By which definition is this not a craft beer ?
In the definition that there is no craft in the brewing of it and it taste like shit.
As for the pricing, we'll the more it costs the more I'll save.
i gave up half way through the first season there, better off in the boozers BEFORE AND AFTERIf the price of a beer has gone up to either £4.50 a pint or £9 for 2 then I will quite simply not be drinking anything at the Stadium.
I suspect The Swan may have to put on extra staff on matchdays though.
Disgraceful. I would like to see a four pint option introduced. And a straw.
Playground answer. Are you old enough to even drink beer ?
I recall that after the Fat Boy Slim concert a few years ago where the prices were raised for that, they never came down again.
You recall wrongly.
Playground answer. Are you old enough to even drink beer ?
I'll try and answer your question a different way. The term Craft beer comes from the States. In essence the producer of a Craft beer should be trying to make the best beer possible. Many believe that if you stick to CAMRA rules or brew generic largers for volume rather than taste, your brew really isn't craft. Compare a London Meantime beer to something Harvey's would produce. London Meantime won't let their beer be ruined by unscrupulous landlords by using casks so most of their draughts are put in kegs. It's not the 70's anymore so keg ale is live, carbonation is natural & not added like in cheap larger, filtering is done without dead fish gut and secondary fermentation is done in the brewery rather than a cask (The CAMRA website paints a very different picture of keg beer taken from the 70's if you'd prefer that version) 21st century brewing methods like dry hopping ( & hop guns!) are used although even Brewdog would probably admit they are about 10 years behind some American brewers when it comes to brewing technology. Harvey's is all about local hops and malt, London Meantime want the best hops and malt for the type of beer they wish to produce so they source from around the world because they are interested in taste not tradition and CAMRA rules. American hops are imported in for their different (mainly aromatic) characteristics to UK hops, German malt is used too because they produce some of the best in the world. My favourite analogy is that Harvey's is like a Jaguar E-Type and a modern Craft beer such as Brewdog Punk IPA is like an Audi R8. Real Ale is about tradition and rules ( do we really drink cask ale warm because of taste or is it because cask ale needs to be stored at 16 degrees in a warm room for secondary fermentation) craft is about innovation, taste and refinement. There are no rules with Craft beers much to the horror of many a CAMRA committee! Harvey's tastes nice but who wants a beer the same temperature as their own piss when it's 30 degrees outside?
I have never had anytime for CAMRA as in the 80s they used The Mapie in Epsom for their meetings saying how good the Courage Best and Directors was. The guv Robbie Brown was going skint and had to pay cash before delivery and asked me to look after the pub. While he was away on holiday he ran out of beer so I bought 2 kegs of Toby Bitter from a wholesaler in Wimbledon removed the centre piece and dangled the pipes in the kegs. Nobody not even the CAMRA members noticed the difference. So much for their knowledge of good beer.And that is why I can't be bothered with CAMRA. They did a great job in the day but are now to narrow in their thinking. Anyway why drink Harvey's in the ground when you can be sipping all manner of great stuff in Craft or any of the other great pubs in and around the station.
He doesn't.
Price increases for 2012/13 which first came into effect at the Fatboy Slim shows:
Harveys Real Ale £3.60 £3.90
Fosters £3.60 £3.90
Strongbow £3.80 £4.00
Red Wine £3.80 £4.20
White Wine £3.80 £4.20
Rose Wine £3.80 £4.20
Soft Drinks £2.00 £2.20
Bottled Water £1.50
https://nortr3nixy.nimpr.uk/showthread.php?251402-Food-and-Drink-prices-this-season