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December 12th, 2009Beer BooksThere’s a great little Oxfam bookshop that I tend to pop into each Christmas in the hope of some eco-friendly, altruistic and (hopefully) cheap chrimbo presents.
Previous years have resulted in some gems of presents and some great popular science finds for myself. There seems to be a continuous supply of Good Beer Guides stretching back into the nineties and noughties and is one of the only charity shops that doesn’t have a token copy of Bridget Jones on the shelf (I dare you to find a charity shop that doesn’t carry this permanently!).
Today didn’t let me down, coming across not only one but two copies of Roger Protz’s The Ultimate Encyclopedia of Beer. In the end I opted for the pictured copy as it was £3.99 (the Yorkshire side of me made the decision based on the fact the other copy was £4.99!).
I’m actually going back for the other copy on Tuesday as a gift but I had my hands full today and was short of coppers…hopefully it’s still there!
Tags: Beer Books, roger protz, ultimate encyclopedia of beer -
October 16th, 2009CommentI was recently directly by a kind friend to an article in shortlist discussing ‘The Real Ale Revival’.
Despite it lacking somewhat in actual evidence (other than the fact that Stephen Fry and James May drink real ale, whose exponential increase in popularity over the last 5 years is hardly evidence for real ale becoming cool) it made some nice points to convince Shortlist readers that real ale is better than the mass produced ‘lager’ stuff, a philosophy I doubt I need to convert most of our readers to.
Anyway, well done to Shortlist for highlighting that real ale is good (and for pointing out for those that are interested the very obviously geeky celebrities that prefer real beer to watered down [insert name of your least favourite canned lager-piss here].
What caught my eye was a column by Roger Protz, who selected ‘a quartet of introductory ales’ alongside the main article. Now Roger Protz knows much more about beer than me, and rightly so, I’ve been supping real ale on and off since I was 17 (that’s 8 years) although only with any real enthusiasm and passion for 1 or 2 (and only writing about it since May this year!).
But given that this foursome is designed to be an ‘introduction’ to real ale – the column was titled ‘A Starter For Four’ – I would assume that these beers are selected with the lager or non-beer drinker in mind. That might include drinkers who’ve touched on real ale in the past, either unwittingly or ‘just to try’ and never really ‘got it’ and those that generally steer clear.
So what ales were selected? Read the rest of this entry »
Tags: Real Ale, roger protz, shortlist -


















