Archive for December 2009

In San Francisco last night, and was served Anchor Steam Beer in Dave’s. And there’s how it came.
It’s odd (and wrong) to have beer in a different glass, particularly a Guinness glass, since I get confused as to why my Guinness is an amber coloured, medium-bitter drink which is slightly too gassy for my taste. But look closer.
It’s a dual-branded glass. It’s also branded ‘Harp lager’.
For a company that consistently gets its branding so correct, I’m rather amazed that Guinness/Diageo would produce a dual-branded glass like this. True, the Harp branding is in black, and therefore would be invisible when this glass is used for Guinness, and only visible when it’s used for Harp lager. But. Even so.
Have you seen any other dual-branded glasses? Let me know in the comments.
In Wetherspoons over the holiday period, and one of the guest beers available was the rather excellent Jennings Snecklifter: with a message on the pump clip.
The message said something about the fact that, because of the recent floods, Jennings beer is being brewed ‘by other breweries’ (other breweries from Marston’s), and that 10p of every pint is going straight into the Cumbrian floods appeal.
Visiting their website, they’ve a special section about the flooding: and the efforts to bring the brewery back online.
Congratulations should go to the Marston’s Group to be doing something sensible for the local economy; and to Wetherspoon’s for stocking it. Hopefully it’ll be popular.

Pop into this bar in San Francisco, and you’re in for a treat.
The place started in 1948, and has a peculiarly French feel to it. With awful portraits on the wall (one claims it’s Patrick Swayze, but the only way of telling is to read the sign saying who it is below), it’s certainly a sight to see.
As I walked in, the sight that greeted me from the upstairs balcony were two feet. Whoever it was up there (who, listening to the bar-tenders chatting to themselves, had imbibed a fair amount of Absinthe), had decided to relax a little.
The amusing signs are all over the bar. Some parts are dedicated to people who used to drink there – the John Wilkes Memorial Booth is above the bar to the right; a large portrait of the original owner – Henri Lenior, a stern-looking french man, in a beret. The signs are classy and amusing – even, somehow, the one typeset in MS Comic Sans. No, really.
The gas-lamp chandelier above the bar, and the art-deco mirror, will give you plenty to look at when you choose your beer; however, the range on tap isn’t quite as exciting as the decor, sadly. Here’s what was on tap when I visited the other day…
Anchor Steam (San Francisco, California, USA)
Widmer Hefeweizen (Portland, Oregon, USA)
Sierra Nevada Pale Ale (Chico, California, USA)
Pilsner Urquell (Pilsen, Czech Republic)
Budweiser (St Louis, Missouri, USA)
Stella Artois (Leuven, Belgium)
Amstel Light (Amsterdam, Netherlands)
Bass (Burton, UK)
Guinness (Dublin, Ireland)
