So there I am sitting in the controlled hubbub of the lounge bar at the Vine in Brierley Hill, the brewery tap for Bathams. Saturday lunchtime, voices engaged, discussing the odds, dissecting this, deconstructing that and constructing an occasion of the other. Through a corridor, pale green tiles on both sides, Victoriana, waist high I remember, and to my right, turn right into the snug bar (a den of dark wood, framed photos and old newspaper cuttings, I’m conscious of intruding into a meeting of village elders), a pint of mild please, plus a cheese cob. Brummie voices: it takes time to tune the wavelength of the dialect into the English an anglophile Welshman like myself understands.
The pub has the feel of a house filled with various members of a family, all of who know and like and dislikes each other in equal measures. Parlour-like in the front lounge, my youthful memories return of visiting aged grandparents in cramped terraces where a lifetime’s collection of brasses or pictures or even pottery was on show — do people still have parlour-like parlours these days? Pub porn in a more modern vernacular. The Mild is marvellous, light, sprightly on the palate, creamy but also crisp, not a big assaulter of the palate but it’s lunchtime and I like it. I also love the pub’s exterior with its creamy colouring of an early 19th century building and the Shakespearian quote crossing its brow.
Later on, 50 miles or so north, the Bhurtpore Inn (above) at Aston, NE of Nantwich, SW of Whitchurch, drive-by village, redbrick terraced cottages sharing space with bungalows, big factory to the right on the way in (I’m in from the south). Opposite a black-and-white house with the date 1667 stamped on its forehead, done up and done over some many times with a variety of architectural botoxes that it looks like some pouty porn star who cannot believe she’s 40. On the other hand the Bhurtpore is light and airy, a long established village pub (late 19th century perhaps) that has had additions but the core of the bar seems to be very much of the now whilst holding onto its history.
I reckon there were several bars once, probably opened up in the great pub slaughters of the 1960s, but it remains the very model of a post-modern pub that majors in both beer and great food (12 cask beers, Budvar, Morvaka and an awesome bottled selection, great curries) without turning into some sort of tickers’ morgue. Saturday afternoon: quiet and reflective, a half of Summer Wine’s Heretic. The whispers of a couple of drinkers, but all the time the Bhurtpore awaits Saturday night’s febrile crowd. Can someone get on with developing a sci-fi gizmo that can get me going on an evening’s pub crawl that would stretch the whole country (beam me up Notty perhaps?).
Two pubs, two places, and two different communities — as I look through my notes, I’m in one of those reflective, slightly self-indulgent moods: what is beer writing? Is it in its purest sense writing about beer (ie tasting notes), or is it just a pier or jetty from which anyone with any interest in beer can push off and discover new lands. As I’m doing a spot of travel writing these days I would go for the latter description; sure sit at home and rate your beers without interacting with your fellow men and women but writing about beer is more than codifying and tabulating the liquid in your glass. It’s about the beer (of course), the pubs (most definite), the men and women who drink and brew the stuff, the breweries, the history, the country and customs. It’s also about spending a short bit of time in someone else’s pub, which is their community, their home, and gives them the all embracing sense of identity that a pub can only do (clubs and churches used to do that once). Pubs by their very nature are not cafes or restaurants; they — well the good ones — are part of the heart of a community, whether on a street corner, country road or suburban hub — they are also community centres and different countries in a sense that anyone, who fancies themselves the pub world’s Bruce Chatwin but cannot afford to travel around the world, should consider them as a much more valuable and affordable alternative. It’s about the beer, yes, but it’s also about the people.
Reminds me of a wonderful 'crawl' round the Black Country as a student in the 70s. The Vine, Ma Pardoe's and Simpkiss Brewery tap (was it the Foley Arms?) & others which I don't remember! Pity we didn't properly take it all in at the time since Simpkiss was one of the casualties lost to Greenhall Whitley; I heard that Greenhall's obviously held Simpkiss's beers in such regard that all they did on buying the brewery was dismiss the staff and open all the valves....progress?
ReplyDeleteHi Guy, heard of Simpkiss but before my time, that’s a scandulous tale though — you’re in Greenhall Whitley land, wasn’t that their catchphrase? First beer I ever had in a pub at 15, next time I went in I was on Strongbow, such was the appalling turn off I thought beer to be.
ReplyDeleteIf sitting with a pint to hand can't encourage one to wander off across all sorts of fields and down hidden byways, then what's beer for, I say.
ReplyDeleteFor example, I now know the battle of Bhutpore was in 1826, and the British commander, Stapleton Cotton (wonderful name) was created Viscount Combermere of Bhutpore in 1827 and named the pub after his victory.
I think you had Greenhall's catchphrase right. However they were scandelous in their treatment of brewers they took over.
ReplyDeleteThe one I remember best was Davenports whose bottling line was behind plate glass windows by the pavement - used to go by there when I worked briefly in Birmingham - brewery closed and demolished, but here is a great link to it as it was built http://www.go-for-it.co.uk/Davenports/
Ultimatley Greenhall's did for themselves;sad ends to many a brewery
They wo loik yow callin um Brummies.
ReplyDeletean Brummies wont loik yo callin Yam-Yams, Brummies.
ReplyDeleteBeer, people, place, time. There may not be a Grand Unifying Theory out there but it's fun looking for one. In the bottom of a pint glass.
ReplyDelete