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CAMRA CELEBRATES SLOW FOOD RECOGNITION

Mid-Chilterns CAMRA are celebrating a campaigning win this week, as the Slow Food Movement have recognised the significance of Cask Beer, through the work of local branch members.


Founded in Italy in 1986, Slow Food is believed to be the world’s largest food movement, touting one-million activists spread over 160 countries. The movement began as a grassroots mission to protect culinary heritage and soon grew to the organisation it is today, promoting biodiversity and campaigning on behalf of endangered foods and traditions.

The Ark of Taste is one of the Slow Food Movements key initiatives, cataloguing endangered food and drinks from around the world. Nominations to the ark are supervised through one of the organisation’s advisory board, who assess a product’s unique characteristics – including cultural and historical significance. If suitable for recognition, The Slow Food Movement safeguards a product through advocacy both at local and national levels, bolstered by the educational resources and public promotion. Members of the movement’s ‘Chefs Alliance’ programme are encouraged to champion ark products at their eateries, connecting slow food producers with chefs at top restaurants far and wide.

Ludlow Marches Slow Food Group was one of the first to champion cask at Slow Food events, commissioning its first cask tasting at the Ludlow Food Festival in 2023. Tastings at the festival have been led in collaboration with beer writer and Slow Food supporter Laura Hadland.


Two-hundred British products are aboard Slow Food’s ‘Ark of Taste’. National treasurers such as Somerset Cheddar, Cumberland Sausages and Three Counties Perry now accompanied by Cask Beer. Not to be found in grain-based-booze isolation on the Ark, cask beer joins peers Umqombothi Beer from South Africa and Rauchbier from Bamberg, Germany. Curiously, hopshoots (as in, those from the hop plant) are another British product on the Ark, celebrated for their culinary properties – used as an alternative to asparagus – and their rich heritage in territories such as Kent, Herefordshire and Worcestershire.

Cask beer, including the way it is produced and dispensed, was nominated for Slow Food’s ‘Ark of Taste’ by Mid-Chilterns CAMRA chairman Jared Ward-Brickett. Both a keen foodie and an accredited Beer Sommelier, Jared believed that cask’s rich heritage – coupled with its struggles in contemporary times – made the drink a prime candidate for Slow Food recognition.


“I believe that cask beer is one of Britain’s finest examples of slow food. Brewers fill casks with beer containing live yeast, which naturally ferments sugars and produces carbon dioxide, lending the beer its gentle effervescence and layered character. Upon delivery to the pub, casks are carefully vented and settled by a skilled cellar-person until they are ready to be served through a traditional hand-pump. This methodical, attentive process produces a unique drinking experience. Lively yet smooth, with subtle complexity drawn from natural fermentation.”

Speaking about cask beer in broader cultural terms, Jared notes:

“It is worth noting that cask is almost exclusively be found in traditional British pubs. These establishments hold a special place in British life and have been a cornerstones of community for centuries. Historically, cask-serving pubs would have offered a vital “third place” away from impoverished homesteads and grim workplaces – environments of warmth, conversation, and conviviality.”


Adbullah Faiz, Progam Coordinator for the Ark of Taste at Slow Food, added:

“The cataloging of Cask Beer in the Ark of Taste is a recognition not only of a traditional brewing method, but of a living culture that values craftsmanship, community, and taste. By safeguarding this heritage, we are protecting the knowledge and conviviality that define Cask Beer, ensuring it continues to inspire future generations.” 

Slow Food’s acknowledgement of cask beer comes as efforts are being made to gain UNESCO recognition for the product. The effort, backed by CAMRA and other noted industry bodies, is fronted by the Craft Beer Channel, who have showcased the virtues of cask-conditioned ale through its ‘Keep Cask Alive’ campaign. Just as timely, the news has been published by Mid-Chilterns CAMRA branch during National Cask Ale Week. An apt reason to ‘cheers’ and raise glasses – here’s to cask beer!


ADDITIONAL RESOURCES

To read more about the Slow Food Movement, please visit slowfood.com. To find out more about the Campaign for Real Ale, please visit www.camra.org.uk. For further details concerning the Slow Food Movement’s ‘Ark of Taste’ and ‘Chef’s Alliance’ initiatives, please go to www.fondazioneslowfood.com and https://www.slowfood.org.uk/aboutcooksalliance/.

To show support for UNESCO recognition of cask beer, please sign the petition here – https://petition.parliament.uk/petitions/716686

For more on National Cask Ale Week, please visit the campaign’s website – https://caskaleweek.co.uk/

Hemel Old Town Beer Festival – Beer, Cider & Perry List 2025

BEER LIST

THE JOHN LOMAX BAR (SOUTH BAR)

1. Allsopps – India Pale Ale – 5% – IPA

“Samuel Allsopp was the first to perfect Burton-brewed India Pale Ale. Some 200 years later, we invite you to savour this faithful recreation of the beguiling, original Burton IPA.
2. Anspach & Hobday – The Porter – 6.7% – Porter
“Porter established Victorian London as the centre of the brewing world. Highly kilned and roasted malts match perfectly to our London water, with flavours of coffee and chocolate.”
3. Black Iris – Snake Eyes – 3.8% – Pale Ale
This beer is packed full of juicy tropical notes followed by a lovely citrus kick coming from the blend of Citra and Cascade hops in both the boil and the dry hopping stage.
4. Brewpoint – Anchorman – 4.1% – IPA (LOCAL) – Donated by The Olde Kings Arms pub
“A modern, fresh and fruity cask beer brewed using a blend of contemporary English ingredients with American late-hopping. Malt sweetness leads to a lingering, bitter finish.”
5. Buxton Brewery – Gatekeeper – 4.1% – Porter
Push the gate aside – step into the brooding landscapes found on our doorstep in the Peak District. Our porter is inspired by the dark, hidden depths and storied past of our home.
6. Buxton Brewery – Nuts & Crosses – 4.5% – Flavoured Stout – Sponsored by Liz Doughton and Gill Badminton
“Defying predictability, just like Peak District weather, we’ve crossed a full-bodied milk stout with rich peanut butter decadence to create a true adventurous palate pleaser.
7. Chiltern – Black – 3.9% – Porter (LOCAL)
“Award winning, dark, complex porter for year round drinking. Dark, ruby treacle tones, hints of roast barley and beautifully hopped with a chocolaty aroma.”
8. Fuller’s – ESB – 5.5% – Extra Special Bitter– Sponsored by Andy and Amanda Harvell
Extra Special Bitter (ESB) is a strong, full-bodied, mahogany-coloured ale with a mellow bitterness and satisfying finish. Brewed with Pale Ale and Crystal malts.”
9. Harvey’s – Sussex Best Bitter – 4.0% – Traditional Bitter
 “A superbly balanced bitter with prominent hop character. Using a blend of four local hops, water filtered through the Sussex Downs, and Harvey’s unique house yeast strain,”
10. Hop Back – Summer Lightning – 5.0% – Golden Ale – Sponsored by Nigel Harris and Richard Healey
A trendsetter in British brewing.. An extremely pleasant straw coloured beer with terrific fresh, hoppy aromas. An intense bitterness leads to an excellent long, dry finish.
11. Hop Tap – Jupiter Heights – 4.2% – IPA (LOCAL) – Donated : The Hop Tap pub
“Maris Otter and Munich malts provide a platform from which the Cascade and Chinook hops shine. Dry hopping adds a bold finish to this thirst-quenching golden coloured beer.”
12. Hornes – Featherstone – 3.6% – Amber Ale (LOCAL) (GLUTEN FREE)
A fruity Amber session ale. US Crystal and Cascade hops in the boil and dry hopped with even more Cascade make this little ABV beer pack a fruity punch. Gluten-Free.
13. Hornes – Unlocked Hornes – 4.3% – IPA (LOCAL) (GLUTEN FREE)
“Our Unlocked Hornes IPA is a citrusy refreshing session IPA, packed full of Citra and Simcoe hops. Gluten-Free.”
14. Indie Rabble – An Actual Orange – 3.4% – Pale Ale
An Actual Orange is a single hop session pale ale with the Tango hop added at both boil and in whirlpool, for an intense citrus zip atop classic, bold bitterness. Zesty and fresh.”
15. Leighton Buzzard – Restoration Ale – 4.6% – Traditional Bitter (LOCAL)
“Like a traditional best bitter, but benefitting from the generous use of American Cascade and Perle hops to deliver a fruity refreshing beer.!”
16. Mad Squirrel – Hopfest – 3.8% – Pale Ale (LOCAL) (GLUTEN FREE) – Sponsored by TopDec Decorating Supplies
“Literally a festival of hops. This is a new world pale ale, headlined by Citra, with Centennial and Chinook supporting, A pure rave of citrus refreshment. Gluten-Free.”
17. New River – Five Inch Drop – 4.6% – IPA (LOCAL) – Sponsored by The Stag pub, Mentmore
“Triple hopped IPA. Toffee, malty spicy aromas. Flavours of pine resin and citrus. Blends three hop varieties from the UK, USA and New Zealand.”
18. Oakham – Green Devil – 6.0% – IPA – Donated: The Full House pub

“This contemporary IPA explodes with amazing hop harvest aromas, packs in big tropical and citrus hop flavours before a crisp, refreshing finishDouble hopped with US hops.”
19. Pentrich – North of South – IPA – 4.0% – IPA (HAZY) – – Sponsored by Coffee & Wine
Hoppy New Zealand session pale. Hopped extensively and exclusively with Nelson Sauvin, for notes of white grape and gooseberry.”
20. Pomona Island – Mondays – 4.0% – Stout
“Session strength Irish Dry Stout. Full bodied, dark and roasty.”
21. Rebellion – Overthrow – 4.3% – IPA (LOCAL) – Sponsored by Simon Webster and Peter Ellis
“Easy drinking and well balanced pale ale with a pleasing hoppy aroma. A clean and crisp base layered with Citra hops from the USA, for tropical and grapefruit aromas.”
22. Salopian – Dark Shadow – 4.4% – Stout
 – Sponsored by The Tea Tree
“Deep, dark and richly black, a powerhouse of a stout, with concentrated flavours of coffee and molasses, infused with clean fruity hops and balanced by a deep bitterness.”
23. Stancil – Black – 3.7% – Mild – Sponsored by J.Worley Funeral Directors
“Temptingly smooth and undeniably moreish. The rich character of BLACK is accompanied by a surprisingly modest ABV, making this the essential dark session ale.”
24. Stardust – Train of Gold – 4.4% – Pale Ale (HAZY) – Sponsored by J.Worley Funeral Directors
“A bright, golden beer, dry-hopped with UK Cascade and El Dorado. Tropical fruit and orange aromas are supported by a light resinous backbone and a moreish bitterness.”
25. Sureshot – To The Trees – 4.0% – Pale Ale (HAZY) – Sponsored by The Three Blackbirds pub
“Hoppy, hazy pale ale brewed with Manalita hops from New Zealand.”
26. Thornbridge x Garrett Oliver (brewmaster at Brooklyn Brewery) – Strong Dark Mild – 5.5% – Mild
“Malt forward and robust. A special collaboration with Garrett Oliver, Brewmaster of Brooklyn Brewery in New York. It’s a unique beer brewed on the world’s only operational Burton Union heritage brewing set.”
27. Tiny Rebel – Summer Jam – 4.3% – Flavoured IPA – Sponsored by the Langa Township Pre-School Trust
“Burnt Pineapple IPA. The perfect pint for warm weather (fingers crossed!). Pineapple and light malt flavours work together to give you a drink that’ll keep the good vibes going.”
28. Torrside – I’m Spartacus – 6.7% – IPA (HAZY)
“Our flagship IPA. Big and fruity, loaded with Simcoe hops! This is our most popular IPA, at the tropical fruit end of the spectrum – not too dry with a balanced bitterness.”
29. Track – Sonoma – 3.8% – Pale Ale (HAZY)
“A refreshing, sessionable, hazy pale ale with a simple malt base & hopped generously with Mosaic, Centennial & Citra. This beer bursts forth with resinous notes of sticky mandarin and grapefruit, finishing crisp & clean with a soft, pithy bitterness.”
30. Tring Brewery – Better With Time – 6.0% – Oak Aged Old Ale (LOCAL) (FESTIVAL EXCLUSIVE)
“A sweet, dark strong ale that has been aged using oak, before an extended maturation in cask. Complex, delicious and very special.”


THE DAVE LEWIN BAR (NORTH BAR)

31. Tring Brewery – Clawhammer – 4.1% – IPA (LOCAL) – Sponsored : Radio Dacorum
“Pine and resin notes make this a true ‘West Coast’ American Pale. Steely US hops sit in a respectable amber body. Grapefruit notes are found in a rich honey, caramel palate.”
32. Tring Brewery – Colley’s Dog – 5.2% – Ruby Ale (LOCAL)
“This dark ruby premium ale is all about the malt, and we’ve packed a lot into this brew. It’s nutty, it’s malty and full of body. An old school strong English Ruby Ale.”
33. Tring Brewery – Death or Glory – 7.2% – Barley Wine (LOCAL)
Despite its strength, this is one easy drinking beer. A rich, sweet barley wine with a heady, nose and incredibly complex palate. Brewed by appointment to the Queens Royal Lancers.”
34. Twickenham Fine Ales – Honey Dark – 4.8% – Mild – Donated: The Full House pub
“Brewed with dark malts and second fermented with honey, this strong dark beer has chocolate, coffee, caramel and, of course, honey featuring in both aroma and flavour.”
35. Vale – Gravitas – 4.8% – Pale (LOCAL)
 – Sponsored by The Red Lion pub, Dagnall
“Bold, zesty flavours give our flagship pale ale a punchy hop hit, beautifully complimented by a smooth malt backbone.”
36. Verdant – Miniature Symbols – 3.4% – Pale Ale – Sponsored by Brian Crawley

Super sessionable low-strength, straw-coloured, pale ale. Loaded up with some classic ‘C’ hops from the USA, in the form of Simcoe, Chinook and Columbus.”



KEG BEER LIST (AT THE DAVE LEWIN BAR, NORTH BAR)

37. Tring Brewery – Alchemist Lager – 4.5% – Lager (LOCAL)
 – Sponsored by ‘the Anonymous Organists’
“Brewed with noble hops from the Czech Republic and Germany. Lightly-kilned malts blend with an authentic lager yeast for notes of gentle spice and sweet grain.”
38. Tring Brewery – Raven King – 5.5% – IPA (LOCAL) (HAZY)
“Brewed with wheat and dry-hopped for extra aroma, our hazy core range IPA is punchy, powerful and delicious with a drenching of tropical fruit aromas.”


CIDER & PERRY LIST (AT THE LILLIAN BATCHELOR CIDER BAR)


1. Ascension – What Is The Market Value Of A Soul – 4.0% – Fruited/Flavoured (CAMRA CERTIFIED REAL CIDER)

“A rich, heady blend of wild cider, fresh Cameo apples and black cherry juice. This cider is good times!”
2. Broadoak – Premium Perry – 7.5% – Donated: The Rising Sun (Berkhamsted) pub
“A sweet but incredibly refreshing Perry with a glorious fresh-tasting pear flavour and wonderful pear aroma.”
3. Dorset Nectar – Old Harry Rocks – 6.0% – Dry Cider (CAMRA CERTIFIED REAL CIDER)
“A scrumptious alchemy of mostly bittersweet cider apples. This cider is naturally fermented from whole crushed cider apples grown in the wilds of West Dorset.
4. Gwatkin – No Bull – 4.5% – Medium Cider (CAMRA CERTIFIED REAL CIDER)

“Orange-brown in colour with an appley aroma together with some vanilla tones. A smooth but sweet toffee-apple taste. Like Herefordshire bulls, this cider is full of character.”
5. Harry’s Cider – Flash Harry’s Mango & Lime – 4.0% – Fruited/Flavoured Cider
 (CAMRA CERTIFIED REAL CIDER)
“Tasty and fresh. This cider features a lime citrus kick and smacks of mango, with just the right amount of cider aftertaste!”
6. Hecks – Blended Perry – 6.0% – Perry (CAMRA CERTIFIED REAL PERRY)
“This blended farmhouse perry has a fragrant nose, a real perry with plenty of fruit taste and real body.”
7. Lilley’s – Tropical – 4.0% – Fruited/Flavoured Cider – Sponsored by J.Worley Funeral Directors
“We have blended our Somerset cider with an explosion of tropical fruits. Pink grapefruit, pineapple, mango and lime all combine to make this a succulent thirst quencher.”
8. Nightingale – Tenterden – 5.5% – Medium Cider (CAMRA CERTIFIED REAL CIDER)
“A beautifully balanced, bright and floral medium still cider, named after our very hometown!
9. Ross On Wye – Biscuits For Dessert? – 6.2% – Dry Cider
 (CAMRA CERTIFIED REAL CIDER)
“A blend of Bittersweet, Bisquet and three dessert varieties are used to produce this seriously moreish dry cider”
10. Snails Bank – ApplyDapply – 5.2% – Sweet Cider (CAMRA CERTIFIED REAL CIDER)
“A sweet, bright cider that blends traditional bittersweet apples with a more contemporary Russet apple, making for a light, refreshing and quaffable tipple!”
11. Thistly Cross – Whisky Cask Cider – 6.9% – Sweet/Flavoured Cider
“Cider is matured in Whisky Casks from Glen Moray Distillery. Just enough time passes for the cider to absorb the distinctive tones of the oak and Highland single malt.”
12. Westons – Rosie’s Pig Rhubarb – 4.0% – Fruited/Flavoured Cider – Sponsored by Chloe Gilbert & Jared Ward
“Complex, with a distinctive Rhubarb palate, featuring a hint of citrus and a refreshing tart finish.”

Hemel Old Town Beer Festival returns for 2025

The Hemel Old Town Beer Festival 2025 will be held across the weekend of Friday 18th, Saturday 19th and Sunday 20th of July. Our Friday and Saturday sessions will open midday-22:30, and our Sunday session will be midday-18:00.

TICKETS ON SALE NOW.

Mid-Chilterns CAMRA and St. Mary’s Church welcome you to a one of a kind beer festival, offering up to thirty ales, cider, live music and food sourced by the Hemel Hempstead Old Town Market.

Where: St Mary’s Church, Hemel Old Town High Street, HP1 3AE
When: Friday July 18th 12-2230, Saturday July 19th 12-2230, Sunday July 20th 12-1800.

Hemel Old Town Beer Festival is an exciting event based at the historic St. Mary’s Church, situated in the heart of Hemel Hempstead Old Town.

The Hemel Old Town Beer Festival 2025 will be held across the weekend of Friday 18th, Saturday 19th and Sunday 20th of July. Our Friday and Saturday sessions will open midday-22:30 with admissions for over-18s only. Our Sunday session will be open midday-18:00, as our ‘Family Day’, with anyone under-18 welcome and admitted free-of-charge.

The grounds of St. Mary’s enjoy vista views of Gadebridge Park, with the church itself offering a unique venue as the town’s oldest building – gilded in history and heritage.

With over thirty quality beers and ciders on offer, attendees of Hemel Old Town Beer Festival are treated to artisan drinks from local producers and national stars from further afield. Beers and ciders are complimented by live music and a sumptuous street food offering.

Hemel Old Town Beer Festival will be held across the weekend of July 18th-20th 2025.

CLICK HERE FOR TICKETS + MORE DETAILS.

CHEERS

How Berkhamsted’s oldest pub, The Bull, squares up to tough new operating conditions


In early April this year, the hospitality sector was dealt a triple-blow to its operating conditions. The Great British pub, an institution regarded by many as on its knees, saw a reduction to business rates relief, an increase in employer national insurance contributions and an increase to the paid minimum wage.

A cruel joke, two of the three changes came into effect on April Fools’ Day, a day that saw perfect beer garden weather. This led to me feeling conflicted as I sat on the outdoor decking of a sun-drenched pub, pint in hand, ready to talk about challenges faced by modern publicans. I had arranged to meet Mark Prendergast and Oli Board, new managers of Berkhamsted’s oldest pub, The Bull.

Mark (Bar Manager) and Oli (Head Chef) sat down with us for a brew and chat.

The Bull in Berkhamsted, Hertfordshire, was constructed at a time when Henry VIII was on the throne, around 1535. It is not outrageous to imagine the portly king supping at The Bull, considering the monarch’s eleven-year residence at nearby Asheridge House, a property that came into his possession through the dissolution of the monasteries in the late 1530s. Unlike the guillotines and ruffled collars of Henry’s rule, The Bull is still tangible in everyday life, and remains a community hub for the people of Berkhamsted. But the pub is an old building that creaks and groans, and new problems are beginning to rear up.

I SIGNED UP FOR THE LOVE OF THE JOB, THE PEOPLE AND THE COMMUNITY.


“Five percent. We’re looking at five percent off the business from the changes this month. That’s without any other prices rises, or reactionary changes from ourselves.” Honing in on business rates, Bar Manager Mark explained further “The playing field is massively skewed when it comes to local bricks-and-mortar businesses versus giant online retailers. The [business rates] relief has gone down at the same time that we’ve been told to absorb a two-pronged rise in staffing costs. But I didn’t sign up to be a publican for the money. I signed up for the love of the job, the people and the community.”

Three cask beers are served regularly at the Grade-II listed, sixteenth century pub.

YOU CAN BRING A CALF TO WATER

When I’d arrived at the pub, Mark was partway through constructing a new set of garden benches and Head Chef Oli was on his way. Mark seemed relieved to be distracted from the task at hand. “The manufacturer shipped these [benches] out with the correct number of panels, hooray, but nowhere near enough bolts! Anyway, the pub opens in fifteen minutes.”

Destined for The Bull’s canalside beer garden, located at the north end of the pub’s elongated footprint, Mark’s benches were just one facet of an ambitious exterior makeover. The headline feature of the revamp was a new children’s climbing frame named The Calf. The Calf was an impressive turret-shaped structure, a nod, I was told by Mark, to Berkhamsted Castle. The turret’s cabin, complete with a slide, could be accessed via a child-sized climbing wall. Underneath the cabin sat a small booth, adorned as a miniature pub.

“Here it is – The Calf. It wasn’t cheap, it was bespoke in fact. We’re hoping it boosts our family credentials for the summer.” Mark elaborated “We’ve invested so that the pub can become a community space for Berkhamsted residents. We can’t let five percent off the balance sheet compromise our offer. The Calf, the benches, new green spots.. they help us cater to community values. They bring people in.”

The pub’s garden area was flourishing and, helped by Mark’s green fingers, the space looked very much in bloom. He remained pragmatic still “Maybe it was easier for pubs in the past, but operating conditions are getting tougher. These days, you can’t rely solely on a canalside setting. In fact, some think of our location as off-the-beaten-track,” he rounded off “We want to give these people a reason to choose The Bull.”

A CHOCOLATE BOX PUB RUN

Set to the east of Berkhamsted, The Bull’s beer garden offers a first glimpse of the Grand Union Canal from the high street, located at one end of the town’s celebrated pub run. The Berkhamsted run, or crawl, is a route of twelve pubs on a near straight line that straddles either side of the high street. Alongside easy navigation and bountiful pub numbers, the town’s chocolate-box aesthetics make Berkhamsted the beer destination of West Hertfordshire. Held in similar regional esteem as St. Albans, AKA home of CAMRA, this historic market town swings above its weight when it comes to pubs.

Local opinions are split when it comes to the crawl’s health. Some believe that a post-COVID peak in pub numbers makes the growing, affluent town a beer drinker’s nirvana. Others reckon that the latest round of budget measures could be the last nail in the coffin of their beloved locals, already pitted in fierce competition. As part a press release which addressed April’s business changes, CAMRA’s national chairman Ash Corbett-Collins said “Hundreds of pubs have already stopped trading this year … with big increases in costs from higher National Insurance contributions starting this week, and hikes in business rates bills for pubs in England too … we risk losing more pubs which are a vital part of our social fabric”. I was determined to find out what Berkhamsted publicans thought of the run’s future.

“The town is definitely seen as a pub destination and I think that in that respect, we all make each other stronger. Every pub has its niche and serves it well.” It was very nearly opening time and Head Chef Oli had arrived, keen to add his opinion. “Pub crawls, pub-golf, hen dos, stag dos; they still pass through. Not as often as they did. It seems the party economy has shrunk a lot. Clubs and bars aren’t as prevalent as they were pre-Covid and Uber isn’t allowed to operate in the town, so taxi prices can be uncompetitive. Of course, people just have less in their pockets at the moment which is another barrier altogether. Add to these concerns the reduction in business rates relief and increase in NI and wages – it could get tough for all of us.” By now, the pub had began to come to life, so we took our pints out of the sun and into the heart of The Bull.

The interior of The Bull, a Grade-II listed building, features plush leather seats, charcoal-black wood paneling, a large Tudor fireplace and casement bow windows. Though, as Oli said, the pub “creaks and groans”, The Bull is considered a charming highlight of the town’s legendary pub run.

The Bull’s interior features tasteful fittings and fixtures, such as a communal news rack, loaded with beer publications and local literature.

OF TIME AND FREEDOM

Oli had started in The Bull’s kitchen nine years ago, part of a team headed up by previous owners Russell and Shelley. Like the owner before them, Russell and Shelley leased from pub company Red Oak Taverns. Oli remarked “Red Oak Taverns are a good pub company and have looked after this building for years and years now”. Oli and Mark’s relationship with their pub company, or ‘PubCo’, was key to the business’ bigger picture.

In recent years, many of the nation’s PubCos have seen complete relationship breakdowns with their tenanted managers, leading to the establishment of the Pubs Code Adjudicator, a new government body with statutory powers and regulations. Mark expanded on his pub’s relationship with Red Oak Taverns, clearly content with the arrangement “They take care of the building itself. As I said, The Bull is very old and that could be an expensive worry. The structure is covered, as is the boiler and a number of other big assets. This leaves us with the time and creative freedom to grow the pub, even in the face of new challenges coming this month.” Like Oli, Mark had worked under Russell and Shelley for a respectable spell, now in his eighth year at the pub.

Mark, Bar Manager at The Bull, pours a pint of local ale.

With a combined tenure of nearly two decades, Mark and Oli had wowed thousands of covers and poured countless well-kept pints before they took the reins in January 2024. Common knowledge among by the pub’s regulars, Oli and Mark prided themselves on a warm welcome. I was impressed that with each guest passing through the door, of which there were many on this particular Tuesday afternoon, came a first-name greeting and a familial chitchat with either manager. The pub was far removed from the ‘painted on smiles’ cliché so bemoaned of clinical hospitality. Mark and Oli knew from experience, a pub can be the centre-point of community life.

AS WITH MANY BRITISH PUBS, THE BULL HAS GOT A SIMPLE YET APPEALING PURPOSE. WE DON’T PLAN TO DEVIATE FROM THAT, JUST TO MAKE IT THE BEST IT CAN BE.

Oli (back right), sharing a laugh and a drink with some of his regulars.

“We’ve been in charge for a year and three months now and we’ve not had a single instance of anti-social behaviour. We’ve not had to eject or bar anyone. Unlike the supermarkets, who seem to get an easier ride, we have a duty of care to supervise our drinkers. Locals know The Bull to be a safe and welcoming space. That, for us, is what it’s all about.” Mark is the most local of locals, living above the pub where as he told me, there were still fixtures for hammock bedding. These fixtures are a reminder that The Bull was a popular guest house in the heydays of the canals. Oli added “The pub has hospitality heritage. Not much has changed besides the offer of beds and hammocks. As with many British pubs, it’s got a simple yet appealing purpose. We don’t plan to deviate from that, just to make it the best that it can be.”

Rounding off our chat, Mark doubled-down on Oli’s ‘simple but well-executed’ sentiment “You can’t be everything to everyone. We used to have a commercial-grade coffee machine, but there’s no need to compete with the fifty other coffee outlets in town. We removed live sports from the pub almost as soon as we took over, which was a sweeping change.” As a spectator in The Bull many times myself, I knew the sizeable crowds live sports had drawn in. But, as Mark explained, with a near eightfold increase in broadcasting costs, the 24/25 season had brought little financial promise. A change in management called for a clean slate. Mark and Oli were determined to crack the basics.

UP TO SPEED, AND ONE FOR THE ROAD

These days, ‘Monday Quiz Night’, ‘Cheap Tuesday’ and ‘Fish & Chip Friday’ put bums firmly in seats, complimented by unique seasonal events such as beer and food matchings, wine and food matchings, and street food markets. Oli’s culinary passions are clear, though in his own words he didn’t want to “..project [my] personal obsessions onto a menu that is expected to be refined British pub fare. It’s tried and tested and I respect that.” He concluded “There are personal touches; seasonal produce, weekly specials, recipe twists.. but the beer and wine matching events, served up with special small dishes, allow the kitchen team and I to explore our gastronomic curiosities. Thankfully, our guests love these events just as much as we do.”

It had come time to finish our interview, which had meandered into a friendly babble through the help of some local cask ale. I was left with the impression that both managers took the changes of April 1st very seriously, understanding the consequences for British publicans, the Berkhamsted run and their newly acquired business venture. But to them it was more than a business venture, it was a lifestyle and a purpose.

Oli and Mark recognised that warm welcomes, well-kept beer, quality food and a sense of community make British pubs a sum of their parts and then some. Sure, there were new challenges for Berkhamsted’s oldest pub, but the outlook of The Bull’s latest custodians was optimistic and resolute. Oli and Mark were going to give it their all.

Cheers to The Bull!

The Bull can be found at 10 High Street, Berkhamsted, Hertfordshire HP4 2BS. To join CAMRA in supporting and protecting British pubs, or to find out more about the organisation’s stance on recent changes to business rates relief, the paid minimum wage and employer national insurance contribution, please visit camra.org.uk.

This feature was written by accredited beer sommelier Jared Ward-Brickett, and produced with the support of Laura Hadland via a mentorship scheme from The British Guild of Beer Writers. If you’re interested in finding out more about the Guild, click here. All words, photos and graphics by Jared Ward-Brickett.

Pub of the Year Awards 2025

Mid-Chilterns CAMRA are thrilled to announce our annual ‘Pub of the Year’ awards for 2025, with The Three Blackbirds, Boxmoor taking overall champion ‘Pub of the Year’.

Congratulations to Lee, Charlotte and all of their team at the pub!

The Three Blackbirds pub in Boxmoor, Hemel Hempstead – Mid-Chilterns CAMRA Pub of the Year for 2025.



Our Joint ‘Runner-Up Pub of the Year‘ recipients have been announced as the The Rose & Crown in Ivinghoe and The George Ale House in Great Missenden. Congrats to both teams at their respective pubs!

Cider Pub of the Year‘ has been awarded to The Rising Sun (Berkhamsted), a treasure trove of close to twenty artisinal ciders and perrys.

Our ‘Most Improved Pub of the Year‘ goes to The Queen’s Head in Chesham, a pub that has seen an incredible reincarnation under the guidance of Paul and Manuel.

Community Pub of the Year‘ goes to The Anchor in Bourne End. This award has been granted for the Julie and Don’s outstanding efforts since reopening the pub in May 2024. Congrats again to Julie, Don, their team and the extended Anchor community.

Newcomer Pub of the Year‘ went to The Hop Tap in Market Square, Hemel Hempstead. Having just opened the premise, which used to house Monks Inn micropub, in November 2024 – owners Tony and Tracey have made a big splash with their quality and range.

A rare award recognising twenty eight years of management was presented to Tony and Lorri at the The Post Office Arms in Boxmoor. The ‘Personal Recognition Award for Long Service and Dedication‘ award was issued in celebration of the couple’s phenomenal tenure at ‘The Patch’ – well done again to Tony and Lorri!

For the first time ever, a special Branch Campaigner of the Year award was commissioned to celebrate the efforts of Richard Abraham who fulfils Tapler Editorial and Brewery Liason Officer Roles within the branch. Richard’s two official titles are just a drop in the ocean when speaking of his dedication to real ale and quality pubs – congrats to our branch campaigning champion.

To read more about our ‘Pub of the Year’ award winners please visit our ‘Awards‘ page!

CHEERS

Focus blog: The Real Ale Brewing Process

Cask-condition beer is a distinctively British drink, but what do we mean by ‘real ale’ and how is it made?

Generally speaking, ‘cask-conditioning’ describes the natural C02 production and flavour development achieved through in-cask fermentation. This historic technique takes place inside a container from which fresh beer is served, and is regarded a cornerstone of British brewing heritage.


Like all beer, real ale is starts life in the brewhouse and enjoys processes such as mashing, boiling, fermentation and maturation. Kick-starting brewday, grains are milled into a grist for the brewer to steep in warm water. This steeping process, known mashing, sees fermentable sugars coaxed out of malted barley along with the grain’s flavours and colours. The resulting mash liquid is called Wort, which is pumped to the kettle for a boil with the inclusion of hops. Hops are added throughout the boil, with more added at the start for bitterness, or more added at the end for aroma. Once the Wort has been boiled with hops, it is lowered to around 21 degrees as the brewers yeast is pitched to trigger fermentation. Ale fermentation lasts around four days, followed by a similar maturation time and then, packaging. It is at this point that beer destined to become real ale cuts a path of its own.


At point of packaging, firkins (real ale casks) are filled with beer which contains live yeast; a living micro-organism that consumes fermentable sugars and, in turn, produces CO2 and alcohol. Alcohol production is has for the most part concluded at this point, meaning only natural CO2 and flavour develop during conditioning. Cask-conditioning doesn’t end at the brewery, and continues at the pub under the watchful eye of skilled publicans.

Cellaring often happens in, would you guess it, the cool underground cellars of pubs where ale is held at around 11 degrees, and is vented to release excess C02. Once the beer achieves a C02 equilibrium, regular tests are undertaken to assess clarity, aroma and flavour. For these efforts, the cellarman is held by the brewer as an equal peer in creation of the perfect pint; each party laser-focused on this most mystical pursuit.
Real ale is ready for service once, and only once, the condition of the beer has been declared perfect. Often, this proclamation arrives only after multiple days of considered conditioning.


Handpulled to the bar, a smooth and sessionable beer is presented to the drinker, threaded with the nuance and complexity that only real ale can offer.
Phew, what a journey! We hope this longer read was worth the time and consideration, much like the methods used to craft sumptuous pints of quality real ale. ‘Real Ale’, ‘Cask Beer’, whatever you call it, now you know how it’s made. We think this makes the beer that-bit more tasty.

We’ll raise a glass to that!

CHEERS

Hemel Old Town Beer Festival 2024 : A community success!

We’ve been radio silent for little over a month, reminiscing on the many great memories made at this year’s Hemel Old Town Beer Festival.

It was incredible to see the Hemel community come together over the weekend, with over one-thousand guests welcomed at the stunning St Marys Church.

Reminiscing is not the only thing we’ve kept busy with, as numbers have been crunched for our fundraising efforts.

Festival goers, we are thrilled to announce that you have raised £8,613 for our not-for-profit causes!!

YOUR IMPACT

As generated by you, the event surplus will help to promote and protect St. Mary’s Church. Grade-I listed and dating back to 1140, Hemel Hempstead’s oldest building is still central to life in the historic Old Town. Markets, art galleries and bike shows are among events welcomed to the church and its leafy grounds, with external support for nearby charities fulfilled by Reverend John and the clergy at St. Mary’s.

Surplus funds stand to benefit another time-honoured pillar of British community, the local pub. Through funds raised for the Campaign for Real Ale (Europe’s largest consumer group), CAMRA champions community pubs and brewers, preserving the nation’s unique culture of cask-conditioned ale.

HOW THIS WAS ACHIEVED

This surplus is close to ten-fold that of the first Hemel Old Town Beer Festival in 2023. As margins at the bar saw no change this year, this growth can be attributed wholly to public support (footfall quadrupled that of our inaugural event!) and assistance from our amazing volunteers and sponsors.

ONE FOR THE ROAD

There is nothing more satisfying than affecting real and positive change. We hope to share the effects of our surplus as they happen – broadcasting the positivity that you have helped create through our social media and Tapler magazine channels.

Thanks again to our volunteers + sponsors and a special thank you to our food vendors and live music acts (as curated by Hemel Hempstead Old Town Market).

A final big thanks to you our guests; for yet another enjoyable and fruitful year at the Hemel Old Town Beer Festival.

Until next year, here’s to you!

CHEERS

GOOD BEER GUIDE 2025

Mid-Chilterns CAMRA are thrilled to announce that CAMRA’s ‘Good Beer Guide 2025’ is out this month and features fifteen of the branch’s greatest pubs.


HERTFORDSHIRE ENTRIES

• The Bell, Tring
• The Bell Inn, Bovingdon
• The Crown, Berkhamsted
• The Full House, Hemel Hempstead
• The King’s Arms, Tring
• Oddfellows Arms, Apsley
• The Rising Sun, Berkhamsted
• The Robin Hood, Tring
• The Saracens Head, Kings Langley

BUCKINGHAMSHIRE ENTRIES

The Blue Ball, Asheridge
The Crown, Ley Hill
The Crown Inn, Little Missenden
The George Ale House, Great Missenden
The Queen’s Head, Chesham
The Red Lion, Dagnall

The Good Beer Guide is CAMRA’s seminal publication featuring 4,500 of the UK’s best real-ale pubs, in rural and urban areas.

Now in its’ 52nd edition, CAMRA’s publication is the best-selling beer and pub guide with a foreword from BAFTA award-winning producer Iain MacLeod alongside consumer features, industry analysis and a comprehensive guide to hundreds of UK breweries too!

The Good Beer Guide’s 2025 foreword is from Coronation Street producer Iain MacLeod


As always, our nominees were curated from the highest scoring establishments on WhatPub, CAMRA’s public scoring portal which allows all members to put their local forward for awards and commendations.

Congratulations once again to all of our entries – here’s to another fantastic edition of CAMRA’s Good Beer Guide!

ORDER YOURS NOW –
https://shop1.camra.org.uk/product/the-good-beer-guide-2025

CHEERS

Hemel Old Town Beer Festival returns for second year

Thirty beers will be on offer at the Hemel Old Town Beer Festival, with special guests, live entertainment and street food hosted across the weekend.


CLICK HERE TO BUY TICKETS

Ales from local brewers such as Mad Squirrel, Tring Brewery and Chiltern Brewery featured in 2023.

The Mid-Chilterns branch of the Campaign for Real Ale (CAMRA) has announced the return of Hemel Old Town Beer Festival, held next month at St. Mary’s Church in Hemel’s historic Old Town.

Hosted on the weekend of July 19 to 21, the Hemel Old Town Beer Festival will feature thirty real ales, served alongside lip-smacking ciders and perrys. Live music and street food are to be procured by Hemel Old Town Market, so that punters can enjoy local musicians and a variety of tasty dishes on the grassy verges of St Marys.

BUY TICKETS HERE

Proceeds from the community event will be split between the two not-for-profit organisers, meaning that any surplus will go towards protecting pubs and the historic interior of St. Mary’s Church.

Sessions will be opened by a special guest speaker each day with Tim Amsden (first Mid-Chilterns CAMRA chairman and former CAMRA national chairman) already confirmed for the Saturday. Last year saw beer-writing legend Roger Protz, Mayor of Dacorum William Allen and the Bishop of Hertford Jane Mainwaring make appearances to engaged crowds of local drinkers.

Tickets for the festival are on sale now at hemeloldtownbeerfestival.co.uk.

Jared Ward, Chairman for Mid-Chilterns CAMRA and Beer Festival Organiser says:

We’re so thrilled to see Hemel Old Town Beer Festival back for another year, we cannot wait to share a pint or three with the local community.

As a not-for-profit event, our main goals are to champion quality beer and the historic Old Town of Hemel Hempstead. Protecting public houses is our MO and protecting the church and its beneficiary charities is in the interest of Dacorum as a whole. We enjoyed ourselves so much last year and are looking forward to building on the event’s successes next month.”

Attendees turned out in their hundreds for last year’s festivities.

Rev. John Williams of St. Mary’s Church added:

“Last year’s inaugural event was sensational, it was great to see hundreds of local people enjoying themselves in the grounds of St Mary’s. The Grade-I church, Hemel’s oldest building, has been welcoming visitors since 1140.

Building on last year, we have reduced entry price to just £5, and have bolstered our flavoured-cider range, which was incredibly popular in 2023. Sunday will mark our first-ever Family Day, with free entry for under-18s.

Community is at the heart of what we do, last year we raised hundreds of pounds for the church and our affiliate causes such as Liberty Tea Rooms in the town centre.

Hemel Old Town Beer Festival will open at midday and close at 22:30 on Friday and Saturday (over-18s only), opening at midday on the Sunday and closing at 6pm.

Tickets for the Hemel Old Town Beer Festival are on sale now starting at just £5. Advance tickets and further information are available at hemeloldtownbeerfestival.co.uk

CHEERS

Pub of the Year Awards 2024

Mid-Chilterns CAMRA are thrilled to announce our annual ‘Pub of the Year’ awards for 2023, with The King’s Arms, Tring taking overall champion ‘Pub of the Year’. Congratulations to Rob (landlord), Gavin (manager) and all of their team at the pub!

Rob Muirhead at The King’s Arms, Tring



Our ‘Runner-Up Pub of the Year‘ has been announced as the fantastic Full Moon, based in the village of Hawridge. Congrats to all the team!

Cider Pub of the Year‘ has been awarded to The Rising Sun (Berkhamsted), a treasure trove of close to twenty artisinal ciders and perrys.

Our ‘Best Improved Pub of the Year‘ goes to The Crown in Ley Hill, a pub that has seen an amazing reincarnation under the guidance of licensees Rob and Sandra.

Community Pub of the Year‘ goes to The Red Lion in Dagnall. This award has been granted for the team’s outstanding efforts through community events, charity fundraising and second-to-none hospitality. Congrats again to Debbie, Ed and the Red Lion community.

A rare award, for individual acclaim, was presented to Clint Whitaker, who has been commended with a ‘Personal Recognition Award for Dedication to Cask Beer, Real Cider and Community‘ award. Clint’s operating of the multiple award-winning and sadly recently closed Monks Inn have left a lasting legacy in the Mid-Chilterns beer scene. A massive well done to Clint!

To read more about our ‘Pub of the Year’ award winners please visit our ‘Awards‘ page!

CHEERS