Wednesday, 9 February 2011

Root Beer - the ancestor of Kaliber?

About 20 years before Kaliber was invented, a schoolfriend of mine mentioned - we were about 10 at the time - that his mother was buying him some root beer. Beer? Now, admittedly, another friend was nicking cider  from the stockroom of his parents' off-licence and we'd go and get hammered among the gorse bushes on Grange Hill....But beer? I couldn't conceive, with the exception of ginger beer, of non-alcoholic beer.

This, from Everyday Goodness, sounds a really good (trade) deal:
Cases of 24 bottles, each bottle is 355 ml.
Offer price 24 x £0.72  = £ 20.74 including VAT per case.
10-30 cases, £10 for carriage .
>31 cases,  £free delivery.

Posters available for Point of Sales advertising.
www.everydaygoodness.net

A Rum Do

Malcolm Gosling, the 7th generation of the family-owned Goslings Rum brand will be back in Blighty and available for interviews on March 9-11th.  He has plenty of stories handed down from previous generations  as the Gosling’s family history actually begins in the UK dating back to 1806. London wine & spirits merchant James Gosling set out from England with £10,000 of cargo, aboard the chartered clipper Mercury with merchandise bound for the New World - America. The voyage was a difficult one. Ninety-one consecutive days of calm left the crew and passengers in dire straits and the charter of Mercury was fast running out. When they finally made port in Britain’s oldest colony St. Georges, Bermuda, Gosling decided to stay and set up shop on King's Parade, in December 1806. To this day the company remains the oldest surviving business in Bermuda and is still a family concern. The Goslings soon started producing rum which quickly became the nation’s favourite.

The much loved Dark n’ Stormy® cocktail is celebrated every year on National Bermuda Day, the 24th May, and this year Goslings  want to bring some of the Bermudian Spirit to Blighty to have some fun.  Originally created by the British Navy in Bermuda over 100 years ago, sailors added local Goslings Black Seal Rum to their own home-made ginger beer, to ‘spice’ it up. The drink took its name from the colour of a cloud that only a mad sailor would dare sail under.  Today the drink is trademarked and has fans all over the world. The rich, smooth, full-bodied taste of Goslings Black Seal Rum is nuanced with butterscotch, vanilla and caramel, complimented by the ginger beer, it creates an intoxicatingly spicy drink with a bit of a bite. You’ll find it served in bars and restaurants all over the island!
The Dark ‘n Stormy®, Goslings and Family Reserve Rum is becoming a staple on bar menus in the finest of establishments here in the UK too.

Creating a Dark ’n’ Stormy is a Breeze
The Dark ‘n Stormy®, is simple to make, yet refreshing to drink so we’re not surprising it’s becoming more and more popular with the British public at home.
Load a tall glass with ice cubes, pour in some ginger beer,  add a large measure of Goslings Black Seal Rum and prepare to be refreshed. If you’d like to get creative, run a lime wedge around the glass rim and drop in.
 
If you’d like to talk to Malcolm Gosling about his experiences as the 7th generation building the family business in an international brand, or simply want a guided tour of what the Bermudians like to do on National Bermuda Day (and how many Dark n Stormy’s they like to drink) then mailto:Sarah@lovedrinks.co.uk

*Gosling’s Black Seal and Dark ‘n Stormy are registered trademarks of Gosling’s Export (Bermuda) Limited, Hamilton, Bermuda

Marstons' Ale House - a new "concept"?

I had a good chuckle when I read this report about Marstons rolling out a concept called "Ale House", which sound suspiciously like traditional pubs - remember them?
Morning Advertiser, 9th February 2011

Thanks to my old friend/fellow licensee Don Woods, whose catchphrase was: " I wouldn't have it in a (expletive deleted) Ale House!", I called my first solo limited company - back in 1988 - Alehouse Investments Ltd!

Tuesday, 8 February 2011

Ever want to blow up your own pub?

The Inflatable Pub Company

This made me chuckle!

Greene King's Food Fare

 Greene King make lovely beer - I have very happy, if rather hazy, memories of quaffing copious amounts of Abbot Ale from the wood in the Marie Lloyd Luncheon Club* back in my college days. From local brewer in the 1970s, the company has come a long, long way - but I couldn't help feeling rather uninspired by the relaunched "Food Made Easy" package for their tenants and lessees.
Morning Advertiser, 4th February 2011

* Don't be fooled by the posh name - the M-L, as it was colloquially called, was not known for its food but, for a fiver a year, offered the opportunity to carry on drinking through the afternoon when our archaic licensing laws forced the pubs to close at 3pm.
A favourite haunt of trade union officials,  I blame my Sociology lecturers - Penri Griffiths in particular, for corrupting me. (Ahem!)

Wednesday, 2 February 2011

Nutritious Red Tape

If you run a restaurant, cafe, takeaway - in fact, any food outlet - YOU PERSONALLY are responsible, apparently, for the growing number of lard-arses in the UK. The latest forum on food diktats centred on healthy-eating options  (Big Hospitality, 2nd February 2011) with one suggestion being that those dishes which meet the criteria should be highlighted on menus so that terminally-vegatative customers wouldn't have to think for themselves. I had hoped, with a cull of the quangos, that individuals would be obliged to act as grown-ups and take responsibility for themselves and their progeny.
Fat chance!

Tuesday, 1 February 2011

Paddy Wetherspoons?


Further to my report on 17th November 2010 about M&B (formerly Bass) selling 333 (why?) surplus pubs to Stonegate, the newest kid on the block, it's just been announced that the Oirish bars in the deal are to be rebranded from O'Neill's to Molloys. Morning Advertiser, 31st January 2011

Food at less than three-and-a-half quid a head for a main course - who does that sound like? Mind you, the colcannon mash is a bit tempting.......