hint of residual sweetness that’s typical of a Belgian beer.

Whether you’re able to socialise (safely) in person this winter or you’re partying by video call, we hope you’re able to enjoy this beer as intended: Tezamen – together.

Tezamen is available now in our online shop and from the brewery bottle shop – see below for our Christmas opening times.

""
Posted by Bethany in Beer Launch, Beer Styles and Recipes, Brewing
Hopping Mad!

Hopping Mad!

It’s harvest time for hops! We’ve known that the Lea Valley is a rich hopping ground for a long time and we’ve wanted to make a green hop beer with local hops for just as long – after all, our Limited Edition Hopped Gin is flavoured with self-seeded hops from Walthamstow, just the other side of the river from the Beerblefish Brewhouse.

However, we weren’t expecting the lovely surprise we got this week when we discovered that the wild (or at least self-seeded) hop plants growing up the gates to the industrial estate where we’re based had borne fruit, and was laden with beautiful cones ripe for the picking.

""

We had previously agreed with the landlord and the neighbouring industrial estate that we could pick and use any hops that grew – we’ve seen several hop plants in the neighbourhood over the four and a half years that we’ve been here, but none of them have ever produced cones before.

As with our gin hops, we have no definitive idea what variety these are – there are two plants and, from the hint of mint, we think one of them might be a Fuggles variety. The other has a slight lemony aroma, but that doesn’t narrow it down massively given the myriad citrusy hop varieties.

The hop plants are less than 50 metres from the brewery door, so we picked them and then ran them straight into the freezer to preserve all their hoppy goodness, ready for Michaela to brew them into a green hop beer. Keep an eye out for our green hop brew over the coming weeks!

Posted by Bethany in Beer Styles and Recipes, Beerblefish HQ News, Brewing
All About… James

All About… James

What’s yer name and where d’ya come from?

My name is James Atherton and I grew up in Leeds. I moved to London via Manchester and Edinburgh and for the past ten years I’ve lived in Harringay, North London with my wife, Bethany, and our cat Ozric.

James and Ozzy the Cat

What made you decide to become a brewer and how did you get to where you are now?

I first started making beer at university when I realised that homebrewing was cheaper than even student bar prices. I moved around a bit after graduating from my Biochemistry and Computer Science degree, and it wasn’t until we moved into our current house ten years ago that I had the space to homebrew again. 

A few years later, I heard about UBREW, a homebrewing club that allowed me to brew on shared equipment in Bermondsey on a scale that wouldn’t be possible in our cellar. Friends and family told me that these beers were good and that I should consider setting up commercially. I had intended to do so on a commercial kit that UBREW were installing, but in the end we managed to get our current space in Edmonton before that came to fruition. Our kit came from a defunct brewery in Suffolk and we did our first brew in our own premises in October 2016.

Since then, the brewery has continued to grow – we hired our first staff in June 2018 and I was thrilled to welcome our new brewer, Michaela, in August this year.

What’s been the most challenging thing about establishing your brewing career?

This interview and overcoming intense apathy. Seriously, working out what I was doing it for. The whole point of setting up a brewery was that I enjoyed creating and brewing beers and I’m not hugely incentivised by making massive profits. I need to eat, of course, but money was never the driving force behind the brewery. That’s why, in 2017, Bethany and I decided to refocus the brewery as a social enterprise, concentrating on how we could make it do good in the world. 

At the time, my cousin was trying to find a civilian job after a career in the army, so we decided to see if we could help people in a similar situation by hiring people coming out of the armed forces who were interested in a career in brewing; one of our first employees was ex-Royal Artillery. My professional background is in IT, so I also decided to give time and, when possible, money to charities that provide IT education.

""
The first ever commercial pint of Beerblefish Bloodletter

What’s the best beer you’ve ever drunk and why?

There’s absolutely no way I can narrow this down to one beer, so here’s a selection of my favourites:

  • Ohana Kumquat IPA – this is a perfectly-balanced beer with an amazing body and carbonation and it was totally unexpected. The best beer on a three week tour of Southern California breweries.
  • Rodenbach Grand Cru – just amazing. A balance of sour and malt and subtle hop, mixed fermentation flavours…it just has everything.
  • Cantillon 2013 Lou Pepe Kriek – easily the best kriek I’ve ever tasted. Subtle, soft, sour and the aftertaste was not like any other fruit sour because there were no edges to it.
  • Beerblefish Bloodletter II aged 18 months – this was the forerunner to our 1892 IPA. It was good when it was first in the bottle, but slightly harsh on the bitterness; having mellowed for 18 months, it took on a slight hint of sour balanced with rounded bitterness and a strong malt profile – it drank like a 4% beer when it was actually 7.2%!
  • Westvleteren 12 – heaven in a glass. Sweet but not cloyingly so, velvety, soft, great with food – the best beer you can have with monastic paté.
  • Iron Fist Velvet Glove – this is the best stout I’ve had anywhere in the world. It does exactly what it says on the tin – it caresses you with a velvet glove then knocks you out with an Iron Fist.

And what about the best beer you’ve brewed?

A toss-up between 1892 IPA and 1820 Porter. I love the mixed fermentation character. Traditional British ale flavours are paired with the slight sour berry flavours from the brettanomyces, plus there’s a twist of modern hops on the aroma.

And the worst?

The first ever homebrew done in the cellar of our current house. It was horrific. I bittered with Columbus hops and the flavour hops were Cascade. It had a pale slightly golden colour, poured and looked great, crisp white head, nice carbonation out of the keg. It tasted of burnt, bitter onion peel or overcooked garlic. Disgusting. I’d used too much Columbus, there was far too much bitterness and, as I later discovered, I hate Columbus hops with a fiery passion. If they’re in a beer, I can now detect them at about 18 inches from my face and it is the work of Satan in hop form.

If you were only allowed to keep one beer style forever, what would it be?

Flanders red. Because it’s amazing.

Other than the obvious two (Covid and Brexit), what do you think are the biggest challenges facing the independent brewing industry right now?

Even though you said I couldn’t have Brexit, I’m still going to say Brexit as the biggest challenge. AI singularity or asteroid strike are next. After that, the Small Brewers’ Duty Relief Coalition. They want to penalise small brewers by pulling up the ladder that allowed them to get to where they are. While I don’t think that Small Brewers’ Relief on duty is perfect and I understand that the current cliff-edge in the taper system is unhelpful, the solution is not to make smaller breweries pay more duty while larger breweries pay less.

What are you most looking forward to for the future of Beerblefish?

Eventually moving the brewery to somewhere with enough space that we don’t have to stack the staff on top of the fermenters. Also, to one day have all 10 of our fermenters in operation (currently we’re at seven). This interview being over. Oh, and all the lovely beers we’ve got coming up – we’ll be doing a batch of our Viking Ale with Kveik yeast soon and, after a very successful pilot, we’ll be brewing a larger batch of our new gingery bitter, Gingerbeerble. And finally, I’m excited about tasting our hundredth brew, which is a Flanders red that we brewed this week in collaboration with our friends at Pope’s Yard Brewery

""

Which Beerblefish beer is your favourite at the moment?

As we head into Autumn, it’s either our new Gingerbeerble or our fresh batch of lovely Cashmere. I also enjoyed the mini casks of our small batch Belgian Porter over the summer. 

If you could brew any beer in any style, with no restrictions on price or quantity of ingredients, what would it be?

It would be an 8.6% version of 1892 IPA, aged for 18 months in a wooden foeder; I’d split the batch 50/50 and age half of it on cherries for 6 months and then blend it back with a fresh batch before bottling. 

So, there you have it: all about James. Thanks, James, for doing this interview.

Posted by Bethany in Beer Styles and Recipes, Beerblefish HQ News, Brewing
How We Design Our Beers – Part 2

How We Design Our Beers – Part 2

Last week we took a look at how we at Beerblefish design our range of Heritage Ales. This week, we’re moving onto how we create our contemporary beers. The current trend for drinkers wanting new and exciting beers all of the time means that we do a lot more of this than we do designing new heritage brews. It’s led us to creating a couple of series of beers where we only change one variable. 

The first of those series to come about was our Hoppy Pale Ale series. The brews are simply numbered in sequence and are designed to showcase hops and not the yeast or malt. The malt bill is 100% extra pale malt and we stick to a one hour boil time, pitching at 20 degrees Celsius for a clean fermentation – unlike our heritage brews, we’re not looking for the funky yeast flavours we can get by experimenting with fermentation temperature. 

We usually select two or three hops to include, carefully deciding (by smell) which of the hops we have in stock work well together. If there’s an exciting new hop out that we haven’t tried before, we might order it in and include it.

Following on from the success of the Hoppy Pale Ale series, we’ve got its first younger sibling, Hoppy Little Fish No.1, in the fermenter at the moment – this will be the first of our new series of table beers, still showcasing hops but at a lower ABV. Look out for it in a week or two!!

Our contemporary range isn’t all about hoppy pales, though. James Atherton, Beerblefish founder and MD, has an eclectic palate and likes to make a variety of styles, including stouts and milds. He says, “I generally don’t like to use roasted malts in dark beers. I prefer using chocolate malts for the softness they give in the flavour and mouthfeel.” He thinks this is a particular benefit when making a fruity stout, where it’s better to have chocolate and coffee notes, not burnt bitter notes.

Beerblefish occasionally ventures into lager, too. In that regard, we’re very traditional, and like to observe the German beer law, the Reinheitsgebot, even though we’re definitely not required to! We use German lager yeast, lager malt and we always use noble hops for bittering and at flame-out. We normally brew our lagers in winter, not summer, because the lager yeast is resilient to the colder temperatures and will still finish fermenting even when it’s freezing outside.

One part of the design process that James (and the rest of the team) always enjoy doing is grabbing 20 examples of the style of beer being created and sipping through them while making tasting notes. We can usually tell within a few minutes what malt bill, flame-out hops and style of yeast have been used and sometimes the rough temperature it’s been fermented at. However, sometimes there will be an enigma of a beer that’s more difficult to work out and there has been more than one time that James has woken up in the middle of the night with a Eureka moment, having realised what the hop he’d missed was.

""

This isn’t to say, of course, that beer design should be simply about copying other beers, but it would be a foolish brewer who ignored the best examples of a style when trying to create a new recipe. It also helps to stimulate the imagination, so that new styles can be created and new variations on older types of beer can be tried.

Sometimes, though, the purpose of the beer is the driving force behind the creation. This time last year, I went to a dinner party and everyone was drinking wine. There were two or three elegant bottles with stylish labels sitting on the table and the other guests were drinking from their fancy wine glasses and having a great time. I’m allergic to grapes and can’t drink wine unless it’s sparkling (yes, I just have expensive tastes!!) so, although I had a beer, I felt a bit left out of the communal activity of sharing a drink with friends. I decided to do something about it and asked the team to make a beer that fills the gap that wine left on my dinner table.

We batted about a few ideas for styles – saison was on the list because it can have some Champagne-like qualities, and we thought about doing something with actual Champagne yeast too. I’d also briefed the team that the beer needed to be seriously classy and suggested that we call it Cashmere, which led us to then use the Cashmere hop as the primary flavour. Cashmere has a lemon-citrus note that pulled us towards the Brut IPA style, which is not too bitter and very dry on the finish – just like a dry white wine. 

The resulting beer does exactly what I wanted it to – packaged into a 750ml bottle with a fancy label, it looks good on any table and the beer is up to the job. It’s light and fruity, very pale gold in colour and, at 6.7%, is strong enough to make you want to share a bottle or two with friends.

""

We hope you’ve enjoyed these insights into how Beerblefish beers are designed – there may be a part 3 at some point, looking at some of our seasonal specials!

Posted by Bethany in Beer Styles and Recipes, Brewing, Research and Trips
How We Design Our Beers – Part 1

How We Design Our Beers – Part 1

This week we asked you all on twitter and instagram which kinds of beers you wanted to learn about our design process for. The twitter crowd were heavily skewed towards Heritage Ales rather than Contemporary Beers, but the majority wanted a bit of both. On Instagram, we could only give two options (Heritage and Contemporary) and the opposite result came through – that group wanted to know about how we design our Contemporary Beers. As a result of this very unscientific experiment, we’re going with “a bit of both”, but it seems Beerblefish founder, James Atherton, has quite a lot to say on the matter, so we’re splitting this into two parts – a blog mini-series, if you will.

First up, some general stuff about beer design at Beerblefish, and then we’ll dive into the Heritage Ales bit.

Beer design Beerblefish-style

Everyone working at Beerblefish has the chance to design beers – we’ve all got our own tastes and preferences, which means we can produce a wide variety of products and create something for everyone. However, there’s one overriding principle – we don’t make beers that we don’t like!

We also believe that beer should be beer. While we do sometimes add things beyond the basic ingredients that make beer, we would never want to turn it into something that tastes like it isn’t beer. We could get into all sorts of philosophical tangles here about whether something “tastes like beer” if enough people make it and call it beer, but we think you’ll know what we mean if we just say beer should be beer.

All our beers are vegan. This means we don’t add isinglass to our beers, but it also means that we won’t add animal-derived ingredients as flavourings, too. You won’t find honey or lactose in any of our products, for example.

Right, let’s get down to the nitty gritty. How do we actually go about deciding what a beer should be like?

The first thing we do is decide what the beer is for. Drinking, obviously, but in what context? Is it for a long session at the pub or in front of the TV? Is it going to take centre stage at your next dinner party? Or is it perhaps something to savour a small glass of when you only want one?

Then we think about when we’re going to brew it and drink it – as in the time of year, not the time of day. Generally, we (and, it seems, the general public) drink more of the heavier, darker ales in winter and more of the lighter, paler beers in summer, but there are exceptions to this. Mild, for example, is a fantastic drink for a warm day because of its relatively thin body and low bitterness, which is one of the reasons we make our annual mild in May. 

However, one of brewing’s little ironies is that brewing a lager in high summer is virtually impossible without very significant chilling capacity and if you brew a stout in winter, you risk the yeast going to sleep unless you have heating. We’re still really tiny and these facilities that larger breweries might consider basic are currently unattainable luxuries for us.

Designing Heritage Ales

Our Heritage range currently comprises three beers inspired by the nineteenth century. I asked James how he would go about adding a sessionable ale to this range. He said that he would start by looking at the research he’s gathered over the years, including books, research papers, archival records from breweries and online resources such as the fantastic “Shut Up About Barclay Perkins” blog run by historical beer author Ron Pattinson. 

James looks at the research to find out what types of ingredients were used and the proportions they were used in, taking account of the way that malts, hops and yeasts have changed in the intervening period. “If I were to use UK extra pale malt for a heritage ale, it would be too pale – nineteenth century pale ales were much darker than we would expect a modern pale to be.”

The first decision point is whether the beer will be dark or pale, which then determines what the malt bill will look like. “Nine times out of ten, I’d choose Maris Otter as a base malt. I’d love to use heritage malts for the base, but the cost is prohibitively expensive at the moment.” James would usually add a crystal malt for colour and body, and if he’s aiming for a darker beer, he’ll consider adding roasted malts or wheat. He tends not to use inverted sugar – even though it would be authentic to the period, it’s difficult to work with and get the right results from when using the quantities required.

The mash and sparge process usually lasts 90 minutes to two hours – not as long as a nineteenth century brewer would have taken, but longer than a modern beer would require. Beerblefish uses a single infusion sparge from the top – some Victorian breweries would have used European-style decoction mashes or underlet sparges, but these methods would be very difficult (perhaps impossible) on our kit.

The second we’re over the element when transferring from the mash tun to the kettle, we put the elements on.  Directly-fired coppers were common in the 1800s, so the early wort would have got a hint of caramelisation – putting our electric elements on very early allows us to replicate this, and it contributes to the rich body of our Heritage Ales, especially our 1892 IPA. 

""

James also adds at least a handful of hops to help stop foaming. He says, “Without modern anti-foam, I think it’s likely that a sensible Victorian brewer would have done this to prevent foaming. They paid duty on the malt used, not the alcohol content like today, so sparge and boil efficiency were key and brewers wouldn’t have wanted to waste vessel space with foam.” 

We always try to use whole-leaf hops for our heritage ales. Our bittering hops always contain a Goldings or Fuggles variety. Our Heritage Ales are not a copy of an 1800s recipe – they are always given a slight modern twist. We often use, for example, Weyermann’s CaraAroma malt in a very small percentage because James likes the slight honey flavour it gives without actually having to add honey to the brew.

The hops used at flame-out will often be modern; just as the brewers in the 1800s used the then-newfangled Fuggles hops, we might add some new US, Australian or New Zealand hops to give the beer our own modern twist.

The boil for a Heritage brew will be at least 60 minutes and we don’t worry if it goes up to 90 minutes. We don’t do the two or three hour boils that the Victorians might have used because we have to get a brew done in a day and our staff aren’t working 16-hour shifts! 

We don’t have a coolship, a common piece of kit in the nineteenth century, so we have to chill through a plate chiller. We’d love a coolship. One day. 

Our fermenting vessels are stainless steel, not wooden. To help simulate nineteenth century wooden vessels, we pitch into primary fermentation a small amount of Brettanomyces claussenii, which is a British strain of brettanomyces. This helps replicate that even with steam sanitation in the 1800s, brewers would have been unlikely to have purged all the brettanomyces from the wooden vessels. James says, “Pitches tended to be mixed fermentation – multiple yeast and bacterial strains. Many British brewers would have used something like the Burton Union system or would have top cropped and pitched yeast into fresh wort. This means you would have an ever-evolving mixture of yeasts and bacteria.” 

At Beerblefish, we use dried and wet yeasts. James will typically design a Heritage Ale with between one and three different saccharomyces strains and Brettanomyces claussenii. We tend to pitch warm (up to 25 degrees Celsius) and then chill the fermenting wort. This method is beneficial to the brettanomyces, which likes to be warm, and it can also add fruity esters from the British ale yeasts that we use. We once pitched British ale yeast in a test batch at 32 degrees Celsius and held it there for two days, which led to a delicious banana flavoured beer!

We’ll normally allow fermentation to run for 10 to 14 days. Fermentation needs to be warm to allow brettanomyces to do its magic. British brettanomyces doesn’t attenuate as completely as some of its Belgian counterparts, so there is a fruity sweetness left in the beer that you wouldn’t get with, for example, a typical gueuze.

James says, “All this may sound like how you make beer, but each of these stages in the process of making beer contributes different flavours to the final beer and the whole process must be considered, not just what’s in the malt, hop and yeast bills.” James reckons that with the same malt, hops and yeast, he could make you many different beers depending on how long you mash for, how long you sparge for, the boil time, the style of elements in the kettle, the times at which the hops are added, the temperature yeast is added at, the temperature of the primary fermentation, whether you give the beer a diacetyl rest…there is an enormous list of variables that contribute to the art and science of designing a Heritage Ale.

Come back next week to find out how we design the beers in our Contemporary range.

Posted by Bethany in Beer Styles and Recipes, Brewing, Research and Trips
All About… Michaela!

All About… Michaela!

What’s yer name and where d’ya come from?

My name is Michaela Charles and I’m originally from Cliffe in Kent although I now live in Walthamstow with my husband, Daniel, and cat, Schrodinger.

""

What made you decide to become a brewer and how did you get to where you are now?

Having come from a small village with five pubs it’s easy to think good beer is in my blood! I was raised on Gadd’s and Shepherd Neame and always encouraged to be curious with beer. My first job was at a certain huge pub chain. I really enjoyed the cellar management and in time I was given some very good opportunities including brewing a beer for the national beer festival.

I like to think I persuaded breweries to give me hands on experience but in honesty I probably hounded them into it! It’s entirely through the generosity, of both time and knowledge, of these senior brewers that I got a foot in the door. It’s a quality that is so often overlooked in so many other industries but sets brewers and their teams apart.

From there I gave up bar work completely and became second brewer at Clarence and Fredericks. I was trusted to release beer under my own brand, Upstairs Brewing. That took a back burner when I was asked to run the brewing operation at Pitt Cue in Devonshire Square and the real creativity started. Since then I haven’t looked back!

What’s been the most challenging thing about establishing your brewing career?

The big challenge for me was the jump between brewery assistant and brewer. I give so much credit to the willingness of brewers to teach, especially Duncan Woodhead.

There’s a lot of talk of sexism in the industry. I’m lucky enough not to have experienced much of it first hand. I think the brewing industry as a whole is much too savvy for that now; however, the pub trade has a bit of catching up to do.

What’s the best beer you’ve ever drunk and why?

The best beer I’ve ever drunk was a bottle of Left Hand Milk Stout some twenty years ago. It was ice cold and served in a goblet and it felt like falling into a kinder egg. Divine! Second to that is the pint of Whitstable Bay Pale Ale I’d have after work in my local. Always a pristine pint of hoppy heaven.

And what about the best beer you’ve brewed?

The best beer I’ve ever brewed is the Rauchbier I produced for Pitt Cue. It was a smoked German Lager that I researched whilst in Bamberg. It took ages to brew each batch and it went perfectly with our mangalitsa pork and pickles. Crisp, smokey, clean and conker red. An absolute beauty.

And the worst? 🙂

The bacon beer. The boss insisted we should have one so I brewed it. It was revolting. I then brewed the Rauchbier and we never discussed the bacon beer again.

""

If you were only allowed to keep one beer style forever, what would it be?

English pale ale. It can be everything you need between crisp and refreshing, and malty and comforting. Park beer, Sunday lunch, music festival and celebration.

Other than the obvious two (Covid and Brexit), what do you think are the biggest challenges facing the independent brewing industry right now?

Every brewery seems to need a Unique Selling Point. Great tasting beer doesn’t appear to be enough. I used to drink Whitstable Bay or Gadds, say, because I knew their beer was spot on. But now a brewery needs something extra or other to compete. I don’t mean to say that there’s anything wrong in appealing to a niche, but the beer has somehow become secondary. I would love to have a brewery that has a flying fox circus on the mezzanine and an actual squirrel on the can but I would still like people to come for the beer.

What are you most looking forward to about brewing for Beerblefish?

Yeast! It’s been a little while since I’ve exercised my creativity and a brewery team that uses blended yeast is a great place to get it going. I love the subtle manipulation to create enhanced flavours. Lots to get my teeth into.

Which Beerblefish beer is your favourite at the moment?

My favourite is Infinite Improbability Saison, it’s a yeast I really enjoy for its distinctive pep and a blooming refreshing beer too!

""

If you could brew any beer in any style, with no restrictions on price or quantity of ingredients, what would it be?

A pale ale with Icelandic spring water. And then the same thing with Burton and London water. That would be a nice experiment and a scenic road trip. 

So, there you have it: all about Michaela. Thanks, Michaela, for undergoing this interrogation!!

""
Posted by Bethany in Beer Styles and Recipes, Beerblefish HQ News, Brewing
Let’s Go Pan Galactic!

Let’s Go Pan Galactic!

We get asked all the time how the brewery got its name – there are two general starting points that enquirers have: “How on earth did you come up with such a weird word?” and, “It’s got something to do with The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy, hasn’t it?”

The answer to the first question is long winded and very much off-topic, so I won’t trouble you with it here (maybe one for another day). The answer to the second is, “Not really, but we’d be lying if babelfish sounding a bit like Beerblefish hadn’t influenced our decision to finally go with the name we have, and then in turn influenced some of our beer names.” 

Back in February (or eleventy billion years ago, which is what it feels like now!), I wrote about our Infinite Improbability Saison, which was actually the second of our beers to have a H2G2 name. The first was Pan Galactic Pale Ale, named partly for the gargleblaster of Douglas Adams fame, but also in honour of the Galaxy hops that make up a large part of its hop bill.

Pan Galactic started out as an experiment. Our brewers wanted to try using the same recipe for two beers but treating the water in different ways to see what, if any, difference it made to the final product. Pan Galactic was given its name and the other beer was called Goldfish Pale.

Goldfish was treated very lightly – more or less London’s finest tap water – while Pan Galactic had lactic acid added to the strike water and the sparge water to lower the pH. We also treat our water with magnesium sulphate because the water in our area is low in magnesium, which is needed by the yeast for a healthy fermentation. We use sulphate instead of carbonate or chloride because the water already has a high carbonate level and a fairly high chloride ion level.

When the beers were ready, they were both good, but we each had our own opinion on which was better. So, to decide it, we entered both into the Drinks Business Global Beer Competition in 2018.  

When the results came out, it was close – Goldfish was awarded a bronze and Pan Galactic was awarded a silver, and we decided to keep Pan Galactic in our range. In 2019, it went on to win a one-star award in the Guild of Fine Foods Great Taste Awards.

Pan Galactic Pale Ale has a typical pale malt bill. We use Crisp’s Maris Otter as the base and add a small amount of Weyermann’s CaraAroma for a slight caramel twist. We’ve been through a few variations of the hop bill since the first edition of this ale, but we’re currently using EKG as the bittering hop, with Galaxy and Ella providing the flavour and aroma. Galaxy really is the star of the show here, giving peach, passionfruit and citrus notes to the beer.

The imagery that “Pan Galactic” can conjure up in the mind was grasped upon by our friends at Art By Volume, who created a beautiful representation of the beer as an LP cover. I’ve always wondered what would be on that album!

We’ve had a few blips along the way with this one, as there was a period when it was very difficult to get hold of Galaxy hops, which are really central to both the recipe and the name! We also only very recently settled a two year “discussion” on whether the beer’s name should have a hyphen and/or a space between “Pan” and “Galactic”, as we have written it several different ways over the last couple of years.

We’ve finally settled on “Pan Galactic Pale Ale” and the next stage of its journey is a revamp of the bottle label and pump clip – watch out for those coming soon!

Pan Galactic Pale Ale is currently available in cask (firkin), 5 litre mini casks and 500ml bottles.

Posted by Bethany in Awards, Beer Styles and Recipes, Brewing, Research and Trips
Beer from the Wood

Beer from the Wood

It’s easy to forget that, in beer terms, stainless steel is a relatively recent innovation. Until the mid-twentieth century, wood was the primary material used for beer casks. In the 1960s, the tide turned in favour of first aluminium and then stainless steel.

Enter the Society for the Preservation of Beers from the Wood (SPBW), which was established in 1963 to try to keep up the traditional use of wooden casks. Through social events and support for breweries, pubs and coopers interested in beer from the wood, their work has helped to stop wooden casks from falling completely by the wayside.

While metal casks undoubtedly have their benefits (among other things, they’re lighter and easier to clean), the brewing industry has caught up in recent years with what the SPBW has been trying to tell us – that something was lost from the creative process when the shift was made away from wood.

A constant supply of new hop varieties, different grain combinations and experimentation with yeasts give brewers an enormous playground in which to innovate, but adding back a couple of extra variables – the type of wood used and the length of time the beer spends in contact with that wood – gives an extra dimension that can be exploited in a different way now that brewers have much more control over their processes as a result of technological advances.

Different types of wood can give different flavour profiles, as can any other drink that’s been aged in the vessel before. It’s important to avoid toxic woods, of course – yew and oleander are particularly nasty – but there are plenty of others to choose from and modern coopers make their casks from a range of trees, including hard maple, for its syrupy notes and white ash, which can give a tantalising hint of campfires and marshmallow. However, it’s very noticeable that there aren’t many firs or pines on the list – some people have reported a hint of turpentine in beers aged in conifer wood, so it’s probably best avoided!

In pride of place in the Beerblefish Brewhouse is our French oak wine hogshead that once contained Beaujolais. The first beer we aged in it was a version of our 1853 ESB that we made for a wedding – some of the lees from the wine were still in the barrel and gave the beer a fantastic round mouthfeel and mellow flavour during the six month aging period. The wood is quite old, so there weren’t the vanillins that one might expect from newer oak.

Since then, we’ve aged a few beers in the wooden barrel, most recently our Barrel-Aged Imperial Stout 2019, the latest in our annual series of imperial stouts. We’ve also borrowed some wooden pins and provided the same beer from wooden and stainless steel barrels so that drinkers can spot the differences.

We’re enjoying our beer from the wood so much that we’re about to invest in our own oak casks in preparation for SPBW’s Woodfest 2020 at the Turk’s Head in Twickenham on 28 to 30 May.

Posted by Bethany in Brewing, Research and Trips
Celebrating the Hardest Workers in the Brewery… Yeasts!

Celebrating the Hardest Workers in the Brewery… Yeasts!

Brewers don’t do hard work.

That is not to say brewing is not a physically and mentally demanding job, but our task as brewers is to herd our microbes of choice – and let them do the hardest work in the brewery, munching on sugars to produce the alcohol in our beer. In the video above, Beerblefish owner, James Atherton, shows us how different microbes do this job (while the video is generally accurate, it’s fair to say it might not be entirely serious…)

Most brewers choose to use a single culture of Brewer’s Yeast, often from the Saccharomyces genus, while some making sours will use Lactobacillus and Saccharomyces together; people who are gluttons for punishment, like us at Beerblefish, will use a varied mix of yeasts (and occasionally blends of bacteria). As you can imagine, herding one invisible fungus can be challenging, herding up to five in a single brew requires a little more attention to detail, but that’s what gives our heritage beers their distinctive flavour and character.

Different yeasts produce different flavours, work at different rates and will consume different sugars/dextrins. Saccharomyces will usually start consuming simple glucose before turning their attention to other monosaccharides or longer chain sugars. Lactobacillus will rapidly multiply and chew through glucose, fructose, sucrose, lactose and galactose in that order – but they are not able to metabolise long chain dextrins or starches. Brettanomyces tend to work a little more slowly than brewing strains of Saccharomyces in an aerobic environment then, slow down considerably to about half the metabolic rate in an anaerobic environment.

An interesting thing, if you are herding your microbes, is that placing saccharomyces and lactobacillus in the same environment causes Saccharomyces strains to abandon their usual preferences for simple sugars for more complex sugars. The presence of Lactobacillus in a Saccharomyces culture causes them to rapidly metabolise all the sugars they can pull in. This can lead to more off flavours and is why many brewers these days will kettle sour with Lactobacillus rather than allowing it into primary fermentation.

Posted by Bethany in Brewing, Research and Trips