Beer of the Day #11 - British this time (Deutsch / English)

in beer •  8 years ago  (edited)

Beer Lovers of Steemit - today's Beer edition is inspired by a company event we had in 2015 - the HQ of my employer is in lovely London in the UK / England / Britain. While being there it is obvious quite common to visit one or more pubs to "enjoy" local lager beer. 

Usually you get the likes of Foster's, Heineken, Stella Artois and Carlsberg - all very British. Lazy German me is just ordering what they offer in Central London but there might also be great pubs offering local beer and not the famous ones above which are from Australia (Foster's), Belgium (Stella), Netherlands (Heineken) and Denmark (Carlsberg) -  some might indeed think these are Englisch beer brands. If you are lucky you get a Guiness (Ireland) or Beck's (Germany) - recently I was so lucky to find a kind of English beer called Carling - now brewed in Canada (but at least the roots are from England - yeah!).

The taste of Carling is ok (they also offer Cider btw - nothing for me) - light aroma of bready malt and very distant floral hops.

Carling’s British roots trace all the way back to the Yorkshire village of Etton, little known, but forever in the hearts of Carling as the birthplace of our namesakes, William Carling and his son Thomas. Inheriting his father’s passion and skill for brewing, a 21 year old Thomas emigrated to Canada taking his father’s Yorkshire beer recipe, which on arrival in Canada he used to brew privately for admiring family and friends. The township Thomas settled in soon became an Imperial Army post where the thirsty soldiers became fans of the Carling family’s Yorkshire brew. In 1843 he built his first commercial brewery, only for his sons William and John to take up the baton soon after, and begin producing lager for the first time in 1869, sewing the first seeds of Carling’s refreshingly perfect pint.

But in general I really would love to drink some of the original English Beer but it is not easy to find in London - at least not where my team members bring me too. Beer in England has impressive history. Beer has been brewed for hundreds of years and the local beer is known for real ale which finishes maturing in the cellar of the pub - rather than at the brewery.

Lager style beer has been popular since the mid 20th century because of the modern developments such as consolidation of large brewers into multinational corporations and the overall growth of beer consumerism.

One of the main goals for the next trip is to discover the real beer outside London - anyone wants to guide me to taste some of the below?


Hallo Freunde des guten Geschmacks - der Hauptsitz meiner Firma ist in London und ich darf sehr oft hinfliegen. Natürlich gehört dort der abendliche Pub-Besuch dazu. Der Geschmack des dortigen Bieres als Pint angeliefert ist natürlich Geschmacksache aber man bekommt ja idR kein richtig englisches Bier, zumindest nicht in Central London. Glücklicherweise konnte ich bei einer der letzten Reisen ein Bier probieren welches englische Wurzeln hat, Carling! 

Irgendwann muss ich einmal das Land erkunden, denn es gibt durchaus lokale Brauereien dort die richtig tolles Bier brauen - das Gebräu in London schmeckt es nach dem 7. oder 8. Pint.

Sources / Quellen: Wikipedia, Carling, BeerHawk, Pixabay and my own photography

My other Beer posts / mehr Bier hier:

#1 - Augustiner

#2 - Spaten

#3 - Kamenitza

#4 - Franziskaner

#5 - Hagenbräu

#6 - Burgasko

#7 - Budweiser

#8 - Astra

#9 - Köstritzer

#10 - Hot Beer


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I don't generally drink lagers. You tend to see the same ones everywhere in the UK, but the bitters, IPA etc will vary more. I don't recognise those in your picture, but there are hundreds of bottled UK beers available. I will try and get a selection to taste and review.

sounds good, you do a first review and then i am coming to taste them all! Thanks @steevc

You are DEFINITELY going to the wrong pubs!

I am VERY OPEN FOR SUGGESTIONS where to guy mate :-) @stevespring

**

Great tips - actually I sometime stay in our company flat in Battersea but we usually are in the pubs around Westminster / Millbank area - will check them out buddy, thanks so much @stevespring

You keep making me thirsty!

kus-knee (The Old Dog)

Glad to read, actually i was too fast - wanted to do Beer tomorrow but got thirsty as well so here you go!

Excellent post dear friend @ uwelang I admire your passion and professionalism of your work, today I will start with my new work on this topic, I will present one on Thursday.
Congratulations on another wonderful job

Thanks buddy @jlufer - looking forward to your next one!

Very good job will follow your post

Thanks @anna1 - appreciated

I'm personally more of a fan of "heavier" beers than lager... being originally Danish, I do have a fondness for Carlsberg's "Elephant" beer... and they used to have one called "Black Gold" which seems to have come off the market. Also very fond of Danish Tuborg "Gold," but not sure that's even available outside Denmark.

Sounds great and calling for some beer posts my friend! Tuborg I drank a lot but probably not the "Gold" one - thanks @denmarkguy

I think I could give you a tour of Britain on beer! Rather than list, may I suggest a trip to Lewes in Sussex for the Harvey's? The Blackboys Inn in the village of Blackboys is one of their 'marquee' pubs and is fantastic. Not too distant is the Lickfold Inn (in Lickfold) towards Petersfield - formally owned by Mark Knopfler of Dire Straits. Stone floors sprinkled with saw dust, wooden panelled rooms, great food (was then!) and a serious collection of ales.

awwwwww - great tips - let me check my next trip and I will be there! Thanks Bro! Appreciate the advise @ebryans

I could ramble on for ever! One suggestion is a post on the differences between the different beers - ale, lager, pilsener, stout and so on - top brew, bottom brew, hops, yeast, fermentation.
Ales are notoriously bad travellers which is one of the reasons why good beer in the UK is very local and the Real Ale Society has the numbers that it does ... just a thought my friend!

So many great British beers to choose from - although we do ale much better than lager. Popular in London are Camden Helles and London Pride. My favourites include T.E.A (Hogsback Brewery), Doom Bar (Sharps Brewery), Tribute (St. Austell Brewery).

Stay away from Carling though - its one of the very worse!