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October 7th, 2011Desert Island BeersBeer lover and eccentric Richard Chennells was born and bred in Zululand, South Africa. Richard has worked extensively in the tourism industry for SA and did a brew masters course through The American Brewers Guild.
He worked in the UK for The London Stock Exchange, Barclays Capital and finished in 2005 at The Bank of America. After brewing school in the USA in 2005, he went home, bought a family hotel and with his brother Graham and established the Zululand Brewing Co. in Eshowe, Zululand.
In 2010 Richard was invited to brew Zululand Brewery’s flagship beer Zulu Blonde Ale at Marston’s Brewery for the JDW International Real Ale Festival. Of the 50 ales in the festival Zulu Blonde was voted number 1. Richard was then invited back to the UK to brew a further 120,000 pints of Zulu Blonde but this time at Everards’s brewery to supply the pub chain in time for the World Cup Kick off. Richard has been invited back again to the Real Ale Festival in 2012 and the brewery is launching Zulu Blonde in bottles in late 2012.
The Brewery is on site at The George Hotel in Eshowe where its beers are available on tap at The Happy George Bar. The brewery is the smallest on the KwaZulu-Natal Brew Route, capable of producing only a maximum of 3000 L (800 Gallon) a month in batches of 300 litres (80 Gallons). Because the brew house is so small they brew up to four times in a day just to fill two 150 L (40 Gallon) fermentation tanks! Due to demand Zulu Blonde is also now brewed under licence by the Nottingham Road Brewery in the KwaZulu-Natal Midlands and will shortly have operations in the Czech Republic and Belgium
Tags: South African -

Right it was day two of the Super 8′s yesterday in the Twenty20 World cup and England took a good old tonking off the Saffers. Let’s see if we could get our own back by pitting one of own nation’s fine ales against the Cape shandy that Smithy and his boys will have been sitting down to last night.
South African – Castle Lager, 5.0% abv
In to bat first is the South African opener. I had mine ice cold, just how I like my lagers on a warm day, but have to admit that it hasn’t really kept it’s cool under the pressure out in the middle. I like the fact that it was flavoursome and malty for a lager, justifying it’s premium tag. It was, however, a little disappointing in terms of texture. Oddly, because I usually find lager too fizzy, this feels strangely flat in the mouth.
Score (out of 20) – Good opening partnership but a disappointing middle order – 8
Blighty – Extra Special ASDA Golden Ale, 4.5% abv
I purchased this beer in advance, hoping the weather would respect the cricket and allow me a clear crisp evening outside on the patio. It did not. Having said that, the beer is actually maltier that it’s golden appearance suggests and, while it is by no means heavy or dark, it has a sturdier backbone than I was expecting. I would therefore say that it is probably more suited to a crisp springtime evening than the strong midday sun.
There’s certainly nothing wrong with this ale and I expect that it is widely, and relatively cheaply, available through ASDA supermarkets. Certainly it is worth a taste to see if you agree with my opinion that, while it does not have the sweetness and finesse required to find itself on any shortlists for great golden ales, it grinds out a solid win for the English code of the game.
Score (out of 20) – consistently above average throughout without shining, ground out the win – 14
Tags: 3 for 4, Ale, ASDA, Castle Lager, Extra Special, Golden Ale, lager, South African -

















