- Oct 17, 2008
- 14,359
It’s more that you brand all Wetherspoons as shit by default, not taking into account the number of absolutely dreadful “local taverns” which are considerably worse in terms of clientele, cleanliness, quality of ale and value.You make a good and valid point. But if I was to say I don’t go into pub A because the beer is shit, or pub B because it’s full of idiots no one bats an eyelid. I say this about Whetherspoons and I’m branded a snob.
There are some really good Wetherspoons and some really shit ones, depending on clientele, the building, location, quality of staff and loads of other factors.
My issue is the disinformation you can’t resist spreading about them selling short date beer. It is a myth, one you have brought up every single time Wetherspoons is mentioned, and every single time been proven wrong about. But for whatever reason, you’re absolutely fixated on this “fact” despite constantly being shown it’s untrue.
The reason they are cheap, as has been explained several times over many years, is they have enormous buying power. They place orders from breweries at negotiated prices for enormous numbers of barrels.
Let’s say an independent landlord wants to buy Carling. He buys 2-3 kegs to fulfil his minimum order. Now imagine Wetherspoons want to stock Carling, they buy 10 kegs for every single one of their 1,000 pubs.
10 kegs x 1,000 pubs is an order for 10,000 kegs of beer. Wetherspoons know this, so they leverage big discounts of the price per barrel. Breweries would rather sell 10,000 barrels for a smaller margin than 3 barrels to a local pub at a higher mark up.
Wetherspoons have never bought short-date stock. It’s simply never happened.