Kitchen Brewery
You think adding fruit (and other stuff) to beers here in the UK was a product of the craft beer movement over the last decade or so? Think again because this is the story of Kitchen Brewery.Here in the fruit-growing areas of the UK there seem to have been similar traditions existing alongside the more prevalent cider and perry making. In her seminal book Food in England (published 1954), Dorothy Hartley records drinking "Kentish Cherry Ale" at "a very small inn near Molash", adding "the recipe was the finest old ale and unlimited freshly plucked cherries".
This however remained a historic curiosity until the late 1990s. Enter Kitchen Brewery, founded by former chef Rob Johnson in 1996 (he started brewing on April Fool's Day so this post is rather timely).
The steam-fired five-barrel (later 10-barrel) kit, which Rob built himself, was based in a former pickling shed at the Shaw Park Industrial Complex which is in Apsley, near Huddersfield.
At first the beers were what you might expect from a mid-1990s microbrewery - the 1998 Good Beer Guide records a range of bitters in the 3.6% to 5% range with various catering-themed names. A typical example was Waitress (4.2%) "A smooth and aromatic beer with a slightly citrus beginning and a fruity flavour, ending with dry bitterness. Very pale in colour". I recall them as being perfectly decent.
Then it all went a bit strange. The 1998 Good Beer Guide records that the range had expanded considerably over the previous 12 months. By the time we get to the 2000 GBG (by which point Kitchen was apparently supplying some 400 outlets) all manner of fruity and vegetable concoctions are mentioned. The Beermad website records no fewer than 94 beers and you can view them here
I actually tried some of these and can record that the Raisin Stout was rather good. Some of the others were, err, well..... a friend who tried the Orrible Onion assured me that it indeed was 'Orrible'. You'll note that one beer used mango - many years before it became a favourite addition for more than a few craft brewers.
Apart from being a former chef, Rob Johnson had also worked as a technician in the food industry, which may have accounted for the rather excessive secrecy that surrounded his beers. On a CAMRA visit to the brewery he was particularly insistent that we didn't see what hops he was using, which was odd, even for then.
However you can't really sustain a brewery on gimmicks alone (well, you couldn't then...) and the brewery went into receivership in March 2001. Word on the streets was that Kitchen's demise wasn't entirely unmourned by the other local brewers due to the brewery's allegedly aggressive pricing policy. That I don't know. - if true perhaps that played a part in its demise.
The brewing kit, by the way, resurfaced a few years later at Oldham's (now defunct) Owl Brewery. Apart from that, Kitchen and its remarkable beers have slipped into history.
The Dorothey Hartley book is a mine if useful information. Inconveniently for cider purists she also records "The use of cherry in ale was much considered by the cider makers of the west, and boats were sent around to Bristol with trees of cherries to grow and mix with the cider apples."
7 comments:
Indeed, the Raisin Stout was excellent and much missed to this day by those who sampled it. Carrot Cruncher was rather nice as well. One of the causes of the demise was foolishly getting Kitchen beers into Sainsburys. Rob simply wasn't able to fulfil the contract. He also had a Trade bar at GBBF, again attempting to run before he could walk.
Hi Ian - thanks for the update. The perils of dealing with supermarkets are something else that Kitchen may have pioneered than!
It was also alleged that a number of landlords refused to pay for casks because the beer was undrinkable. The casks were always returned empty having been poured away. No proof of how much had been sold before being declared undrinkable. The Tavern had nearly all the Kitchen beers on due to a special agreement. That was before the Tavern had a brewery. And yes 'Orrible Onion did just what it said on the tin.
My Notes from 2002
Kitchen* Dishwater 3.8 WokingRC Loverly hoppy beer 4
Kitchen* Tubby Tangerine 4 GBBF99 Typically good Kitchen beer 3
Kitchen* Goblin Waitress 4.3 Woking99 Indifferent 2
Kitchen* Manic Mango 4.3 LibertyB499 Sweetish mango flavour 2
Kitchen* Spudsstock 4.3 P’borough99 Another good Kitchen beer 3
Kitchen* Pert Pear 4.4 GBBF99 Typically good Kitchen beer 3
Kitchen* Tormented Turnip 4.5 LibertyB Blonde colour, light-bodied medium bitterness hoppy nose leading to fruity sweetness in the finish. Typical blonde root beer enjoyed by Swedes 4
Kitchen* Fiendish Fig 4.6 LibertyB Rather tasty Kitchen beer 4
Kitchen* Laminated Lemon 4.6 P’borough99 Rather tasty lemon beer 4
Kitchen* Hop Cross Bunny 4.7 Farnham00 Typically good Kitchen beer 3
Kitchen* Perilous Pumkin 5 LibertyB1099 Typically good Kitchen beer 3
tankard
Yes - it seems that the beers did divide opinion somewhat - mind you some of the additions sound as though they would have produced quite dubious results!
I love this comment, John:
However you can't really sustain a brewery on gimmicks alone (well, you couldn't then...)
Regards
David
Hi David
Good to hear from you! Couldn't resist that comment which, as we know, has an element of truth in it.
Cheers,
John
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