Wychwood Brewery

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Wychwood Brewery
Wychwood
Logo of Wychwood Brewery
Location Witney, Oxfordshire, United Kingdom
Owner(s) Refresh UK
Year opened 1983
Annual production 50,000 UK barrels (8,200,000 L)
Active beers
Black Wych Stout
Circle Master/Scarecrow Golden ale
Fiddler's Elbow Wheat beer
Goliath Golden ale
Hobgoblin Strong ale
WychCraft Pale ale
Seasonal cask ale beers
Dirty Tackle Best bitter
Dog's Bollocks ESB
Festive Spirits Winter ale
Seasonal bottled beer beers
Bah Humbug Winter warmer
White Wych Bitter
Duchy Originals organic beers
Organic Ale Bitter
Summer Ale Bitter
Winter Ale Rye beer
Sainsbury's beers
Firecrest Strong ale
Osprey Strong ale
Retired beers
Corn Circle Pale ale
England's Ale Bitter
Old Devil Pale ale
Pumpking Pumpkin ale
Red Kite Bitter
Whirlygig Best bitter

Wychwood Brewery is an English brewery located in the town of Witney, Oxfordshire.

Wychwood Brewery produces around 50,000 barrels (8,200,000 L) of cask ale each year, and is the UK's largest brewer of organic ales. Wychwood filtered and bottled beers are exported all over the world including the United States, Canada, Sweden, France, Australia and Japan.

The brewery is noted for its intricate, fantasy-inspired label artwork.

Contents

[edit] History

Eagle Maltings
Eagle Maltings

The brewery is sited at the old Eagle Maltings, built in 1841 to malt barley for John William Clinch's brewery.

Clinch & Co Brewery was respected in Southern England with an estate of seventy one pubs. In 1961 Courage bought Clinch's for its pub estate and closed down the brewery.

In 1983 the original Clinch's Brewery site was purchased by Paddy Glenny who christened the building The Eagle Brewery, but named the brewing company Glenny Brewery.

In 1990, the Eagle was re-named the Wychwood Brewery after the ancient Wychwood Forest which borders Witney. The brewery was taken over in the spring of 2002 by Refresh UK.

[edit] Notable Beers

Wychwood Hobgoblin is the best-known and most popular beer brewed at Wychwood Brewery. It is 5.2 percent alcohol by volume in bottles and cans, 4.5% (previously 5.0%) on cask, and is described by Wychwood as a "strong dark ale." Jeremy Moss, Wychwood's head brewer, describes the drink as "full bodied and well balanced with a chocolate toffee malt flavour, moderate bitterness and a distinctive fruity character with a ruby red glow."

The current motto for Hobgoblin is "What's the matter Lagerboy, afraid you might taste something?", challenging drinkers of pale lager, a more popular style of beer in Britain, to consume a more prominently-flavoured drink. In October 2004 and 2005, Wychwood used a variation of this motto for Halloween, "Afraid of the dark, Lagerboy?". A 2006 complaint against Wychwood to the Advertising Standards Authority that the Halloween campaign was "aggressive" and "offensive" was not upheld.[1]

Circle Master is a golden pale ale made organically at 4.7 percent strength. It combines Target hops with Plumage Archer barley malt. It is sold as Scarecrow in the USA. When it was launched in the UK it was called Corn Circle beer, but the name was changed after a dispute with the Hop Back Brewery who produce a beer called Crop Circle. The new name Circle Master is a reference to CircleMakers, the UK arts collective founded by John Lundberg who have been creating crop circles since the early 1990s; the label actually depicts a scarecrow standing in the middle of a crop circle.

Circle master beer
Circle master beer

Recently Wychwood began brewing an oak aged hard cider called Green Goblin

[edit] Wychwood and Brakspear

Wychwood took over the brewing of the newly-acquired Brakspear beers in October 2002. The new Brakspear brewery was integrated into an expansion of the Wychwood plant, and includes parts of the copper 'copper' (boiling vessel), as well as some of the fermenting vessels which themselves had been refurbished at Henley. There is only one brewhouse at Witney but two separate fermenting rooms for the separate Wychwood & Brakspear beers. The Brakspear beers are still brewed in Witney by Wychwood & not in Henley, where the original brewery site has the has been converted into a boutique hotel.

[edit] Refresh UK

Refresh UK was set up in 2000 as a contract brewing business by some of the former managers of Ushers. Refresh UK now have two brewing plants of their own in Witney.

[edit] References

[edit] External links