Beer - Steve Hobman's Beer Almanac

We've loaded our regular beers and some guest ales we like into our beer machine below. Use it to find out which pubs are selling your favourite or use it to find brews you might like.
- Three Tuns 1642 Bitter (3.8%)
- Wadworth 6X (4.3%)
- Green King Abbot Ale (5.0%)
- Abbeydale Absolution (5.3%)
- Adnams Adnams Bitter (3.7%)
- Adnams Adnams Explorer (4.3%)
- Crouch Vale Amarillo (5.0%)
- Station House Aonach (4.9%)
- Phoenix Arizona (4.1%)
- The Arran Brewery Arran Dark (4.3%)
- Oakham Atilla (7.5%)
- Anglo Dutch Auntie Glads Ghoul (5.2%)
- Acorn Barnsley Bitter (3.8%)
- Spitting Feathers Basket Case (4.8%)
- Black Sheep Best Bitter (3.8%)
- Liverpool Organic Brewery Best Bitter (4.2%)
- Weetwood Ales Best Cask Bitter (3.8%)
- Blue Monkey Brewing BG Sips (4.0%)
- Ossett Big Red (4.0%)
- Harviestoun Bitter and Twisted (3.8%)
- Moorhouse Black Cat (3.4%)
- Copper Dragon Black Gold (3.7%)
- Moorhouse Black Witch (4.2%)
- Thornbridge Blackthorn Ale (4.4%)
- Butcombe Blond (4.3%)
- Moorhouse Blond Witch (4.5%)
- Coniston Bluebird Bitter (3.6%)
- Boddingtons Boddingtons Bitter (4.1%)
- Boogart Hole Clough Brewery Boggart Rum Porter (4.7%)
- Bollington Brewery Bollington Dinner Ale (4.3%)
- Crouch Vale Brewers Gold (4.0%)
- Otter Bright (4.3%)
- Adnams Broadside (4.7%)
- Hawkshead Brodie's Prime (4.9%)
- Marstons Burton Bitter (3.8%)
- Yorkshire Dales Butter Tubs (3.7%)
- Conwy Celebration (4.2%)
- Celtic Experience Brewery Celt Golden Ale (4.2%)
- Peakstones Rock Brewery Chained Oak (4.2%)
- Brass Monkey Cheeky Monkey (4.2%)
- Weetwood Ales Cheshire Cat (4.0%)
- Fullers Chiswick Bitter (3.5%)
- Coach House Combine Harvester (5.1%)
- Corvedale Brewery Corvedale Dark and Delicious (4.2%)
- Marston Moor Cromwell Pale (3.8%)
- Cwmbran Brewery Crow Valley Bitter (4.2%)
- Hartleys Cumbria Way (4.1%)
- Purple Moose Dark Side of the Moose (4.6%)
- Dark Star Brewing Co Dark Star American Pale Ale (4.4%)
- Caledonian Deuchars IPA (3.8%)
- Facers DHB (4.3%)
- Wye Valley Dorothy Goodbody’s Wholesome Stout (4.6%)
- RCH Double Header (5.0%)
- Derby Brewing Co Double Mash (4.6%)
- Okells Brewery Dr Okells IPA (4.5%)
- Hanby Drawwell (3.9%)
- RCH East Street Cream (5.0%)
- Weetwood Ales Eastgate Ale (4.2%)
- Lymestone Brewery Ein Stein (5.0%)
- Hop Back Entire Stout (4.5%)
- Dark Star Brewing Co Espresso Stout (4.2%)
- Ossett Excelsior (5.2%)
- Bradfield Brewery Farmers Blonde (4.0%)
- Northumberland Fog on the Tyne (4.1%)
- Northumberland Gateshead Gold (5.0%)
- Purple Moose Glasfryn Ale (4.8%)
- Exmoor Gold (4.5%)
- Wylam Brewery Gold Tankard (4.0%)
- Archers Golden (4.7%)
- Timothy Taylor Golden Best (3.5%)
- Badger Golden Champion (4.6%)
- Stonehouse Golden Fox (house brew) (4.2%)
- Salopian Golden Thread (5.0%)
- Outstanding Brewing Co Golden Valley (4.2%)
- Hornbeam Golden Wraith Pale Ale (5.0%)
- Acorn Gorlovka Imperial Stout (6.0%)
- York Guzzler (3.6%)
- Castle Rock Harvest Pale (3.8%)
- Hawkshead Hawkshead Bitter (3.7%)
- Skinners Heligan Honey (4.0%)
- Wadworth Henry's Original IPA (3.6%)
- Hobsons Brewery Hobsons Mild (3.2%)
- Hook Norton Hooky Gold (4.1%)
- Dark Star Brewing Co Hophead (3.8%)
- Hornbeam Hornbeam Top Hop (4.2%)
- Wye Valley HPA (4.0%)
- Titanic Iceberg (4.1%)
- Green King IPA (3.6%)
- Kelham Island Pale Rider (5.2%)
- Thornbridge Jaipur (5.9%)
- Oakham Jeffrey Hudson Bitter (3.8%)
- Buxton Brewery Kinder Sunset (4.8%)
- Anglo Dutch Kletswater (4.0%)
- Beartown Kodiak Gold (4.0%)
- Hawkshead Lakeland Gold (4.4%)
- Lancaster Brewery Lancaster Red (4.9%)
- Timothy Taylor Landlord (4.3%)
- Blakemere Brewery Landmark Bitter (3.7%)
- Facers Landslide (4.9%)
- Leeds Brewery Leeds Pale (3.8%)
- Woodlands Light Oak (4.0%)
- Fullers London Pride (4.1%)
- Thornbridge Lord Marples (4.0%)
- Ludlow Brewing Company Ludlow Gold (4.2%)
- Northern Brewery Ma-V-Lus (4.1%)
- Mighty Oak Brewing Co. Maldon Gold (3.8%)
- Abbeydale Matins (3.6%)
- Northumberland McCory's Irish Stout (4.4%)
- Moles Brewery Mole Catcher (5.0%)
- Abbeydale Moonshine (4.3%)
- Wincle Mr Mullins IPA (4.8%)
- Nethergate Nethergate Augustinian Ale (4.5%)
- Black Hole Brewery No Escape (5.2%)
- Northern Brewery Northern 45 (4.5%)
- Northern Brewery Northern 45 (4.5%)
- Wylam Brewery Northern Kite (4.9%)
- Thwaites Nutty Black (3.3%)
- Woodlands Oak Beauty (4.2%)
- Weetwood Ales Oast-House Gold (5.0%)
- Worfield OBJ (4.2%)
- Oakham Oblivion (5.7%)
- Old Bear Brewery Old Bear Goldilocks (4.5%)
- Moorhouse Old Boss Bitter (4.3%)
- Acorn Old Moor Porter (4.4%)
- RCH Old Slug Porter (4.5%)
- Salopian Oracle (4.0%)
- Banks Original (3.5%)
- Hobsons Brewery Original (4.3%)
- Brunning and Price Original Bitter (3.8%)
- Roosters Outlaw Wrangler (3.7%)
- Outstanding Brewing Co Outstanding Stout (5.5%)
- Ossett Pale Gold (3.8%)
- Derby Brewing Co Pale Tranquility (4.5%)
- Wood Parish Bitter (4.0%)
- Moorhouse Pendle Witches Brew (5.1%)
- Burton Bridge Brewery Pie in the Sky (4.5%)
- Sandstone Brewery Pigs Do Fly (4.4%)
- Oakleaf Brewing Company Piston Porter (4.6%)
- Plassey Plassey Bitter (4.0%)
- Wood Pot o’ Gold (4.4%)
- Moorhouse Premier Bitter (3.7%)
- Moorhouse Pride of Pendle (4.1%)
- Brewdog Brewery Punk IPA (6.2%)
- Slaters Queen Bee (4.2%)
- Breconshire Brewery Ramblers Ruin (5.0%)
- Outstanding Brewing Co Red Dragon (4.7%)
- Storm Brewing Co Red Mist (3.9%)
- Roosters Roosters YPA (4.5%)
- Roosters Roosters YPA (4.5%)
- Rudgate Brewery Ruby Mild (4.4%)
- Salopian Salopian Hoptwister (4.5%)
- Sandstone Brewery Sandstone Edge (3.8%)
- Harviestoun Schiehallion (4.8%)
- Sharp's Brewery Sharp's Eden Pure Ale (4.3%)
- Sharp's Brewery Sharp\'s Own (4.4%)
- Salopian Shropshire Gold (3.8%)
- Wood Shropshire Lad (4.5%)
- Ossett Silver King (4.3%)
- Pictish Brewing Co. Simcoe (4.4%)
- Purple Moose Snowdonia Ale (Cwrw Eryn) (3.6%)
- Shepherd Neame Spitfire (4.5%)
- Stonehouse Station Bitter (SB) (3.9%)
- Station House Station House Buzzin’ (4.3%)
- Wickwar Station Porter (6.1%)
- Lymestone Brewery Stonefaced (4.0%)
- Burton Bridge Brewery Storr (4.8%)
- Titanic Stout (4.5%)
- Hop Back Summer Lightning (5.0%)
- Acorn Summer Pale (4.1%)
- Harveys Sussex Bitter (4.0%)
- Northumberland The Original (4.1%)
- Spitting Feathers Thirst Quencher (3.9%)
- Thwaites Thwaites Original (3.6%)
- Everards Tiger (4.2%)
- St Austell Tinners Cornish Bitter (3.7%)
- Titanic Titanic Steerage (3.5%)
- Titanic Titanic Stout (4.5%)
- Brimstage Trapper’s Hat (3.8%)
- St Austell Tribute (4.2%)
- Derby Brewing Co Triple Hop (4.1%)
- Hobsons Brewery Twisted Spire (3.6%)
- Thwaites Wainwright (4.1%)
- Weetwood Ales Weetwood Ambush (4.8%)
- Wells and Young Wells Bombardier (4.3%)
- Great Orme Welsh Black (4.0%)
- Bollington Brewery Wheat Nancy (4.3%)
- Woodfordes Wherry (3.8%)
- Envile White (4.2%)
- Oakham White Dwarf (4.3%)
- Roosters Wild Mule (3.9%)
- Thornbridge Wild Swan (3.5%)
- Wincle Wincle Waller (3.8%)
- Three Tuns XXX (4.3%)
- Roosters Yankee (4.3%)
- O'Hanlon's Brewery Yellow hammer (4.0%)
- Acorn Yorkshire Pride (3.7%)
- York Yorkshire Terrier (4.2%)
- Youngs Youngs Special (4.5%)
Abbeydale
Absolution
In Britain men of the cloth and good ale were linked for centuries after monks found that man cannot live on bread alone. So what better use for barley than beer? In Belgium there are still strong bonds between brewing and religious orders, but over here it’s left to the likes of Abbeydale to keep the tradition alive.
Pat Morton and his crew are having a lot of fun doing it, with a range of tongue-in-cheek ecclesiastically themed ales. Pat set the brewery up back in 1996 and named it after the local area leading to the Beauchief Abbey, near Sheffield. Well maybe there’s an old abbot up there in the great ale house who was a bit chuffed, because in recent times the brewery has been a healthy 25 per cent year on year growth.
So if you are feeling in need of a little spiritual support what better than to seek out Absolution. Winner of many awards, this mid straw coloured ale is made, unusually, with Glacier hops and has aromas of tropical fruit while in the mouth it offers sweet ‘toffee apple’ fruitiness with a bitter finish. And at 5.3 per cent strength this would almost certainly have been the answer to the prayers of those medieval monks on a Saturday night. Amen!
Steve Hobman is our website beer editor. No stranger to a scoop, he is a PR man, beer writer and cask-ale fan who was in one of the very first customers of Brunning & Price in Cheshire: a regular from the moment Harkers first opened its doors.
Following many years honing his journalism and associated skills in the hard drinking North-East - home to The Northern Echo and Cameron’s Strongarm - he was somewhat aggrieved to ship up in Chester during the dark days of Greenalls.
But, with an office fortuitously located in Russell Street, Steve was seriously chuffed when Harkers first threw open its doors in 1989. Thirty seconds from pen push to pint pour was terrific for a thirsty PR exec.
So began a long and, largely, convivial relationship with B&P. (We won’t mention being refused entry to Harkers one lively festive evening). The years since have seen a nodding acquaintance develop with the Grosvenor Arms.
Once, in his PR role, Steve was forced to drink several pints of Wrexham Lager - proof he will sell his soul to the devil for a price. But don’t tell the British Guild of Beer Writers. It was while promoting Moorhouse’s Brewery in Lancashire, that he was recruited to the Guild by ale guru Roger Protz.
Steve’s stuff has been broadcast on radio and TV, appeared in all brewing/ pub trade magazines in the UK, many consumer magazines and countless newspapers. As co-editor of The New Imbiber - a magazine for ardent real ale aficionados he - regularly writes about micro-brewers. Sometimes he even samples their wares.
By Steve Hobman (29/06/10)
There is nothing like a little deprivation to make you appreciate the finer things of life. Lying in a hospital bed, racked by pain, throat like the roughest sandpaper coated... [read more]
A stroll through the maze of mildBy Steve Hobman (24/05/10)
The other day I walked into one of my favourite local pubs and there she was - lusciously dark and dusky. Temptress like, she held my gaze, daring me to... [read more]
Pubs - what for the future without Gordon?By Steve Hobman (14/05/10)
And so the shouting is over. The wheeling and dealing is done. Gordon is a Gonner. Now it’s the Dave and Nick Show.With a humongous £900bn national debt, the bankers... [read more]
Beer history comes back to lifeBy Steve Hobman (30/04/10)
Britain has its beer history back. The National Brewing Centre has opened in the cradle of modern British brewing - Burton-on-Trent.The former Bass Museum closed a couple a of years... [read more]
Our beers
Of our fifteen pubs, twelve are freehouses and choose their own cask beers from whatever source, and three - The Black Jug in Horsham, the Cross Foxes in Erbistock and the Hare at Langton Green - are tied to different individual breweries, but still offer an excellent choice of cask beers. You won't find keg or smoothyflow bitters in any of our pubs.

"Beer is God's way of telling us that He loves us and wants us to be happy"
Each pub generally has two or more guest beers each week in addition to their normal line up, and in our pubs last year we featured over one thousand different cask ales. What follows is a deeply subjective review of a selection of these beers.
We tend to like small independent breweries run by enthusiasts who love beer.
Making Beer
Steve Hobman's guide to the brewing process. Read...


