With their preference for taste over branding, flavour in place of price and microbreweries over macroeconomics, you might think that ale drinkers’ desires would mesh neatly with many of the objectives of the organic movement. And let’s be honest, the demographics probably aren’t that divergent either.
But in all the quickly cobbled together, mildly slurred pub-polls I’ve ever conducted, the origin and nature of the ingredients in a beer hardly ever get a mention, even amongst ardent label-searching vegetarians. Beer seems to exist outside the normal rules.
It was largely the same at The Royal Oak’s Organic Beer Festival. Because while the vast numbers of organic ales on the bar, and those served straight from the barrels, attracted plenty of attention, most of the pints were bought without the livers owners’ even knowing about the pesticide-free origins of the hops and malt. Let alone caring.
And yet Britain is reputed to be the third largest market for organic produce in the Europe. Over the last few years the Soil Association have charted double-digit growth for the retail sector. And while that may be slumping now there never seems to have had the same effect in beer or booze generally. The word ‘organic’ and ‘local’ appear on menus all the time, but very rarely on pump clips. Instead the brewing industry seems to target its organic beers at supermarket bottle-buyers. Particularly with sweeter or novelty ales.
Instead the received wisdom, both on the web and in the pub, seems to be that all organic beers are lacking something. That higher costs lead to weaker beers. That the price of organic hops prevents brewers from producing certain style - particularly the bitter-bombs that are so in vogue at the moment. That somehow any brewery that worries about such fripperies couldn’t create an ale worthy of serious consideration anyway.
So in the name of a purely unscientific research the question has to be asked: Do you think about organic beer? Do you even notice if your beer is branded as organic, local or even British? Have you ever knowingly tried an organic ale and is there one you like? And more importantly do you care either way?
Salvador
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I awake at 10 AM. Amsterdam time. Which is 6 AM here. I’ve only had four
hours sleep. I go downstairs for breakfast. No bacon, sadly. I make do with
scra...
14 minutes ago
3 comments:
I actively avoid organic beer, and have no idea why, given I will travel miles in order to buy dirty but local organic carrots for the wee 'un, and have my own veg beds and chickens at home.
Msybe because none of my favoured breweries have offered one, or more probably as you point out the assumption is with small scale ale that there are no nasties lurking by definition. That Duchy Originals Ale looks insipid even on the shelf
It does seem to be that beer, and wine too fall outside the key areas for organic produce - meat, fruit and veg. I buy them all but when it comes to grains - and so beer - I'm less worried.
Agreed on the Duchy stuff but I generally avoid his produce. After all anyone who rents our trees back to the nation can't be trusted with ale.
Having said all that I realised that the same night I was drinking St Peter's IPA, a great pint, and organic to its roots. This I believe makes me a fool.
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