The recipe for success
is a delicate balance.
Water is essential,
but Harviestoun’s alone filters through the granite Ochil hills. Quality
lowland barley is equally vital, but is only as good as the carefully
cultivated yeast for its germination.
And without
beautifully bitter hops, your real ale is just another mediocre lager -
which, lacking the magic herb's preservatives, may go off (if you can tell the
difference).
We really do
appreciate the work and waiting to perfect this subtle combination. Yet
still our eyes glaze over – before we’ve tasted a drop!
In fairness we’re a
hard audience: this is the tenth time we’ve learned the brewing process,
grist to the mill of our annual beer weekends.
And maybe this isn’t
‘purist’ enough: if you add salts to your water, oats to your barley, even
lager to your range of ales – and base yourself in a soulless industrial unit -
well, for us it’s hard to swallow.
Yet Iain is an
enthusiastic and generous host, soothing sharp questions with honesty and
pragmatism – and our thirst with generous tastings. We all adore a
beautiful blond, and Bitter & Twisted is a worthy Champion Beer of
Britain. The fruity zing of Wild Hop pale ale makes it my
favourite. And we jump at the chance to sample the dark, rich Old Engine
Oil stout – though a few drops are enough!
Tasting continues into
the evening, with Stirling’s surprisingly rare supplies of real ale drained by
our rapacious thirst for education and enlightenment. An hour in a sports
bar to witness Chelsea’s triumph is 60 minutes of wasted ale-appreciation, but
we end on an high note in the comfort of the Porthcullis Hotel, tired but happy
after a fulfilling day.
Yet whilst necessary,
good beer in itself is not sufficient to make the weekend.
Location is crucial,
and over the years we’ve been fortunate to balance Stirlingshire and the
Lothians with Cumbria and North Yorkshire - with Oxfordshire now on our
list. Good accommodation helps, this time in Stirling’s
impressively-situated and imposing youth hostel.
Food, whilst secondary
to drink, is also part of the mix - a welcome pizza sets us up for the
evening, whilst Sunday begins with an indecisive tour of coffee shops, our
selection criteria as shaky as our stomachs - but we finish strongly, with
a stonkingly good pub lunch in the sunshine at Sheriffmuir.
This, of course,
follows that other key element - the morning-after walk, without which the
weekend just isn’t complete. This time Rick does us proud with a cracking
hike giving clear views across the Firth of Forth and ample chance to stretch
legs and clear heads.
Yet all this would be
for nothing without the most important ingredient of all: friends.
And what a cracking
collection! Nick, Dick, Mox and Me may sound like a children’s book, and
we do indeed go right back to schooldays, with welcome additions Chris (once,
so far), Gareth and our latest rookie Christian. Nick successfully added
Scoff (sadly missed this time), Andy and Mike to the mix – and of course
Tim: sometimes key ingredients just cannot be sourced
locally.
This easy mix
generates a relaxed camaraderie – a natural understanding developed through
studying our subject together over many years. Conversation includes
love, laughter and livelihoods (what is it you actually do - again?),
not to mention the perennial musing on what makes the mix come together so well
– and to what extent the elements can be changed (wives and girlfriends next
time? - only joking!).
As the gentle haze of
the weekend lifts, I see clearly that the ingredients for a good beer weekend
are as varied and complex, and sometimes as difficult to define, as those for
the brew itself.
This weekend though, I think we found the perfect
recipe.
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