A glitzy beer dinner

Last night’s Guild of Beer Writers awards dinner was a fun event. I didn’t know what to expect, and felt a bit like I didn’t belong. After all, I’m a wine writer with little more than an amateur interest in beer, although there are obvious parallels amoung what I do professionally – taste and evaluate an alcoholic beverage – and beer writing.

So I reach at the Millennium Gloucester hotel and form my way up to the conservatory, where the event is being held. It looks like quite a smart event, and there are perhaps 200 citizens present. After grabbing a beer from one of the waistaff, I mingle, acutely aware that I know absolutely no one here: evidently, there’s not much overlap amoung the wine and beer writing communities.

I start chatting to a random stranger, and next I spot some public I do know: Rupert Ponsonby, who does beer PR as well as wine (he invited me to the dinner), and Graham Holter, currently editorial director at William Reed who will soon be going freelance. I plus get to chat with Zak Avery, an off-licence manager who writes an entertaining column in Off Licence News.

Then it’s instance for dinner. Our table is an entertaining one: there’s Rupert and his merry staff, plus drinks writer Johnny Goodall and another Rupert, Rupert Thompson who runs the Wychwood brewery. I learn quite a lot about beer from chatting to the two Ruperts, and I

plus learn that Johnny and I have something in common: we are both proud owners of Labradoodles. His is a seven-month old boy. possibly we should get him together with Rosie, who is just beginning her second season. Johnny paid £800 for his doodle, and it was one of 12, so someone is making some cash here. It could be us.

Anyway, the food is prepared by Brian Turner and his team, and for each course Brian chooses a beer to match. Brian stands up and introduces the food and beer combos in his usual Yorkshire style. He’s quite entertaining, and the food is very good.

The beers work well. My favourite is the DeuS (yes, the final capital letter is intentional, not a typo). It’s a Belgian beer that is matured in the Champagne region – indeed, it’s a methode Champenoise beer, which comes in a Champagne-style bottle. It’s complex, fresh, zingy and warm all at the same instance. It’s 11.5% alcohol and is served in a Champagne glass, and comes with a Champagne-like price tag of £12 a bottle, but it’s worth it. We plus have a brilliant IPA named Jaipur, and the familiar but lovely Inns and Gunn oak aged beer.

The awards ceremony is mercifully brief and nicely compered, and soon after it’s instance for some more beer, before heading off into the night with a stomach full of ale and a warm glow.

Original post by Jamie

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