Month: October 2020

Spotlight on… Lamorbey Wine, Sidcup

Spotlight on… Lamorbey Wine, Sidcup

Spotlight on… taking a risk

Before setting up Lamorbey Wine, Bob was a number cruncher, sitting at a desk working on spreadsheets in the City.  He knew that redundancy was coming up so he started thinking about what he might do next.  

“I enjoyed wine and realised that there was a gap in the market in Sidcup.  By the time I took redundancy, I was ready to take a risk, so I set up Lamorbey Wine from scratch.”

Spotlight on… rolling up the sleeves

Bob told Glenn that the challenges he faced in setting up included finding the right location, fitting out the shop and sourcing appropriate stock.  “Whilst my city role would’ve seen me assign areas outside of my expertise to others, I had to handle all of this myself.”

Spotlight on… tapping into heritage  

The name “Lamorbey” refers to the name of the local village which was swallowed up by Sidcup and the area even featured a hop farm (until about 100 years ago) so you’ll find “wild” hops growing in the area, just like we have near the brewery.

Bob Cuthbert from Lamorbey Wine, Sidcup with a range of Beerblefish products

Spotlight on… beer in a wine shop!

Bob’s favourite beer style is a good old fashioned bitter, although he also enjoys Belgian ales too (especially Saison Dupont).  “Speaking of bitters, I have stocked Beerblefish’s take on this style, Edmonton Best Bitter.” Bob has also stocked Lady Mildmay, Hoppy Pale Ale No.6, 1820 Porter, 1853 ESB, 1892 IPA and Cashmere Brut IPA.  “Cashmere Brut IPA in particular has been very popular and feedback from customers is that Beerblefish make beers (and gin) of very good quality.”

“I used to stock a range of Belgian ales, but my customers are more interested in beers from local microbreweries – which is great to see.”  Bob encourages people to be adventurous so that they try a range of beers.  “Hopefully one day Beerblefish will release a Lamorbey Lambic for my customers!” You never know, Bob, you never know!

Spotlight on… what the future holds

Bob told Glenn, “In terms of the coming year, I’ve shelved my plans for world domination until after the pandemic as (thankfully) I’ve been quite busy.  Of course, government dictated rules and regulations can change at a moment’s notice so who knows what the future holds?”  

Spotlight on… bottle shop romance

Glenn always likes to ask our stockists how many couples they know have met in their place – and Bob’s has to be the best answer yet: “Me and Jackie for starters!”

Spotlight on… the secrets of success

Bob says his shop is successful because, “Customers appreciate my personal service, quality products and fair prices.” Glenn asked Bob how a regular customer would describe his shop: “Essential!”

Glenn finished by asking Bob if there is anything else interesting that customers should know. Bob says, “Pop in and say hello, you might just be surprised!”

Posted by Bethany in Beer Styles and Recipes, Stockists
Fall Back (Spring Forward)

Fall Back (Spring Forward)

This weekend sees the changing of the clocks (we like to think they’re changing from Beer Summer Time to Gin Maybe Time) and the journey to the darkest part of the year is well underway. At Beerblefish HQ, we reckon it’s time to cosy up with something delicious to drink by the fire or snuggled up on the sofa under a nice warm blanket.

Beerblefish Mixed Case

We’ve got plenty of beers in stock or coming soon that fit the bill. We’ve a fresh batch of our 1892 IPA bottled up and ready to go – that will be on our online shop later today – as well as 1820 Porter. Both of these beers go really well with hearty autumnal dishes like stews and roast dinners, and the porter is especially good with a rich, chocolatey pudding.

On the horizon, we’ll have our new Gingerbeerble spiced beer into bottles and onto the shop pretty soon too – you can’t get much more cosy and autumnal than that – and a new batch of its Blackbeerble stout cousin is also coming soon!

We’re also in the midst of getting our Christmas offerings up and running. We’ll have gift packs going live on the webshop over the next few days which you can have sent directly to whoever you want (within the UK) – we can help you to spread a little Christmas cheer, even if you might not get to see everyone you would want to this festive season.

Posted by Bethany in Beer Styles and Recipes, Taproom and Bottle Shop
Holding Back the Tiers

Holding Back the Tiers

With the way things have gone so far this year, we’re not that surprised that we woke up this morning in a Tier 2 “High Alert” zone – to be honest, it would probably take an alien invasion or the discovery of wizards in one of the fermenters to really shock us at this point! (But wouldn’t that be cool, eh?! Wizards in the fermenters…)

Wizard in the fermenter: what it might look like…

We’re fortunate to be in a much better place this time around than we were at the start of the national lockdown in March – now that we have a premises licence and our online shop, we’re pivoting like a ballerina and using our yoga-like flexibility (obtained from P.E. with Joe, obviously) to make sure we can serve our customers whatever the circumstances.

We’re still opening the brewery three days a week – Thursday, Friday and Saturday, 12 to 5pm – for beer and gin takeaways. You can rock up on the day and take your chances on stock, or you can call in advance to reserve stuff from our weekly beer list. You can also order and pay online for brewery collection (but note that this won’t include our special brewery-only discount on bottles and cases). We usually put the weekly beer list up on a Wednesday – look out for it on social media and on the homepage of our website.

You can order from the shop for UK-wide delivery too – you can have mixed 6 and 12 packs of 500ml bottles, mixed 3 and 6 packs of 750ml bottles, individual 750ml bottles and bottles of our Limited Edition Hopped Gin delivered to UK addresses for a £5 flat rate – or delivery is FREE if you spend £70 or more!

Individual 500ml bottles and our 5 litre mini casks are available for brewery collection only. We can’t send mini casks, and individual bottles are complicated because packing boxes are for multiples of 6 (and if they aren’t full, there’s a much greater risk of damage to your beer in transit, which no-one wants).

While we’d love to see you at the brewery, don’t forget to support your local pub too. Everyone in hospitality is having a hard time at the moment, and it really is a case of “use it or lose it”. Many of the pubs we supply are still open and have COVID-secure systems in place to make your visit safe and compliant with the current regulations. Please pay them a visit, whether it’s to drink in or pick up a takeaway – and if you can bear to spend more time with people from your household, please take an inside table; there’s a risk that lots of available seats in pubs will be empty because of the “no mixing with other households indoors” rules.

The great news if you want to meet your mates for a pint is that lots of pubs have upped their outdoors game in the last couple of months – many now have undercover outdoor areas with heating so you can enjoy your drinks in comfort while still getting to catch up with friends.

Finally, look after each other – the first phase of lockdown wasn’t much fun for anyone and, although the restrictions are a little lighter this time around, there are still many people who might be feeling a bit isolated. Make sure you pick up the phone to them and make sure they’re alright – let’s look after each other!

Posted by Bethany in Beerblefish HQ News, Stockists, Taproom and Bottle Shop
All About… Our New Intern!

All About… Our New Intern!

We’re now three months on from joining Work In Progress and one of the inclusion areas we’ve focused on is in our staffing. When we signed up, we had just hired our new brewer, Michaela, whose addition increased the gender diversity of our team – but we thought there was more we could do.

So, a few weeks ago, we welcomed another James to Beerblefish. We’re very excited that we have partnered with West Lea School’s Supported Internship Programme. This is a programme that gives 16 to 24 year olds with Special Educational Needs (SEN), an opportunity to find work and encourages businesses to diversify their workplaces by employing people with SEN. 

As a result, James has joined us on a year long placement, fully supported by the programme and a dedicated Job Coach, making his transition into the brewery so much easier on us. We have wasted no time in putting James to work – he’s already helped us brew, bottle and label our beers! James has been given a plethora of tasks in his short time with us so far, and has proven that he is capable of carrying out brewery duties.

He’s also made us think about things in a different way – we need to try to look at the world through his eyes when we’re working with him, which is a great benefit to everyone else in the team too; we’re all learning from each other and we’re used to there being two Jameses in the team now!

James has always wanted to work in the beverage industry, and his enthusiasm and willingness to learn have shone through from the get go. We are very excited to be working with James and the Supported Internship Programme, and look forward to guiding him in the future.

We’re proud to be giving a young person with SEN an opportunity to work and we’d love any of our customers and suppliers who can to consider doing the same – you can find out more by contacting the West Lea Supported Internship Programme at sip@westleaschool.co.uk, or by visiting the SIP website.

Posted by Bethany in Beerblefish HQ News, Brewed for Good
Going the Extra Mile

Going the Extra Mile

We tweeted earlier this week about our Brewer, Michaela, and her quest to run the London Marathon. Today was the day, and the Beerblefish team joined Michaela’s husband and friends on Tottenham Marshes to cheer her on.

I think it’s important to put this in perspective. Running a marathon is a massive effort. It’s not just about the 26.2 miles on the day itself. It means giving up virtually all of your free time for at least six months and spending it running instead of doing whatever else you enjoy. It means being careful about what you eat and drink. It means not just going on long runs every weekend, but also getting up in plenty of time to eat before you go out and then spending another hour or so getting cleaned up sorted out when you get back – it’s basically a day out (or at least it is at my pace!)

And then you get to the race itself and it’s amazing – people cheering you on all the way around, people giving you jelly babies and shouting your name, high-fiving kids as you run alongside the barriers and rounding that final corner onto The Mall and seeing the finishing line ahead of you. I know all this because I’ve done it – ten years ago.

Except this year it’s different. The runners have had a whole year’s build-up since the results of the ballot for places came out, uncertainty since March over when and even whether the race would go ahead at all, and then finally they ended up doing it “virtually” – that is, actually running the marathon distance, but at a place of your choosing, so as to stop crowds gathering in one place. 

Michaela at the end of lap four of seven.

For even the most hardened professional athlete, that would be tough. How do you manage your training schedule when you don’t know when you’re aiming for? How do you figure out your strategy for where to run your race? Is it better to run a linear route like the normal London Marathon course, or should you do laps of somewhere? What’s the optimal lap length? 

Michaela’s had to deal with all of this. To me, it seems like several years ago that she did the Richmond Park Half Marathon as part of her marathon training, when it was actually only in February. She’s kept her legs ticking over all the way through lockdown and moved onto the really long runs in September – she even paid a visit to the Beerblefish stall at Forty Hall Farmers’ Market last month, halfway through the longest run of her training.

To add to all of this, there’s the solitude. Long-distance runners are used to eating up the miles on their own – if you’re really lucky, you might find a like-minded lunatic to run with you at least some of the time – but it’s rare to be on your own in the race itself. Today, Michaela ran seven laps of a route around Tottenham Marshes on her own, starting at the lovely Waterside Cafe, with her support team cheering her on each time she passed. The weather was awful – wet, cold and windy – but she kept going, as she put it, “one foot in front of another.”

Michaela wasn’t just doing this for the privilege of solitary running round reservoirs in the rain, though. She was doing it in memory of her mother-in-law, Margaret, and her Uncle Alan, both of whom died of cancer. She wants to raise money for Cancer Research UK to try to prevent other people from going through the same as they did and, at the time of writing, she’s raised an amazing £968.39 but she’d love to get to her goal of £2,000.

Michaela had her running app tracking her every step of the way and in the end she actually overshot – she literally went an extra mile! She crossed the world’s shortest finishing line (and possibly the only one made of masking tape) in 4h46m – a Herculean effort and a time that most first-time marathoners would be pleased with under normal circumstances.

Michaela Charles crossing the finishing line

She celebrated by spraying a bottle of prosecco (mostly in her ear, I think!) and then drinking a beer out of the back of the brewery van. Always classy at Beerblefish.

Needless to say, everyone at Beerblefish is hugely proud of her and really pleased for her that she’s achieved her goal.

If you have a couple of quid lying around, Michaela’s fundraising page will be open for donations for a while yet – she and Cancer Research UK would be very grateful for anything you can give.

Michaela after finishing.
Posted by Bethany in Beerblefish HQ News, Brewed for Good