The perpetually thirsty Paul Staines and his rabble at the
Guido Fawkes blog thought they were on to a winner after Mil The Younger
visited a microbrewery in Hackney last week and sampled the product. With a nod
to one of their heroes, the legendarily foul mouthed Paul Dacre, they proudly
announced “The
Man Who Hated Bitter”, claiming that Miliband had not enjoyed the brew
he sampled.
Nah, I'm not as interested in craft beer as getting ratarsed, shit no, news, yeah, about getting legless, bollocks no, politicians bang to rights. While getting pissed. Oh sod it
Sadly, quite apart from the debateable evidence – the video
doesn’t prove anything one way or the other – the story is another example of
the Fawkes folks failing to do their homework. A little application of the
ancient and mysterious act known as “five
minutes’ Googling” followed by a little background reading, tells you that
what was offered to the Labour leader was not “bitter”.
I don't drink bitter, cos I'm on telly!
Miliband had visited the Five Points Brewing Company,
whose range of beers, as befits a craft brewery, is not constrained by labels
such as “bitter”, although they do
produce a pale beer, Five Points Pale,
which could be described thus, although that would be to do it an injustice, as
this is a meeting of British and North American styles, using hops from the US
West Coast.
Wrong again, lads ...
But that was not the beer sampled by the Labour leader, as
the Five Points Twitter feed confirmed – on several occasions. It is clear from
the video, and all the photos, that the beer was too dark to be called “bitter”. True, there are darker bitters
produced – Barnsley Bitter from the Oakwell Brewery is one such – but this was
yet darker. That should have given the Fawkes rabble a clue.
... here's the correct information
Or rather, it should have given a clue to anyone who knew
their beer styles, which The Great Guido gives every sign of not doing. What
was offered to Ed Miliband was Hook Island Red,
a red rye ale brewed to an ABV of 6%, promising “lots of interesting tastes and
aromas”. This, just in case the Fawkes folks have still not taken in the
information, is not “bitter”.
There are pale beers brewed to that strength – lots of IPAs,
such as Out
Of Step IPA from Crewe’s own Offbeat Brewery at 5.8%, could at a stretch be
called strong “bitter” ales – but anyone
calling what Miliband sampled “bitter”
would get laughed out of court by even semi-serious craft beer lovers. For
people who consume so much in the way of alcoholic beverages, Staines and Co
are worryingly clueless.
So back to the classroom for The Great Guido. Another fine mess, once again.
4 comments:
Guido's probably more of a can of Stella kind of guy.
My uncle drinks ale. In his view, Wincle Brewery is unsurpassed. Special mention should also go to Titanic, based as they are in Burslem, supportive of excellent local pubs, and
Have you people given any thought to what jobs you are planning to do when this blog folds?
Ed miliband is not a beer drinker, why is he pretending he is. working class vote.. ha. he'll be eating fish and chips next.
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