Banks's Mild and Bombardier among ales axed by brewer

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Chippy_Tea

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Carlsberg Marston's has been accused of "wiping out UK brewing heritage" following a decision to cut a number of beers sold in pubs.

Eleven beers would be affected, including classic ales Banks’s Mild and Bombardier, although some would continue to be available in other forms after being taken out of production in cask or keg format.
The affected beers are Banks’s Mild, Banks’s Sunbeam, Bombardier (keg), Eagle IPA, Jennings Cumberland Ale, Mansfield Dark Smooth (keg), Mansfield Original Bitter (keg), Marston’s Old Empire, Marston’s 61 Deep, Ringwood Boondoggle and Ringwood Old Thumper.
The Campaign for Real Ale (CAMRA) said it was a "sad and disappointing decision", with Banks's Mild being among the first beers made by the 150-year-old Wolverhampton brewery.
Carlsberg Marston's Brewing Company (CMBC) said it remained "passionate about cask ale and delivering a sustainable, successful future for this important part of British beer culture".
The company said it had taken the decision following a review of its products and it had taken the decision to cut production where demand had declined.


Amber Bitter and Pedigree to stay

Carlsberg Marston's said Jennings Cumberland ale, Marston’s Old Empire IPA and Ringwood Boondoggle will continue to be sold as bottled beer.
In addition, Banks’s Mild will still be sold in keg, and in can, and Bombardier Amber Beer will be available in cask and in bottles.
"We continue to invest in and launch new cask ales as well as support popular traditional cask ales ranging from Banks’s Amber Bitter to Marston’s Pedigree," a spokesperson for Carlsberg Marstons said.

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Gillian Hough, from CAMRA, said the move was “another example of a globally owned business wiping out UK brewing heritage".
“I hope that this change will mean space on the bar for licensees to stock guest beers from local independent breweries, but realistically, I suspect this isn't what CMBC plans," she said.
Earlier this year the Carlsberg Marston’s Brewing Company announced it would close Banks’s Brewery in Wolverhampton as part of restructuring.
But it also announced "significant investments" to its Northampton and Burton breweries.

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Terry Cole, the landlord of the Royal Oak, close to the Bank's brewery in Wolverhampton, said his pub sold about 200 pints of Bank's Mild every week.
But Mr Cole said he believed there was "no going back" and that "the world has to evolve and we have to move on".
He said he could understand why the company was cutting its less popular ales and he understood Bank's Mild was a "regional ale", popular in the West Midlands, but not as popular nationally.
Nevertheless, he said his customers would be disappointed and it would be hard to find a replacement.
Warinder Juss, the Labour MP for Wolverhampton West, said he was "concerned" by the decision to cut back on some beers.
He said: "I've had a meeting with them where they assured me that they will continue to brew the Bank's beer that we are all accustomed to."
"I think it is probably time to have another meeting with them," he added.

BBC News
 
I don't think i have ever seen their beers in a pub round here but i have had Boondoggle and Old Empire they were both decent.

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Or you could see it as making space for small independent cask ale producers. Many of these 'historic' breweries muscled out or bought many a small local brewery in their hayday, narrowing the choice of beers available.

CAMRA do love large multinational.
 
Yeah...they ruined everything they got hold of.
They got Wychwood and cheapened Hobgoblin gold into pi55water. It used to be a decent beer...I emailed them years ago saying it wasn't the beer it used to be, asking for a recipe ,got a reply basically saying to add Nelson Sauv...can't remember the rest.
 
Sad that 'regional ales' such as Banks Mild don't seem to be viable these days when there seems to be local demand. Still, that seems to be the way of brewing in this country.
 

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