Author: WishboneAde

Keg Serves

Once in a while a customer will tell us that a Keykeg will serve too foamy, this is maybe once every 6-12 months, I thought I would write a blog post about this so I can add some details and also try and gain some feedback from our Keykeg customers.

Keykegs are the plastic things we use and we keg-condition them for carbonation, this means we ferment a beer out completely and then add sugar to it before kegging to create natural carbonation.

We want our beer to be right and consistent, so please if you do serve our kegs then feel free to get in touch in any of the usual ways and tell us about your experiences.

It would be wrong of us to react to a single customer mentioning something and change whole batches of kegged beer when no one else has said anything.

I’m going to go through as many variables as I can from storage temperature of kegs to how you pour a pint, and nearly all bar setups have differences and its impossible for a brewer to react to each and every different setup…

  • What Temperature is the beer stored at? – Please aim for 11-13c as a minimum for keg beer, more ideal would be 4-8c, beer stored at ambient temperature can cause problems on some bar setups.
  • Flow Controllers – These should be set to allow a smooth non-fobbing pour, they can be on-tap types or under-bar types and they can be quite fine to adjust. The size of beer line can also effect things, a thin 3/16″ beer line of about 2 meters long can slow the beer flow and make it hard to get a head on your pour, this would help should you think a beer is too lively.
  • Chiller Temperature – I would guess that most chillers are a fixed temperature (4-8c), though the Lindr Keg machines that we have have a dial to set the cooling, for a Lindr machine I would set the dial at 5 or more for a good consistent pour through the flow-control-taps.
  • Speed of Pour – Never rush a pour, a good pour can be the difference between letting a split second of beer hit the drip tray before catching in the glass or catching everything from turning the tap on. That initial bit of tap-fob can ruin an otherwise perfect pint. Always open a beer tap fully when pouring, no messing with it half open! The same goes for topping up a glass, be sure to waste that little bit of tap fob before catching in the glass.
  • Serving Pressure – Ensure your Gas or Compressor pressure is sufficient for your kegs and bar setup, 40psi should be sufficient for most beers, check the limits of the kegs you serve so you know the Maximum. Pressure keeps the bubbles in the beer, too low pressure will allow the bubbles to escape and cause problems.
  • Different beers – Different styles of beer can serve differently, work with the beer you are pouring. Variables like; Angled Glass, Glass pushed close and almost horizontal with tap nozzle, nozzle in beer, nozzle above beer, catch that tap-fob for more head, vary height of pour for either more or less head.
  • Newly Connected Kegs – Freshly hooked up kegs can be more lively until you have poured a few pints, you can slow down the Flow rate for new kegs and gradually speed it up the more pints you’ve served until you have an adequate flow rate.
  • Clean Glassware – and you don’t need those annoying head-keeper patterns on the inside of the glass. Renovate Glasses when necessary.
  • Some bar setup are better than others – Everything matters.

So please do give us feedback on carbonation levels.

Paua IPA

Paua is what they call Abalone in New Zealand, this IPA is loosely based around our Hop Dust Handcuffs recipe but with hops from Australia and New Zealand, its a full on rounded, soft stone fruit character to it. Available now in Cask & keykeg.

Brewery Bar day Saturday 24th September with Palomino Pizza

Our next Brewery Bar day will be Saturday 24th September 12 til 7pm-ish We will have Palomino Pizza with us doing the wood fired pizzas 😉

Further dates are:
29th Oct – Niko’s Comfort Kitchen
26th Nov – Caribbean Café from Leeds
17th Dec 🎄 Sssshh, don’t mention Christmas! FOOD – Provisionally Jimmy from Hullabaloo doing Caribbean Food. Plus around 3pm Haworth Ukulele Group will be joining us.

Barley wine

Wood be good to me 10.6% is a Red wine barrel-aged Barley wine, big luscious and deeply malty, hopped with Australian Enigma. Aged for almost a year in imported French red wine barrels.

Available in 20L keykegs and Pin casks.

Brewery Bar Day Saturday 11th June

We’ll have Palomino Pizza here on Saturday 11th June 12 til 7 or 8pm, stick the date in your calendar-diary-planner-thing and we’ll see you here, Cheers

All the usual details:

Wishbone Brewery Limited
2A Worth Bridge Industrial Estate
Chesham Street
Keighley
West Yorkshire
BD21 4LG

Landline: 01535600412
Mobile: 07867419445
info@wishbonebrewery.co.uk

Dogs welcome but please keep them out of the brewing area and under control like your kids 

We have flat / sloped access though being primarily a brewery our toilet facilities may not suit the less able among us.

60 Low Street Keighley – Our Future Pub

The Cat is out of the bag, I’ve no idea why the cat was in there in the first place as it all sounds rather cruel…
That aside, we have been cruel to you for over a year and only cryptically teased with the Two Lapels (Anagram) and Common Chord (Old Map) pumpclips. We felt it polite on the Tenant not to go blurting out where it would be.

Our tenant has now left and we can start planning what we are going to do with the building to turn it into a pub.

60 Low Street, Keighley, BD21 3PT
Email: hello@wishbonetap.co.uk
Twitter: @WishboneTap
Instagram: @WishboneTap
Facebook: @WishboneTap

Our hops & dreams

We have 3 floors, we will probably never use the top floor but who knows, someone like a food trader might fancy making a business up there or we turn it into offices.
We want to have a community aspect to the pub as we will have room to accommodate local community groups etc
We will have a nice little sun-trap of a Beer Yard out back, needs TLC, thinking we may need to move the backdoor and widen it and add a ramp.
First job is to get a bit of roofing done and I’m hoping for Solar Hot water panels on the roof and bang a Velux or similar in there.
The big blue sign at the front needs some investigating to see where the Roller shutters roll up to and see if we can open the first floor windows back up to their former glory, possibly front and back.
The entire first floor may be a secondary project to be done after we get a functioning bar on the ground floor, though toilets will be created upstairs.
We want to put toilet facilities on the ground floor with access for anyone less able.
We want to explore the idea of having some lower service and table areas to make us more accessible.
We will definitely explore the idea of serving more of our beers in a Vegan state, if we head in this direction then we will ensure all our drinks are acceptable to people not wanting to consume animal products.
We hope to do some simple bar nibbles.
We will try hard not to serve anything that JDW, Supermarkets or Tied Pubs swerve and instead support smaller and independent drinks businesses.
4 Rotating Wishbone Cask beers on handpull.
8 ish Keg beer lines with a mix of Wishbone and other indie brewer’s keg beers.
Staff: we’ll be in need of a trustworthy manager to ensure our customers and well received and accommodated, plus other staff.

We will be here!

Things to do first

We’ve setup the Ltd Co, registered for VAT, new bank account soon, need to then look at a mortgage to release funds for improvements, I should probably write a business plan (meh!), Change of use for the building and apply for alcohol license.
Check what electrics and water supply we have to work with.
Investigate the Cellar, we apparently have a cellar full of Rubble so this is the key to how we use the rest of the building, anyone feeling strong and enjoy hauling buckets of rubble / filling skips / and getting black bright?
Pretty much everything needs ripping out, hope we find a few original features we can bring back to life.

Crowdfunder?

Wish us luck!

Simcoe on sine waves

We did a thing with the guys from The Draughtsman in Doncaster, its this funky little pub with a proper professional feel to it. Its an IPA brewed with the Verdant yeast, almost entirely Simcoe hops with just a soupcon of Citra to bring a rounding-out effect.

You may have to like Synth music to appreciate the beer name, its good to be able to bring Modular Synth music and Beer together.
If you randomly like a bit of Eurorack Synth music you could always give our Youtube channel a go and see what its all about.

Hazer Pin

Sorry its all been supped before I got around to posting about it, we brewed this as a Birthday special with our friends at the Boathouse in Skipton. We took the Tiller Pin recipe and boosted it in all the areas that would give it the fullest rounded flavours, used the Lallemand Verdant yeast on it for Maximum haze and dry hopped it twice in the FV. Call it a DDH if you like, I try not to call things DDH (Double Dry Hopped) too many times even though some of our beers are DDH as it all becomes a bit of a sausage-fest with every brewer shouting about DDH FOMO (Fear Of Missing Out) beers 😉

Rest assured we will be brewing this beer again because it was rather blooming good #DDH!